Showing posts with label 5 stars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5 stars. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2011

Book Review: The Distant Hours by Kate Morton

  • The Distant Hours

  • By: Kate Morton

  • Pub. Date: November 2010

  • Publisher: Atria Books

  • Format: Hardcover, Pages: 562

  • ISBN-13: 9781439152782

  • Source: Library Copy



  • Synopsis:

    A long lost letter arrives in the post and Edie Burchill finds herself on a journey to Milderhurst Castle, a great but moldering old house, where the Blythe spinsters live and where her mother was billeted 50 years before as a 13 year old child during WWII. The elder Blythe sisters are twins and have spent most of their lives looking after the third and youngest sister, Juniper, who hasn’t been the same since her fiance jilted her in 1941.

    Inside the decaying castle, Edie begins to unravel her mother’s past. But there are other secrets hidden in the stones of Milderhurst, and Edie is about to learn more than she expected. The truth of what happened in ‘the distant hours’ of the past has been waiting a long time for someone to find it.

    Morton once again enthralls readers with an atmospheric story featuring unforgettable characters beset by love and circumstance and haunted by memory, that reminds us of the rich power of storytelling


    My Review:

    This is the first book I have read by Kate Morton, but I will definitely be reading more! This book was wonderful. The writing was absolutely beautiful and the plot was enthralling, full of suspense and layers of stories.

    The Distant Hours switches back and forth between two time periods, the near past, the 1990s, and WWII, the late 1930s into the early 1940s. This expanse of time allows for the layers of the plot to slowly stack up and the secrets build, waiting for the final denouement. I loved the intricacies of the characters and their relationships to one another, especially the Sisters Blythe. This book explores how both war time and your family's history can impinge on one's life and how you can respond to it- many of the characters allowed the circumstances around them to dictate how their lives would go. Edie, though, the only characters from the newer generation, tended to make her own destiny more than her mother and the sisters. However, Edie also did not grow up in a time of world war or in a severely confining family.

    My favorite part of The Distant Hours was definitely the ending. We learned the secrets of the past and watched the tragedies of the sisters unfold to their last moment. I'm trying to be especially vague because I don't want to give away of the major plot points. I highly recommend this book for anyone who has the time to sit and enjoy this book. The story and the writing are both beautiful and should be enjoyed.

    My Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

    Wednesday, November 16, 2011

    Book Review: Inferno by Dante Alighieri

  • The Divine Comedy; Volume 1: Inferno

  • By: Dante Alighieri, Translated by Mark Musa

  • Pub. Date: December 2002

  • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)

  • Format: Paperback , 432pp

  • Series: Penguin Classics Series

  • ISBN-13: 9780142437223

  • ISBN: 0142437220

  • Source: Personal Copy




  • Synopsis:

    This vigorous translation of the poet's journey through the circles of hell re-creates for the modern reader the rich meanings that Dante's poem had for his contemporaries. Musa's introduction and commentaries on each of the cantos brilliantly illuminate the text.
    My Review:

    I read Inferno for the October Group Read hosted by Allie at A Literary Odyssey. I did finish this in October, I just got very busy and wasn't able to post my review in time for the group read. I read The Inferno once before, in high school. The translation I read then was the Longfellow translation, which I really struggled with back then. This time, I bought a newer translation by Mark Musa. I found the Musa translation much more accessible.

    The Inferno is Dante Alighieri's view on Hell. Here is an illustration that gives the overview of the layers in Dante's Hell:

    This picture shows Dante's divisions of sin in Hell. Each sinner is punished accordingly to their main sins. Each punishment fits the sin. For example, flatterers ("brown nosers") are immersed in shit for figuratively kissing the asses of their superiors to gain favors. This is probably one of my favorite punishments. I know its gross, but it's so easy to picture and relate the sin to the punishment.

    I really encourage everyone to give The Inferno a try. I believe that it is one of those classics that everyone should read. It's a large part of our culture as well, everyone has heard of Dante's levels of Hell. Mark Musa's translation is wonderful and the endnotes for each canto include great notes to make some of Dante's references to specific people or places understandable for today's readers.

    I am going to include my paper on The Inferno that I wrote in 11th grade as the end of this post. I did quite a bit of research for that paper and I'm proud of it for a high school paper.

    My Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

    “All hope abandon, ye who enter in!” (Alighieri 14) states the sign on the gates to Hell, according to Dante Alighieri in his book, The Inferno. The Inferno is one of Dante’s masterpieces in which both the story and the meaning behind it have intrigued readers for centuries. Dante wrote the book to be read and understood in multiple ways. A reader could read The Inferno literally, allegorically, morally, or anagogically (“Dante Alighieri” 1533). The different levels of comprehension and discernment serve Dante’s purpose of writing The Divine Comedy, which was “to remove those living in this life from the state of misery and lead them to the state of felicity” (qtd. in “Dante” 4).

    Arguably, the best way to read The Inferno would be allegorically. To read a book allegorically is to look for hidden meanings and symbols. As defined in the dictionary, symbolism is the “a: artistic imitation or invention that is a method of revealing of suggesting immaterial, ideal, or otherwise intangible truth or states b: the use of conventional or traditional signs in the representation of divine beings and spirits” (Mish 1194). If read allegorically, The Inferno becomes an insightful book in which Dante employs highly developed and meaningful symbolism to express both religious and political views.

    The Inferno is a story about Dante the Pilgrim and his journey through Hell. In the beginning, Dante the Pilgrim finds himself lost in a dark forest, where Virgil finds him and offers to be his guide and protector through Hell. Dante the Poet greatly admired the work of Virgil, explaining why it is no surprise that Virgil is the guide in Dante’s story. Once Dante the Pilgrim accepts Virgil as his guide, Virgil conducts him into Hell and though all nine circles.

    The main symbols Dante the Poet uses are numbers. For example, the number three is constantly utilized. On a religious aspect, the number three can signify many things, such as the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, or power, wisdom, and love, or faith, hope, and charity (“Dante Alighieri” 1532). The most obvious way Dante utilizes the number three is his The Divine Comedy, which is broken into three books, The Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. A vital part of the Christian faith is one God in three persons, just as Dante’s book is one story in three books. In addition, the poems in The Inferno are written in the terza rima rhyme scheme, which results in each rhyme occurring three times (“Dante Alighieri” 1532). The significance of the reoccurrence of the number three in Dante’s work, particularly his poem The Inferno, is how it can embody many things in Christian theology. Dante also uses nine, as a multiple of three, in his work. For instance, there are nine circles of Hell. Multiplying three by itself only increases the significance of the number three as a symbol.

    Another numerical symbol is the mystical number seven (“Dante Alighieri” 1532). Dante the Pilgrim’s journey through Hell lasts seven days, which is also the length of time that it took God to create Earth; “By the seventh day God had finished the work he had been doing; so on the seventh day he rested from all his work. And God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done” (New International Version, Genesis 2: 2-3). Just as God created a new world, Dante the Pilgrim became a new person, all in the same length of time.

    Another religious symbol in The Inferno would be Mohammed, who is in the ninth Bolgia of the eighth circle in Hell. Mohammed’s sin is causing division among people. Dante the Poet puts Mohammed in his story specifically to express how he felt about other religions. Dante the Poet is a devout Christian; he does not agree with other religions and shows that through the punishment of Mohammed. Mohammed’s punishment is to walk in a circle and to be cut apart by a devil with a sword. Mohammed’s placement in Hell represents Dante the Poet’s feelings against other religions.

    Some of the most noteworthy depictions in The Inferno would be the forms of punishment that each sinner must endure. Each sin correlates specifically to the main sin of the individual. For example, before Dante the Pilgrim enters Hell, he and Virgil come upon the space known as the Ante-Inferno. Here is where some angels and humans, who never committed themselves to either positive or negative, are sent, since neither Heaven nor Hell will accept them. Their punishment is to be chased into action by being stung by bees and other insects while chasing a blank banner:

    And I, who looked again, beheld a banner,
    Which, whirling round, ran on so rapidly,
    That of all pause it seemed to me indignant;
    And after it there came so long a train
    Of people, that I ne’er would have believed
    That ever Death so many had undone […]
    These miscreants, who never were alive,
    Were naked, and were stung exceedingly
    By gadflies and by hornets that were there (Alighieri 15-16)

    The blankness of the banner represents their lack of affiliation, thus their punishment compares to the sin they perpetrated (Musa 39). Since they were always passive in their lives on Earth and never took action, the bees force them to take action now. In addition, since the action that the bees perpetrate makes the sinners chase the blank banner; both the bees and banner represent the action they should have taken.

    Another example of a case where the sin fits the punishment is the sin of lust, which is punished in the second circle of Hell. The sinners there are swept around in a constant frenzy of wind, where they are forever in the “embrace” of the wind (Bondanella XL). Dante the Pilgrim talks to two of the sinners in the second circle, Paolo and Francesca. Francesca relates their story to Dante the Pilgrim and how they came to be in Hell. The use of the wind holding the sinners in an embrace is the perfect metaphor for the embrace and lust that they lived in during their time on Earth.

    Additionally, the flatterers are another notable example of Dante the poet’s genius in ensuring the symbolic representation of the punishments doled out in Hell as relating to each particular sin. The flatterers in the eighth circle, “who made their way figuratively by ample applications of their tongues to the objects of their flattery are now immersed in human excrement, produced by the same posteriors they so obsequiously kissed to further their nefarious causes” (Bondanella XL-XLI) are punished in the literal meaning of the sins they perpetrated on Earth. Dante the Poet’s brilliance and humor show with the way that Dante takes the figurative meaning of their sin and symbolically changes it into a literal punishment.

    As indicated by the numerous uses of numbers and sin/punishment correlation as religious symbols, Dante the Poet emphasizes the Christian religion throughout his entire work. One of the very first religious symbols that can be seen is Dante the Pilgrim as an ordinary man, Virgil as reason and wisdom, and Beatrice, who comes to Dante briefly in the beginning, as faith and love (Durant 1067):

    With voice angelical, in her own language: […]
    Beatrice am I, who do bid thee go;
    I come from there, where I would fain return;
    Love moved me, which compelleth me to speak. (Alighieri 9-10)


    Dante the Pilgrim is an everyman, which means that he stands for all human beings and their journey through sin and temptation. Dante the Poet’s use of Virgil as logic represents how logic can make one worthy of the first circle of Hell, but cannot allow one into Purgatory, and much less Heaven. Beatrice, who stands for compassion, is in Heaven and defines how one can attain the right to be there. Both Virgil and Beatrice are prime examples of Dante the Poet’s religious symbols.

    In addition to the religious symbols contained within The Inferno, Dante the Poet included a few political references. Dante wrote the book mainly for religious reasons, but he included many of his own feelings and views; as a member of the Council of the Hundred, Dante saw many different sides of the political matters in the early 1300’s (“Dante” 3). One paradigm of Dante’s political views is the prediction that Ciacco makes in Canto VI. Dante the Pilgrim asks Ciacco what will happen to Florence if things continue as they are:

    ‘[…] But tell me, if thou knowest, to what shall come
    The citizens of the divided city;
    If any there be just; and the occasion
    Tell me why so much discord has assailed it.’
    And he to me: ‘They, after long contention,
    Will come to bloodshed; and the rustic party
    Will drive the other out with offence.’ (Alighieri 32-33)

    As a White Guelf, a faction of the Guelf party, which supported the pope, Dante was exiled from Florence by the Black Guelfs when they came into power in 1301 (“Dante” 3). Dante the Poet has Ciacco make a prediction about what had already happened in Florence to take a political stand, which was the fall of the White Guelf party in Florence. Dante the Poet’s word choice in the aforementioned quote distinguishes his personal views on the political perspective in his world. By using words like divided city, rustic party, and offence Dante deliberately adds another meaning to the passage.

    After Dante’s exile from Florence due to the rise in the Black Guelf power, Dante was separated from his family, job, and political connections (Ferrante 137). Dante the pilgrim is alone in the dark woods, away from all other people, echoing Dante’s feelings in the commencement of The Inferno (Ferrante 137). The resemblance between the two events, Dante the Poet’s exile and Dante the Pilgrim being alone in the forest, indicate an intentional symbol by Dante the Poet. Dante the Poet puts Dante the Pilgrim in the same kind of situation that he had been in, in order for the readers to relate to Dante the Poet.

    In addition, to Dante’s current world, Dante looked to the past for political aspirations. Dante the Poet felt very strongly about the benefit of having an empire as the ideal form of government. For example, he admired the Roman Empire and wanted Italy’s government to be set up likewise. To express his view in The Inferno, Dante the Poet creates a Hell as an unorganized city with very little central authority. Adversely, Dante’s heaven is set up as a well-maintained city with authority (Ferrante 45). Dante the Poet’s placement of the chaotic government in Hell and a well-maintained one in Heaven represents Dante’s love for a strong empire with a central authority, and therefore is a political symbol.

    Also, Joan M. Ferrante believes Dante’s “Hell reveals what society is when all its members act for themselves and against the common good” (132). All of the sinners in Hell are there because they did not recognize God and lived for themselves on Earth. The sinners do not change much in Hell, for they continue thinking about only themselves. Dante the Poet’s story can be read allegorically, but the moral reading is also the political reading since “it is impossible to be a moral human being without being a good citizen, and it is difficult to be either a good citizen or a moral person in a bad society” (Ferrante 136). Therefore, the moral symbols in The Inferno equate very much to Dante’s political ideas and vice versa.

    Just as Dante cherished the Roman Empire, he also loved the rulers in Rome, especially Julius Caesar; Lucifer, in the ninth circle of Hell, is seen chewing on Brutus, Cassis, and Judas Iscariot:

    When I beheld three faces on his head! […]
    At every mouth he with his teeth was crunching
    A sinner, in the manner of a brake
    So that he three of them tormented thus.
    To him in front the biting was as naught
    Unto the clawing, for sometimes the spine
    Utterly stripped of all the skin remained.
    ‘That soul up there which has the greatest pain,’
    The Master said, ‘is Judas Iscariot.
    With his head inside, he plies his legs without.
    Of the two others, who heads downward are,
    The one who hangs from the black jowl is Brutus;
    See how he writhes himself, and speaks no word!
    And the other, who so stalwart seems, is Cassius (Alighieri 176-177)

    Brutus and Cassius were the two men who deceived Julius Caesar and assassinated him in order to take the Roman Empire from him. The reality of Lucifer chewing on Brutus and Cassius as well as Judas, the betrayer of Jesus, shows that Dante the Poet sets the betrayal of Jesus and Julius Caesar as equal. The equivalence between the two betrayals denotes Dante’s esteem and love of the Roman Empire.

    In addition to Dante’s adoration for the Roman Empire, he also wholly appreciates the great philosophers. Some of the philosophers are named specifically in The Inferno, and include Homer, Horace, Socrates, Plato, Ptolemy, Orpheus, and Virgil, who is taking a short leave to guide Dante the Pilgrim through Hell, and later Purgatory. According to Will Durant, the placement and specific naming of the great people who came before Dante allows readers to know whom Dante respected (1070). Most of the great people Dante admires are in the first circle of Hell, called Limbo, because they were believed to live a virtuous life yet were never baptized. In Limbo, they are free to do much as they please, which is why Dante the Poet placed them there since he could not bear to have them punished for something he so strongly believed in. In fact, Dante was so generous as to give them a castle in which to stay. Dante the Poet made a political statement through placing the philosophers in Limbo.

    In The Inferno, Dante makes use of many different types of symbolism and representations throughout the novel, such as number symbolism, religious symbols, and political symbols. Religious symbols such as the sin and punishment correlation makes moral statements for how Dante the Poet believed people should live. In addition to the religious symbols, Dante the Poet adds some political symbols, such as the city representation in order to express his views. The use of the symbolism is highly developed and very influential since most readers are able to recognize the symbols and apply it to their lives. The Inferno is influential because symbolism is basically dripping from every page, so any reader can notice it. After a reader recognizes what Dante the Poet is trying to get across, the reader can take many lessons from the book and lead what Dante considered a better and more moral life. All of the symbolism contained within The Inferno combines to create a unique and powerful book, for the past, present, and future readers.

    Friday, September 2, 2011

    Book Review: Tolstoy and the Purple Chair by Nina Sankovitch



  • Tolstoy and the Purple Chair

  • By: Nina Sankovitch

  • Pub. Date: June 2011

  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers

  • Format: Hardcover , 256pp  

  • ISBN-13: 9780061999840

  • ISBN: 0061999849

  • Source: Borrowed from the library






  • Synopsis:

    Nina Sankovitch has always been a reader. As a child, she discovered that a trip to the local bookmobile with her sisters was more exhilarating than a ride at the carnival. Books were the glue that held her immigrant family together. When Nina's eldest sister died at the age of forty-six, Nina turned to books for comfort, escape, and introspection. In her beloved purple chair, she rediscovered the magic of such writers as Toni Morrison, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ian McEwan, Edith Wharton, and, of course, Leo Tolstoy. Through the connections Nina made with books and authors (and even other readers), her life changed profoundly, and in unexpected ways. Reading, it turns out, can be the ultimate therapy.

    Tolstoy and the Purple Chair also tells the story of the Sankovitch family: Nina's father, who barely escaped death in Belarus during World War II; her four rambunctious children, who offer up their own book recommendations while helping out with the cooking and cleaning; and Anne-Marie, her oldest sister and idol, with whom Nina shared the pleasure of books, even in her last moments of life. In our lightning-paced culture that encourages us to seek more, bigger, and better things, Nina's daring journey shows how we can deepen the quality of our everyday lives—if we only find the time.

    My Review:

    Nina Sankovitch's Tolstoy and the Purple Chair is a wonderful memoir on her year of reading one book every day for a year. Following the death of her sister, Nina felt her life becoming a downward spiral as she tried to cram everything in to live for both herself and her sister. She tried giving everything that she could to support all of her family around her but it was too much.

    Finally, she realized that she needed to slow down and give herself time to reflect and accept life as it is... leading her to start her mission of making reading book her work for a year. With a lot of planning and support from her family, Nina did just that and a lot more on the way.

    Blending her love of books with her own life's journey, Nina's story is a great reminder that life is both great and terrible and sometimes you just need to stop, calm down, and reflect on it all. I loved how Nina brought in the stories that she was reading and specific quotes that she found inspiring. I especially liked the final chapter where she relates her year's journey to her father's time off in life and how important the past year had been to her.

    Tolstoy and the Purple Chair has completely reaffirmed my love of books and the importance that I place on them. I also made a list of books that I want to read now because of how they were described in Purple Chair. I found Nina's story to be very relatable and I hope that when tragedy and grief strike my family, which is inevitable at some point, that I remember her story and find my own comfort from the pages of beloved books.

    My Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

    Want to learn more? Check out Nina Sankovitch's website!

    Wednesday, August 3, 2011

    Book Review: The Help by Kathryn Stockett

  • The Help

  • By: Kathryn Stockett

  • Pub. Date: April 2011

  • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)

  • Format: Paperback , 544pp

  • ISBN-13: 9780425232200

  • ISBN: 0425232204

  • Source: Personal copy











  • Synopsis:

    Aibileen is a black maid in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi, who's always taken orders quietly, but lately she's unable to hold her bitterness back. Her friend Minny has never held her tongue but now must somehow keep secrets about her employer that leave her speechless. White socialite Skeeter just graduated college. She's full of ambition, but without a husband, she's considered a failure. Together, these seemingly different women join together to write a tell-all book about work as a black maid in the South, that could forever alter their destinies and the life of a small town...

    My Review:

    Wow! I know I mentioned once before that I normally don't read the big bestsellers right away because I think a lot of times books can be hyped up too much. But this book deserves all the hype it can get. I found The Help to be wonderful, inspiring, funny, scary, and a great read.

    Its 1962 and 'Skeeter' Phelan just graduated and moved back home to a criticizing mother and no husband or boyfriend. But Skeeter has dreams of being a writer... which leads her eventually to the idea of writing about the help, the colored women who work for the rich white women in Jackson, Mississippi. The social rights movement is beginning to get off the ground and Skeeter gets a little positive feedback from an editor at a publishing company in New York City for her idea.

    Skeeter is young though and doesn't realize how difficult it will be to get the maids to talk to her. She will have to cross the color line, and when she does, she'll begin to understand just how dangerous the territory is that she has entered.

    Aibileen, the first colored maid that Skeeter befriends is a wonderful woman and my favorite character. She is wise and loving, which is apparent in the care she shows for the little white girl that she cares for in her job.

    The maids stories are wonderful and sad. I think Kathryn Stockett did a great job portraying the early 1960s in the south. I don't want to give any more away... so go ahead- believe the hype and read The Help.

    My Rating: 5 out of 5 stars


    Thursday, July 28, 2011

    Book Review: Decision Points by George W. Bush

  • Decision Points

  • By: George W. Bush

  • Pub. Date: November 2010

  • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group

  • Format: Hardcover, 497pp  

  • ISBN-13: 9780307590619

  • ISBN: 0307590615

  • Source: Personal Copy





  • Synopsis:
    President George W. Bush describes the critical decisions of his presidency and personal life.

    Decision Points is the extraordinary memoir of America’s 43rd president. Shattering the conventions of political autobiography, George W. Bush offers a strikingly candid journey through the defining decisions of his life.

    In gripping, never-before-heard detail, President Bush brings readers inside the Texas Governor’s Mansion on the night of the hotly contested 2000 election; aboard Air Force One on 9/11, in the hours after America’s most devastating attack since Pearl Harbor; at the head of the table in the Situation Room in the moments before launching the war in Iraq; and behind the Oval Office desk for his historic and controversial decisions on the financial crisis, Hurricane Katrina, Afghanistan, Iran, and other issues that have shaped the first decade of the 21st century.

    President Bush writes honestly and directly about his flaws and mistakes, as well as his accomplishments reforming education, treating HIV/AIDS in Africa, and safeguarding the country amid chilling warnings of additional terrorist attacks. He also offers intimate new details on his decision to quit drinking, discovery of faith, and relationship with his family.

    A groundbreaking new brand of memoir, Decision Points will captivate supporters, surprise critics, and change perspectives on one of the most consequential eras in American history – and the man at the center of events.

    My Review:

    First, I'd like to acknowledge that this book and my review may offend people. Emotions still run high from the Bush 43 Presidency and I'm going to try to review Decision Points as rationally as I can. With that being said, I would like to disclose that I did not vote for President George W. Bush.... because I was too young. Had I been old enough, I would have voted him. I am a conservative Republican and agree with many of Bush's decisions, not all of course, but some.

    One of the most distinguishing factors in Decision Points is the way the book is formatted. Rather than going through a chronological narration of his presidency, President Bush focuses each chapter around a major event or issue and the decisions he made regarding those events or issues. For example, an early chapter focuses on his decisions on how to staff the personnel in his cabinets and staff, which I found really interesting. I liked reading about these important figures who helped President Bush guide his decisions from a personal aspect. Bush gives his first impressions and backgrounds on many of his staff. A later chapter focuses on the issue of embryonic stem cell research and the decisions that President Bush made for funding this research.

    Each chapter gives a great amount of detail, enough for the reader to have a sense of the scope of President Bush's decision making-process and the background and information he had to work with in order to make those decisions. Particularly fascinating are the chapters surrounding 9/11 and the Middle East engagements. I won't give my views on how I feel about Bush's decisions but I will say that I loved getting his point of view and learning about the context of his decisions. I always like to keep in mind that the President of the United States always has more information than the public whenever it comes to foreign affairs, especially military affairs. I don't want all the information because I know it can jeopardize our safety, but I really appreciated what Bush was able to describe in these situations.

    The one thing that I found most disconcerting was that sometimes his stories seemed to wander and then the next section went back to his original point. I found it a little jarring and left me wondering what the past couple of paragraphs had been about. However, this was mostly just in the first few chapters that dealt more with Bush's personal reminisces rather than his Presidential policies.

    Overall, I highly recommend this book for anyone and everyone. I don't think it matters if you hate or love George W. Bush. If you hate him, you may be able to better understand him as a person trying to do an incredibly difficult job or you can gain some more fodder for your wrath against him. If you love him, this book gives you better insight to him as a person and his decisions which will help you understand him more. If you're not political, this book will still give you a better understanding, or at least a different perspective, of many important events and decisions from 2000 to 2008 and it's very easy to read, it is not like trying to read a dense political science book.
    My Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

    Monday, June 27, 2011

    Book Review: Madame Tussaud by Michelle Moran




  • Title: Madame Tussaud

  • By: Michelle Moran

  • Pub. Date: February 2011

  • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group

  • Format: Hardcover , 464pp  

  • ISBN-13: 9780307588654

  • ISBN: 0307588653

  • Source: library loan


     
    Synopsis:

    In this deft historical novel, Madame Tussaud (1761-1850) escapes the pages of trivia quizzes to become a real person far more arresting than even her waxwork sculptures. Who among us knew, for instance, that she moved freely through the royal court of Louis XVI, only to become a prisoner of the Reign of Terror? Her head was shaven for guillotining, but she escaped execution, though she was forced to make death masks for prominent victims. Novelist Michelle Moran covers this breathtaking period without losing the thread of its subject's singular story.

    My Review:

    I loved this book! Right from the beginning, I felt like I was watching a movie- a great movie that completely immerses you in the scenery and the story. The writing was descriptive enough to allow me to picture and feel everything without giving too much so that it detracts from the story. Once I started, it was very hard to stop reading and thinking about Marie Grosholtz (Marie Tussaud's maiden name, as she is know for at least four fifths of the book).

    Marie experienced the French Revolution from a unique, and precarious, position. As her and her Uncle's wax museum fame spreads through Paris, Marie is asked to tutor the King of France's sister in wax modeling. This gives Marie some personal access to the royal family while her salon at home hosts many of the revolution's leaders. Marie and her Uncle, Curtius, have a wax museum that features the political and scandalous figures of the day. As political tensions increase with the rise of the French Revolution and more figures rise to prominence, Marie continually changes out the models for the new leaders to keep in the good graces of the changing fortunes of political leaders.

    This is the only way for Marie and her family to survive the revolution. As the revolution progresses, she is forced to make gruesome wax molds for the revolutionary mobs, which she eventually refuses to do and ends up as a prisoner herself.

    Marie Grosholtz's life is incredible and her position in history is makes both her personal and global story fascinating. I learned a lot about the rise of the French Revolution throuhg this book. Although some facts were altered for the sake of the story, most of the major events were true.

    There were a few things that I didn't like about this book. First, there is a prologue that is set in the future which gives away some of the ending that I would have prefered not to know until the end. Secondly, the book is called Madame Tussaud, but Marie doesn't become a Tussaud until very near the end of the book. I suppose Madame Tussaud is just more recognizable than Grosholtz but it is still a little misleading.

    However, in spite of my minor complaints, I highly recommend this book for anyone looking for a great story and some historical context.

    My Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

    Tuesday, March 22, 2011

    Book Review: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot


    Synopsis:

    Longtime Discover fans may recall the name Floyd Skloot from years past. Floyd, an acclaimed poet and memoirist, was a finalist for the Discover Award in 2003. Well the apple doesn t fall far from the tree. His daughter's debut, an intriguing book about the harvesting of DNA from an unsuspecting woman, is a marvel.

    Rebecca Skloot first learned about HeLa cells more than a decade ago, while enrolled at community college. Named after Henrietta Lacks, a poor African-American woman born in 1920, the famed cells were taken from a tumor removed during Lacks s treatment for cervical cancer. While she died from the disease, her cancer cells proved uncommonly hearty, reproducing at an unheard-of rate, and years later, billions of these cells are used in laboratories around the world.
     
    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is a story about science and so much more. Lacks died unaware that doctors would be using her cells to further advances in the scientific community and cashing in on such developments and never received a dime. In search of justice, Skloot seeks out Lacks s descendants to learn if they re aware of the famed cells and to see if they ve derived any benefit from the important contribution to science their relative made. A fascinating discussion of the enduring legal and ethical questions that human-tissue research raises, Skloot's debut is a gem. (Image and synopsis from goodreads.com)

    My Review:

    This is one of the most important books I have ever read. I originally listened to this book on an audiotape, borrowed from the library, on a long drive. My drive flew by, hours became seconds, and I was home before I knew it because this book was so fascinating. (I then had to buy it and read it again, but I do also recommend the audio version because it was very, very well done and I loved hearing the dialect of the Lacks family- it made listening to it, and subsequently reading it, more personal.)

    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is part biography of a family and part science and ethics. A young black woman died in the 1950s from invasive cervical cancer, she left behind 5 young children, a husband, and a tissue sample that revolutionized science.

    When Henrietta was diagnosed with cervical cancer, her doctor took a sample of the cancerous tumor and sent it to researcher to see if he could culture a cell line from the sample. Henrietta's cancer cells grew like wildfire- they multiplied continuously, lived easily in the right culture medium, and contaminated other cell lines because they could even survive floating through the air on dust particles!

    Scientists had been unable to culture human cells beyond a generation or two of the original cells, but now they had the HeLa cell line, named after Henrietta Lacks. Now, scientists could use her human cells to discover the polio vaccination, cancer treatments, find the effects of nuclear bombs, and send them into space. Businesses sprang up that cultured and grew her cells commercially to sell to individual research labs so that researchers didn't need to waste time growing their own stock. Henrietta's cells saved many lives through the vaccinations and treatments it helped researchers to discover.

    YET, Henrietta's family lived in povery and were extremely uneducated. It was years, decades even, before her family even learned that Henrietta's cells were alive. Because most of the family had only 4 to 8 years of school, they didn't know enough basic biology to even know what cells were or how they could still be alive. Visions of evil experimenters hurting their wife, mother, or sister tormented many family members. Even when they learned about the HeLa cells, no one took the time to explain what that meant.

    Through their fears, they were preyed upon by a con-artist and used by researchers to take samples of their blood. Eventually, Rebecca Skloot, a young and white science journalist began asking questions and found the Lacks family. She had to work to gain their trust, but she eventually did and went on to discover their family history, including details about one Lacks sibling who died in a mental institution as a young girl.

    Rebecca researched both the family and the scientific and ethical questions surround HeLa. Businesses made a lot of money off of growing and selling HeLa cells, as well as using it to make important advances, yet the Lacks family couldn't afford health insurance or education. The central question to this book is... who owns the cells? What right did Henrietta, and by extension, her family have in the use of the cells? Should they have received any financial compensation?

    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks reminds me where science has come from and why regulations are there. As an undergraduate in neuroscience, I researched in a lab using human post-mortem tissue. This tissue was obtained only through consent of the person before they died or from the immediate family after their death. The tissue is also handled so that no personal information, such as names, is ever linked with the tissue. The tissue bank and use of the tissue is also regulated through two review boards, one from the university and another through NIH. This was not the case in the 1950s, or even through the 1980s. Doctors didn't necessarily need consent for obtaining tissue and they weren't obligated to separate personal information from the tissue.

    I think this is an important book for any researcher because it serves as a reminder that science affects the general population even when they may not be aware of it. It also reminds scientists to consider ethical dilemnas before proceeding in their work or press releases.

    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks also portrays a family struggling with the death of their mother and their inadequacy to understand what she meant to science- leading to anger and frustration and paranoia. This is an amazing and personal look into the Lacks family that any reader can appreciate and sympathize with in their own way.

    I recommend this book to anyone and everyone.

    My Rating: 5+ out of 5 stars


    

    Tuesday, March 8, 2011

    Book Review: Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card


    Synopsis:

    The Earth is under attack and the survival of the human species depends on a military genius who can defeat the alien “buggers.” Recruited for military training, Andrew “Ender” Wiggin’s childhood ends the moment he enters his new home: Battle School. A reader’s guide is available for this Starscape editionperfect for readers ten and upof the beloved science fiction classic by best-selling author Orson Scott Card. (Image and synopsis from bn.com)

    My Review:

    I'm normally not a big science fiction fan, although I do enjoy fantasy which is often linked with sci fi, but this book has been recommended to me many times so I finally got around to reading it. Well, I'm glad I did!

    Ender's Game is not just pop science fiction; it doesn't rely on technology to move the story, rather it is about the psychology of a little boy who is pushed further than he ever should because of humanity's desire to survive a possibly non-existant threat.

    This book centers around genius children who are monitored by the government to see if they have what it takes to save the world. Ender's parents were allowed to have a third child because their first two were so close to being what the government needed. This makes Ender, the Third child, an outcast amongst his peers because he is special. From the beginning, Ender is marked as different from the others in his school.

    The children chosen by the government to be trained for the military are not normal. They are geniuses that much act and make decisions as adults. They are trained extensively for one mission- to save humankind. Ender rises amongst these chosen children, but he endures a lot of hardship in doing so, most of which is caused by the adults, or teachers of the special school.

    In the end, though, was Ender's training enough to save himself and the world? Was Ender the special one, made for that mission? I found the ending actually surprising and very gripping. It was hard to put it down once I reached the last couple of chapters.

    The thing I enjoyed most about Ender's Game was the psychology of Ender, his struggles and triumphes. However, what I found hardest to believe, and what kept jolting me out of the story, was Ender's age. He was only 6 years old when he started his training! How could a 6 year old ever be expected to save Earth? How could a 6 year old think and act the way Ender did? There were several times I wished that Ender was just a few years old, but I guess that is suppose to be the amazing thing about him- his maturity in dealing with things he should not ever have to face.

    My Rating: 5 out 5 stars

    Sunday, March 6, 2011

    Book Review: Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

    
    Synopsis:

    A monumental classic considered by many to be not only the greatest love story ever written, but also the greatest Civil War saga.


    My Review:

    First, I must kick myself- how could I have never read this book before?!

    Gone with the Wind is a sensational novel, an ever-lasting sensational novel. This 1000+ page novel played with my emotions far more than the vast majority of books I've ever read. I loved and hated; I felt joy, sorrow, torment, anguish, giddiness, contempt, delight, and anger through this saga of the South during the Civil War. I feel this way because the book is not about the events or a simple love story, it is an in-depth survey of humans during good and bad times. It's hard to find any author that can portray humans with such keen analysis to make them utterly real and believable.

    Scarlett O'Hara is an absolutely selfish and vain person, but she is also determined and willing to survive.  She is the American woman, in every form of meaning. She is passionate and self-willed; at times I wanted to slap her silly and other times I wanted to applaud her actions which I felt incapable of myself. And who could forget these famous lines: "Hunger gnaed at her empty stomach again and she said aloud: 'As God is my witness, as God is my witness, the Yankees aren't going to lick me. I'm going to live through this, and when it's over, I'm never going to be hungry again. No, nor any of my folks. If I have to steal or kill- as God is my witness, I'm never going to be hungry again'" (Mitchell 428). Scarlett's passion for survival saved her and her family. She may be extremely selfish and bullheaded, but she was going to survive. And we all must applaud her determination to live.

    Rhett Butler and Ashley Wilkes - the two men Scarlett ever loved.  And her love only ends in tragedy. Yet, Scarlett will survive. These two men are extremely interesting in their own ways.  Rhett is just as stubborn and determined as Scarlett while Ashley, as Rhett puts it, is "He's only a gentleman caught in a world he doesn't belong in, trying to make a poor best of it by the rules of the world that's gone" (Mitchell 1028).  The portrait of these two men is display Mitchell's characterization superbly, second only to Scartlett's character.

    I could go on, but really just encourage you to read it for yourself.  The novel moves quickly for being so long, I was never once bored or started skimming to read quicker. I highly recommend Gone with the Wind.

    My Rating: 5 out 5 stars