Jump to content

Menu

zillymom

Members
  • Posts

    201
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by zillymom

  1. Last week I finished:

    A Masque of Infamy by Kelly Dessaint (autobiographical novel, coming of age story, tough themes)

    Washing Cars & Wasting Time by John C. Oliva (memoir, quick and funny read, especially if you've ever worked retail!)

    Trains and Lovers by Alexander McCall Smith (four strangers meet on a train and share stories about love and life)

     

    This week I'm reading:

    Three Lives of Tomomi Ishikawa by Benjamin Constable

    The People in the Trees by Hanya Yanagihara

    and I'm slowly reading the Italian book Che animale sei? by Paola Mastrocola for a summer language challenge

  2. This thread is encouraging. My only is almost 4, and I still feel brain fog much of the time! I was starting to worry, thinking it should be clear by now. I do need to be better about getting enough sleep, though... but nice to know that for some of you, around age 4 was a turning point.

  3. I skipped my prom. Instead, my boyfriend and I got dressed up (not prom dress dressy, but very nice), went out for a fancy dinner (fancy for high school kids, at least), and then went to hear Hélène Grimaud perform with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. Got to meet her afterward, too! I remember people telling me I'd regret missing my prom, but I'm almost 37 now and still haven't felt that regret. I just think back to it and remember how perfect that evening was.

  4. I finished 1Q84! Murakami has written a masterpiece, I think. Zillymom, I enjoyed reading your review on your blog.

     

    Let me gather my thoughts a bit & then I'll post some of my comments about it.

     

    Thanks, it was a really hard one to write coherently about. Everything was a huge swirl in my head. LOL

    Looking forward to hearing your thoughts, too!

  5. I posted my thoughts on 1Q84 on my blog today.

     

    Finished reading an advance copy of Of Dice and Men: The Story of Dungeons & Dragons and The People Who Play It by David M. Ewalt (due out in August). It was part history of RPGs with a focus on D&D of course, and part memoir of the author's experiences playing them. I'm a pretty new RPG player, started playing a sci-fi one called MegaTraveller with some friends a couple years ago (we don't get to meet terribly often). So I found the book pretty fascinating, especially the evolution of this open-ended, creative type of gaming.

  6. I've finished book 2 of 1Q84.

     

    One comment I have about it re: magical realism.... In this book, the characters know they are in a strange setting &/or that different/weird things are happening. In that respect, it is quite different than say, Latin American style magical realism (where strange/different things are obvious to the reader, but not to the characters in the story). So, is this book magical realism? Or something else? (Maybe surrealism?)

     

    Oh, I think it's definitely surreal, too. I sort of think it doesn't fit into one category.

  7. LOL I love all the Murakami funnies posted here! I'm finished with 1Q84. (I loved it but... I'm already a huge, huge Murakami fan so I'm used to his quirks.) Anyhow, I feel good about the ending. I don't think I'd want a Book 4.

     

    I also finished reading The World's Strongest Librarian (subtitled A Memoir of Tourette's, Faith, Strength, and the Power of Family) by Josh Hanagarne. LOVED this memoir! It was so positive and honest and uplifting.

     

    This week I'm reading Of Dice and Men: The Story of Dungeons & Dragons and The People Who Play It by David M. Ewalt, and The House at the End of Hope Street by Menna van Praag.

  8. I'm just about done book 2 of The Wind up Bird Chronicle, by Murakami. I read 1Q84 last year, loved it. Murakami just pulls me into his surreal world, and I can't get my head out. I read After Dark earlier this year. I may read 1 or 2 more of his books this year too. It's going to be a Le Guin and Murakami year. :)

     

     

    There's a Murakami Reading Challenge going on this year, too!

     

    http://murakamichallenge.blogspot.com/

  9. I love surrealism & magical realism. But all of you knew that already... :D

     

    (Zillymom, I'm thrilled to see that my library now has A Tale for the Time Being. I'm on the waitlist. Not saying that it is surreal or magical realism, but I know you read it & loved it & I've been wanting to read it.)

     

     

    Yay!! I really did love it. I do think there are glimpses of magical realism in it, but definitely not compared to the wild ride that Murakami takes his readers on. ;)

     

    Two people commented on my Amazon review for Tale for the Time Being, both recommending that I read her book My Year of Meats. I'll have to add it to my TBR pile, too.

  10. I saw that someone on Goodreads said that it is better to read 1Q84 if you are already a Murakami fan and have already read at least a few of his other books. Don't know if that is true or not.... (Fyi, I have read 2 of his books and am enjoying this one. I'm about 200 pages in and am seeing the tangents getting woven closer together.)

     

     

    I have said this to a few friends, actually. I'm a huge Murakami fan, but I agree that 1Q84 might not be the best one to start with if you've never read his work before. Unless you're really into surrealism and magical realism already. ;)

     

    The short stories in the collection "The Elephant Vanishes" are a good starting point. It's my favorite collection (the story "TV People" is what got me hooked on his stuff). The novel "Norwegian Wood" too, although it's completely different (more of a coming-of-age story, and reflective of the feelings among young people in Japan just after the post-student movement).

  11. I'm reading 1Q84, just started Book Two.

     

    Just finished Stuck in the Middle with You: A Memoir of Parenting in Three Genders by Jennifer Finney Boylan. Loved it. I hope to have a review up soon.

     

    Also reading a self-published book, called Spiral Aloe: Deceit in Losotho, Africa's Mountain Kingdom by L.A. Forbes. It's about an American who joins the Peace Corps and goes to live in a small village in southern Africa. It almost has a third-person memoir feel about it, but it's fiction. I'm enjoying it so far, not so much for the plot (so far there doesn't seem to be one...) but because of the cultural interest.

  12. I just read Born To Read: Unschooling in the New Paradigm by Kytka Hilmar-Jezek. The Kindle edition was free on Amazon the other day. It was riddled with typos and errors - lots of kitten killing going on with those apostrophes! It also had a condescending tone toward working mothers and anyone who homeschools with a different philosophy than she does. Definitely left a bad taste in my mouth, and I was disappointed... there's a lot about unschooling I find attractive, but there's just no need to put down other schooling choices in the way it was done. I just posted a full review with examples on my book blog.

  13. I had pre-eclampsia with my daughter, who was 7 weeks early. She had IUGR, too, so she was smaller than a normal 33-weeker. Spent almost 3 weeks in the NICU, fighting jaundice and learning to coordinate suck/swallow/breathe - we could only hold her for short periods of time so that she wasn't burning too many calories trying to keep her body temperature regulated. She had the apnea and bradycardia spells common to preemies. She came home still under 4 lbs and has done really well (she's 3 1/2 now). Every preemie is different, and you never know what's around the next bend, or if prematurity is going to rear its head again later on (teeth enamel issues, sensory issues, etc.). Pre-eclampsia isn't a walk in the park, either - I still struggle with my blood pressure (had no issues with it before pre-e).

×
×
  • Create New...