The life of a Mom-Geek who loves writing, reading, all things Buffy/Angel/Firefly, courtesy & a politeness.
Monday, December 31, 2007
2007 Book List
January:
A Lesson Before Dying - Ernest J. Gaines
The Five People You Meet in Heaven - Mitch Albom
The Tenth Circle - Jodi Picoult
The End - Lemony Snicket
February:
The Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold
The Glass Castle - Jeannette Walls
The Other Boleyn Girl - Philippa Gregory
March:
The Catcher in the Rye* - JD Salinger
Blue Water - A. Manette Ansay
The Memory Keeper’s Daughter - Kim Edwards
April:
The Grapes of Wrath* - John Steinbeck
Serenity - Keith R.A. DeCandido
Monkeewrench - P. J. Tracy
May:
The Annotated Walden* - Henry David Thoreau
Grime and Punishment: A Jane Jeffry Mystery - Jill Churchill
The Odyssey* - Homer
Pickering’s Lane - Jeremy Pack & Cindy Aitchison
June:
A Green Journey - Jon Hassler
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer* - Mark Twain (aka Samuel Clemens)
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn *- Mark Twain (aka Samuel Clemens)
July:
The Color of Water - James McBride
Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J.K. Rowling
The Phantom Tollbooth - Norton Juster
August:
Creatures of Habit - Tom Fassbinder & Jim Pascoe
Catch-22* - Joseph Heller
Guilty Pleasures - Laurell K. Hamilton
Lord of the Flies *- William Golding
Live Bait - P.J. Tracy
To Kill a Mockingbird* - Harper Lee
Crossing to Safety - Wallace Stegner
September:
For Whom the Bell Tolls* - Ernest Hemingway
Charlotte’s Web - E.B. White
S if for Silence - Sue Grafton
October:
The Idiot Girl’s Action Adventure Guide - Laurie Notaro
We Thought You’d Be Prettier - Laurie Notaro
The Count of Monte Cristo* - Alexandre Dumas
Water for Elephants - Sara Gruen
The Idiot Girl’s Christmas - Laurie Notaro
Autobiography of a Fat Bride - Laurie Notaro
November:
Cry the Beloved County - Alan Patton
Great Expectations* - Charles Dickens
In the Woods - Tana French
Of Mice and Men* - John Steinbeck
Tales of the Slayer, Volume 1 - Various authors
There’s a (Slight) Chance I Might be Going to Hell - Laurie Notaro
December:
The Life of Pi - Yann Martel
The Old Man & The Sea* - Ernest Hemingway
The Laughing Corpse - Laurell K. Hamilton
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest* - Ken Kesey
*books on my "Classics Book to Read" list
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
I read Mr. Kesey's book, even knowing the ending, which was spoiled for me a long time ago. I've never seen the movie but remember being told about its ending. So I am reading the book, knowing full well how it ends. I don't like that.
The book itself feels like a psychedelic acid trip. Not that I know what that's like, mind you. :) The book is told in the first person by an Indian named Chief Bromden, who is mentally ill (schizophrenic). The things he imagines happening to him in the asylum on a daily basis are ...well....crazy. Kesey writes his delirium so well (it is said Kesey took drugs and had electroshock therapy so he could know what the patients went through back in the day). Chief believes the walls are alive, that there are invisible strings pulling people along. That there is a "Combine," a group/a machine/ workings that run everyone and everything and he's trying to fight against this Combine.
The asylum is run by the hard-nosed Nurse Ratched, a tyrannical nurse who has everyone and everything, including the doctors, under her thumb and does not hesitate to get people moved or fired if they don't adhere to her idea of order. She has everyone in there, patients and staff, afraid of saying or doing anything. It's almost as if her oppression of these men mirrors the oppression Chief and his family felt at having their land taken from them. New location, same oppression by the Combine.
In comes Randal McMurphy, a young "punk kid" who gets himself checked in as sort-of a retreat. He doesn't want to work, he wants to relax. He's a gambler, a womanizer, and freeloader, and he brings life to the ward. Forever butting heads with Nurse Ratched, Randall eventually brings everyone out of their shells...and pays a very dear price.
Even knowing the ending, I was sad. I hated the Nurse, hated what she, in my opinion, did to Billy and I hated Randall's punishment for his reaction to Billy's demise. She lost in a way. Everyone was gone, but what happened to Randall and Billy made me feel she won more than she lost and it angered and saddened me.
It's a great book and the last book of my Classics list I will be reading in 2007. On to 2008!
Merry New Year!
Friday, December 28, 2007
The Next Generation
Update: Well, keeerap. I think I may lose the blogs over at Friendster. I'm still trying to figure out how to export old blogs out before cancelling the account.