Sunday, April 22, 2012

Lady Susan


Since this novella is short and sweet I will likewise keep my post to a minimum. Long ago I vowed to read all of Jane Austen's works and have had great success with Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey, Persuasion, and most recently Lady Susan. The format in which Lady Susan  was written was by letters of correspondence between characters. I found it quite amusing how each character changes their writing dependent upon who they are writing to. Although I do tremendously enjoy Jane Austen's style of writing I often find myself irritated by her characters, namely I did not like Lady Susan at all. I thought that Lady Susan was a terrible mother and person in general, her tact and wiles were put to a lot of ill use. I was also very dissatisfied with the ending that came about. I somehow thought things would end differently but then again since it is called Lady Susan undoubtedly things would have to end well for her.

Jane Austen

Saturday, April 21, 2012

The Last Unicorn


A blast from my past hit me while I was wandering about Chapters: The Last Unicorn. I cannot count the number of times I watched the movie adaptation of this book as a child, it was one of my favourites. I loved it so much that I ended up buying it on dvd last year. Oddly enough, I had never read the book and thought I might as well pick it up to read. I was definitely satisfied by the familiar adventure from my childhood.

Friday, April 20, 2012

The Lathe of Heaven & Tehanu: The Last Book of Earthsea

 
I started April off with a bit of an Ursula K. Le Guin marathon: The Lathe of Heaven, which is a sci-fi, and Tehanu: The Last Book of Earthsea, which is the fourth book in the Earthsea Cycle. Both of these novels were hard to put down for I find Ms. Le Guin's writing to flow quite well, so that 3 hours would go by and I would not even notice. They are great examples of how an author can diversify their writing. The Lathe of Heaven takes on political and ethical questions through a journey into the not too distant future while Tehanu is written for a much younger audience in a fantastical world full of wizards and dragons.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

March 2012


March started off swell with Rob Thurman releasing another book in her Cal Leandros series, Doubletake. I always enjoy the shenanigans that Cal, Niko, and Goodfellow get up to and this was no exception. An evil automaton bent on killing you, no problem! Got all of the pucks in the world convening in NYC, no sweat! Another romping tale of urban fantasy that had me laughing all the way through.

February 2012


It's been quite a while since I last posted anything. What can I say? It's time consuming reading all of these books, but I don't mind since I enjoy them all so much! February was a teen fiction heavy month (Starcrossed, What I Was, Glow, and Lenobia's Vow) which I managed to balance out by finally finishing The Brain That Changes Itself. As well as finishing one of my favourite series with Out of Oz.