Category Archives: Reading

"The Corrections"

This was supposed to be a great book. The New York Times said its “everything we want in a novel.” Pat Conroy called it “The brightest, boldest, and most ambitious novel I’ve read in many years.” Even Oprah loved it.

And I didn’t like it.

This is not to say that it isn’t well written. Esquire is right; “The Correctionsis “a stunning anatomy of family dysfunction.” I’m just not feeling sufficiently bitter to appreciate that right now. Maybe I should only be reading books about rainbows, teddy bears and pretty, pretty flowers.

That being said, there were a few phrases that rang true for me:

… “She’d always been a pretty woman, but to Chip, she was so much a personality and so little anything else that even staring straight at her he had no idea what she really looked like.” …

… “Not being theatrical, Chip felt disadvantaged around people who were.” …

… “What you discovered about yourself in raising children wasn’t always disagreeable or attractive.” …

On reading

I was not tagged for this meme by anyone. Specifically not by Doppelganger. But I’ve been getting a lot of book recommendations from her site and then, today, this was there. And I thought I’d give it a shot. So.

Name five of your favorite books.

  • “Freddy and Fredericka”
  • “Catch 22”
  • “A Prayer for Owen Meany”
  • “The Time-Traveler’s Wife”
  • “The Westing Game”

    What was the last book you bought?
    I don’t remember. I buy books very, very rarely. The library is my friend.

    What was the last book you read?
    Housekeeping

    List five books that have been particularly meaningful to you (in no particular order).

  • “The Bridge to Terabithia” was, I think, the first book to make me cry.
  • “If You Want to Walk on Water, You’ve Got to Get Out of the Boat” made me want to do something courageous.
  • I read “The Lovely Bones” just a few months after Poppy was born, and it devastated me. I don’t get torn down very easily (although Rockford might tell you otherwise), but I felt this one deeply.
  • “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” is the first book that captivated Poppy. I hope it’s just the first of many.
  • I read the Seamus Heaney translation of “Beowulf,” and it wasn’t for an assignment. I was proud of myself for getting through it. Not only that, but I enjoyed it.

    Name three books you’ve been dying to read but just haven’t gotten around to it?
    I don’t know about “dying to read,” but here are a few on my to-read list:

  • “The Year of Magical Thinking”
  • “Our Man in Havana”
  • and someday I’d like to finish “Anna Karenina”
  • "Housekeeping"

    I wrote about this once earlier, but Blogger seems to have discarded it. Let’s assume it was brilliant and insightful.

    I finished Marilynne Robinson’s “Housekeeping” this afternoon. I’d read that it was better than “Gilead,” which I really enjoyed, so I was looking forward to reading it. It was well written, but I didn’t like it as much as “Gilead.” It was so melancholy and lacking hope. I never once thought that the characters might be in for a happy ending. Some might argue that they did find their happy ending, but I’m not buying it.