Wednesday, May 15, 2019

The Children of Noisy Village by Astrid Lindgren

After reading Pippi Longstocking last month, I wanted to revisit this amazing book by Astrid Lindgren with Graham. I read this with Dane before Graham was old enough to listen along to our chapter books, and I wanted him to hear these books too, because they are so cute and sweet and just perfect. I absolutely love these books. It reminds me of Betsy-Tacy and All-of-a-Kind Family and Five Little Peppers and so many perfect classic children's novels; each chapter is a fun little episode where the children explore something, play a game, go somewhere new, and each little story is told so well that the kids listening or reading are just enthralled. This book is different from the rest because it's set in Sweden, so it has the added charm of having traditions and activities that are different and unfamiliar for my kids, but are so fun to read about. Dane and Graham both love this book. I think my favorite chapters in this book might be the Christmas chapters about how they celebrated it there, and the magic of Christmas for all the children in Noisy Village.

The Bookshop on the Corner by Jenny Colgan

I absolutely loved this audiobook. I felt like I was sucked into Nina's life and couldn't wait to find out what happened next. This book was clearly written for bookish people like Nina, who have all always wished to run a bookstore (every person who loves books has had that fantasy), but it was also set in beautiful rural Scotland, and the setting played a great part in the novel as well. Nina gets let go from her job at a library in Birmingham because they are shutting down the library, and she decides to buy a van and be a bookseller. She ends up having to travel up to northern Scotland to pick it up, and ends up staying there to sell her books. She begins to live life for the first time, instead of just relying on books to live, and she begins to make friends and actually fall in love in real life for the first time. I loved how Nina came out of her shell and bloomed (excuse my mixed metaphors) as the book went on--I felt like her character was one I could relate to (once she stopped being so timid as she gained confidence as the book went on). I loved the setting of rural Scotland, and the blatantly Scottish experiences Nina has (particularly the farmers' dance and the midsummer party) that really made me be able to envision it and made me want to be there so badly. I loved how Nina really contrasted Birmingham and Scotland so well, and showed why she loved it. I could see how some people would hate living there, but I could see how Nina would love it. It fit very well with her personality, and it was such a pleasure to see her succeed and grow. The romance was also great too. I loved it.

My one complaint about this book was that it seemed a little unrealistic that Nina should have such complete success so easily, selling books in this tiny Scottish village. It seemed like she didn't travel around the countryside as much as I'd expect, and she still was selling enough books to get by in just this tiny village. She didn't seem to need to stock up on new books very much--just got a couple sets of books from libraries shutting down, and that was apparently fine to set her up all summer. I felt like there could have been a little more focus on the work of owning the bookshop, since that was the main focus of the first half of the book as she got it set up, but I still hugely enjoyed the story.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Londoners: The Days and Nights of London Now--As Told by Those who Love it, Hate it, Live it, Left it, and Long for it by Craig Taylor

Another book I wanted to read before going to England. I feel like most of my imagination of London is about the city as it was in Regency, Victorian, or WWII times. All very different eras, but all eras in which many books about London are set. I've read a bunch of current books set in London too, but I still imagine London in a long-ago sort of way. This book was a really interesting spectrum of perspectives from all sorts of people doing all sorts of things in London, in the current day (this book was published in 2012 or 2013 or something like that, so it is pretty recent). Taylor basically interviewed a huge collection of people and transcribed their interviews into this book. I loved how varied the types of people are who Taylor interviewed, and I loved how they truly spoke in their own words, without much or any interference from anyone else. I love the oral history format (I always think about Listening is an Act of Love and how powerful it is to hear people's stories from themselves) and I love how Taylor managed to organize this huge, varied group of perspectives into a semblance of a story, a portrait of the city as a whole as it is for the people who live there now (or some who have left, as the subtitle says). I obviously am more sheltered than I thought (because I'm still picturing WWII London, obviously) but I was surprised by how many people were talking about how dangerous London is and all of these unsavory parts of the city. Although I guess people would say that about New York as well, if you talked to the wide range of people like Taylor did. I loved hearing about how so many people love it, and why so many people hate it, and I felt like this really did help prepare me for our upcoming trip there.

Friday, May 10, 2019

Pride by Ibi Zoboi

You know I love me some Jane Austen fan fiction, and this one sounded particularly compelling: a retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in the "hood" of Bushwick in Brooklyn. And it totally lived up to the hype. I thought it was so fun, and it was so much more than just a P&P rewrite. Zoboi did not keep all of the storylines from P&P (like the embarrassingly obsessed mom, etc.) and focused more on creating a strong culture and main character. Zuri, the main character, has such a strong voice and a strong personality, and so much pride and love for her family and her neighborhood and her culture. There is so much Dominican and Haitian influence in her story, and I really felt like I was a part of it because of how well Zoboi incorporated the Dominican food and words and dances. I loved Zuri's concern for her block and this place she loves, as she watches it get gentrified and change before her eyes, and how she is so proud of where she comes from. This was particularly good as an audiobook, because the narrator has the perfect accent for all of the Spanish words and Dominican influence, which really helped to bring it all to life for me. I really felt like I could envision their block and their family.

The romance between Zuri and Darius Darcy was not really the most compelling part of this book. There were a few cute parts between them, but honestly, Darius was boring and I couldn't see why she liked him. But Zuri herself, and her poetry, and her aspirations, dreams, and goals (which she talks about multiples times in the book, in that order) of going to Howard and coming back to help her hometown, was worth reading this book for.

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Jane Steele by Lyndsay Faye

Jane Eyre is not one of my favorite books. I've read it several times (although not in the last eight years, since I've kept track of my reading), and I've never enjoyed it. I just don't get the attraction of Mr. Rochester, and I don't love Jane's totally boring personality. Plus, he's creepily older than her and I feel like it's just gross. I'm sure millions of people want to kill me right now.

This book is basically nothing like Jane Eyre, except that it uses it as an inspiration, and adds the element of Jane actually being a serial killer, which improves the interest level of this book times a million. I liked this Jane, who is convinced she is evil and just keeps killing people (only despicable, terrible people who deserve to die and have hurt her or her friends). I read some reviews on Goodreads, and a lot of people complained that the story dropped off after Jane went to be a governess at Mr. Thornfield's house (different name), but I thought it was still really interesting and fun with all the changes that she made, like Mr. Thornfield being a Sikh with his Sikh best friend and household, and I loved that it was almost like a mystery, where Jane is trying to figure out who killed someone and where a missing trunk full of jewels was, in addition to being a romance and a thriller.  I loved how much drama and excitement there was in this story, and I actually didn't mind the romance between Jane and her employer like it's always bothered me in Jane Eyre. The only thing I didn't love about this book was that there were a few parts that were a little too vulgar for me (which probably outs me as being kind of picky about that, because it wasn't like there was a lot of actual sex in the novel but there were a few pornographic letters which Jane read and were included (which were written by one of the people she had to kill) and a few other instance of Jane dreaming about sex, etc.). Other than those parts, this book was really fun for me. I would not hesitate to recommend this to anyone with the caveat of being aware of some of the more vulgar parts.

Monday, May 6, 2019

On Becoming a Disciple-Scholar, edited by Henry B. Eyring

I have to be honest, I only read this book because it was sitting on our shelf, and I'm trying to read through some of the religious books on our shelves that I've never read. This is one that Tommy brought to our marriage, and he says he'd never read it either. And once I started reading it, and realized it's just a collection of talks given at BYU to the Honors students in the years of 1994 and 1995, I thought, well, we mayyyy not end up keeping this one. It was very meaningful and had a lot of good things, however. Elder Neal A. Maxwell's talk about discipleship and scholarship was particularly good, about how there are different levels of truth and how we don't need to distinguish between faith and scholarship. The other one I really enjoyed was about Elder James E. Talmage and his experience with writing Jesus the Christ, and his many qualities that allowed him to succeed at that (not giving up, not being distracted by worrying about what others thought of him, etc.). One of the themes that stuck out in this book is that humility and meekness are hugely important qualities for a scholar--going along with the scriptures cautioning people for not thinking they are too wise. I loved these men, who all have highly important callings (and could in other realms be ambitious or think highly of their own situation), reinforcing the importance of humility and showing how much they have thought about and value those qualities. It was definitely a good read, but not the most engaging of books to sit and read straight through.

Sunday, May 5, 2019

Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked by Adam Alter

I read this one for our family book club, and it definitely made me think. I don't know that it was exactly earth-shattering, but it definitely got me thinking about how I use technology. I honestly think I spend too much time on my phone, and I think I pick it up too often. Even if I put it down pretty quickly, I still check my phone all. the. time. I think I need to get a watch so that I don't have the excuse to be touching my phone so much. I loved how at the beginning it talked about how so many tech leaders refuse to let their children use most of the technologies they are selling, and how they personally recognize the capabilities to overuse and be too reliant on technology. He pretty much is writing about how there is no such thing as an addictive personality, but there are circumstances in which anyone can become addicted to things, and people working in these technologies have worked to adapt their technologies to take advantage of these addictive tendencies to make us more addicted. Wow, that is the most convoluted sentence I could possibly write, but I am too lazy to go back and rewrite that right now. The things they use to make us addicted to them are feedback, progress, escalation, cliffhangers, and social interaction, and he writes about each of those things in turn and gives interesting examples of how they work in our social media and video games and Netflix shows these days. I think there's something to his ideas, and I think there's a lot we could all do to be better. I try really hard to not waste time on my phone with my kids around, but I want to be better about just not checking it at all.