Saturday, January 16, 2010

READING: Too Late to Turn Back: Barbara and Graham Greene in Liberia by Barbara Greene

While Graham Greene was busy keeping notes on the journey though Liberia (in 1935), he did not realize that his 23-year-old cousin Barbara, who "rashly agreet to go with him...into the jungle", was also doing so. "Too Late to Turn Back contains the humorous, foot-sore and richly evocative Aftican adventure of a young woman who set out from the world of Saki and the Savoy Grill and returned quite profoundly changed."
An introduction by Paul Theroux, probably my favorite travel writer, is part of this 1981 Penguin Travel Library edition. (205 pages)

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

LISTENING: Loved Walked In by Marisa de los Santos

Published by Recorded Books, 2005; narrated by Alma Cuervo and Jennifer Ikeda.

"Summary: Thirty-one-year-old Cornelia Brown adores classic romantic films. Anything starring Jimmy Stewart or Cary Grant will do nicely, especially The Philadelphia Story. Unapologetically idealistic about love, Cornelia appears to catch the break of a lifetime when the dashing Martin Grace, her own personal Cary Grant, comes strolling into her life. But Cornelia's life truly changes one snowy day when she looks up to find troubled 11-year-old Clare Hobbes standing before her."

Marisa de los Santos is a poet and novelist (with a PhD!!) who can write so as to make the reader savor every sentence, delight in each character and live their moments as one's own. The same characters are followed in Belong to Me.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

LISTENING: Home to Holly Springs by Jan Karon


The first of Father Tim novels, narrated by Scott Sowers, published by Recorded Books, 2007.

I've read (or listened to) most of the Mitford Series novels, and find each of them a delight and I marvel at Ms. Karon's insight into human nature.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

READING: Black Lamb amd Grey Falcon: A Journey through Yugoslavia by Rebecca West

The book is "widely recognized as Rebecca West's most distinguished non-fiction work. It describes a journey she and her husband took through Yugoslavia in 1937, a journey overshadowed by the growing inevitability of the Second World War. The landscape and people of Yugoslavia, its history, cultures, religions and politics, are brilliantly observed as Rebecca West untangles the tensions that rule the country's history as well as its daily life."

Originally published in 1941, I'm reading the 1986 Penguin Books edition. Since the book has 1150 pages of small print, I expect to finish it sometime in 2010. I read the first 200 or so pages in 1989 (I know because of a note/book marker with 1989 written on it)...but I just started where I left off and will reread the beginning after I reach page 1150.

Friday, January 1, 2010

READING: The Dog Who Came to Stay by Hal Borland



Do you pick a book by its cover?...Buy a bottle of wine by its label? I often do, and, often, the choice turns out to be a good one.
I selected The Dog Who Came to Stay from its spine picture just by browsing the stacks at PV library. I'm not really a dog person even though we have a dog, but reading this 1961 novel/memoir was wonderful and I gained a lot of insight into what it really means to be a dog "owner".
The wine had the best label I've seen in a long time...but I gave the bottle away so I'll have to let you know if it lives up to its label in the near future.