I wish that I could remember the first time that I read Little Women. I know I was very young, and it wasn't the original, but the Great Animated Classic's version (loved those!). I read Louisa May Alcott's version in junior high, and I was hooked. Since then, I must have re-read it a hundred times (okay, so probably not a hundred, but enough). If I absolutely had to choose one favorite book, Little Women might be it. My teacher recommended March to me when we were off on a book-loving tangent one day. She said that if I loved Little Women, that I would love March as well. She leant it to me, and here we are.
It's the story of the patriach of the March family. Which in itself is an interesting idea, and something that I'm sure most Little Women fans have not thought much about (myself included). It tells the story of how he met Marmee, and how their family lost their fortune, as well as what Mr. March was doing while Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy were being ingrained into our hearts.
Dealing with the civil war, March also deals with slavery and issues of race. We learn that a young Marmee worked passionately with the underground railroad, and continued this work with her girls. It gave dimension to one of my favorite families, bringing Mr. March, and Marmee, to life and putting a new perspective on Alcotts story. And it made me cry. And we know I'm a sucker for a book that makes me cry.That being said, it also stays true to the original version. Little Women was based so much on Louisa May Alcott's life, and Geraldine Brooks clearly did her research to continue that. The writing is also fantastic. If you're a fan of Little Women, I highly recommend this book. And if for some unexplainable reason you have never read it, I suggest you start there!
"I cannot remember the books I've read any more than the meals I have eaten; even so, they have made me" -Ralph Waldo Emerson
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Thursday, April 18, 2013
I Remember Nothing
After reading something as
heavy as The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, I picked up Nora Ephron's I Remember
Nothing. I loved it. I finished it in a day. There were so many things that I
liked about it that I kept stopping and making notes for what I wanted to mention.
1. First off, I liked that
it was such a light read. I always have to have a book on my bedside table, and
sometimes it's nice to have one that I can just breeze through. I Remember
Nothing is just a collection of Nora Ephron's reflections and each one was it's
own separate story.
2. I liked the history of
it. I firmly believe that I was born at the wrong time, and I should have been
living in the 1940's, 50's, and even the 60's. Nora talks about meeting Eleanor
Roosevelt and references Jimmy Stewart, Cary Grant, Tippi Hedren, Casablanca,
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, and The Ed Sullivan Show. I loved that.
3. I liked that it was
relatable. There is a whole chapter about forgetting someones name, and that
awkward moment when you have to introduce them to someone else. She talks about
the cowlick on the back of her head, and the fact that she has to google
everything. The things that she talks about are things that I relate to, things
my mother could relate to, and things my grandmother good relate to. And the
best part is, she does it with humor.
4. I liked that it made me
think. I am the girl that always has a journal. I think my dad bought me my
first one when I was eight years old, and I have been keeping one ever since.
When Nora talks about all the things from her youth that she has forgotten, it
made me think about all the things that I write about. It made me think about
the kind of things that I am going to want to remember and the things that are
not going to matter in the long run.
5. I liked her reflection
on Journalism. As a journalism major, I loved reading about her early
experiences as a journalist, and what made her want to do it in the first
place. She also gave advice, like "Never begin a story with a quote",
"Never use anything but 'said'", and "Never put something you
really care about into the last paragraph because it will undoubtedly be cut
for space". Great advice.
6. It made me cry. At the very end of the book, Nora Ephron reflects
upon the things that she will and will not miss when she dies. They are simple
lists, but they made me cry. It made me think about the little things that you
take for granted, and she showed me to appreciate life while you are living it.
So, yes, I loved this book. I
definitely recommend you pick it up, and gaurantee you'll finish it the same
day.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
When I thought about starting this blog, I must have
thought of a hundred books that I would rather begin with, but here I am
posting my first entry about Carson McCuller's The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter. If
you start to notice a theme in some of the books that I read, it's because I am
attempting to read Newsweek's list of the top 100 novels.
Making my way through the first 15 has been...difficult at times. Gone With the
Wind was easy, even if it did take a few months. The History of the
Peloponneisian War however, is not something I would say I'm exactly looking
forward to. To even begin to review the books on this list was not something I
planned on doing. After all, who am I to critique Ernest Hemingway or Mark
Twain? But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that I don't want
to critique them. I want to share them. I want to share my experience, and that
means you'll just have to take the good with the bad.
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter was hardly a bad experience for me. It's the story
of 5 individuals who in one way or another feel isolated from society. I think
that that may have been why it took me a little longer to get in to, because it
was so many separate stories. That, and the fact that I thought the girl on the
cover was supposed to be Mick (It's not. It's definitely Carson McCullers).
Anyway, the book really turned around for me during the tail end of the story.
Looking back, I probably should have been able to predict what would happen,
but I didn't and when the story reached climax I literally gasped.
If you attempt to read it, (And personally, I suggest you attempt to read the
entire list) be patient. It was definitely worth it in the end.
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