Showing posts with label RIP IV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RIP IV. Show all posts

October 18, 2009

The Sunday Salon

Literature
Books-I just finished reading Harry Potter. I'm surprised at how much I liked it. Review will be up this week. I'm not sure of what to pick up next. Something fun and perhaps romantic. Something happy to match my mood.

Challenges-Harry Potter counts for two of my three challenges for sure (Take a Chance & Clear Off Your Shelves) but I'm wondering if it would count for RIP IV. It's got the supernatural and mystery. What do you think?

Life
Not much to share. Not much is happening besides this. FlyLady was a flop this week. I did make a French meal but...well, you'll read about that tomorrow. My computer has been behaving for the last few days. Yay! And school was kinda boring. I'm not really sure where my time went this week. (That's a big fat lie! Facebook is an evil time suck. And now I'm on Twitter too. Somebody stop me, please!)

But I am happy. Very very happy. That's always news worth sharing. Oh! And I found this picture (I stole it from a new blog full of beautiful things) which also makes me happy. I'm wondering how I can print it so I can hang it on my wall. It matches me so perfectly.

October 12, 2009

Review: The Ghost Writer

The Ghost Writer
by John Harwood

Gerard's mother is a woman with many fears and many secrets; because of it, Gerard lives a very sheltered life. His only act of rebellion is writing to a penpal, Alice, a paraplegic living in England. Soon the two are madly in love over their years of correspondence. But Alice has secrets of her own. She will not send Gerard a picture of herself. Nor is she ever around to meet him when he travels from his home in Australia. But soon Gerard must confront his family history and the woman he loves to unravel the lies that are the only truth he's ever known.

I'm trying to decide if I should start with the good or the bad. How about a sandwich effect?

The bad: that cover. It's not creepy so much as unattractive, which is fitting in some ways but mostly not.

The good: the stories within the story. I always love a story that tells many littler stories, especially if they are fairy tales or, in this case, ghost stories. I think these littler stories were the best parts of the book.

The bad: the confusion. The final story was long and interrupted and very similar to the main story so that the line between the two became very blurry. Actually, I believe this was done on purpose but my little brain hurt from the effort of sorting the two out. Then, elements of the other two ghost stories crept in. By the end I didn't know if I was up or down.

The good: it gave me the willies. As you read the little ghost stories and you start sensing that things aren't right with the characters, you do become scared of all the little sounds and shadows in your house. I reverted back to my fear of mirrors while I was reading it. Harwood built the suspense before he did anything freaky with the story. Clever.

The bad: overly descriptive. As the English Manor that is at the heart of the bigger story (and one of the littler ones) is described, all the furniture is placed in it's proper corner, all doors are put just so in the walls, all four floors are given their own blueprint, or so it seemed. My eyes glazed over. And the physical description of "the machine" was too complicated, though the explanation of what it actually was and how it was used was very interesting. But talking about pieces of metal shaped like A with tubular glass bulbs projecting out of point B wasn't at all helpful.

The bad: the ending. So I am really, really good at figuring out the endings of mysteries. All those years watching Matlock, Diagnosis Murder, and Law and Order taught me a thing or two. One of the things I learned was that everything in a story has a purpose. Did the murder victim's neighbor speak? They have some kind of useful information or they are the killer. Did the camera linger a little longer on a certain scene? There is a clue in that shot. First you gather your suspects and your suspicions and then you start eliminating them. But this book didn't do that. Gerard considered every possibility, no matter how ridiculous and threw them all out and gathered them all back up again. By the end there were so many outrageous theories running to and from that it was hard to pick which one to stick with. I believe this to be a sign of a poorly plotted mystery. It's kind of like when some poor schmuck calls you to solicit money over the phone. Instead of telling you simply what they have to offer and give you a chance to say yes you need that service or no you don't, they will bombard you with words. They will throw out compliments and act like your best friend from college. When they feel resistance they will ask you stupid questions like "don't you want to save money?" or "you honestly can't afford just $10 to join our gym?" They figure if they can keep you on the phone longer then you are more likely to give them your money. That is what this book does. It bombards you with ideas, making the ridiculous sound plausible and the logical seem unrealistic to disguise the fact that the answer is clear from somewhere in the middle. tsk tsk What a disappointment.

It looks like the bad outweighs the good but I will say that the good is really good and the bad is only partially bad. Like I said, I think the author accomplished what he set out to do, that is, making the reader as dazed and confused and second guessing their every idea as Gerard was. I just didn't like being dazed and confused. Your mileage may vary.

One Word Review
So-so

Matlock, you ruined me for mysteries.

Anyone remember Puck? He's the poppet I won in the original RIP Challenge. He stands sentry while I read, especially when I read ghost stories for the RIP Challenge.

Speaking of which, this makes the first book read (finally!) for the RIP IV Challenge. It also counts for the Clear Off Your Shelves Challenge since it has been lingering on my book shelf for over six months. I'm all about multitasking.

August 27, 2009

It's R.I.P. Time!

Welcome friends. We are about to embark on a dark journey. R.I.P. IV has begun so grab a candle and your spookiest book. Let us begin. *cue wicked laugh*

Carl V. is hosting his fourth year of the Readers Imbibing Peril Challenge. I haven't missed one yet and I don't plan to miss it this year either. Go to Stainless Steel Droppings to learn how you can join(you know you want to). This year I chose Peril the Second.


Peril the Second is a commitment to read at least 2 books that fit into the category of mystery, suspense, thriller, dark fantasy, gothic, horror or supernatural. Basically anything creepy will do. And, because Carl V. is a cool guy who understands that his challenge buddies can also be commitment challenged, he is letting us choose from a pool of books instead of listing the two books I like now only to change my mind later. So here is my pool:

The House of Dies Drear
The Woman in White
The Turn of the Screw
Frankenstein
The Murder of Helen Jewitt
House of Sand and Fog
The Ghost Writer

Not only do we get to freak ourselves out with these lengthy books(some of these are extremely thick) but we also may participate in the Short Story Peril. For this section I have the following options:

Seven Gothic Tales by Isak Dinesen
The Complete Stories of Poe
The Stories of E.T.A. Hoffmann (a contemporary of Poe)

I have enjoyed the R.I.P. Challenge every year and expect the same this year.

*cue freaky organ music* "Hurry baaaack. Hurry baaaack. Be sure to bring you death certificate if you decide to join us."