Showing posts with label 6 word sum up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 6 word sum up. Show all posts
Sunday, July 14, 2013
The Paris Wife - Six Word Sum Up
Paradise is lost when you stop believing.
"The Paris Wife" is probably the best book I will have read this year. I was expecting a love story, but what a love story that was. One between the mighty Ernest Hemingway, just before he became famous and Elizabeth Hadley Hemingway, his first wife. Hadley recounts the years she spent married with Hem, from the first year when he was struggling to finish his first stories and up to the end, when he almost finished "The Sun also Rises" (which he dedicated to Hadley and their son, Bumby).
Eight years older than Hemingway, Hadley dedicates her life to become a supportive wife, while they spend most of their marriage in Paris, befriending Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound or Zelda and F. S. Fitzgerald.
Paula Mclain portraits the couple as a single being, with identical haircuts and nicknames, each one calling the other "Tatie", they ski and drink together, but one day Ernest meets Pauline, whom he seduces in front of Hadley and who will become his second wife.
Although it may seem like a simple love story, filled with betrayal, it is not just that. It is a love story that scares you forever, since Hemingway, married for the fourth time, will write in his memoir "A Movable Feast" that "I wished I had died before I ever loved anyone but her."
You can find an interview with the author about this book here.
Read for Paris is July and New Authors Reading Challenges.
Labels:
6 word sum up,
Paris,
reading challenge,
The Paris Wife
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Diego & Frida - Six Word Sum Up
Frida was an amazing woman
with an incredible talent. She started to fascinate me back in high school,
when I discovered her breathtaking paintings and her unbelievably aching yet
admirable life. Since then, I have bought (or received) her art albums and read
one or two books about her life. In 2011, in Istanbul I even admired some of their paintings and sketches from the Gelman collection.
Most of Frida's work and life revolve around her love for Diego Rivera, whom she considers more than a lover. In a poem quoted by Le Clezio, she states that Diego is her best friend, her fellow artist, her father and mother, her child, her universe.
Art - the only way to exist.
The book is written by Le Clezio, the French writer who was awarded the Nobel prize for Literature back in 2008. I expected more insight into Frida's life, but I guess I will have to read her diary, which is on my list. The book focuses on the romance between the Mexican artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, their political involvement and their travels to the United States and Europe. The biography is a short one, but it is the perfect introduction in the lives of the two painters, Diego the Womanizer and Frida the Sufferer...
"L'infirmité progressive, l'enfermement dans la solitude de la douleur ont transformé le rêve d'enfant en fantasme, et donné une valeur presque mythique à cette autre elle-même, qu'elle scrute indéfiniment dans son miroir." p.65
Read for my pleasure, Birgit's Non - Fiction Challenge and New Authors Challenge :)
Most of Frida's work and life revolve around her love for Diego Rivera, whom she considers more than a lover. In a poem quoted by Le Clezio, she states that Diego is her best friend, her fellow artist, her father and mother, her child, her universe.
Art - the only way to exist.
The book is written by Le Clezio, the French writer who was awarded the Nobel prize for Literature back in 2008. I expected more insight into Frida's life, but I guess I will have to read her diary, which is on my list. The book focuses on the romance between the Mexican artists Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo, their political involvement and their travels to the United States and Europe. The biography is a short one, but it is the perfect introduction in the lives of the two painters, Diego the Womanizer and Frida the Sufferer...
"L'infirmité progressive, l'enfermement dans la solitude de la douleur ont transformé le rêve d'enfant en fantasme, et donné une valeur presque mythique à cette autre elle-même, qu'elle scrute indéfiniment dans son miroir." p.65
Read for my pleasure, Birgit's Non - Fiction Challenge and New Authors Challenge :)
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Soni - Six Word Sum Up
Once every few months I come across a book written by a Romanian author which really, and I mean really amazes me. I wish this had been translated into English so maybe you could grasp the reason why I am so thrilled about Andrei Ruse's "Soni". The book was written in 2008 and in September 2012 the third edition appeared, with a few changes (for the better) in the story line, a better publishing house and even more publicity around it, moving from being a controversial book (due to its sex scenes and the use of drugs) to one meant to change your perspective on life.
"Soni" is a book about a 26 year old girl who finds out she has stomach cancer. Needless to say that she goes through all these stages of fear, rage and bad decisions in order to get to the "other side". Which other side? I won't spoil it for you so you'll have to read the book... but be prepared for everything good and bad in-between the covers.
"On our first day at school we should be told that we are going to die. Then, the alphabet."
Cancer Is Not the Final Frontier.
Now back to "Dealer for a day" :)
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Fear and Trembling - Six Word Sum Up
This is probably the first time I have been disappointed by a French writer, especially after I found her first book, "Hygiene and the Assassin" incredibly well written and shocking and that fact truly raised my expectations for her other books. Yet, "Fear and Trembling" did nothing except to annoy me up to its last page. Written in 1999, seven years after Nothomb's literary debut, this short novel is supposed to be about her less than positive cultural experience in Japan. But it is not. In fact, all I could grasp was this masochistic side the main character showed towards any Japanese person she encountered. There was too much humility from the main character's part to be able to somehow sympathize with her.
Life reduced to happily scrubbing toilets.
P.S. The book received le Grand Prix du roman de l'Académie française in 1999, so you may give it a try, maybe you will find the story amusing.
P.P.S. The woman on the cover is Amelie...
Labels:
6 word sum up,
Amelie Nothomb,
books,
Fear and Trembling
Monday, October 15, 2012
The Daylight Gate - Six Word Sum Up
This is the first time I haven't been blown away by a Jeanette Winterson book and I even know the reason to my "un-amazement": it is neither the subject - hunting down the Pendle witches, which can be quite thrilling, nor the idea of Jeanette experimenting with a horror novella for the first and last time, in her words... It is, in fact, the change in her writing style, which I simply used to adore. I kept on reading the short novel, waiting for a glimpse of her style, but it felt like I was reading a book by an ordinary writer who had nothing to do with the mesmerizing way in which Jeanette usually writes. And when I came to the line "Do you remember?", which also appears in the story "Goldrush Girl" I even smiled, but that was it... the falcon has flown away never to return (read the story to understand the meaning). I really hope her next literary piece will be a return to her famous, non-conformist style, with or without Shakespeare being mentioned :) For those who love horror stories, the book is a must.
Are all clever women powerful witches?
"She heard wings. She held out her arm. It was her bird. He scarred her arm where she had no glove but she did not care because she loved him and she knew that love leaves a wound that leaves a scar."
To read more about the book, click here.
Read for the LGBT reading event, hosted by Roof Beam Reader.
Labels:
6 word sum up,
books,
Jeanette Winterson,
The Daylight Gate
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Piercing - Six Word Sum Up
You probably know about my Japanese Literature Challenge... and "Piercing" is one of those books read for this challenge and which really made me thankful for having decided to join in, since it is a book you will never forget. If this is not enough for you to read it, then take into consideration that I stopped twice because I was shocked by the images and situations it presented... My first book by Ryu Murakami, but definitely not my last!
Unimaginable obsessions defeated by daring prostitute.
The Guardian has a great review here and I have a tempting passage below :)
"As he opened his eyes he found that his senses of sight and sound and smell were getting entangled with one another, and now came a snapping, crackling sensation and a pungent whiff of something organic burning. Yarn or fingernails, something like that. He moaned beneath his breath: Not again. It always started with the sweating, followed by this smell of charred tissue. Then a sudden sense of utter exhaustion, and finally that indescribable pain. As if the particles of air were turning to needles and piercing him all over. A prickling pain that spread like goose bumps over his skin until he wanted to scream. Sometimes a white mist clouded his vision and he could actually see the air particles turning into needles.
Calm down, he told himself. Relax, you’re all right, you’ve already made up your mind you’ll never stab her. Everything’s going to be all right."
Read for The Japanese Literature Challenge and The New Authors Challenge.
Unimaginable obsessions defeated by daring prostitute.
The Guardian has a great review here and I have a tempting passage below :)
"As he opened his eyes he found that his senses of sight and sound and smell were getting entangled with one another, and now came a snapping, crackling sensation and a pungent whiff of something organic burning. Yarn or fingernails, something like that. He moaned beneath his breath: Not again. It always started with the sweating, followed by this smell of charred tissue. Then a sudden sense of utter exhaustion, and finally that indescribable pain. As if the particles of air were turning to needles and piercing him all over. A prickling pain that spread like goose bumps over his skin until he wanted to scream. Sometimes a white mist clouded his vision and he could actually see the air particles turning into needles.
Calm down, he told himself. Relax, you’re all right, you’ve already made up your mind you’ll never stab her. Everything’s going to be all right."
Read for The Japanese Literature Challenge and The New Authors Challenge.
Labels:
6 word sum up,
books,
challenge,
Piercing,
Ryu Murakami
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Gourmet Rhapsody - Six Word Sum Up
This book is written by Muriel Barbery, the author of the famous and extremely beautiful book "The Elegance of the Hedgehog". I was expecting so much from the book and I was more than "full" :) It is definitely a "must" once you have read "The Elegance...", because you may want to know what other secondary characters in "The Elegance" are doing 'now", but just prepare to get hungry, while reading and looking for that exquisite flavour... Thank you Bellezza for this great opportunity!
Proust-like cook redefines taste, smell, life.
P.S. Here's a "taste" of this wonderful book:
"Meat is virile, powerful; fish is strange and cruel. It comes from another world, a secret ocean that will never yield to us; it bears witness to the absolute relativity of our existence, and yet it offers itself to us through the ephemeral revelation of unknown realms. When I was savoring these grilled sardines, like an autistic child whom nothing could trouble at that point in time, I knew that this extraordinary confrontation with a sensation from elsewhere was making me human, bringing its contrasting nature to bear to teach me my human essence. Infinite, cruel, primitive, refined ocean; between our avid teeth we seize the products of your mysterious activity. The grilled sardine suffused my palate with its frank and exotic bouquet,with each mouthful I grew more mature, and every time my tongue caressed the marine ash of blistered skin I felt exulted."
P.P.S. Don't click here if you are planning on reading the book :))
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Night train to Lisbon - Six Word Sum Up
I heard about this book after Jeremy Irons accepted to play the leading role in the movie that is going to be released next year. Adding this to the fact that I have been planning for two years to visit Portugal, the book seemed like an interesting choice, and so it was. I recommend it to anyone who actually knows that there is more to life than our daily routine and it is never too late to decide to do whatever you feel like, no matter the social constraints.
You are more than your routine.
Read for the New Authors Challenge and the European Reading Challenge...
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Fifty Shades of Grey - Six Word Sum Up
Whoever thought erotic literature cannot sell was completely mistaken. The hype that surrounded this book (actually, trilogy) made me read it because I was way too curious about it. Surely, it is quite erotic, in the sense that a 49 year old woman is writing about her fantasies and this made me wonder if I will be dreaming about that when I am 49 as well... Totally undemanding literature, which can be perfect for a few summer nights, depending on your mood!
Dark desires can never be boring.
Read for the New Authors Challenge...
Thursday, June 14, 2012
The Summer Without Men - Six Word Sum Up
It has been my first encounter with Siri Hustvedt ( the surname has Norwegian origins) and I am sure I will be reading some of her other books in the near future, especially since she is so interested in psychoanalysis and she has included this aspect in her writing. Here's one of her interesting interviews on the topic.
A cheated woman goes beyond despair.
Read for the New Authors Challenge.
Read for the New Authors Challenge.
Labels:
6 word sum up,
books,
challenge,
new author,
Siri Hustvedt
Saturday, May 5, 2012
The Woman in Black - Six Word Sum Up
Do you believe in haunting ghosts?
This is quite a creepy book to read, and I stopped reading it a few times, probably because it somehow got to me. Susan Hill has also written a series of crime novels, which I might tackle, after I get rid of this awful feeling of being watched and followed by a woman in black...
Read for the New Authors Challenge.
This is quite a creepy book to read, and I stopped reading it a few times, probably because it somehow got to me. Susan Hill has also written a series of crime novels, which I might tackle, after I get rid of this awful feeling of being watched and followed by a woman in black...
Read for the New Authors Challenge.
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
The Sense of an Ending - Six Word Sum Up

Disturbing memories can ruin one's ordinariness.
This is my 5th or 6th Barnes, and definitely not my last, since there are already two waiting to be read.
"The Sense of an Ending" is a short novel that goes smoothly until you reach the final pages and you are left wondering if Tony told us the whole story, or memory played tricks on him... or us?
Labels:
6 word sum up,
books,
Julian Barnes,
Sense of an Ending
Thursday, April 5, 2012
The Museum of Innocence - Six Word Sum Up

Every few years I stumble upon a book that turns out to be just... PERFECT! "The Museum of Innocence" is such a book, and I can't wait to read more of Pamuk's work!
Obsession - Love raging in the soul.
Read for Tea and Books Challenge, The European Reading Challenge and New Authors Challenge.
Here is a video of Pamuk talking about his book and the future museum inspired by it.
And here is my favorite quote, well... one of the dozens :)
"When two people love each other as we do, no one can come between them, no one," I said, amazed at the words I was uttering without preparation. "Lovers like us, because they know that nothing can destroy their love, even on the worst days, even when they are heedlessly hurting each other in the cruelest , most deceitful ways, still carry in their hearts a consolation that never abandons them." (p.191)"
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Tish & Pish - 6 Word Sum Up
Fancy Language Can Be much Fun.

It is quite uplifting from time to time to peruse a book that is not a novel. In fact, it is a book about language, and what language that is!
Here are a few examples of gorgeosities:
How are you? - May I enquire as to whether you are in receipt of a state of bodily wellness?
Oh no, not you again - Tish and pish, has the restraining order already expired?
Pleased to meet you - I tingle in your presence.
Hi, allow me to introduce myself - Greetings, pleasure me with permission to present myself to you for evaluation as a potential friend, lover or colleague.
I can read you like a book. I bet you’re great between the covers. - Your forehead appears to have about seventy thousand
words imprinted thereupon. I’d hazard that you are accomplished in the rumpy-pumpy department.
Every cloud has a silver lining - Every visible collection of fluffy, floating water particles possesses a surface layer of a lustrous, pliable metallic element of the atomic number forty-seven.
Oi, taxi! - Forgive my shouting in the street in this rather vulgar manner, but I should like to reserve the usagenosity of your taximeter cabriolet for a journey to... oh, fiddlesticks, someone else has beaten me thereto.

It is quite uplifting from time to time to peruse a book that is not a novel. In fact, it is a book about language, and what language that is!
Here are a few examples of gorgeosities:
How are you? - May I enquire as to whether you are in receipt of a state of bodily wellness?
Oh no, not you again - Tish and pish, has the restraining order already expired?
Pleased to meet you - I tingle in your presence.
Hi, allow me to introduce myself - Greetings, pleasure me with permission to present myself to you for evaluation as a potential friend, lover or colleague.
I can read you like a book. I bet you’re great between the covers. - Your forehead appears to have about seventy thousand
words imprinted thereupon. I’d hazard that you are accomplished in the rumpy-pumpy department.
Every cloud has a silver lining - Every visible collection of fluffy, floating water particles possesses a surface layer of a lustrous, pliable metallic element of the atomic number forty-seven.
Oi, taxi! - Forgive my shouting in the street in this rather vulgar manner, but I should like to reserve the usagenosity of your taximeter cabriolet for a journey to... oh, fiddlesticks, someone else has beaten me thereto.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Perfection - Six Word Sum Up
This is a very sad book, but not entirely.

Life: still possible after betrayed love.
Here's a very insightful interview with Julie Metz taken by the New York Times, and the official site for the book.

Life: still possible after betrayed love.
Here's a very insightful interview with Julie Metz taken by the New York Times, and the official site for the book.
Monday, January 9, 2012
The Marriage Plot - Six Word Sum Up
My third book by Jeffrey Eugenides and definitely my favorite, and one of the best reads of 2011!

Life is about loving and learning.
The New York Times offers a great review here.

Life is about loving and learning.
The New York Times offers a great review here.
Labels:
6 word sum up,
books,
jeffrey eugenides,
the marriage plot
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Man Walks Into a Room - Six Word Sum Up
I have been planning to read "The History of Love" for more than a year, but it "strangely" happened that I decided to discover Nicole Krauss starting with her first book, "Man Walks Into a Room". I really enjoyed reading it and I can say I found it quite intriguing. You might too.

Losing your memory means finding freedom.
For a more in-depth review, click here.

Losing your memory means finding freedom.
For a more in-depth review, click here.
Labels:
6 word sum up,
books,
Man Walks into a Room,
Nicole Krauss
Sunday, November 27, 2011
One Day - 6 Word Sum Up
"One Day" has been the best book I have read this year. It is one of those books that stays with you forever, though incredibly sad at the end, but maybe that is one of the things that makes her unforgettable. I have also seen the movie and for a perfect book I could not have imagined a better way to personify the two main characters, Emma and Dexter.

True Love Stays with You Forever.
Movie trailer for book clubs here.
True Love Stays with You Forever.
Movie trailer for book clubs here.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Aleph - 6 Word Sum Up
Sunday, October 9, 2011
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