January 7, 2013

There were some books that reached through the noise of life to grab you by the collar and speak only of the truest things. A Confession was a book like that. In it, Tolstoy related a Russian fable about a man who, being chased by a monster, jumps into a well. As the man is falling down the well, however, he sees there’s a dragon at the bottom, waiting to eat him. Right then, the man notices a branch sticking out of the wall, and he grabs on to it, and hangs. This keeps the man from falling into the dragon’s jaws, or being eaten by the monster above, but it turns out there’s another little problem. Two mice, one black and one white, are scurrying around and around the branch, nibbling it. It’s only a matter of time before they will chew through the branch, causing the man to fall. As the man contemplates his inescapable fate, he notices something else: from the end of the branch he’s holding, a few drops of honey are dripping. The man sticks out his tongue to lick them. This, Tolstoy says, is our human predicament: we’re the man clutching the branch. Death awaits us. There is no escape. And so we distract ourselves by licking whatever drops of honey come within our reach.
Most of what Mitchell read in college hadn’t conveyed Wisdom with a capital W. But this Russian fable did. It was true about people in general and it was true about Mitchell in particular. What were he and his friends doing, really, other than hanging from a branch, sticking their tongues out to catch the sweetness? He thought about the people he knew, with their excellent young bodies, their summerhouses, their cool clothes, their potent drugs, their liberalism, their orgasms, their haircuts. Everything they did was either pleasurable in itself or engineered to bring pleasure down the line. Even the people he knew who were “political” and who protested the war in El Salvador did so largely in order to bathe themselves in an attractively crusading light. And the artists were the worst, the painters and the writers, because they believed they were living for art when they were really feeding their narcissism. Mitchell had always prided himself on his discipline. He studied harder than anyone he knew. But that was just his way of tightening his grip on the branch.

—Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot

August 30, 2012
Only 800 pages to go! Also, this is the kind of cover more books should have (Taken with Instagram)

Only 800 pages to go! Also, this is the kind of cover more books should have (Taken with Instagram)

July 12, 2012
A little obsessed with phillippa gregory and ted dekkar at the moment (Taken with Instagram)

A little obsessed with phillippa gregory and ted dekkar at the moment (Taken with Instagram)

June 4, 2012

i finished this book, a thousand splendid suns, over my time off. just like the kite runner , my eyes were opened to a whole other world. the women in this story saw and experienced wars, death, brutality, hopelessness and disappointment…while they were also forced to obey and lost their independence. the story shows how they persevere through their hardships and in the end find a way to hope.

it is hard for me to stomach that these wars happened in my life time, and that people are still treated like this around the world. it makes me stop and think about how my heart is calloused, and my “issues” are so trivial.  

April 23, 2012
i finally finished this book this weekend. 
i think i started it in december? january? 
all i know is that it took me a very long to read this book because it was so slow. most of the story is description, and cheesy description of emotions and grief that i couldn’t get in to. the story idea was awesome, and i just kept waiting for something to happen…but it didn’t. i know the author was writing about the “secret” (and this was a BIG secret that i don’t know how he could have lived with day after day = the point of the book) and how secrets can affect people and change everything in their own life, as well as everyone around them, but for me it was just so unexciting. it was frustrating knowing the secret and waiting for everyone to find out..especially with all the teasers that it was just about to..but then for it to not go anywhere, which i guess is more realistic. 
it was interesting to learn about how people treated down syndrome back in the 60’s and how hard it was for the parents to fight to where we are now. it was something i haven’t heard about before, and it was disappointing—yet not unbelievable—how once again people were not supportive of anyone who was different. 

i finally finished this book this weekend. 

i think i started it in december? january? 

all i know is that it took me a very long to read this book because it was so slow. most of the story is description, and cheesy description of emotions and grief that i couldn’t get in to. the story idea was awesome, and i just kept waiting for something to happen…but it didn’t. i know the author was writing about the “secret” (and this was a BIG secret that i don’t know how he could have lived with day after day = the point of the book) and how secrets can affect people and change everything in their own life, as well as everyone around them, but for me it was just so unexciting. it was frustrating knowing the secret and waiting for everyone to find out..especially with all the teasers that it was just about to..but then for it to not go anywhere, which i guess is more realistic. 

it was interesting to learn about how people treated down syndrome back in the 60’s and how hard it was for the parents to fight to where we are now. it was something i haven’t heard about before, and it was disappointing—yet not unbelievable—how once again people were not supportive of anyone who was different. 

(via frappengbarako)

January 5, 2012
i read this book over the break. at first i was skeptical when i looked at the book flap and saw the picture of the author (fancy looking white lady writing in the voice of the help in the 60s) but this book was great. so great i couldn’t put it down. plus the bonus of another journalist protagonist! 
it amazes and saddens me that this time period was when our parents and grandparents lived. 
we watched the movie last night, and after hearing so many good things about it, i wasn’t super impressed. it was so long and a little boring at times. i felt bad for putting tim through it (even though he surprised me by renting it for me :] ) some parts were funny, but overall i would say that the book is by far the better option. 

i read this book over the break. at first i was skeptical when i looked at the book flap and saw the picture of the author (fancy looking white lady writing in the voice of the help in the 60s) but this book was great. so great i couldn’t put it down. plus the bonus of another journalist protagonist! 

it amazes and saddens me that this time period was when our parents and grandparents lived. 

we watched the movie last night, and after hearing so many good things about it, i wasn’t super impressed. it was so long and a little boring at times. i felt bad for putting tim through it (even though he surprised me by renting it for me :] ) some parts were funny, but overall i would say that the book is by far the better option. 

12:05pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZUsBZyEIxVIf
  
Filed under: books the help movies 
November 14, 2011
okay, so i jumped on the bandwagon late, but seriously—this book is awesome. it is one of those rare stories where all i want to do is read, no matter what else is going on. in the past with other books this has lead to some bad grades. whoops
i finished it in a few days, and as soon as i was done, (literally within the hour) i went on a search for the second one. the first stop was half price books, where i had a coupon, and when i couldn’t find it on the shelves i was too embarrassed to ask for it. tim eventually did for me, and the guy working there said that it wasn’t embarrassing, everyone is reading them, (how did everyone want to read a book about kids killing each other?) and they didn’t have any copies.
i found one though at the next store, but have been holding my self back since i have work to do. i don’t know how long i will last…

okay, so i jumped on the bandwagon late, but seriously—this book is awesome. it is one of those rare stories where all i want to do is read, no matter what else is going on. in the past with other books this has lead to some bad grades. whoops

i finished it in a few days, and as soon as i was done, (literally within the hour) i went on a search for the second one. the first stop was half price books, where i had a coupon, and when i couldn’t find it on the shelves i was too embarrassed to ask for it. tim eventually did for me, and the guy working there said that it wasn’t embarrassing, everyone is reading them, (how did everyone want to read a book about kids killing each other?) and they didn’t have any copies.

i found one though at the next store, but have been holding my self back since i have work to do. i don’t know how long i will last…

September 26, 2011
finally!
i have been waiting to read this book for so long (it was never at any book stores) and i got it for my birthday last week. i can’t wait to be back in the ridiculous mind of nick twisp, (or should i say rick), especially now that he is in paris.
we also just went to paris, so it will be great to be able to imagine in my head and know what he is talking about (if that is at all  possible). 

finally!

i have been waiting to read this book for so long (it was never at any book stores) and i got it for my birthday last week. i can’t wait to be back in the ridiculous mind of nick twisp, (or should i say rick), especially now that he is in paris.

we also just went to paris, so it will be great to be able to imagine in my head and know what he is talking about (if that is at all  possible). 

11:41am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZUsBZy9z5jMx
  
Filed under: nick twisp books cd payne 
September 22, 2011

npr:

The new, long trailer for David Fincher’s The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. 

it is going to be hard to replace noomi rapace as lisbeth, that is for sure. she really should get an oscar.  

the original movies were great, but i guess we are too lazy to read subtitles over here. it will be interesting at least. 

September 16, 2011
“and i realized as i walked through the neighborhood, how each house could contain a completely different reality. in a single block, there could be fifty separate worlds. nobody every really knew what was going on just next door.”
i finished white oleander by janet fitch yesterday (after spending most of my travel time reading it) and i am still a little unsure of how i feel about it. the story follows astrid magnussen as she loses her mother and goes through a series of foster homes. her mother, ingrid, is in prison because she murdered her boyfriend, and is pretty much one of the most evil characters i have ever read. (not counting voldemort) not evil in the way we think of it normally—violent, powerful, talking over the world—she is subtly evil by influencing and poisoning her daughter and everyone around her, just by letters from prison and a visit every few years. she is a very annoying character as well, she’s a “grand poet” who knows everything, judges everything and has to have everything in her control. over the book, astrid tries to shake her grasp and learn who she is by herself, without her mother being a part of her. 
fitch is a great writer—her descriptions and prose are hauntingly beautiful, and i got immediately caught up. sometimes to me it just seemed a little over the top and repetitive (especially with all the different descriptions of her mom and letting her go finally yada yada yada). but i liked it, and it wasn’t the “fluff” type reading i have been filling my mind with recently. (i can’t help it that i love jonathan kellerman! he is so great!)   

“and i realized as i walked through the neighborhood, how each house could contain a completely different reality. in a single block, there could be fifty separate worlds. nobody every really knew what was going on just next door.”

i finished white oleander by janet fitch yesterday (after spending most of my travel time reading it) and i am still a little unsure of how i feel about it. the story follows astrid magnussen as she loses her mother and goes through a series of foster homes. her mother, ingrid, is in prison because she murdered her boyfriend, and is pretty much one of the most evil characters i have ever read. (not counting voldemort) not evil in the way we think of it normally—violent, powerful, talking over the world—she is subtly evil by influencing and poisoning her daughter and everyone around her, just by letters from prison and a visit every few years. she is a very annoying character as well, she’s a “grand poet” who knows everything, judges everything and has to have everything in her control. over the book, astrid tries to shake her grasp and learn who she is by herself, without her mother being a part of her. 

fitch is a great writer—her descriptions and prose are hauntingly beautiful, and i got immediately caught up. sometimes to me it just seemed a little over the top and repetitive (especially with all the different descriptions of her mom and letting her go finally yada yada yada). but i liked it, and it wasn’t the “fluff” type reading i have been filling my mind with recently. (i can’t help it that i love jonathan kellerman! he is so great!)