poem – weaponry

Weaponry

By Kim Addonizio

I used an arrow to kill the spider.
I used a steamroller to flatten the worm.
For the ants I called in an air strike.
Bee that found its way in through the screen:
blowtorch.
The mammals were easier—
a bucket of water for submerging the cat,
a poisoned word thrown to the dog.
For love, only a kitchen match. That
and a stove leaking gas
and waiting until the dinner
was good and burned.

Source: Poetry (February 2009).

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Extremely engrossing and incredibly written

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer

Oskar Schnell is searching for meaning after the death of his father in 9/11. He maps his days and world through collected photographs and inventions he makes in his head. He is always thinking and wondering and imagining . So when he finds a key in his fathers room he decides to search New York for the lock that it fits. Oskar’s quest for the lock which the key opens parallels his need to make sense of the loss of his father.

I had avoided this book for months, people told me to read it, my sister told me it was lovely but I didn’t want to read a sad book about 9/11 survivors. However although this is the subject fo the book it is so much more. The character of Oskar you will love or hate or maybe, like me, do both. I should confess here that I have a son who has aspergers so I immediately decided that Oskar had aspergers or something similar. This made me love him but also suffer with him as I do with my son.

I finished the book yesterday and I keep picking it up again hoping there is more to read. My brain keep thinking back over the book and some of the questions Oskar asks like “Is love love”, and the answers too. For me, love was love for this book.

 

 

 

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A fresh view of love, family and hope

Love in the Present Tense by Catherine Ryan Hide

This book is a delight. From reading the back cover about how Pearl disappears one day leaving her young son Leonard with the next door neighbour. Where does she go? Why did she abandon Leonard? What will happen to him now? The story revolves around Leonard and the effect he has on those around him.

I enjoyed reading this book, it is charming and well written. Leonard is such an engaging character you can’t help but want to rescue him. As I read I found my self cheering him on or holding my breath. As the book continued I suspected it was going one way but delighted me in a surprise. It gave me a fresh view of love, family and hope. Try it for yourself.

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A gossamer thread luring the unsuspecting reader

The Cloud Atlas is one of those highly recommended novels, where ever you turn someone else is raving about it and recommending it. The more a book is recommended the more worried I get that it will disappoint. David Mitchell was even at the Auckland Readers & Writers Festival last year, I know because my copy of the book was signed, however I can’t remember if I heard him talk.  All I knew was the book was about six lives that spanned a time frame from 1850′s to a post-apocalyptic future. I was not convinced so it languished on my ‘to read’ pile for almost a year.

Over the summer I finished my Christmas reading and decided it was time to check The Cloud Atlas off my ‘to read’ list.

I was so surprised this book is very delightfully unusual and fresh. I felt like I was being drawn along on this gossamer thread, being lured into the story. I blindly followed the thread and as each step revealed another question, another mystery, another desire that I read on if only to discover more. Each characters life was a delightful taste, just enough to intrigue and capture the reader. I could tell you more but the shape of the story was a delightful revelation and I would hate to spoil any of the magic. Just know that as I finally closed the last pages I was satisfied and content.

This is an unusual book that if you let yourself be drawn in (the first chapter is the hardest, it gets fun after that)  I guarantee you will be enraptured.

 

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What did you read over the summer?

I’ve just returned from my summer holidays and have a huge list of books to review. I completed the Wolves of Mercy Falls Trilogy, read five printed books that were Christmas presents and still managed to swim everyday.

Right now I am reading IQ84 – I’m two chapter in and totally intrigued and I also am half way through Brick Lane by Monica Ali. I lost it for a while so I started IQ84.

Hope you had a great summer, what books did you read over the break? Anything you’d like to recommend?

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A delightful rifle through history in pursuit of small items of joy

The Hare with the Amber Eyes by Edmund de Waal

I only bought this book because it kept coming up on my recommendations list. I didn’t think following the journey of a group of small Japanese ornaments from their purchase in Paris in 1870 to Edmund inheriting them from his Uncle who lived in Japan. How wrong I was, this is a fascinating story of the 264 wood & ivory carvings surviving two world wars. Saved by a loyal maid hiding them in her mattress as their house in Vienna was confiscated for being owned by Jews during WWII they continued their journey through to this day.

A wonderful trip through history as we rifle with Edmund through the lives of his family, their highs and lows and like him wonder at the cruelty and joys of their experiences. It is highly personal story that shows the resilience of one family in the fate of these small items. Highly entertaining and delightful like the carvings themselves, a unique collection and a unique story that is a great read.

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Fast reading for coffee lovers in Kabul

The Little Coffee Shop of Kabul by Deborah Rodriguez

In Afghanistan waiting for her lover to return from whatever dangerous mission he is on now Sunny runs a coffee shop. Kabul is not a easy place to run coffee shop – there are bombings, soldiers, rebels and the Afghan culture to negotiate.
The coffee shop and Sunny become entwined in the lives of four women whose secrets and choices could destroy them all.

This is an interesting story uncovering the Afghan society and its rules and also the occupation of the American army. However some of the characters are very two dimensional and I found some of the plot very hard to believe. I was surprised to find that Rodriguez had lived in Kabul having a hair salon. I can only say that the parts of the book she had good knowledge of were excellent like the Afghan culture and its rules for women but the diplomatic arena was very weak and her description of Candace was very stereotypical.

All in all it is a light fun read with a bit of background about Afghanistan.

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The Help – Just Plain Brilliant

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

In Jackson Mississippi 1962 22 year old Skeeter has got herself a job as the domestic agony aunt on the local paper. Knowing nothing about running a household Skeater turns to a local black maid she knows to ask for help. Aibileen and her friend Minny join forces to help Skeeter write a book about the lives of the maids and the families they serve, while Skeeter tries to find what happened to the maid that raised her who has disappeared.

Each of the characters is superbly drawn and Skeeter is particularly endearing. After the reading the book I went out straight away to see the movie that also didn’t disappoint.  The book is funny, poignant, eye-opening and just plain brilliant. It’s an education about slavery, domestic service and the South. Read it!

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Like Walking Through Mud

In America by Susan Sontag

I have always wanted to read this book so when I saw it at a school fair I was happy to buy it. On the cover it says it won the National Book Award of 2000 and awards mean a good read. The plot is great – a famous Polish actress decides to emigrate  to America with her family and friends and start a community in southern California. The story follows their decision to move to America and the eventual failure of their community and the reinvention of self – a homage to the American dream where you can be anything in America.

I wanted to like this book, its full of great detail, moments of brilliance but I couldn’t. I hated the writing style. It was like walking across mudflats at low tide, you sink to your thighs in the mud and each footstep is an effort but you press on thinking all the time how great it will feel to get to the other side and surely it will get easier at some point. When you finally get to the other side you are covered in mud and too exhausted to be excited about having conquered the mud flats. You just look back thinking why did I bother.

 

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Italian Partians & Jewish Refugees

A Thread of Grace by Mary Doria Russell

A Thread of Grace is set during WWII and follows a group of Jewish refugees who have fled to southern France and relative protection of the Italian occupied area. Now the Italians have surrendered to the Allies the German army is coming and they must flea over the Alps into Northern Italy following the path that Hannibal and his elephants took centuries before. However Italy is now occupied by the German Army and the Allies are only slowly fighting their way north. If refugees like young Claudette Blum and her father want to survive they must find friends and hide until the allies come. This is the little known story of the partisans of northern Italy and of the people who hid Jewish refugees from the Germans.

Having read Mary Doria Russell’s two other books Sparrow and Children of God and loved them I was disappointed to find that her next book wasn’t sci-fi. However my opinion changed upon reading A Thread of Grace. Like her other books it is incredibly well written, the characters come alive and you become invested in their fate as if you are walking with them. My only issue with the book was the Italian names that mean I often didn’t know which group of people and where they were until into the chapter. One character also has several names and personas, which was hard for me to keep up with but in another way added to the enjoyment of the book.

A Thread of Grace was incredibly moving and sad but most of all I enjoyed reading about the role of the church and the citizens of northern Italy who risked all to save the Jewish refugees. I was delighted to find reading the notes at the end of the book that the story set in a real background where deeds like those in the book really happened.

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