Monthly Archives: September 2009

A very well-to-do hobbit …

Oh, it’s a momentous day, my friends … a momentous day.  On this day, in 1937, J.R.R. Tolkien’s ”The Hobbit” was published.  What began as a scribble – “In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit” – on a blank page, in a sea of student papers, went on to become one of the world’s best loved stories.  Of course, we owe our gratitude not only to the author, but those friends and acquaintences who encouraged, pushed, prodded and otherwise convinced him to publish.  C.S. Lewis being one.

So to all of you who support writerly-types, thank you!  You are every bit as important as the one who pens the tales.  You are the guardians, the champions of fine story-telling.  If it weren’t for the likes of you, we wouldn’t have the likes of this upon our bookshelves …

In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.
Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole,
filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell,
nor yet a dry, bare sandy hole with nothing in it
to sit down on or to eat:
it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort.
It had a perfectly round door like a porthole,
painted green,
with a shiny yellow brass knob in the exact middle.
The door opened on to a tube-shaped hall like a tunnel:
a very comfortable tunnel without smoke,
with panelled walls, and floors tiled and carpeted,
provided with polished chairs
.

-Excerpt, The Hobbit

Nothin’ quite like great literature

i_heart_books

There’s just no knowing …

According to tradition, the first time someone visits this place, he must choose a book, whichever he wants, and adopt it, making sure that it will never disappear, that it will always stay alive.  It’s a very important promise.  For life … Today it’s your turn.” – from The Shadow of the Wind, by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

So.  I promised a review of Carlos Ruiz Zafón’s book, The Shadow of the Wind.  Though I had planned to save the read for those dark, gloomy days of autumn, I made the mistake of peeking at the first page and was hooked.  It was the Cemetery of Forgotten Books that had me. Yet by the end of the novel, I simply was not sure how I felt.  Zafón is a fine writer - poetic even at times.  He’s created a magical tale set in a fitting place and time – Barcelona, 1945. A boy takes to a mysterious novel entitled The Shadow of the Wind, written by Julián Carax. But when he seeks other works of the author  he discovers they’ve been destroyed. He soon discovers a disfigured stranger lurking in the shadows is seeking to destroy his copy as well - and the dark secrets linked to it.  

Zafón’s The Shadow of the Wind has all the elements of a true gothic novel: a palatial home, long abandoned … doomed lovers … murder … madness.  Perhaps there lies the issue – he simply tried too hard.  It was as if a whole lot of everything was poured in – including a quasi-Freudian relationship -  leaving little more than a blur.  The result was more melodramatic than literary.  I didn’t hate it; but it didn’t maintain it’s hold.  The intrigue that so captured my imagination at the onset died somewhere along the way.

My younger self

Ever wish you could go back in time and meet your younger self?  Well, in a round-about sort of way, I got to do just that.  While cleaning out my grandparents house, my aunt came upon a book I had filled out when I was seven – “Very Special Me: A Book About Myself From Head to toe.”  Here’s what I had to say (my responses are in bold):

Know why I’m so special?  Because nobody else looks, thinks, or writes exactly like me!

What I like best about me is I read

Something I like to do all by myself is Read.

I already know a lot about god, Josh (my brother), and animals.

Here’s a good idea for something different to do on a rainy day: laze around.

I think a good name for the tooth fairy would be debbie (my mom’s name mind you).

What I like to do when I’m quietly not talking or singing or yelling is Read (sensing a theme?).

With my left hand, I can wave.

With my right hand, I can write (okay, maybe a couple themes). 

My favorite place for my feet to take me is My bed

Sometimes I get tired of hearing my mother say Time to get up.  (Isn’t it nice that I learned the finer things in life at such a young age?  Things like lounging about, reading, writing…)

And, my personal favorite:

Here’s a joke I heard that made me laugh: get off my case potato face. (which still makes me laugh because, hello, it’s not even a joke!)

Classic-Schmackic

I was in a surly disposition last week – and I’m just gonna go ahead and blame it on the fact that I was reading Robinson Crusoe.  You know it’s a bad sign when the main character of the story threatens to off himself within the first 60 pages or so and you’re thinking, “We could only be so lucky, because then the book could END!” 

I must say, I feel totally duped.  I’ve always heard about Robinson Crusoe, shipwrecked on an island.  I was thinking valiant adventurer – what I got was total cad.  He treated Friday like some sort of animal and he killed kittens!  Granted, he did eventually acknowledge Friday as the better man - as if that wasn’t totally obvious – but he KILLED KITTENS!  Add to that insipid writing and you’ve got one painful read.  Seriously.  Two hundred and ninety-seven pages seemed like a million.  By the end, I was actually trying to think of things I could do rather than read … maybe clean a toilet or two, or schedule in a root canal. 

And so the question begs to be asked:  why – oh why – is this considered a classic?  And don’t tell me it’s because of the Christian themes or my head will explode.  My head, will explode.  And let’s face it – you don’t need that on your conscience.