Archive | January 2007

Can’t Resist a Book Meme

I grabbed this one from Kate’s Book Blog, and Kate got it from Italo Calvino’s novel, If on a winter’s night a traveler.

Books You’ve Been Planning To Read For Ages:
Kim by Rudyard Kipling
Wives and Daughters by Mrs. Gaskell
Winds of War by Herman Wouk
Most of the books on This List.

Books You’ve Been Hunting For Years Without Success:
Hardcover editions of the Snipp, Snapp, Snurr books by Maj Lindman. I have several of the recently re-issued paperbacks, but they’re not made well and keep falling apart.

Books Dealing With Something You’re Working On At The Moment:
Well, the books I need to read or re-read for my US history class and for my American literature class are:
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain.
Nothing Like It in the World by Stephen Ambrose
Mornings on Horseback by David McCullough
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Books You Want To Own So They’ll Be Handy Just In Case:
Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary, Deluxe Edition

Books You Could Put Aside Maybe To Read This Summer:
Tender Is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Books You Need To Go With Other Books On Your Shelves:
I need some Madeleine L’Engle books to fill in my collection and to replace the falling-apart paperbacks.

Books That Fill You With Sudden, Inexplicable Curiosity, Not Easily Justified:
All of the books on This List.

Books You Needn’t Read or Books That Everybody’s Read So It’s As If You Had Read Them, Too
Left Behind by Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins
Harry Potter (all of them) by J.K. Rowling. I think I’ve got the gist of the story from dinner table conversation and blog reading.
The Davinci Code by Dan Brown. Same thing, but not at the dinner table.

Books You Mean To Read But There Are Others You Must Read First
I need to read Plato before I read Augustine, right?
And shouldn’t Aristotle come before Plato?
Thank goodness, I have already read the Bible (and continue to do so).

Books That If You Had More Than One Life You Would Certainly Also Read But Unfortunately Your Days Are Numbered
Ulysses by James Joyce
The Koran
The Upanishads

Bee Season by Myla Goldberg and Atonement by Ian McEwan

I’m not sure how many of my readers would enjoy or appreciate these two novels. I’m not sure how much I enjoyed them, although they were both intriguing. I’ve seen Bee Season on various lists and thought it might be something I would like reading given our current interest in spelling bees. However, the book is only tangentially about spelling bees. It’s more about words and Jewish/Eastern mysticism and chanting and letters and insanity. In the end, I think the insanity wins. It’s about a family that is falling apart because the family members are mentally aberrant, all four of them, each in his or her own way. The father is controlling and overly absorbed in the achievements of his two children, but distant when it comes to emotional interaction. The mother is literally mentally ill and extremely distant from her husband and her children. The son, Aaron, becomes a member of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON, or Hare Krishnas) because his emotional needs for affirmation and love are not being met at home or anywhere else. And the daughter, Eliza, spells —really well, so well that she believes that God will speak to her through letters. As I said, the insanity wins; the family disintegrates; and the denouement (n. the final part of a play, movie, or narrative in which the strands of the plot are drawn together and matters are explained or resolved) isn’t.

Atonement was a much more satisfying read. (WARNING) The two books share a theme (family disintegration) and a predeliction for more graphic sexual description than I am comfortable reading, but Atonement was more believable, even redeeming in a way. Whereas I had little or no hope after reading Bee Season that the characters in the book would ever come to some kind of peace or healing or forgiveness, Atonement has some hope for, well, atonement and forgiveness.

Atonement is written in three parts: two near-halves and then a shorter sort of epilogue that (WARNING) turns everything in the book upside down and makes you doubt your reactions to and evaluations of the entire story. The first section, the set-up, moves rather slowly. But the events in the first part are the core about which the the rest of the book revolves. Read carefully and note the characters’ differing points of view and their inability to understand what is really going on in anyone else’s mind.

The second part takes place mostly in France and in England at the beginning of the Second World War, in particular the evacuation of Dunkirk. This section is violent, but appropriately so. War is violent and nasty and uncontrollably insane. Even in England, two of the characters in the novel are working in a hospital, so they, too, see the violence and suffering that war brings. In this section of the book, the past impacts the present and breaks the family into distinct units, each an island of bitterness and misunderstanding.

The third part of the novel is, as I said, surprising, and you’ll have to read it for yourself. If you decide to read the novel, no fair peeking at the ending. You probably wouldn’t understand without the first two parts anyway.

The ending to Bee Season is somewhat surprising, too, although I could see it coming a little beforehand. It’s not nearly as thought-provoking. I did like the parts in Bee Season about the mentally ill mom; for some reason I’m captivated by stories of insanity and eccentricity. Maybe I’m on the edge myself?

Oh, by the way, Bee Season has been made into a “major motion picture”; my copy has a picture of Richard Gere on the cover, so I’m assuming he stars as the dad. Has anyone seen it?

Ian McEwan, the author of Atonement, has written and published several other novels, including one called Amsterdam which won the Booker Prize in 1998. Has anyone read it?

Bloggers’ Reading Lists 2006

BoyReading-Cute(MIM)What did you read this past year? What were your favorites? What did you try to read but couldn’t quite get into? Which books made a real impression on you? What was overrated? What did you waste time reading? What do you recommend?

What do you plan to read in 2007? Why?

Post a link in the comments to your own reading list for 2006–-or your reading plan for 2007—, and I’ll link to it here. I did this last year, and it was lots of fun. I like reading lists and lists of books almost as much as I like the books themselves. Maybe it’s the anticipation— all those possibilities out there waiting to be enjoyed.

Last year’s List of Lists had thirty-three entries; I wonder if we can collect over fifty this year. Bloggers of the world, list your books and tell us about your reading adventures!

UPDATE, December 31, 2006: 51 Reading Lists so far. I’ll add yours if you leave a comment.

UPDATE, January 7, 2007: 75 reading lists so far. If it gets to 100 or I get tired of adding lists, I’ll quit. I’m moving this post to the top of the page one last time. (“We will eat one very last cookie,” said Toad.)

Susan at pages turned wins the Length and Diligence Award; her list of books read goes all the way back to 2000. Susan’s Janus post: favorites for 2006 and planned reading for 2007.

Lazy Cow, an ex-librarian from Australia, writes about the books her reading group read and discussed in 2006. A couple of the books she lists are books I read in 2006: Never Let Me Go and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime. I wish I could have attended the book group discussion in Melbourne. Ms. Lazy Cow is also planning to read more Australian books this next year. She has a good list of books set in Victoria with which to start. And here’s her Reading Round-up 2006.

Seasonal Soundings has a Reading Plan for 2007, and it includes listening to Moby Dick on CD. What an idea! Maybe I could get all the way through it that way!

Libromancy: Best Books That I Remember Reading in 2006. This list is heavy on the post-modern novels and graphic novels. And she did/didn’t like Edith Wharton’s House of Mirth. Should I read Cloud Atlas?

Danielle Torres at A Work in Progress is going to keep working the Modern Library List of 100 Best Novels that she started work on last year. She’s read eight of the 100 in 2006, not a bad start. And here’s her list of Top Ten Books Read in 2006. I think I’m going to have to read Sophie’s Choice.

Ellen at Wormbook is working on the same long term project, the Modern Library List. She’s read over 100 books this year, but not all or even mostly off the list.

The Little Professor posted on December 8th: My Year in Books (with a special appendix on Victorian anti-Catholic sermons). The appendix has some great quotations from Victorian sermons, and the list itself is heavily weighted toward things Victorian and historical fiction in general.

Author Jenny Davidson writes about “The books I loved in 2006.” I don’t think I’ve read a single book on her list although several of them sound interesting. We do share one “book read” in common: The Book Thief, and we have about the same opinion on it . I didn’t see what all the fuss what was about, and Ms. Davidson says it was her “Most disliked novel #1.”

Lotus, like several others in bookblogworld, is planning to structure her 2007 reading around several book challenges: The TBR Challenge by Miz Books, The Classics Challenge sponsored by booklogged, and The Chunkster Challenge initiated by bookfool. I’d say Lotus has her work cut out for her, and she’s planning a trip around the world, too! Well, sort of.

Maggie in Mississippi writes about her year and her favorite books read in 2006. She actually liked Capote’s In Cold Blood! To each her own.

Dorothy at Of Books and Bicycles writes about her year in books here, and here. And there may be more to come. 2006, it was a very good year. At least one of her favorites for the year, The Places in Between by Rory Stewart, sounds like something I would enjoy.

Scott Freeman: Top Ten Fiction Books Read in 2006. I’m with him on The Kite Runner, but Mr. Freeman’s number one book of 2006 is not on my favorites list at all. I repeat, to each his own.

Fay, at Historical/Present, is issuing to herself The Jane Smiley Fiction Challenge, a plan to read books by modern women authors that Jane Smiley names as most influential in the past twenty-five years. Of the authors Smiley praises, I have read books by Ursula LeGuin, Marilynne Robinson, and Amy Tan. The rest are strangers to me. Do you see any that you think I would particularly enjoy? I know MM-V has a thing for Joyce Carol Oates.

Chris at Another World Is Possible lists twenty Best Books of 2006. The list leans heavily towards post-modern emergent Christianity: Scot McKnight, Brian McLaren, Donald Miller, etc. I should probably read one of these authors to at least see what all the fuss is about, but I fear that I’m one of those Baby Boomer generation modernists who never will understand the post-modern mind.

Greg at Everything That’s on my Mind also has a list full of Christian nonfiction: Phillip Yancy, Greg Bell, and Rob Boyd. He also read Night by Elie Wiesel. I’ve not read that book, and I think maybe it’s time I did.

Sarah’s list of books read in 2006. She liked that woman-married-to-a-time-traveller, too.

Stephanie’s planning to read 26 fiction books from her TBR list by the end of 2007 for the Fiction Lovers Challenge. I’m thinking she’ll really enjoy The Thirteenth Tale and No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency, but she’s got two books on her list that I wouldn’t recommend: Lonesome Dove and The Time Traveller’s Wife. Maybe she’ll enjoy them more than I did.

Pilton, Soldier of Fortune in Toronto, Canada, is planning to read lots of good books in 2007, including C.S. Lewis’s The Screwtape Letters and Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov. If it’s his first reading of either book, I envy him the pleasure.

Kevin Holtsberry at Collected Miscellany posted his Books to Read in 2007 Preview. He got Mark Steyn’s book America Alone as an early Christmas present. I want to read that book!

Dave, an aquisitions editor at Bethany House who blogs at Faith in Fiction picks his top books for 2006. It’s an eclectic list including Inkspell by Cornelia Funke (I’ve gotta read Inkheart), Flotsam by David Wiesner, and The Book Thief by Zusak. He also lists a couple of disappointments for the year.

Sarah of Reading the Past shares her Top 10 Historical Novels of 2006. I have a lot of reading to do since I’ve not touched a one of these.

Carrie, aka Mommy Brain posted a link to her Year in Books at last Saturday’s Review of books, but I thought it should be included here, too. She gave 5-star rating to books by Diane Setterfield, Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, and Jan Karon. I think we have similar tastes. oh. I went back through the list, and Carrie also give 5 stars to a book called Homestead by Rosanna Lippi. It’s set in Austria? I think I’ll have to add it to my list.

Exxie read 52 books in 52 weeks of 2006, including Gilead by Marilynne Robinson and her first Wodehouse, Right Ho, Jeeves!. She writes that this is his her second successful year of 52 books/52 weeks, and she’s planning to do it again next year.

Sarah Faragher owns a used-and-rare bookshop in Maine, and in this post she lists her favorite books read this past year.

Kimbofo (Reading Matters) has posted her list of Top Ten Books Read in 2006. Her favorite was in tune with the Nobel Prize committee: Snow by Pamuk. I read it, too, but can’t say I liked it as well as they did.

Girl in a Book lists the books she read in 2006. Among the many fantasy series, she read The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon. I’m interested to know what she thought of it since Computer Guru Son loves this book. But he won’t/can’t tell me why.

Carrie of Reading to Know posted her Master List of Books Read in 2006 at a separate blog set up just for booklists. What a nice idea! I see she read a lot of my favorites: Dorothy Sayers, George Macdonald, C.S. Lewis, Elisabeth Elliott, Dostoyevsky, Jan Karon, Victor Hugo, Dumas. We must have similar tastes.

Palm Tree Pundit: What I’ve Read in 2006. Her favorite book of the year was When People Are Big and God Is Small by Edward T. Welch.

Lady Laura’s Book List for 2006.

Another Stephanie at So Many Books posts her 2006 in Review post. Again, should I read Cloud Atlas? What is it about, anyway?

Allison who blogs at The Autumn Rain has lots of delightful books on her 2006 Reading List, including two that I recommended and she enjoyed. I see she also read Mrs. Miniver. We just watched the movie a couple of nights ago, and I found it interesting, not a movie that could be made in the same way nowadays, too much patriotism. I didn’t know it was a book.

Magistramater has a Master Reading List for 2007. It’s much more organized and disciplined than my TBR List. After looking at her list all neatly sorted into categories, so balanced, I feel as if mine is a Wild Thing that escaped all bounds and reason long ago. Even worse, I see books on her list that I’d like to add to mine. (Mornings on Horseback? I’ve been wanting to read about TR.)

Mama Hen who moves At a Hen’s Pace shares her list of Books Read ’06. And the first book she’s planning to read for 2007 is Diane Setterfield’s The Thirteenth Tale. I think she’ll enjoy it; I did.

The Rap Sheet has a top-10 List of Crime Fiction Picks for 2006. He also lists a few extra that were good but wouldn’t fit inot the top 10. I haven’t read any of these, but I may go back and check some of them out.

Mental Multivitamin’s “Best of” post for 2006.

Southern Girl has a year-end book report, a list of the books she’s read in 2006. She liked The Kite Runner and Peace Like a River and several others that are favorites of mine, too.

Karen Krakovianka posts The Lure of the List from Krakow, Poland, a review of her reading for the last ten months of 2006.

Kinuk, another blogger from Poland, has her list of ten best books of 2006. Rose Tremain? Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers?

Heather Madame Rubies read a lot of books in 2006, too. Some of her frequently mentioned authors were C.S. Lewis, Jody Piccoult, Chaim Potok, and Neta Jackson.

Fairfax at Perhaps Joy read 70 books in 2006, including Walking From East to West by Ravi Zacharias (on my TBR list) and Rebecca by Daphne DuMaurier, one of my favorites.

Lauren lists the 12 best or most influential books that she read in 2006. One of the books on her best list is A Small Rain by Madeleine L’Engle, a book that is up for a re-read here at Semicolon sometime this next month. I love Madeleine L’Engle, and I’m planning to re-read a number of her books in 2007.

Ruth who lives in Tecwil and blogs at There Is No Such Thing as a God-forsaken Town (great name) lists some of the books she read in 2006.

Jason who is Spoiled for the Ordinary posts his Top Six of Oh Six. One of his six is Hood by Stephen Lawhead. I read that book, too, and liked it although I didn’t think it was Lawhead’s best. Byzantium was his best book, imho.

Elaine at Random Jottings of a Book and Opera Lover lists some of her favorite books of 2006, and it turns out that some of her favorites are mine, too: Dorothy Sayers’ Gaudy Night, Edith Wharton’s House of Mirth, and George Eliot’s Adam Bede —all wonderful books.

Joy at Thoughts of Joy lists her favorites for 2006. Water for Elephants and Hell at the Breech both sound like books I would like to read.

Little Willow, a fellow lover of children’s literature, has a list of favorite books of 2006 that ranges from picture books to adult fiction and nonfiction. I you like children’s fiction or YA fiction, you’ll enjoy her list.

Literary Feline lists all of her books read in 2006 in the post prior to this one and then her favorites in this post, including The Thirteenth Tale and one I’ve never heard of, her number one book of the year, Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See.

Tanabata has her Best and Worst Books of 2006.

Ex Libris has a long post mulling over the thoughts produced by an exceptional reading year. Two of her favorites were TO Kill a Mockingbird (great book) and Scoop by Evelyn Waugh, a book I”ll be adding to my TBR list.

Lisa at Breaking the Fourth Wall has a partial list of books read in 2006 and some personal picks for best and worst. She liked Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, too. Why have I not heard of it?

Monica Brand has a choice for the Most Importatn Book of 2006. I think I’ll have to re-read that book someday and see if I get it better the second time around.

Denise has her 2006 Reading List posted at Books in Bed.

Zandria has a list of 110 books read in 2006, mostly nonfiction.

Mindy Withrow has a nice list of books read, including her husband’s dissertation on Jonathan Edwards. And she also has a plan for 2007, subject ot changes. And the TBR list includes Kristin Lavransdattir!

Mary writes about the best books she read in 2006. Her top pick? Abide With Me by Elizabeth Strout.

Miss Erin has some fine favorites for 2006 —children’s, young adult and adult fiction. She’s a Jane Austen lover and a lover of fine books in general, so if you are, too, then you might enjoy her choices.

Kevin Stilley has a list of five favorites from 2006. And his favorite was a children’s book; he’s my kind of guy.

Carl V. at Stainless Steel Droppings has a list of what he read in 2006, lots of fantasy/horror/scifi, including Tolkien (!). He includes links to his reviews of many of the books he read.

Claire of gingerpixel.com has a list of favorites and not-so-favorites for 2006. Her best read of 2006 was The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova. I didn’t know it was a Dracula book?

Lesley reviews her literary year at A Life in Books. One of her favorites was Atonement by McEwen, a book that Eldest Daughter is reading right now and liking very much. I may follow behind her and Lesley.

Imani gives her list here with favorites highlighted, and here she says she’s never read a bad book (this year).

Here’s Cam’s Year in Review, complete with graphs. It sounds as if she had a wonderful year discovering blogging, and litblogs, and reading lots of books.

LitLove says it’s been a fantastic year for fiction. She lists ten favorites.

Les (Lesley’s Book Nook) had a very good year of reading, and her blog includes revews of all the books she read in 2006. The Book Thief was her favorite.

Cinnamon at Nose in a Book read novels, lots of short stories, nonfiction, and drama—quite a variety, including The Secret Life of Walter Mitty and several of Wodehouse’s Jeeves stories.

Liz B. made a list of the Best Books of 2006. These are Liz’s picks for the best in children’s literature published in 2006.

Here’s 3M’s Book List blog. She has books read in 2006 as well as books to be read in 2007. She’s planning to read some great books: RIver Rising, Kristin Lavransdatter, Peace Like a River and Number 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency. What a great year of reading!

Eileen (Books and Hooks) read 62 books in 2006, almost equally divided between fiction and nonfiction. She reads a lot of “Christian fiction” and has some things to recommend that I’ve never read.

Jen Robinson, one of my favorite bloggers, read a lot great children’s books in 2006. She also read some adult fiction and nonfiction, and she has links to reviews of many of the books she read.

Mindy at propernoun.net posts My Reading Year, a list of favorites in several categories with an emphasis on YA fiction.

Laura has a beautiful list of books to read in 2007. She’s interested in homemaking and women’s history, diaries and journals and biography, som fiction, many of the same things I’m interested in reading.

Bybee, who’s Naked Without Books, read 66 books in 2006. She liked a lot of them, including one of my favorite authors James Herriot.

Here’s Miz B’s list of books read in 2006, and here are her favorites and her goals for 2007.

Bookfool read 128 books in 2006, and they’re listed in categories: Biggest smile-inducers, tear-jerkers, most surprising, biggest wastes of time, etc. She also wishes she could have met Corrie Ten Boom and P.G. Wodehouse, among others. Me, too.

be_zen8: A Year in Books. There’s that Book Thief again. Maybe if I had discovered it instead of being told how wonderful it was by everyone in the blogging planet. . . .

Isabella Magnificent Octopus recaps her year in books. Her three favorites were Middlemarch (yes!), Snow by Pamuk (yuck, but what do I know?), and The Dodecahedron.

Linda intentionally read some great books in 2006, and she’s planning to read more in 2007. One of her planned books for 2007 is The Lord of the Rings; I hope she enjoys it half as much as I have over the years.

Here are Kate’s favorite books from 2006, and here are her reading resolutions for 2007. She’s planning a Virginia Woolf project and a Small Press Spotlight on her blog, among other goals.

Kathleen Marie’s Stranded in the Mountains 2007 Reading List. She says she’ll start with these and update from time to time. So stay tuned.

Mom at We Six in the City posted her reading list for 2006. She raed Kristin Lavransdatter, and some C.S. Lewis, and a couple of books by E.M. Forster. I’m curious as to how she liked the Forster books.

Author Debbi Michiko Florence read these books in 2006, lots of good YA fiction and fantasty here.

Author Cynthia Leitich Smith listed these Cynsational Books of 2006. She has a long list of picture book titles, middle grade fiction, and YA fiction, all published in 2006.

Tulip Girl is planning her reading for 2007. She’s going to read Gilead, among others. Enjoy, Tulip Girl.

Ariel’s Top Ten Books of 2006 include a few of my favorites, Peace Like a River by Leif Enger, The Pilgrim’s Regress by C.S. Lewis, and A Certain Justice by P.D. James. Since he has such good taste, I might just take his suggestion and read the other books on his list this year.

Joseph Bottum’s (First Things) possible reading plans for 2007 include Ronald Knox and Nevil Shute, or maybe others. He also recommends James Hilton’s Random Harvest.

Poetry Friday: Carl Sandburg

Tomorrow, January 6th, is Carl Sandburg’s birthday. So I thought today would be a good Friday to post something by and about Sandburg. I’ve already posted my favorite Sandburg poem, Arithmetic, here. I found this poem tonight:

“Joy” (1916) by Carl Sandburg

Let a joy keep you.
Reach out your hands
And take it when it runs by,
As the Apache dancer
Clutches his woman.
I have seen them
Live long and laugh loud,
Sent on singing, singing,
Smashed to the heart
Under the ribs
With a terrible love.
Joy always,
Joy everywhere–
Let joy kill you!
Keep away from the little deaths.

I like those last two lines.

Ten Things I Love that Begin With “C”

I got this meme from Stefanie at So Many Books who assigned me the letter “C”.

1. Computer Guru Son, whose real name actually begins with “C”, too. He’s not a thing, but he is a talented and loving son. And I do love the man he is becoming.

2. C.S. Lewis. His books. All of them.

3. Cashews. I got some for Christmas; my urchins ate a lot of them. I want some more.

4. Christmas. I had a beautiful, family Christmas. I hope you did, too.

5. Cartography. A beautiful map is rather a delightful thing, don’t you think?

6. Connections. I like Madeleine L”Engle’s books partly because they’re all interconnected. Characters from an early novel show up in later novels. I like finding connections between authors and characters in books and bloggers and people in my life. I like it when one person I know from one place shows up somewhere else.

7. Community. I like books about community. I like writing about Community. I would like to figure out exactly how a community is formed and sustained, how members of a community can nurture one another without suffocating individuality.

8. Calligraphy. I don’t do it. I don’t do anything artistic. But I do enjoy the look of letters and words artistically spilled across a page.

9. Cherry Coke and chocolate. I shouldn’t, but I do.

10. Christ.

If you’d like a letter, leave a comment, and I’ll pick one for you.

Philippa Pearce

Author Philippa Pearce died December 21, 2006 after suffering a stroke, at the age of 86. (HT: H2Oboro Blog) She wrote several books for children, including her most famous fantasy Tom’s Midnight Garden. This book is classic British fiction about time travel and the ending of childhood.

The Independent: Obituary for Philippa Pearce

Telegraph: Obituary for Philippa Pearce.

Two articles from Horn Book, one by and one about Philippa Pearce.

Philippa Pearce was born on January 23, 1920. Have you read Tom’s Midnight Garden or her Whitbread prize-winning book, The Battle of Bubble and Squeak? I read Tom’s Midnight Garden a long time ago and remember it fondly if not too clearly. I seem to remember a strange sort of clock that strikes thirteen to signal the onset of magical events, but I may be mixing it up with something else.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born January 3rd

I got busy today and almost forgot to recognize Tolkien’s birthday! We’ve been enjoying the products of Tolkien’s inventive mind around here for many years, and lately has been no exception. Dancer Daughter is in the midst of her yearly re-reading of The Lord of the Rings. We watched Peter Jackson’s interpretation of The Fellowship of the Ring a few nights ago. Yesterday I read Eldest Daughter’s essay on Samwise Gamgee as a Kierkegaardian White Knight of Faith, an essay she wrote for one of her classes at Baylor. And Engineer Husband is reading Fellowship of the Ring out loud at night to some of the younger urchins who haven’t read it yet.

So Tolkien is daily indulgence here, and it’s easy to forget his birthday since we celebrate him and his works every day.

Happy BIrthday, Professor Tolkien!
Thoughts on The Silmarillion
Yesterday Was Tolkien’s Birthday
On Seeing the Movie Version of Return of the King

How Does Something Like This Happen?

I’m writing this post two days before Christmas, but I’m saving it until after Christmas because it’s going to sound grinch-y. And picky. But I’m writing it anyway.

Isn’t Hyperion Books a major publisher? Don’t they have editors and staff and people who read their books before they are published to make sure there aren’t any grammatical errors or spelling errors?

I just read one of the books that was nominated for the Cybil Middle Grade Fiction award. This book was a hardcover copy of the book from the library, not an advance reading copy or a review copy. Near the end of the book I read the following: [Character in book] pushed for a marker on the sight of [historical character’s] house..

Yes, “sight.” It’s not a misprint or a typo. I make plenty of those and have no room to talk about other people’s. But where was the editor when this blatant error made it into print?

I know it’s obsessive/compulsive, but the mistake rather spoiled the book for me.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born January 2nd

Philip Freneau, b. 1752. Known as the Poet of the American Revolution, he was a close friend of Madison and of Jefferson. His poetry leaned toward propaganda, first anti-British and then anti- Federalist and supporting the party of his friends Madison and Jefferson. Here’s a few lines from a more personal poetic ode:

If I should quit your arms to-night
And chance to die before ‘t was light,
I would advise you — and you might —
Love again to-morrow. From Song of Thyrsis

William Lyon Phelps, b. 1865, American educator, critic, author and preacher, professor of literature at Yale. “Those who decide to use leisure as a means of mental development, who love good music, good books, good pictures, good plays, good company, good conversation – what are they? They are the happiest people in the world.”
“You can learn more about human nature by reading the Bible than by living in New York.”

Robert Nathan, American novelist and author of The Bishop’s Wife and Portrait of Jenny, both of which were made into movies in the late 1940’s.

To This Great Stage of Fools: Born January 1st

Maria Edgeworth, b. 1767, Irish novelist and children’s author. She met and corresponded with Sir Walter Scott. She also met Byron, and George III read one of her novels and said that he now had a better knowledge of his Irish subjects. Her father, who had four successive wives and twenty-two children (Maria was his second oldest child), insisted on editing and approving many of her books before he would allow them to be published.

Arthur Hugh Clough, b.1819, poet and friend of poet Matthew Arnold. Clough died at the age of thirty-one of malaria, and Arnold wrote the elegy Thyrsis in remembrance of his friend.

Yes, thou art gone! and round me too the night
In ever-nearing circle weaves her shade.
I see her veil draw soft across the day,
I feel her slowly chilling breath invade
The cheek grown thin, the brown hair sprent with grey;
I feel her finger light
Laid pausefully upon life’s headlong train; —
The foot less prompt to meet the morning dew,
The heart less bounding at emotion new,
And hope, once crush’d, less quick to spring again.

Sir James George Frazer, b. 1854. Scottish student of mythology and comparative religion, author of The Golden Bough. He saw the history of religion in Darwinian terms as “three rising stages of human progress — magic giving rise to religion, then culminating in science.” So now you know one source for that bit of nonsense.

E.M. Forster, b. 1879, English novelist and essayist. His most famous novels are Howard’s End, A Room With A View, and A Passage to India. I started reading A Passage to India but didn’t get very far into before giving up. I don’t remember what I disliked about it, but I did dislike it. Can anyone give me a good reason to try again?

J.D. Salinger, b. 1919, American author best known for his book The Catcher in the Rye. No, I’ve never read it.