Saturday, January 30, 2010

What I Did Last Year

Last year I decided to read through as many genres as I could. Some I fudged and others were genuine genres. i.e. The Zookeeper's Wife = Animal Lit.

Here's a list of what I read.... titles and genres. It was terribly fun and pushed me into areas of reading that I wasn't familiar with. I love sports, but would never read a sports book. However, Michael Lewis' Moneyball, soon to be made into a movie, was brilliant and actually exciting. The "genre" or "classification" of microfiction was new to me and Marcus, my brother, passed along a book of it he read for school. Interesting stuff there.

In chronological order through the year, here's what I read.

  1. Graphic Novel - The Watchmen
  2. "Fairy Tale" - The Tales of Beedle the Bard
  3. Autobiography - My Boyhood and Youth (John Muir)
  4. Mythology - Random House Book of Greek Myths
  5. Sports - Moneyball
  6. Money - The Treasure Principle
  7. Classic - Treasure Island
  8. Food - How to Pick a Peach
  9. Christian Fantasy - On the Edge of the Dark Sea of Darkness
  10. Music - Nick Hornby's Songbook
  11. Juvenile Adventure - The 39 Clues - The Maze of Bones
  12. Christian Living - Enter the Worship Circle
  13. Animal - The Zookeeper's Wife
  14. Microfiction - Collection of Microfiction
  15. Mystery - The London Eye Mystery
  16. Adventure/Memoir/History - The Lost City of Z
  17. Conspiracy - The Men Who Stare At Goats
  18. Novel/Fiction - Memoir in Antproof Case
This is what I finished. I had started three books before the end of the year, but lost momentum and gave up. They were...
  1. Fantasy - The Sword of Shannara
  2. Writing - Maps and Legends
  3. Essay/Short Story - State by State

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Buried Treasure: Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson


I did not know how bloody and violent this book really was. We've all seen the Disney version or perhaps the mock up by the Muppets and Tim Curry. Maybe it's just me, but I just can't see Tim Curry bludgeoning to death a sailor. The book itself is terrifying. Jim Hawkins is caught up in all of the greed and madness that overcomes men whose lives turn on money. Even the good men, the best men, are out searching for riches and are willing to turn to subtlty and even deception to get them there. Last year I tackled as many genres (mini and meta) as I could and when it came to classic I thought about reading some Dickens, but they often lack the "adventure" that I wanted at the time. Stevenson more than satisfied me and intruiged me enough to pick up some of his other work. All fantastic.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Folklore and Sports: Summerland by Michael Chabon

A book about baseball and native/worldwide folklore? Almost too good to be true. Add to it that Michael Chabon, Pulitzer Prize winner and all around brilliant wordsmith, wrote it? Just flat out awesome. It's a slow burner and as far as a kids book goes, it may not be the sort of story for bedtime reading. Sure the action moments are packed, and the jokes are sly, but the Chabon works it slowly, building his characters and his purpose from nothing and weaving a seamless tapestry of a tale. Amazon recommends it for kids 10 and older, but the length and word size would have given me pause.

Ethan is a bad baseball player in a town in Washington that has perennially good weather. Turns out that things are not as they seem and his town is actually on the edge of several worlds that are now being threatened by an evil fairy named Coyote. He must battle his way through worlds and play baseball to save the world(s).

Chabon threads the ubiquitous Coyote motif throughout and adds to the list of books/stories that use this ever-present baddie. Coyote, going by different names in most folktales and by different animals, is a trickster and never wishes good on humanity.

It's a fun book to read and for anyone who loves baseball, it will be a welcome addition to their shelves. Right next to Moneyball and The Brothers K.

Friday, January 8, 2010

The new year

I have not given up. November was national novel writing month in which I took part and spent every extra hour writing. December was... in fact... december. and so here we are.

Next week we'll restart the site and once again, introduce/remind you of the books you need in your house and your life.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Wordless Play - June 29, 1999 by David Weisner

To honor this book and its true wordless power, I will leave it up to the pictures to convince you of its greatness.












Saturday, October 31, 2009

There and Back Again: The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien

This is what began it all. I can remember listening to my parents read this book aloud to us as kids and being totally enthralled. Amazed that someone could create a world so thorough and engaging without actually having been there. While it would be a couple years before I tackled the weighty Lord of the Rings trilogy, The Hobbit was the prelude to my love of fantasy, the catalyst you might say. It was a book of camaraderie, bravery, and heroism. And though it was laden with frightful situations and horrible creatures, there was still the safe feeling of a good ending. Even during the final battle. In real life, I often feel a little Bilbo-ish. Reluctant to exit my cozy surroundings, yet eager to explore and experience. I feel much less like the world traveler and perhaps a little world weary Gandalf, though I hope... and at times... believe that I'm escaping my shell more often in strengthening ways (Again, a little like Bilbo).



On another note, this book, along with Lloyd Alexander's Prydain Chronicles (specifically Taran Wanderer) are huge influences on the challenge I'm undertaking beginning tomorrow. Tomorrow begins National Novel Writing Month and within the course of 30 days we are to attempt to write 50,000 words: a novel. I have had ideas running in my head for months now and many of them revolve around a small group of people banding together and journeying around a land they know little about. I have heard it said that it is best to write what you would genuinely like to read and in this case, I genuinely love a good journey, a little mystery, some special powers, and the broad genre of juvenile fiction. I just wish I had thought of Beorn - the man/bear - or a troop of oddly named dwarves, first.

All Pictures by the brilliant Justin Gerard. Check out his blog: Quick Hide Here and search for The Hobbit on the right column under "Projects."

Saturday, October 24, 2009

A Miracle Man: Peace Like a River by Leif Enger

Leif Enger showed up on the bill for our local bookstore's reading room (Village Books), promoting his latest novel So Brave, Young, and Handsome an extremely worthwhile read. I was an avid follower and believed the rest of Bellingham must be as well. So I was stunned to see that only a handful gathered to listen to him speak. Before his reading began I chatted with him about life in the midwest and family life (as Talia and I had just started our own family). He was soft spoken and generous in demeanor and equal to the image I had cast of him based on his first book. His debut novel, one sprawling across the American Midwest, was Peace Like a River. My Uncle Kris, a torrential reader, recommended it to my mom, who in turn passed it to me. Now, you must understand that at the time I was racing through a reading phase I would liken to the punk movement or some sort of anarchist adventure. On my list at the time were books like Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, anything by Chuck Pahlaniuk or Douglas Coupland. I was, internally, being fed by the edgy seditious nature of these novels. It was a vicarious position since I didn't really want to experience violence for no reason, nor take copious amounts of drugs just for fun, but I did enjoy the view through each narrator's fuzzy or blood shot eyes.

So when I opened Peace Like a River and read: "From my first breath in this world, all I wanted was a good set of lungs and the air to fill them with - given circumstances, you might presume, for an American baby of the twentieth century," I was not taken. I thought... "I'll give it a chapter and if it's just a feel good family novel - I'm done." (I now know the terror and joy of loving a child and this book is a treasure to me). Four pages later, I was hooked. A deeply loving father that seems to work miracles; an asthmatic narrator who struggles to understand the craziness around him; an older brother who's protective, strong, and headstrong; and perhaps one of the greatest little sisters in all of literature - a spaghetti western poet who cannot help but encourage and lean on her older brother.

It is a family book. But it is so much more. An adventure, filled with romance, redemption, evil, tremendous good, deep questions, and humor. With the arrival of Fall and the imminence of Winter, I cannot recommend this book enough. A perfect book to relax with, inside, on a rainy day. It is suspenseful enough to keep you up a little later, but not scary enough to force unwanted images into your dreams.

Before I wax eloquent any longer, here's a brief snippet. Enger's prose is like few that I know.

"Before dawn we settle among decoys in one of August's barley fields. Dad and Swede lay on their elbows side by side, the two of them whispering under a swath. Davy and I took the opposite flank, he with his clawed-up Winchester goose gun. I was too young to shoot, of course and so was Swede; we were there purely, as she said, "for seasoning." In all the years since I don't remember a colder morning afield. Rain can outfreeze snow. We lay between soaked ground and soaked swaths with a December-smelling wind coming over our backs. As the sky lightened we heard geese chuckling on the refuge away to the east. The rag decoys puffed and fluttered. I yawned once, then again so hard my ears crackled."