riotheclown: clowning (diva great life!)
I am definitely NOT going to read another book about war for a while. But it was one of those books that leave me missing the characters, wanting to know that they are alright. The cool thing about that is they moved to Toronto. So I might have sat on a bus beside them, eaten at a restaurant next to them, (I had a passion for goulash when I was pregnant with O.S.) or had one for a teacher.

I guess what I loved so much about the book was it was always tethered to those stars it references and this made the sometimes oppressively close, and painfully intimate, bearable.

She said, "In the end, my dear, the person hardly matters. the person lies down in the earth. No one knows where Mozart is buried, but it doesn't really matter. He has left his music above ground to frolic amoung us. The labels don't matter. They never do. It's what you do in the name of the labels that matters. Sometimes that is good and sometimes it is not."

So it was a "good book" in my opinion.

What I have to choose from next are not so promising. Again, my excuse is I just picked at random, as random as is humanly possible. Anyway, late at night I picked: Bequest by Ian Thomas. Turns out he is a sort of Canadian celebrity. That put me off a bit in fact. I will give it a go. All I read last night was the Forward.
riotheclown: clowning (sarahsad)
Right now I am reading two things. First off, Peregrine which I don't think is published (yet) and might not be available to anyone who hasn't friended Troyswann, but I have no doubt it will find a wider audience. I never got to be a fan of Inspector Lewis, the BBC produced show, but I did catch a few episodes and liked it, but now the detective is solving another sort of crime in another sort of universe with a very similar side kick, if you add the fact that he sings and amazing things happen to visual scanners and Zeppelins. They do drink beer in this place, have assignations, and histories that follow them like mysterious Jinn... Her writing is so beautiful and her affection for her two protagonists make reading this mini novel my favourite warm bath to slip into before I go to sleep... I had a go at illustrating some of it. or you can just hit the tag peregrine. The story is here.

Damn I just erased the last thing I wrote, I have a raised keyboard for my arthritis and sometimes I accidentally lean on it and get weirdness............ I went on about my attempts to get into a book, any book and how I brought a bunch home from the library. (there should be a "Bla Bla Bla" key on this keyboard) anyway, I am reading "The best American Mystery Stories" which bugs me because, as you know, I get bugged by the abuse of the name "American" by people of the United States....................bla bla bla. I think it is on par with the incorrect use of "English" when we mean "British" which bugs my English friend to no end. ) The only story so far that got me was Until Gwen, by DEnnis Lehane. So I will google his name and see what else he has written. I got into an anthology once. :P

So what are you reading?
riotheclown: clowning (sorry)
Please.

I read all the books Jilly recommended... now it is your turn.
riotheclown: clowning (Starbuck)
I found it on the shelf after reserving it. Ha ha! I didn't have to wait FOREVER, it was THERE!

Yeah! I have a book to read. Two things I need as a caregiver: A Good Book to read and a "calm the frac down" shot of Tequilla in reserve...

So I have the book now.
riotheclown: clowning (Default)

I watched Blindness on Bravo last night.

Producer Niv Fichman became interested in the project back in 1999 when he and Don McKellar, who would write the script, flew to the Canary Islands to talk to the Nobel Prize-winning Portuguese author José Saramago about giving them the film rights to his book. One of Saramago's conditions was that the film must not be set in any recognizable countries.


First of all, I read the book because, when I walked into a second hand book store the owner said, "If you buy this book and do not think it is the most incredible book ever, I will give you double your money back." 

I read it and then each of my kids read it.  It is certainly, one of the most powerful books ever written.  With a very simple premise it tears open the nest of human tendencies, good and bad and lays them all bare. 

There is only one woman who can see and she sees everything. Jullianna Moore plays this woman.  She is such a gifted actress.  Every time I see a movie with her in it I am surprised she is so generous in her willingness to be vulernable and even ugly, so not Hollywood. 

There are great performances all over the place, the choices made in the adaptation are good.  If you take the time to read the book or watch the movie will be worth it.

If it received less that top marks it must be for the fact that it in no way glorifies violence or rape.  I am so tired of the way television and movies glam up physical abuse and rape when they are pretending to abhor both.  It also does not have the Roman/American Hero, but it has small acts of heroism, many of them, numerous questions about "self" image, about relationships and survival and the value of life and love.

not a major spoiler )This movie, like the book is going to follow me for days.

It was not, in the end depressing, not at all.  There is an aspect of humanity that is loathsome. (too much of anything is loathsome) But the thing about being human is we do see and it is not about the eyes it is about the mind and the heart. In the face of so much horror we open and reopen to beauty and love and forgiveness. 

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