In a letter to John Adams, Thomas Jefferson wrote, "I cannot live without books," and we understand how he felt. Books have been our best friends ever since we can remember and we're going to celebrate our love for them with this 'reading challenge.' The aim is to tick one book off every month!

Although our lives have taken us in different directions, this challenge, and this blog, is also a way for us to celebrate our friendship as well as our love of reading.

This blog is really just for fun and each entry will explain how the 'book of the month' fits into the category, why we made our choices, and include some comments/thoughts on each book.

Let the challenge commence!!

Donna and Ida

Thursday, 18 May 2017

Challenge 14: A Book Set In Summer


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Donna's Book: "One Summer: America 1927" by Bill Bryson (Transworld, 2013)

I love Bill Bryson and I've been using this reading challenge to make myself catch up with all of his books that I haven't read yet.  This, obviously, fits nicely in this category!

Comments: 

Once again, Bill Byrson did not disappoint!  This is a gentle but at the same time fascinating stroll through the main events of the summer of 1927 in the United States.  The main focus is on Charles Lindburgh, and his record-breaking flight from New York to Paris, but other chapters focus on baseball stars Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, Grover Cleveland and Herbert Hoover (with a really excellent section on the great Mississippi flood), and the notorious criminals of the age, including Al Capone.  Bryson described both the lead-up to the 'key moment' in 1927 and its aftermath, and thus provides a real insight into the development of the United States in the inter-war years.  This is very different to Bryson's travel books, and so, if you're not interested in history too, this might not be for you.  But Bryson's style never fails to entertain!  I loved it!

Wednesday, 17 May 2017

Challenge 15: A Book Of Poems

Ida's book: "Making Cocoa For Kingsley Amis" by Wendy Cope (Faber Faber, 2001)


I've been waiting for this one to come up, and I've had a name down for this challenge basically since beginning the whole reading challenge: Wendy Cope. I can't remember why or when I first read her poem The Orange, but I absolutely loved it, and since then I've read a few of her love poems; they are quirky and to the point, but embody so much feeling as well (I can heartily recommend 'Differences of Opinion' just because it's so on the point on mansplaining).


Anyway, I've chosen to read Making Cocoa For Kingsley Amis, mostly because my Danish library had it, and so the choice was sort of made for me. We shall see whether it lives up to the poems I already know.

Comments:

For new-comers to Wendy Cope I would recommend her love poems, as most of them are quite straightforward and deliciously unprententious. This collection requires slightly more thought, or maybe I just feel like that because, despite having lived in England for 5 years, there are still a lot of (cultural) references I don't get and my reading of this collection suffers slightly from it. However! There are brilliant poems in this collection. The 'All-Purpose Poem For State Occasions' is wonderfully to the point and a true comment on the role of the royals in British society. 'From June To December' and 'Rondeau Redoublé' are, I suppose, love poems, but not the soppy ones. They are more bitter or bitter-sweet, but all the better for it, I think. And the concluding poem, 'Making Cocoa For Kingsley Amis' is possibly the star of the collection, what with it's position at very back of the book, in it's own section, and the way it completely does away with any kind of implied depth from the title of it. I won't spoil it (can you spoil a poem?), but read the collection and make sure you save it for last.

Challenge 14: A Book Set In Summer


Ida's book: "The Yellow Wallpaper" (and other stories) by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (Dover Publications, 1997)


So! It's been quite a while since I've given any thought to this reading challenge, and I am only slightly cross with myself about it. I moved back to my home country, became unemployed, then employed again, and all the while I re-read some of my favourite books. Probably a bit of a coping mechanism: if life is chaos, it's nice to return to a familiar place and familiar characters, to not be surprised by anything.

But life has calmed down a bit now, and the reading challenge has been nagging for at least a month. Yesterday I read a short story, sort of by accident, and then realised that it was set in summer, and that it would therefore fulfil challenge number 14: A book set in summer! So I am now back in the game, with The Yellow Wallpaper.

The book (if you can call it that) is short. But my God is it well-written! The story is about a woman confined to a room by her doctor-husband, because of her nervous breakdown, but of course it only makes it worse, and of course, her confinement should be read metaphorically (after all this is a feminist text!).
The woman's descend into madness is gradual, and you can't help but follow her, it's not until the end that you realise you've been sucked in and that's what makes it so good.

It's part of a collection of some of her other stories, which I will now promptly go read!