Saturday, April 29, 2006

#8 The Giver

by Lois Lowry

This book had me hooked from the very first page. I really enjoyed the entire story and couldn't wait to find out what happened. The story is about a boy named Jonas who lives in a community that is perfect. There are no locked doors, no crime, and no real pain to speak of. When people get old they are "released" from the community with a celebration. The boy lives well not knowing that there is much more feeling in the world; including color. He is chosen to be the receiver which means that he will receive all the memories of the entire world. He is responsible for those memories so they won't be lost, but also so the rest of the community won't have to deal with them. As he receives each memory he learns new and wonderful things like colors, snow, and love; but he also learns about war, heartache, and pain. That's all I'm going to write about the storyline. If you want to find out what happends you'll have to read it for yourself. It comes highly recommended from myself, as well as my little sister and mother. It's a short, easy read, but well worth it.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

#7 The Tale of Desperaux

Being the Story of a Mouse, a Princess, Some Soup, and a Spool of Thread
by Kate DiCamillo

This is a wonderful story. I really enjoyed it, and loved that it was a quick read. This WILL be a story I read to my children at bedtime when they are between 5 and 10 (that is if and when I have children). I think it is perfect because the chapters are short and moral is great. There are some wonderful lessons about courage and doing what is right. It is an interesting and fun book that I would definitely recommend.

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

#6 Catcher in the Rye

by J.D. Salinger

I'm not sure exactly why this is such an acclaimed book. Not that it wasn't good, or that I didn't like it, but it seems a little simpler than I imagined it would be. The one reason for it's acclaim that I can think of is that it is about depression and was written in a day when depression was misunderstood. Maybe I don't fully understand the book, so if that is the case, and you've read the book, let me know. That being said, I will try to give it a review without my strange sense of wonder about it's status.

The book covers a few days in the life of a teenage boy that has depression. He is retelling the days that led up to an assumed year in a mental hospital in California (his being in a mental hospital is only elluded to). He finds that most people in his life are phony and the small amount of happiness he feels in those few days comes from children: his sister, a boy on the street, etc... He refers to many things others do that annoy him, but he does most of those things many times in the book. I think he is most depressed because he realizes that he is phony also, and he's trying to do whatever he can to prevent that from happening.

Here is my analysis of what the book is really about. It's about how depressing the real world is; how innocence and sincerity are lost when you grow up. This is shown thru the happiness he feels because of children and about how he finds all adults to be phony. Even his two favorite teachers, the ones he thought weren't phony, tell him how he needs to grow up and be responsible.

The thing that really stood out to me was that he wants to be The Catcher in the Rye. He misinterprets the lyrics to a song and gets the idea of the catcher in the rye. The song's lyrics are "if a body meet a body coming through the rye" and he thinks it says "if a body catch a body". He tells his little sister that he always pictured all these little children playing in a rye field. He is the only person around that is not a child. His job is to stand by this big cliff and catch any children who might run out of the rye field, not knowing where they are going, and save them from falling off the cliff. Falling off the cliff is like entering the real world and losing your childlike innocence. He wants to save all the children from that fate.

The story is good, and the point is good, but it was too simple. I guess my expectations exceeded what the book is. It was enjoyable and I'm gald I read it, but I don't know whether I would recommend this book or not.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

#5 Pride and Prejudice

by Jane Austen

What an amazing book!! This will definitely go on my favorite books list (the one that only exists in my head right now). I already knew the basic plot, but I still found myself wanting to find out what happens next. There's a good line in the book that describes this perfectly. Elizabeth is reading a letter from Mr. Darcy and this is how her reading the letter is described, "She read, with an eagerness which hardly left her power of comprehension, and from impatience of knowing what the next sentence might bring, was incapable of attending to the sense of the one before her eyes". Okay, I wasn't quite that bad. I did take enough time to comprehend what I was reading, but I still couldn't wait to read the next sentence.

Another quote from the book that I thouroughly enjoyed was when Elizabeth is descibing the love that Mr. Bingley felt for her sister Jane. "I never saw a more promising inclination. He was growing quite inattentive to other people, and wholly engrossed by her. Every time they met, it was more decided and remarkable. At his own ball he offended two or three young ladies, by not asking them to dance, and I spoke to him twice myself, withough receiving and answer. Could there be finer symptoms? Is not general incivility the very essence of love?" The last line was the part I liked the most.

I would recommend this book to anyone and everyone! It is definitely a classic. Now I just need to watch the movie to see how good it is.

Monday, April 10, 2006

#4 Peppertide

by Jack Weyland

This is an old book that I'm pretty sure I read when I was about 13 or 14. It is so old that I couldn't find a picture of it on the web anywhere. I picked it because I remember enjoying a few Jack Weyland books when I was younger, and this was the only one we had in the house. It was very simple and an easy read. It was okay and the story was heartwarming, but the depth of the characters and the plot were lacking. I wish we would have had a copy of Charlie because I think that would have been a better choice from this author.

Saturday, April 01, 2006

#3 The Da Vinci Code

by Dan Brown

This book is a page turner. I stayed up until 1:00am one night, and 12:30am the next night reading it. All the history and mystery were very intriguing. I especially liked the fact that it felt like the reader could participate in figuring out the clues. I watched a similar movie, National Treasure, where they were looking for a treasure hidden by The Masons. In the movie I felt like I was just watching the characters figuring everything out. In this book the clues weren't so difficult that you couldn't at least figure some of them out before the characters did. Even the more difficult ones were usually figured out in steps, so at some point you felt like you knew the answer before they had fully figured it out. I also didn't figure out who the nemesis was before being revealed in the book. Multiple times I thought I knew who it was, but I was never correct. Throughout the book I was concerned about how they would end this book. I didn't know if they would be able to end it either logically, or with final conclusion. Brown found the perfect way to finish that didn't disappoint. I would highly recommend this book to any and everyone. It was fantastic.

I don't have any favorite quotes that I remember, but there were a few ideas that intrigued me.
The biggest was the number of divine proportion, PHI. PHI is the number 1.618... It is called the divine proportion because it is present in nature, art, and many other things in different proportions. I will give an example to help explain. If you take the distance from your shoulder to your wrist, and divide it by the distance from your shoulder to your elbow you get the number 1.618. It is present in the proportions of the pyramids and the Parthenon; in art like The Last Supper, in music by Mozart and others, and many other things. One of the examples the book gave was, if you take the male population of ANY beehive anywhere in the world and divide it by the female popluation in that beehive, you get 1.618. Very interesting.