Wednesday, 31 December 2014
Wednesday, 17 December 2014
Literary Movement Reading Challenge 2015 - My List
Literary Movement Reading Challenge is hosted by Fanda. I
don’t have any literary background and to be frank I have not read many books.
I have a passion for reading, especially classics. When I found this challenge,
I thought this challenge would be an opportunity to explore and learn the
different literary periods. So I am taking this challenge, and I am happy for I
could pick the books for different literary period from my classicsclub list.
Here comes my list for LMRC.
January: Medieval (500 - 1500)
February: Renaissance (1500 – 1670)
March: Enlightenment (1700 – 1800)
April: Romanticism (1798 – 1870)
May: Transcendentalism (1830 – 1860)
Hospital Sketches – Louisa May Alcott
June: Victorian (1837 – 1901)
A pair of blue eyes – Thomas Hardy
July: Realism (1820 – 1920)
The Golden Bowl – Henry James
August: Naturalism (1870 – 1920)
Germinal – Emile Zola
September: Existentialism (1850 – Today)
The fall – Albert Camus
October: Modernism (1910 – 1965)
Women in Love – D.H. Lawrence
November: Beat Generation (1945-1965) / Bloomsbury Group (1903-1964)
December: Post Modernism (1965 – Today)
Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie
Wednesday, 10 December 2014
A Lost Lady by Willa Cather
Book – A Lost Lady
Author - Willa Cather
Country - United States
Language - English
Genre - Fiction
Publisher - Alfred A. Knopf
Publication Date - September 1923
This is my second book by Willa Cather. I read ‘My Antonia’ few years ago and I loved it. A lost lady is set in late 19th century, in a small fictional town called Sweet water along the Burlington rail road on the Western Plains. The finest house in Sweet Water is the white winged house of Mr. and Mrs. Forrester. The Forrester’s spend only their summer in Sweet Water, yet they called it their home. Mr. Forrester is a rail road contractor and a generous man. He had loved this place as a young man and vowed to build a home. Twenty years later he had made his dream come true. Mrs. Forrester is twenty years younger than Mr. Forrester. She is beautiful, charming and an enchanting hostess. The main focus of the story is Mrs. Forrester. Niel Herbert is a boy of twelve years at the opening of the story. He is enchanted by Mrs. Forrester’s grace, charm, laugh and the way she manages her home. Most of the story is told from Niel’s perspective. As Forrester’s become financially weak, they tend to spend more time at Sweet Water. Niel is now nineteen years of age and spends more time at Forrester’s House. His admiration for Mrs. Forrester had grown more over the years. He is dismayed when he finds Mrs. Forrester’s affair with Frank Ellinger. He had lost one of the most beautiful things in his life. Mr. Forrester becomes totally broke financially and all that is left for them is their home at Sweet Water. Soon Mr. Forrester suffers a stroke, but survives. Mrs. Forrester is worn out, yet she maintains her elegance. After a second stroke, Mr. Forrester becomes totally invalid and Mrs. Forrester loses her elegance. After Mr. Forrester’s death, she prefers life on any terms. Niel finds her affair with Ivy Peters, a shyster lawyer, who at the beginning of the novel is portrayed as a bully and a cruel teenager. His illusion is finally unveiled and he leaves her and Sweet Water forever.
This novella is a delight to read with vivid descriptions that bring Sweet Water and the white winged house at the foot of the hills and its inhabitants very much alive. Cather’s writing is elegant, yet simple and lucid.
Sunday, 7 December 2014
The Classics Club - December Meme Question
The Classics Club December meme question is about Children's Classics and the question goes like this:
"Did you read any classic works as a child? What were your favorites? If not, have you or will you try any classic children's literature in the future?" (We're aware children often read at an adult level. Please feel free to share adult or children's classics that you treasured in childhood or children's work that you have recently fallen far.)
When I think of my childhood days, flood of precious memories overwhelms me. But, books I have not read many. Just a few fairy tales and fables and I have loved them all. One book which I adored most as a child was "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" by Lewis Carrol. I was very much fascinated by the wonderland where Alice had drifted me. Even now I love fantasy fictions and of late I enjoyed Harry Potter and The Lord of the Rings.
Friday, 28 November 2014
Things Fall Apart
This is my first book review for the Classics Club
Challenge. As I have said earlier, I started the challenge with "The Moonstone".
It’s interesting and I am going slowly. Meanwhile I finished Things Fall
Apart, hardly 150 pages.
Book – Things Fall Apart
Author – Chinua Achebe
Country – Nigeria
Genre – Historical Fiction
Publisher – William Heinmann Ltd
Publication Date – 1958
(Source: Wikipedia)
The title of the novel is taken from the poem “The Second
Coming” by W.B. Yeats which foretells the end of the world. Chinua Achebe wrote
this novel to shatter the wrong portrayal of Africans in earlier novels (Heart
of Darkness and Mr. Johnson) by Europeans. Both Conrad and Joyce Cary portray
Africans as savages.
Things fall apart is a gripping tale written in simple
language. I had at first difficulty with the names but then I got over it. It’s
a tale about a man named Okonkwo who lived in Umuofia. Umuofia is a cluster of
nine villages in the outskirts of present Nigeria. Okonkwo had earned name and
fame at a younger age. His father Unoka was called Agbala (means effeminate) by
his playmate when he was young and he was still haunted by this bitter memory.
Unoka was a lazy man and was always in debts. He died a shameful death. Okonkwo
strives hard not to be like his father. He hated his father and despised
everything his father liked- one of the thing was gentleness and another was
idleness. According to Okonkwo, manliness means being strong and aggressive. He
often used to beat his wives and children. Being kind and compassionate are
according to him being effeminate. He hated his eldest son Nwoye, who according
to him is not showing signs of manliness. As a peace settlement with a
neighbouring village, a young lad named Ikemefuna was left under his care. He
becomes fond of him, but he doesn’t express it for he thinks, expressing affection is a sign of
weakness. Later when the village oracle tells that Ikemefuna should be
sacrificed, he even kills Ikemefuna to show his clan that he is not weak.
However he feels guilty and becomes depressed for many days. Later, Okonkwa and his
family are exiled for seven years because he shoots a lad at a funeral, accidentally though. While in exile he hears from his friend that white Missionaries have
entered a nearby village. When Okonkwo returns to Umuofia after exile, he finds
the white Missionaries had damaged his long valued traditions and customs. The rest of the tale tells the fate of Okonkwo amidst all the changes around him.
Through the tale of Okonkwo, Achebe portrays the daily life
of Nigerian people in the late 19th century and the culture and tradition of Igbo society. The society
is well organized and led by a group of village elders. Though there are some
tradition and customs which are not digestible, he points out the Igbo society
would have evolved on its own like any other society in the world. Though the
British colonialism had brought some reforms nevertheless it had let to the
devastation of the Ibo culture and tradition and the Igbo society had fallen
apart.
Achebe’s writing is powerful and brilliant in bringing the
daily life of Ibo people, Igbo culture and tradition before our eyes.
Okonkwo is not a lovable character but a character with who
I can sympathize with.
“Perhaps down in his heart Okonkwo was not a cruel man. But his whole
life was dominated by fear, the fear of failure and of weakness. It was deeper
and more intimate than the fear of evil and capricious gods and of magic, the
fear of the forest and of the forces of nature, malevolent, red in tooth and
claw. Okonkwo’s fear was greater than these. It was not external but lay deep
within himself. It was the fear of himself, lest he should be found to resemble
his father.”
Wednesday, 19 November 2014
Unlucky 13
Monday, 17 November 2014
Thursday, 30 October 2014
Welcome to My Space
This blog is my space where I would share my classic books. I welcome all who happen to land on my space.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)