Friday, July 20, 2012

Book Beginnings: Mr. Sammler's Planet


Please join me every Friday to share the first sentence (or so) of the book you are reading, along with your initial thoughts about the sentence, impressions of the book, or anything else the opener inspires. Please remember to include the title of the book and the author's name.

TWITTER: If you are on Twitter, please tweet a link to your post using the hash tag #BookBeginnings. My Twitter handle is @GilionDumas.

MR. LINKY: Please leave a link to your post below. If you don't have a blog, but want to participate, please leave a comment with your Book Beginning.



MY BOOK BEGINNING



Shortly after dawn, or what would have been dawn in a normal sky, Mr. Artur Sammler with his bushy eye took in the books and papers of his West Side bedroom and suspected strongly that they were the wrong books, the wrong papers.

 -- Mr. Sammler's Planet by Saul Bellow. This won the National Book Award in 1971.  It counts as my second National winner for the 2012 Battle of the Prizes, American Version.

I really love Saul Bellow's books (Henderson the Rain King being the notable exception), but I only read one every couple of years because they are really rich.  I have to be in the mood to work a little.  The payoff is huge -- they are very entertaining, charming, funny, and just plain wonderful -- but they take some attention and thought.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Review: The Spectator Bird



No one can strip a marriage down to find the twinging nerve like Wallace Stegner, but he does it with such a deft and gentle touch that it is beautiful to observe. In the case of The Spectator Bird, which won the 1977 National Book Award, Stegner combined his marital vivisection with an elaborate backstory about a family of faded Danish aristocrats trying to live down their scandalous past.

Joe Allston, a retired literary agent, feels he has gone through his life as a spectator, falling into his career, his marriage, friendships, and fatherhood without much conscious effort on his part. But Joe and his wife Ruth have lived with a pebble in the shoe of their marriage for twenty years, ever since an extended trip to Denmark following the death of their son. When an unexpected postcard from their Danish friend startles Joe out of his grouchy retirement funk, Ruth uses the opportunity to finally learn what happened all those years ago. For the first time, Joe is forced into an active, thinking role in his long-enduring marriage.

Stegner uses Joe's journal from their Denmark trip to move back and forth between the Allstons' current life as affluent retirees on the stormy California coast south of San Francisco and the remarkably gothic story of the Danish aristocrats with whom they became entangled. In between late night sessions of Joe reading the journal to Ruth, they deal with the disruptions of daily life – bad news about a neighbor, storm damage, and an unexpected visit from one of Joe's eccentric former clients.

Combining Stegner's elegant composition with a terrific plot, curmudgeonly humor, and spot-on set pieces about growing old, sex in contemporary fiction, and the "homeland" myths of second-generation immigrants, The Spectator Bird is the rare page-turner that lingers.

OTHER REVIEWS

If you would like your review of this or any other Wallace Stegner book listed here, please leave a comment with a link and I will add it. 

NOTES 


The Spectator Bird is my favorite read of the year so far and I can't see anything replacing it.  It may make my all-time Top 10 list if I can think of what to bump off it.  It is an incredible, wonderful, entertaining novel.

It also counts as one of my two National winners for the 2012 Battle of the Prizes, American Version.  There is still time to sign up for this challenge, which involves reading only three or four books.  Click the link above or the badge below for details.



Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Teaser Tuesday: The Angels' Share

When I had a bad day and my brain buzzed like angry ants and I couldn't think or talk straight, I thought of what the characters I admired would do. . . .  I read for hours a day absorbing so much Victorian literature that my internal diction started shaping into something more formal, more old-fashioned.
-- The Angel's Share by Rayme Waters, published by Winter Goose Publishing.

The engaging heroine is recovering from addiction with the help of Jane Eyre and her other favorite characters from Dickens, George Eliot, and the like.

Rayme Waters wrote a guest post for Rose City Reader explaining how she incorporated the themes and lessons of 19th Century fiction into her novel.


The Angels' Share is already generating buzz. For example, Diane Johnson, author of Le Divorce, says it "will completely absorb you.” And Meg Waite Clayton, author of The Wednesday Sisters, calls it a "compassionate debut novel" and says, "Set in the quiet luxury of Nob Hill, the counterculture of Bolinas, and the evocative wine country of Sonoma, Angels' Share is as tasty as the 1919 Primitivo [the heroine] drinks on this journey of recovery.”

PUBLISHER'S DESCRIPTION: Born into a tumultuous world of neglectful bohemian parents and an overbearing grandmother, Cinnamon Monday lives through an imagination inspired by the nineteenth-century heroines she admires. As she grows older, and her make-believe worlds are not enough to protect her, she descends into drug addiction and eventual resignation. When this finally leads her to be physically beaten near the point of death, she is saved by a compassionate neighbor named Sam who gives Cinnamon the opportunity to reclaim her life. Now, working at Sam’s vineyard in the beautiful Dry Creek Valley, Cinnamon Monday attempts to put her life in order, find the will to overcome past demons, and utilize her strengths to live a positive, successful life on her own terms.


Teaser Tuesdays is hosted by Should Be Reading, where you can find the official rules for this weekly event. 



Sunday, July 15, 2012

Mailbox Monday and Giveaway Winners


Thanks for joining me for Mailbox Monday! MM was created by Marcia, who graciously hosted it for a long, long time, before turning it into a touring meme (details here).

Jennifer at Mrs. Q: Book Addict is hosting in July.  Please stop by her fun and pretty blog to see what she has been reading.

I got two books last week and both look great.



The Christmas Carol Murders by Christopher Lord.  This is the first of hopefully many in a new series of cozy mysteries set in Dickens Junction, Oregon and featuring local bookstore owner Simon Alastair.  It's like Agatha Christie on the Oregon Coast.  And judging from Christopher Lord's blog, it will be a lot of fun.

My copy is an ARC from Jessica Glenn Book PublicityThe Christmas Carol Murders will hit the shelves in September. 




The Paris Directive by Gerald Jay.  This is another first of a series and looks like the opposite of a cozy -- all international espionage, embassy bombings, hit men, etc.

My copy came from the LibraryThing Early Reviewer program

GIVEAWAY WINNERS

Last week, I hosted a giveaway for three ARCs of The Angel's Share by Rayme Waters, published by Winter Goose Publishing. The three lucky winners will get ARC copies of their own, plus another to giveaway on their blogs, with thanks to book publicist Mary Bisbee-Beek




Huge thanks to everyone who participated! Using random.org to pick, the three winners are:


Click these links to read Rayme Waters' essay on how Victorian literary heroines inspired The Angels' Share and the Book Beginning for The Angels' Share.

Please check back tomorrow for a Teaser Tuesday post featuring Rayme's book. 

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Guest Post: Rayme Waters, Author of The Angels' Share

Release date: August 15, 2012.

I am so pleased to have my very first guest post here on Rose City Reader. Rayme Waters, author of the soon-to-be-released debut novel, The Angels' Share, explains how she incorporated the themes and lessons of 19th Century fiction into her novel.

Please visit my giveaway post for a chance to win one of three advanced readers' copies of The Angels' Share. The deadline to enter is tomorrow, Sunday, July 15, at 9:00 p.m. Pacific Time.

And see my Book Beginnings post for the opening sentences from The Angels' Share.



HOW MY LOVE OF VICTORIAN LITERATURE INSPIRED THE ANGELS’ SHARE
OR
HOW THREE HEROINES SHAPED MY HEROINE

by Rayme Waters

The more reality TV stars publish books, the more I find myself re-reading the classics. Novels where hard work, perseverance, and love triumph are infinitely more rewarding than any analysis of a Kardashian wedding.

When I began working on The Angels’ Share, I hoped to write the kind of book I wanted to read myself. Now that I’m finished, I can say my heroine, Cinnamon Monday, shares traits with my favorite female characters from Dickens, Brontë and Austen. I didn’t set out to create Cinnamon in their image, it happened organically while I was writing—the kind of gift a writer hopes to gain by also being an avid reader.

Cinnamon Monday grows up in the 1970s counterculture with very little parental protection or guidance. I put my heroine into this tough situation because one of the questions I wanted to ask in the novel was “Can you raise yourself though literature?” From the moment she begins reading, Cinnamon discovers that novels, the classics in particular, help her to navigate the morally ambiguous era she lives in.

Heroines, the female protagonists of a story are often known for their achievements and noble qualities. These following three heroines from 19th century British literature have shaped Cinnamon’s story and made her path to redemption possible. I’m hoping you already know this trio of fantastic females. If not, you’ve got some good suggestions for your reading list!

Jane Eyre, Jane Eyre

When I couldn’t sleep, I’d click on my lamp and pick a passage at random. Jane Eyre always had something new to tell me. In the pages of Jane, Charlotte Brontë renders an escape plan from the hedge maze of a forlorn childhood, a narrative blueprint for lost girls, a way to navigate dark dead ends and come blinking into the peopled light.

Jane is Cinnamon’s main moral touchstone. Although you don’t need to be familiar with Jane Eyre to enjoy The Angels’ Share—the story stands strongly on its own— lovers of Charlotte Brontë’s most famous novel will be rewarded another layer of depth and some fun twists and surprises from Jane Eyre references in The Angels’ Share.

Elizabeth Bennett, Pride and Prejudice

Austen entertained with manicured perfection, everyone getting what they deserved, but I didn’t trust it. What happened to Lizzie Bennett when she was alone with Darcy and his darkness returned?

Cinnamon is quick witted and feisty in ways similar to Elizabeth Bennett, and also shares Elizabeth’s wish for honesty, acceptance and true love despite her meager circumstances. But while Cinnamon enjoys Austen’s flawless dialogue and chessboard plotting, she wonders, if marriage at twenty-two to man with Darcy’s moodiness, can really be the happy ever after Jane Austen promises.

Esther Summerson, Bleak House

(N.B. Of the three heroines I mention, Esther is probably the least known. She’s fantastic, though, and I highly recommend making her acquaintance. Charles Dickens felt the same way—Esther Summerson is the only female narrator he ever created.)

Everyone involved expected justice, but all they got was an expensive, soul consuming trial that eventually reduced the estate’s value to zero. In Dickens, litigation was like a disease, catching and deadly. I wanted nothing of it.

A subplot of The Angels’ Share involves legal wrangling over Cinnamon’s family money. Esther Summerson watched those she loved driving themselves crazy as parties to the endless lawsuit of Jarndyce v. Jarndyce. At some point, Cinnamon must decide if she is going to become a party to the fighting or let it go.
With the help of Esther’s wisdom, Cinnamon leaves a heartbreaking family squabble behind and creates a healthier future.

Audre Lorde once said, “There are no new ideas. There are only new ways of making them felt.” Certainly using ideas from Brontë, Dickens and Austen in modern novels is nothing new. But 19th century heroines still have plenty of wisdom for modern readers just as they did for Cinnamon Monday. Their experiences guide her throughout the novel, lighting her path when all seems lost. Jane, Elizabeth and Esther are Cinnamon’s guardian angels, helping her through her story, moving her away from suffering and toward happiness. She listens to them and she is saved.

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