March has gone by way too quickly. It helps that half of it was spent in another country, but still. I finally picked up some craft projects again last week. It's been way too long. I'll be writing more about that whole other country thing, but for right now, movies and books as usual.
Movies:
This month I saw 300: Rise of an Empire, Divergent, Muppets Most Wanted, Grand Budapest Hotel, and Bad Words.
I love the original 300. I was worried when they announced a sequel/prequel thing. I was right to be worried. It was super bloody and completely unbelievable. I mean, I didn't expect Oscar worthy work, but I thought maybe it would just be better than what it was. Sad.
Divergent was another let down. It was wasn't bad. I did actually like it. But, compared to the book, it was just meh. I think it really wanted to be a new Hunger Games, but without Jennifer Lawrence, that's just not going to happen. The lead wasn't as strong as she needed to be, although, possibly she could grow into the role. If that happens, the other movies in the series (if they get made) should be even better.
Muppets Most Wanted was excellent! It was very Muppet Caper-y and I am totally fine with that. The cameos were brilliant and it was just a lot of fun.
Grand Budapest Hotel was really, really good. Wes Anderson is always a good bet. The story was great and the actors were, of course, fabulous. Always quirky, always a little heart warming. That's Wes Anderson.
Bad Words. So. Wrong. So. Hilarious. I laughed at things that I know I shouldn't have, but I couldn't help it at all. Jason Bateman is a genius. It is probably offensive to most, but if you like Jason Bateman, you'll be aware of his strengths, so, you'll like it.
Books:
This month I read: Twisted Sisters by Jen Lancaster, Divergent by Veronica Roth, Tell the Wolves I'm Home by Carol Rifka Brunt, The Perfume Collector by Kathleen Tessaro, Bad Apple (The Warner Grimoire) by Clay Held, The Shock of the Fall by Nathan Filer, and Rush to Glory: FORMULA 1 Racing's Greatest Rivalry by Tom Rubython.
I love Jen Lancaster. This one was still entertaining, but not my absolute favorite. It was a new, very pop culture-y twist to the essential Freaky Friday story. The main character doesn't get along with her family and has become very disconnected from reality. By switching places with her younger sister, she starts to realize how she comes off to her family and starts to doubt the very things she has based her adult life on. It's a good story, just not as laugh-out-loud awesome as Lancaster's more personal essay type books.
My friends have been telling me to read Divergent for a while, so I finally did...just before the movie came out. The book is really good. In the future, in Chicago, five factions make up society and how their world works. Your faction is your family...you are tested and choose where you belong (after the test shows you) and, in some cases, leave everyone and everything behind for a new faction. Tris, the main character, leaves behind her family and goes to Dauntless (the fearless protectors) and discovers a lot about herself, her new faction, her family, the other factions, and about her inner strength and what it means. This is a good book and I'm looking forward to reading the next two installments.
Tell the Wolves I'm Home was a coming of age story about a teen girl who becomes defined by her relationships with her uncle who passes away from AIDS in the 1980s and his partner. As she gets to know her uncle's partner, she learns more about her beloved uncle and her mom. Through the story, as she grows up, her family slowly pulls itself back together from the brink of near destruction, all through the uncle's last painting. It was odd at times, but it was a solid story.
The Perfume Collector was a really good story. It's the story of two women and their connection. The main parts take place in Oxford, Paris, and New York, with other travels denoted throughout the book to explain how characters arrived where they were by the end. Being subjugated to the whims of others her entire life, one woman was finally able to break free and establish an out for the other woman by leaving her everything in her will. The odd part was, the two women had never met. The story slowly weaves their lives together and you see how one woman's hard-earned freedom from dependencies leads her to give the other the greatest gift she can...an independent life to go with the independent spirit she had buried for her entire life. I really liked this one.
Bad Apple is a tale of magic and its hidden existence in this world, and how it lives in parallel in a world all of its own. At times Harry Potter-ish, it's a darker take on things from the beginning instead of building to the darkness. The more I read, the more I wanted more. The characters draw you in and you want to know what they think and what they're going to do next. As soon as I got back from vacation, I asked the author if I could be in his beta program. I am and the next one is waiting for me as a prerelease! As soon as I finish the two I'm reading now, I'm diving back into the world of magic. I highly recommend this one.
The Shock of the Fall was an impulse purchase while on vacation. Mainly because it was on the bestseller walls at all the bookstores in London and the cover was colorful and drew me to it. The main character is a very troubled young man reliving his past through his writing sessions during therapy while living at the institution and later on his own. He goes in and out of time periods and you never really find out why the death of his brother pushed him over the edge until the end of the book. It's a complicated take on a simple story. Definitely different from the books I usually choose. An interesting look inside a person's mental health and how it can deteriorate so quickly.
Lastly, I read Rush to Glory. I saw the movie Rush last fall and really, really liked it. Which is bizarre because after all the hours my ex made me watch it, I really held a grudge against Formula 1 racing, and really, racing in general. I enjoyed the book as well...it goes in depth into the rivalry between Niki Lauda and James Hunt and the 1976 season. Both men were very competitive and their story is a fun one to read. If I had to make a call, I'd say watch the movie, but the book is a nice way to spend some time and I learned more about racing and now feel less antagonistic about it.
That's it for the books and movies. Now I need to get all my pictures into a blog to tell you all about London!
If you read The Believer or the gathered essay books of Nick Hornby then you know what this blog is about--once a month, all the books bought and all the books read will be posted. And a bunch of other stuff too. Only not by Nick Hornby...sorry.
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Friday, March 7, 2014
The books of February 2014
Once again, I've fallen behind. In my defense, I've been busy. And snowed in. Very snowed in. A lot. So much so that I only made it out for one movie.
Movie:
I went to see Pompeii. It wasn't awesome. It was trying very hard to be Gladiator...but it wasn't. The kid from Game of Thrones did his best, but he shouldn't be carrying an entire film by himself at this point. Keifer was a good bad guy, but his little lisp affectation didn't work for me. Nor did the sheriff from Grimm being bad again. I got used to him being good on the show. What was really cool was how they did the special effects to destroy the entire city. The lava, the fireballs, the waves flooding the city, and the ash. Wow. Something to watch when it hits Netflix while you fold laundry and stuff.
Books:
This month I read The Lost Hero by Rick Riordan, The Son of Neptune by Rick Riordan, London Travel Guide 2014: Essential Tourist Information, Maps, and Photos by Caroline Booth, Kingmaking: Book One of the Pendragon's Banner by Helen Hollick, Waking Kate by Sarah Addison Allen (prequel to her new book, Lost Lake), The Mark of Athena by Rick Riordan, After Visiting Friends: A Son's Story by Michael Hainey, and The House of Hades by Rick Riordan.
The London Travel Guide 2014 was a short citing of some of the main sites people visit when they go to London. It was on my Kindle, so the pictures were black and white and the maps were small, but I was able to use the urls to check out things that I liked. I got it the day the 2014 version went on sale, so it was free. I call that excellent timing.
Kingmaking was pretty good. It's been a while since I read an Arthur book. It starts with all the major players as children. Arthur, with Uther, visits Gwenevere's family. It follows them, on and off, through teens, a first marriage for Arthur, and up through her second pregnancy. I believe there is a sequel...possibly two sequels. I liked it, but I don't know if I'll read more. It was pretty different from the regular telling. I'm still thinking about it.
Waking Kate is a short story about a woman who is sitting at home, waiting for her husband on the first night of summer. Their daughter is staying with a friend, so she makes a nice dinner and sits down to watch some TV while waiting. She sees a familiar face on TV and later, watching people get off the bus, she realizes that man was her neighbor. She walks over to say hello and ends up chatting with him for a long time. They chat about his life and it's implied that her own choices may not have been the best, but not stated out loud. The short story came with a few pages of the new book, Lost Lake. I won't give anything away, but as always, Addison Allen writes a story with someone you can relate to in the lead and you want to know more. As soon as the price drops on the new one, I'm getting it.
After Visiting Friends is the story of a reporter who pieces together what really happened when his dad died. Hainey was 6 years old, his brother 8, when their father died in his mid-30s. Raised by their mom, no one ever discussed it. As Hainey aged, he found pieces of a puzzle that didn't add up, so once he was grown, he started researching what had really happened. This is a good book. It wasn't a grisly true crime thing (which I was kind of expecting)...the outcome was that a normal family had normal problems and things happen. It wasn't terribly exciting, but it was a good read.
The Rick Riordan books were awesome! This series (there's one more coming out this October) starts with new recruits for Camp Half-Blood...the safe space for Greek demi-gods. But Percy Jackson, son of Poseidon and the camp's recent hero, is missing. His girlfriend, Annabeth, the daughter of Athena is becoming frantic. But this first book focuses on the three new recruits, and their quest. In the next book we find Percy and the plan for the series becomes clearer. Percy's lost his memory (just as Jason has in book one) and is working with the kids at his camp...a Roman Camp...to finish their quest. The third book, The Mark of Athena, brings all the characters together and it is an epic fail. Except for the chosen seven who must go on a dangerous quest, taking them back through Greece and Rome without the Gods to help them. The next one, The House of Hades, continues the quest of the seven demi-gods. And, as the title suggests, much of the story takes place in the underworld. It's very intense. Having to wait until October to finish this up is not going to be fun.
OK. That's it for February. I've already finished one this month and am mid-way through my second. Should be more interesting for you all. Laters!
Movie:
I went to see Pompeii. It wasn't awesome. It was trying very hard to be Gladiator...but it wasn't. The kid from Game of Thrones did his best, but he shouldn't be carrying an entire film by himself at this point. Keifer was a good bad guy, but his little lisp affectation didn't work for me. Nor did the sheriff from Grimm being bad again. I got used to him being good on the show. What was really cool was how they did the special effects to destroy the entire city. The lava, the fireballs, the waves flooding the city, and the ash. Wow. Something to watch when it hits Netflix while you fold laundry and stuff.
Books:
This month I read The Lost Hero by Rick Riordan, The Son of Neptune by Rick Riordan, London Travel Guide 2014: Essential Tourist Information, Maps, and Photos by Caroline Booth, Kingmaking: Book One of the Pendragon's Banner by Helen Hollick, Waking Kate by Sarah Addison Allen (prequel to her new book, Lost Lake), The Mark of Athena by Rick Riordan, After Visiting Friends: A Son's Story by Michael Hainey, and The House of Hades by Rick Riordan.
The London Travel Guide 2014 was a short citing of some of the main sites people visit when they go to London. It was on my Kindle, so the pictures were black and white and the maps were small, but I was able to use the urls to check out things that I liked. I got it the day the 2014 version went on sale, so it was free. I call that excellent timing.
Kingmaking was pretty good. It's been a while since I read an Arthur book. It starts with all the major players as children. Arthur, with Uther, visits Gwenevere's family. It follows them, on and off, through teens, a first marriage for Arthur, and up through her second pregnancy. I believe there is a sequel...possibly two sequels. I liked it, but I don't know if I'll read more. It was pretty different from the regular telling. I'm still thinking about it.
Waking Kate is a short story about a woman who is sitting at home, waiting for her husband on the first night of summer. Their daughter is staying with a friend, so she makes a nice dinner and sits down to watch some TV while waiting. She sees a familiar face on TV and later, watching people get off the bus, she realizes that man was her neighbor. She walks over to say hello and ends up chatting with him for a long time. They chat about his life and it's implied that her own choices may not have been the best, but not stated out loud. The short story came with a few pages of the new book, Lost Lake. I won't give anything away, but as always, Addison Allen writes a story with someone you can relate to in the lead and you want to know more. As soon as the price drops on the new one, I'm getting it.
After Visiting Friends is the story of a reporter who pieces together what really happened when his dad died. Hainey was 6 years old, his brother 8, when their father died in his mid-30s. Raised by their mom, no one ever discussed it. As Hainey aged, he found pieces of a puzzle that didn't add up, so once he was grown, he started researching what had really happened. This is a good book. It wasn't a grisly true crime thing (which I was kind of expecting)...the outcome was that a normal family had normal problems and things happen. It wasn't terribly exciting, but it was a good read.
The Rick Riordan books were awesome! This series (there's one more coming out this October) starts with new recruits for Camp Half-Blood...the safe space for Greek demi-gods. But Percy Jackson, son of Poseidon and the camp's recent hero, is missing. His girlfriend, Annabeth, the daughter of Athena is becoming frantic. But this first book focuses on the three new recruits, and their quest. In the next book we find Percy and the plan for the series becomes clearer. Percy's lost his memory (just as Jason has in book one) and is working with the kids at his camp...a Roman Camp...to finish their quest. The third book, The Mark of Athena, brings all the characters together and it is an epic fail. Except for the chosen seven who must go on a dangerous quest, taking them back through Greece and Rome without the Gods to help them. The next one, The House of Hades, continues the quest of the seven demi-gods. And, as the title suggests, much of the story takes place in the underworld. It's very intense. Having to wait until October to finish this up is not going to be fun.
OK. That's it for February. I've already finished one this month and am mid-way through my second. Should be more interesting for you all. Laters!
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