Saturday, October 29, 2011

The Penelopiad

Faithful followers,

You may recall that in one of my first blog posts, I mentioned Margaret Atwood's The Penelopiad as being one of my favourite novels.

Last week, Atwood's own stage adaptation of her novella came to The Stanley and the Arts Club Theatre put on an incredible show.  I went to the play with my friend Kat, who hadn't read the text before, and she was equally blown away.

I often assume that everyone knows the gist of Homer's "Odyssey", but I'm beginning to realize this isn't true.  Thanks to Brad Pitt, I think most people at least know the story behind "The Illiad", so I'll use that as my starting point.

After winning the Battle of Troy with his crafty Trojan horse plan, Wily Odysseus sets sail home to Ithaca, after 10 years of absence from his wife Penelope and son Telemachus. Instead of going straight home though, Odysseus spends another 10 years adventuring all over Ancient Greece, outsmarting a cyclops (pissing off Papa Poseidon to no end), withstanding the songs of sirens, and shacking up with the Goddess Circe on her island, to name a few.  Meanwhile, Penelope is back at home in Ithaca with a "hardened heart", warding off hundreds of suitors eating her out of house and home and trying to convince her that her husband is dead.  Penelope is the definition of loyalty, never losing faith in her husband's returning, and earning her own epitaph, "clever", with tricks like her never-ending shroud.  In the end, Odysseus finally returns home and kills everyone, including 12 maids of Penelope's who been particularly skanky with the suitors.  P and O go to sleep in their special treetrunk bed, dawn with her red rose fingers dances across the sky and so end "The Odyssey".

In Atwood's The Penelopiad, however, the story takes a decidedly different take on the events of Homer's tale, with a deceased Penelope telling HER side of things down from Hades.  The essential difference in Atwood's text is that the 12 maids are in fact Penelope's most trusted confidantes, hanging with the suitors on her command, helping her weave and unweave the shroud, and being basically like daughters to Ithaca's Queen.  Penelope is therefore heartbroken when unbeknownst to her, her beloved maids are hanged by her own son before she can explain to her husband what a help they were to her.  The maids take a main role in Atwood's text, narrating hilarious scenes like "The Trial of Odysseus"  and giving a lecture on phallic imagery in Odysseus' return to Ithaca.  They are incredibly haunting characters as well, following Penelope around in Hades, "floating" rather than walking, their feet still "twitching"- the term immortalized in Homer's original.

Those of you who know me best know I LOOOVE to get my Feminism on, and this novella suits me so fine.

I was so excited to find out that "The Penelopiad" was coming to Vancouver, and that it was Atwood herself who had adapted her original work for the stage.  The play features an 11 person, all female cast, Vancouver's staging starring Meg Roe as Penelope.  The remaining 10 women all play maids, but additionally play other characters, including male ones such as Penelope's father, her son Telemachus, and of course, Wily O.  The actresses featured in the Arts Club's production were so incredibly talented, and I was especially impressed with their ability to portray masculine characters.

Another aspect of the play that I adored was the musical excerpts included throughout.  Penelope and her maids sing a haunting lullaby to Telemachus, an effective round while they weave and unweave at the dead of night, and as raucous sailers sing a ballad on O's exploits.  There was a violinist in the cast, another woman played guitar, there was often additional percussion instruments involved in the songs, and oh my goodness could these ladies sing!!! Sometimes the pieces were in 4 part harmony, and they were gorgeous!  I am so incredibly picky when it comes to vocal music, so you can be assured that if I'm saying these gals were good, I really, really mean it.

Check out some of the pics, and a video "trailer" from the Arts Club production.  It runs until Nov 20th, and if you have a chance I whole-heartedly recommend seeing it.  If thats not a possibility for you, at least read Atwood's book!






Friday, October 21, 2011

A Novel in Five Hours

I have just completed my first adventure into the world of Douglas Coupland.  I've spent the last couple days mostly curled up on the couch, going through boxes of kleenex, watching Say Yes to the Dress marathons, and reading Coupland's Player One: What Is to Become of Us. Proclaimed at the bottom of the front cover as "A Novel in Five Hours".  It is indeed structured as such, hours 1-5, and narrated by 4 characters stranded in a seedy airport hotel bar during a global disaster.

Kathy, a divorced mom looking for a second shot at love, Rick, a divorced alcoholic tending bar at the lounge, Luke, an ex-priest turned criminal, and Rachel, a physically gorgeous, emotionally and mentally complicated 20 something looking to have a baby, all end up stuck in Rick's bar when oil hits a whopping $900 per barrel and the world as they know it goes absolutely to shit.

Along with these 4 characters, the novel is also narrated by "Player One" a disembodied voice that exists in the computer world, and knows everything.

Coupland's novel is eerie, and post-modern, but not preachy or annoying. I daresay I enjoyed it very, very much, but I can recognize that I might be a minority audience in this feeling.


Through his 5 narrative voices, Coupland launches an inquisition in to too many hot topics to count: Religion, Technology, Relationships, Time, Society, Identity....the list goes on.  And while it doesn't offer many answers to any of the proposed questions, Coupland's novel certainly gets you thinking.  

Get this though- it has a happy ending!  Yes, "the New Normal" is depicted in a not altogether positive light, but the characters that I got surprisingly attached to all came out of their shared-disaster-experience THANG alright.  Then after the story there's a hilarious "Future Legend" of terms, that also includes clever little references to the plot and characters preceding it.  For example:

Time Snack:

Often annoying moments of pseudo-leisure created by computer when they stop responding in order to save a file, to search for software updates, or, most likely, for no apparent reason.

Torn-Paper Geography

The phenomenon in which, if you take a sheet of paper and rip it in half, both pieces will probably resemble and American state or Canadian province...

Pope Gregory's Day-timer

Doesn't mean anything in particular, but it certainly would have been interesting to see.





I'm having trouble discussing this Player One without giving too much away...think Woolf meets Hemingway meets that t.v. show Jericho meets Canada meets the Dystopian lit genre, and if you're still interested, let me know and I'll lend it to you!






plus


plus


plus


plus

equals





Thursday, October 6, 2011

The Solitude of Prime Numbers

The women on my mum's side of the family have a great book and magazine sharing system, and my grandma (aka, the gma or the matriarch) is the hub.  Whenever we visit, there's a massive stack of magazines on the coffee table, and much more to my delight, a magical table in her upstairs bedroom covered in all sorts of literary goodies.

My mum and her 3 sisters all have pretty exceptional taste in books, and that upstairs-table at my grandma's is a never-ending source of reading material.  Every time I go over for a visit at my Gma's I come home with new reads.

This weekend, I brought home Paolo Giordano's The Solitude of Prime Numbers.




It was a really quick and easy read- I finished in about a day and half.  It was certainly a change of pace from the Austen novel that preceded it, and because of this I think I enjoyed it all the more.
Giordano's novel is a story of two "prime number" type characters, Alice and Mattia of Italy.  

The title of the text provides a context for the lives of these two characters, who are prime numbers in that they never quite fit in with society as a whole.  Mattia, who grows up to be a successful mathematician, at one point wonders if the two can ever be "prime pairs", prime numbers with only one other number between them, like 5 and 7 or 11 and 13.  These numbers are alone together, less lonely than the higher prime numbers, where pairs get less and less frequent. 


The novel begins with sections on both 6 year old Alice and 6 year old Mattia, when the main characters both experience a childhood trauma that impacts the entirety of their lives.

Mattia suffers from the loss of his identical twin sister, and Alice has a ski accident, experiences that leave the protagonists emotionally and physically crippled, respectively.  Mattia's childhood commits him to a seriously anti-social lifestyle, while Alice's leads to an eating disorder and a dangerous need to feel accepted by her peers.  

Alice and Mattia meet in high-school, forming a somewhat inexplicable bond that neither of them can shake off, even when Alice gets married and Mattia leaves Italy for a research position out of the country. 
Giordano's text is a really well-written character-study that examines the sometimes underestimated impact of childhood experiences on one's life.  The plot is entirely believable (something I really appreciate in a novel), and is simple enough that Giordano's readers are able to focus on the characters themselves and how they deal with their lives, rather than the WHAT of what happens to them.  


If you're looking for entertaining, escapist literature, this book is not the way to go.  It is at times slightly depressing, and constantly inspires introspective thinking.  If this is a reading goal that intrigues you however, I highly recommend Giordano's book and the innovative writing it presents.



Also, Paolo is a hottie.
...and he's only 7 years older than me!
                              

Can you say "crushing"?

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

"Now a Major Motion Picture"

Dear followers and random stumblers-by,

I'm afraid I've been away from the blog world for a while! Now that I've had a month to get my new "you're-not-a-student-anymore" life all sorted our, I hope to be frequenting the blogspot crooks and crannies more often.

Tonight's post is not so much inspired as straight up developed by the lovely Miss Ashley, who suggested I write a post on novels turned movies.

Interestingly enough,  3 of my english courses at UBC, 2 of them from my last semester, dealt with that hot-topic.  I wrote a paper on Disney's adaptation of Perrault's Cinderella for my Children's Lit course, and in both my Victorian and Dystopian lit classes, we often had the opportunity to watch film versions of the texts we were studying and respond to them.  Both classes came to the similar conclusion that good adaptations are a rare gem.



First person narratives turned films specifically rarely-if ever- work out.  When you have a story written in the "I did this, I did that" style, screenwriters often jump to the horrendous overdubbed narration option.  It works in Grey's Anatomy.  I hate it almost everywhere else.

This issue is even more of a complication for screenwriters when a novel has multiple narrators.  One of the examples from my Victorian Lit class is Wilkie Collins' The Moonstone.  As a class, we all though the BBC film version of this "first detective novel" did it a huge disservice in having to erase the several narrative voices included in the text.

A more recent and topical example is Kathryn Stockett's The Help.  My mom and I agreed to read novel before seeing the movie, and I'm quite glad that I remained true to this pact.  The Help has 3 narrators, Aibileen, Minny and Skeeter, but the movie only uses Aibileen's voiceover as a narration.  My only real complaint of the movie is that this decision causes the audience to lose a lot of the Stockett's characterization of Skeeter and Minny that is so well deveoped in the novel.  The biggest contrast I noticed, and one that nagged at me throughout the late night showing of the film that I saw with my cousins, was a discrepancy in Minny's character.  You know that Avenue Q song, "Everyone's a Little Bit Racist"? Well, in Stockett's novel, the uppity white women of Jacksonville, Mississippi aren't the only ones with racist tendencies.  Its done in a very subtle and well-executed way, but still apparent in the text version of this story, Minny is presented as being similarly prejudiced towards the white people who have prejudices against her.  That complex layer to the novel made a much stronger statement than the movie's "white people are mean" one. (Sorry).

That said- the movie is still very good! I almost think I would have enjoyed it more however, if I hadn't read the book first.  And lets be clear, the book was still better.  As tends to be the rule.


                                        


To go general again, as much as first person narratives are difficult to transfer over into film, limited omniscient p.o.v's (where the reader is privy to one character's thoughts, but one one) can be equally challenging.  How do you show a character's thoughts in a movie without doing the silly voiceover thing? With difficulty.  Some movies though, have managed to do it.  Harry Potter.  Case in point.

I just finished reading, for the first time.  Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. What a fabulous read! If any of you haven't read it yet- do it.  It is SOOOOO much better than the movie! It goes into so much detail, and wow, it was just great.  The 2005 Keira Knightly version of the novel is a nice "filler", in that it does a lovely job of showing off the English countryside and fancy dress, and it makes me love Mr. Darcy a bit more than just words on a page can do.






 (or actually watch him walk across the field.)



In the end though, I have to conclude that the best movies are made from objectively-written novels.


Lord of the Rings baby.  LOTR.  

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Seamus Heaney: Human Chain

I don't feel like analyzing tonight, just sharing.

At my last Chapters visit I scored 3 Victorian novels (A Tale of Two Cities, Far From the Madding Crowd, Pride and Prejudice) and 2 books of poetry, one being Seamus Heaney's 2010 publication, Human Chain (the other being a Margaret Atwood collection with a fox on it that I can't remember the name of at the moment....).

I haven't made my whole way through Heaney's collection yet, but I'm very taken with the first poem, "'Had I not been awake'".    As I said, no analyzing, just sharing.  And here I go.



'Had I not been awake'

Had I not been awake I would have missed it,
A wind that rose and whirled until the roof
Pattered with quick leaves of the sycamore

And got me up, the whole of me a-patter,
Alive and ticking like an electric fence:
Had I not been awake I would have missed it,

It came and went so unexpectedly
And almost it seemed dangerously,
Returning like an animal to the house,

A courier blast that there and then
Lapsed ordinary.  But not ever
After. And not now.


Make of it what you will.  At the very base of all things poetical- isn't that the point?

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Tennyson's "Ulysses" and Halley's "Untravelled Worlds"

I'm blogging from my iPod followers!

This is the first time I've done this, so it's quite exciting. I've spent that last day or so up at Timberline Ranch in Maple Ridge, on retreat with the Surrey Children's Choir for my first go in my official capacity as their new general manager. It's been a great weekend so far, filled with the the typical, cliched standards of music and laughter. I'm incredibly impressed with this new, young group. Their sight-reading is decent, they've got a fair bit of gusto when it comes to singing things like showtunes or, you know, Jerusalem, and their unison sound is the classic scc blend of beautiful.

For a good few years now, I've been very intrigued by the connection between music and literature, fuelled hugely by the mentorship of my highschool IB English teacher, Ronnie Haggarty. It's a wonderful thing that music can take already beautiful poetry and push it just that much further towards the edge of sublime.

Take for example, Tennyson's "Ulysses" and what a brilliant thing Paul Halley did with it in his composition "Untravelled Worlds".  Halley manages to match melodies with Tennyson's lyrics that lift the words to new levels, allowing for what I would argue is an even stronger connection with the poetry.  I think the most beautiful example is Halley's setting of the line "Yet all experience is an arch wherethrough/ Gleams that untravelled world, whose margin fades for ever and for ever/ When I move".

On the words "wherethrough gleams that..." Halley writes an ascending melodic line that breaks into a beautiful 3 part chord, topped with the highest notes the song has seen to this point.  Then just as the notes moved in an upwards motion as if to create the first half of an arch-like shape, the melody than subtly returns back to the midrange, both completing the arch AND evoking the feeling of a "fading margin" with each chromatic step.  Bam.

Pages later, Halley accompanies the word "silence" with brief phrases punctuated by eighth note rests.  The line from the poem is actually "...every hour is saved/ From that eternal silence"; the fact that the silences are brief, with short melodic lines seemingly breaking through it, mirrors Tennyson's vision of Ulysses/Odysseus seeking an extended, never ceasing life of excitement. At the end of this line, the melody extends the words with a triplet-like feel,  giving a sense that this wish has been or will be fulfilled.

Even something as simple as setting the words "sinking star" to a descending line from the 5th to the 3rd of the chord is a great example of Halley's bringing words to life.

If you haven't read this poem before, you should.

If you haven't heard the song before, you should go to the Grand Opening of the new Surrey City Centre Library on September 24th and hear the Surrey Children's Choir perform it in those fabulous acoustics!!

Ithaca- Ulysses' hometown.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Summer Reads.

I just spent about 3 hours on and off writing a blog about the crappy novels I read at the lake this summer.  When I went to post it, it disappeared.

I LOVE TECHNOLOGY!

I won't write it out again, I can't be bothered.  I'll just leave you with the conclusion that I came to in the end:


A warning to readers: When at the lake, instead of reading easy, shitlit, its probably best to read nothing at all, and just get wasted instead.

Friday, August 12, 2011

"It Wasn't Fair..."

Lovely blog world.

Today, I return to you after a couple weeks of silence.  A glorious two weeks for me, which I spent in my little piece of heaven, my slice of paradise, my one true love and favourite place in the world, Kosh Lake.

As per usual, I had an absolutely brilliant time up at the cottage, and have returned home a little sad, but extremely revitalized and fulfilled.  I was just on the phone with a friend, and described my time at the lake as this little bubble, where nothing ever changes.  Thats not entirely true, of course.  The people remain mostly the same, but we grow up year by year.  And although each of my Ontario Summers consists of the same ingredients of sing-songs, skiing, swimming, double-kneeboarding, tubing, drinking, dancing, and catching up, the recipe always turns out a little bit different.

dubz kneebz is a huge tradition.  This year's updates included a midride board switch and backflips.

Spicing things up this year was an international flair.  Kevin, one of my beloved cottage neighbours, spent the past year going to school in Denmark, and brought back 4 delightful Danes with him when he came home.  Kasper, Johannes, Matias and Rasmus were so much fun to have around, and definitely put a welcomed spin on things.  Also visiting the Duerr family this year was Pauline from Berlin.  She and I hit it off pretty quick, making official our cottage-friendship by jumping off High Rock together.  Pauline was such a sweet and fun-loving gal, and I hope to someday visit her in that far off country of hers.    Steven, the older Duerr brother, was also up and around a bit more this year than others, which was great.  I was super happy to have him around.  And so we had a bit of a youthful crowd up this year, rounded out by my little cousins Kamryn and Carter, a couple friends of theirs, and always a cottage girl, Emma from next-door.  My girl Karley came up for our second weekend, and it was awesome, as I knew it would be.

Me and Pauline hanging out in the Duerr's basement
Me and the Danish boys!


The Kell kids and the Duerr brothers <3

Emma and Kamryn. Cottage Girls forever!

 The rest of my cottage crew remained mostly the same. My cousin Sean joined us at the lake for the first summer in a few, which was a delight, and as always, my cousin Rick and his wife Nicole were up and down in the midst of their busy lives.  Cap'n Ron held down the fort as always, and we got to catch up with our long time cottage buddies, Steve, Bill, Leanne and Linda.  The "soul sisters", my mom, myself and my Dad's two sisters, Roz and Marci made our gang official this summer with matching jewelry.  We all wore our necklaces all trip long, and I've yet to take mine off.  Along the same line, friendship bracelets were a huge hit this year, and I'm happy to note that my little sneaky cottage connections will be alive and well on some precious Oakville inhabitants, in a fancy financial office in Toronto, wandering around France, Denmark and Germany, braving a new school in Brooklin, and here in classic White Rock.

Cousinly Action!

Its always hard for me to adapt back to life in White Rock after having such a magical stay at Kasshabog.  Its always the same the first morning back home: I wake up slowly, and the moment I realize I'm no longer in Ontario start the day with some carelessly chosen curse word.  The last few days at the lake are always hard too, with that bittersweet sense to them as I know I'll be leaving soon.  I'm always in such a rush those last days to soak things up, to squeeze every little memory in, knowing it will  have to last me an entire year before I'm back again.

Ever since I started this blog, I've wanted to share my favourite poem of one of my favourite poets, "Blackberry Picking" by Seamus Heaney.    For a long while, I figured it would fit in as a summer post, simply because thats its temporal setting.  After my cottage experience, however, I've realized that choosing to share it now makes even more sense.  I feel so connected to the closing lines of the poem, as if the speaker wrote them about my final cottage days.

Here, give it a read, and then I'll elaborate.



Late August, given heavy rain and sun
For a full week, the blackberries would ripen.
At first, just one, a glossy purple clot
Among others, red, green, hard as a knot.
You ate that first one and its flesh was sweet
Like thickened wine: summer's blood was in it
Leaving stains upon the tongue and lust for
Picking. Then red ones inked up and that hunger
Sent us out with milk cans, pea tins, jam-pots
Where briars scratched and wet grass bleached our boots.
Round hayfields, cornfields and potato-drills
We trekked and picked until the cans were full,
Until the tinkling bottom had been covered
With green ones, and on top big dark blobs burned
Like a plate of eyes. Our hands were peppered
With thorn pricks, our palms sticky as Bluebeard's.

We hoarded the fresh berries in the byre.
But when the bath was filled we found a fur,
A rat-grey fungus, glutting on our cache.
The juice was stinking too. Once off the bush
The fruit fermented, the sweet flesh would turn sour.
I always felt like crying. It wasn't fair
That all the lovely canfuls smelt of rot.
Each year I hoped they'd keep, knew they would not.



There's obviously a whole lot going on in this poem, and not every bit of it reflects my annual lake experience, but certain bits of it definitely do.  Throughout the poem, there is a sense that this event of sorts takes place year after year, something almost everyone can relate too.  The line "I always felt like crying" really drives this sense home for me, the choice of the word "always" indicating a repeated emotion, despite its irrationality.  Again, the speaker's description of feeling this way "each year" emphasizes the sense of repetition and even return.

"Each year I hoped they'd keep, knew they would not".

The juxtaposition of hoping and knowing is soooo melancholy here and just breaks my heart.  Its this line that struck a chord with me from the start, and now, in connection to the piece of my heart the cottage carries year through, I feel even more strongly about it.

To lighten the mood a bit before closing, another cottage constant is that I come back home, without fail, addicted to some piece of music that I would usually despise, or at least be annoyed by.  It'll get played on a boat ride, or at a party, or performed by someone, and the second its connected to my lake life I fall in love with it.  Gems from past years include "Holiday" by Green Day, "Beautiful Girls" by Sean Kingston, and last summer "I Know You Want Me" by Pitbull.

This summer, I especially regret to admit that my artist of choice is Rihanna.  (Shut up Kirstin).  Redeeming me somewhat though, is the fact that the lyrics of this particular song are pretty cool:

"Sound is my remedy/Feeding me energy/Music is all I need"

Give it a listen.  It might make you want to dance.


Next post: All the crappy books I read while I was away!

Saturday, July 23, 2011

My Ontario Summers Part 2

So today after working out (Zumba Cardio Party!!!), and I was doing my happy dance out on the deck ("I'm going to the cooottaaage, I'm going to the coottaaaage"), my Mom asked me "What is it that you love most about the cottage?"

And I was like "Psha! Mother, don't you know the lyrics of my cottage song? Specifically the second verse?" and went on to recite it for her.  She pointed out that I could almost slam it, and I figured that since song lyrics are pretty much poetry, I could include it here as "something" about literature!  So after perusing my outside cottage literary picks, here is mine- straight from the heart.

My Ontario Summers

It was raining in Vancouver when we got off of the plane and I thought
Right about now they're probably stumbling to bed
After sitting at a campfire for hours on end.
When I woke up the next morning, I couldn't hear the sound of music or laughter
Or the clatter of a boat going by.  How was it that I was stuck at home
While you were there.  I always hate to say goodbye 
To my Ontario Summers, my time at the cottage on the lake.
I'll be rolling back in next year
Whatever it takes.
Where pale blue skies turn to blankets of stars 
Can you believe all this magic is ours?
Throw your cares away.
Once you're up, you're up to stay.  

Its in the sparkle of the sun on the water.
Its in the flickering flames at night.
Its a thousand different little things that make up this feeling
That eveythings gonna be alright.
And the moment that I get there,
I mean the second I arrive I'm struck by that feeling.
Its in the faces of the people who are there.
The smell of the air.
The loons on the bay.
The end of the day.
I always hate to say goodbye
To my Ontario Summers.
Throw your cares away.
Once you're up, you're up to stay.

And what I mean by that is even though it may seem 
So far away, there's a part of you that will always stay.
Cause just one day, just one month, just one summer
Ain't enough.
You'll be back again.
Cause the lake won't let you let go.

So when I'm winding through those tricky roads
After saying sad goodbyes,
I'm always looking over my right shoulder
Like I've left something behind.
But then when August turns to September,
When Summer fades into Fall
I realize what it is.  And that I haven't really lost it at all.
Its where it should be
This imperative part of me.
I forgot my soul there, don't you see?

So my tan lines may fade and I'll start wearing shoes again,
But I'm holding on to that feeling of my Ontario Summers.
My time at the cottage on the lake.
I'll be rolling back in next year, whatever it takes.
Where pale blue skies turn to blankets of stars.
Can you believe all this magic is ours?
Through your cares away.
Once you're up, you're up to stay. 

















Wednesday, July 20, 2011

My Ontario Summer

Hello lovely blog people.  I am in a strange mixture of moods today.  On the one hand, I am absolutely giddy with the knowledge that in a week's time, I will be on a plane to Ontario for two weeks holidays at my Aunt and Uncle's Cottage on Kosh Lake.  On the other, I am in an intense amount of physical pain, as the wicked sunburn I so idiotically procured on Monday has turned into a super sensitive minefield of aching and agony.  OW!  Its so bad that I had to call in sunburnt to work today.  Its like its penetrated into my muscles.  BUT THAT'S OK BECAUSE I'M GOING TO THE COTTAGE IN A WEEK!

Which brings me to the subject of today's blog!  Last Christmas, I gave my aunt and uncle a collection of literature that reminds me of the cottage.  I wrote it all out on pretty paper and bound it with ribbon, and it probably made me more happy making it then anybody gets reading it.  But hey, I'm a lit-nerd, and thats what happens.  I thought that in preparation for my annual cottage trip, I'd share some of those selections here!

Stephen Leacock's Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town
I first came across this lovely story sequence in my Engl 222 course, Canadian Literature.  We studied "The Marine Excursion of the Knights of Pythias" and I adored it to no end.  Leacock's entire work is centred on the fictional town of Mariposa, that is loosely based on his home town in Northern Ontario, and also incredibly alike to the small town feel at Lake Kasshbog.  So I obviously love it.  This particular short story that we read in class is about one of those New Orleans style boats- you know, the ones with the windmill type thing on the back?  Anyways, they take one of those out on the lake, practically the whole town is on board, and they get stuck out in the middle and have to paddle themselves to safety, singing the Canadian National Anthem all the way.  Its adorable.  And AMAZINGLY the whole thing is available online for free!!!

A.J.M. Smith's "The Lonely Land"
Yet again a find from my Canadian Lit class, this poem is straight-up Canadian landscape and has the word 'spume' in it.  In one of the epic scrabble showdowns that grace the shores of Kosh Lake every summer, my Aunt Marci played this word, and nobody believed her that it was real.  I can't remember if it cost her a win or not,  but a large deal was made of it.  So when I came across the word the following September, we all felt pretty bad.  The closing line of the poem is also quite wonderful: 

This is the beauty


of strength
broken by strength
and still strong.

 Loves it!

William Butler Yeats' "The Lake Isle of Innisfree"
Choir kids, you'll love this one!  Mr. Horning associates this poem with hitchhiking, and I think that is dumb.  I mean, I guess that technically everyone is welcome to interpret poetry as they see fit, but I think he tends to forget that the "While I stand on the roadway or on the pavements gray" line, is preceded by "...for always night and day/ I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore/" and is followed by "I hear it in the deep heart's core" (Beautiful, by the way, WB my man).  So when I sing this line, I think of the way that I constantly have the cottage on my mind, wherever I am, and that I can't wait to get back there.  Once you've heard lake water lapping, you can't go back. 

There are more, but my back is on fire, and I have to go put a facecloth soaked in peppermint tea on it and lie still for a while.

Next up, I believe, will be another Seamus Heaney poem, that will be perfect for the 38 degree weather I'll be heading into next week (SUCKAAAAAAAAAS!)

Weird things happened to the font/font size of this blog.  Oh well.
See you soon Kosh!

Sunday, July 17, 2011

The Hunger Games Trilogy

This morning, I finally finished the Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins. The Hunger Games, Catching Fire and Mockingjay kept me constantly entertained in the small patches of hours I've had off work for the last couple weeks.  I feel like I haven't blogged in ages (which is suitable, since I haven't), but I wanted to finish all three of Collins' novels before babbling on about them here.  I read the dystopian set on the recommendation of the lovely Jennifer Kelly, who, in her words (ish), knowing my taste, wouldn't suggest a book that "wasn't good literature".  Thanks Jenn.  I agree that The Hunger Games and its sequels are definitely worth reading, and would recommend them to all my literary friends.  Going beyond the "worth reading" stamp though, I would hazard a guess that young adult readers, Collins' target group, would adore the trilogy like my generation adores Harry Potter (moment of silence).

I guess that to some of my readers it sounds silly considering myself something other than a young adult, but when it comes to novel genre, I tend to think of "young adults" as being more in the 14-18 range.  Is that just me?  As much as I enjoyed Collins' trilogy, I sometimes found myself wishing I had read it at a younger age (or I suppose wishing it had been written when I was younger), assuming I would have enjoyed it that much more.  I also think a younger Danica would have cared less about Collins' fragmented style (as in, her style is literally one of sentence fragments), which started to really get on my nerves by book three.  In terms of content and entertainment value though, I was totally sold.  And at the risk of being harshly made fun of by Jenn and Kirstin, I appreciated the trilogy's motif of fire imagery.  (Insert laughter).






For those of you who haven't heard of it, Collins' trilogy is set in the dystopian world of Panem where an elite Capitol rules over twelve underprivileged districts.  Prior to the action of the novels (about 74 years to be exact), a rebellion is described to have taken place, where the Capitol defeated rebel forces from the district, completely demolishing the 13th district, and leaving the others in rather shoddy conditions.  And these jerks at the Capitol have made an annual event to remind the districts of their place.  Welcome to the Hunger Games, where each district pledges a boy and girl between the ages of 12 and 18 to fight each other to the death in a man-made arena full of horrors.  Only one child can win (as in, only one can live).

Isn't that terrible!?  This past year, the boy I tutor did his English 11 book report on Collins' trilogy, and when he explained this general plot line to me I was both completely intrigued and highly disturbed.  Ah, the beauty of dystopian fiction.  I knew right then that I wanted to read Collins' novels, but it took some pleading from Jenn to make it happen.  I was worried that since I knew the basic plot of the novels (pretty intensely in the case of the first) they would be ruined, but that totally wasn't the case.  The things I thought I knew came to a totally different world after entering Panem, and the life of Katniss Everdeen.

Katniss is one of the district twelve tributes for the 74th annual Hunger Games.  She narrates all three novels, and is, I think, one of Collins' greatest achievements.  She's an incredibly believable character, with natural talents and flaws, and the way Collins writes her mindset at any given time is very impressive.  When Katniss doesn't quite know whats going on, neither does her reader.  If Katniss isn't present for a certain event, Collins doesn't fill us in with some lame, detailed conversation between Katniss and someone who was present, but instead allows the reader to fill in the blanks along with her narrator.

Girly girl that I am, one of my most favourite parts of Collins' story was the romance that weaved in and out of it. Again, Katniss' trials with love are very honestly and realistically written.  As the books go on, they get more and more political, and Katniss' uncertainty on her stance on these issues is also quite convincing.

I feel as if I can't go very far into any of the books without giving too much away, but let me say this:  I applaud Collins for her courageous decision to stray from the classic happy ending.  The third novel, the last in her trilogy, closes on a melancholic and even dangerous note, which I fully appreciate.  It gives the whole trilogy a lot more strength, and leaves an impression with her reader that seriously lasts for days.  Its a thinker, her trilogy, and as I mentioned before, it is worth the read for any avid reader.  And if you know a "young adult", buy it for them for their birthday.  They will thank you.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Jai Ho!

I just realized this blog title has the potential to confuse a lot of my faithful readers.  This entry is not about Slumdog Millionaire, and it is not about the epic dance choreographed by Kirstin Hain and yours truly (although you can see it here, here, here and here).  It is, instead, another "list" blog, this time highlighting some of the Indian and Indian-themed literature I've come across in recent years.

I wouldn't go as far as to call it a "genre", but this grouping of texts is definitely a set of sorts, and one that I have almost entirely enjoyed.


Midnight's Children - Salman Rushdie 
I've mentioned this novel before, in my "faves" list.  I don't have the book on me (Kirstin, do you have it?), but I know it is close to a whopping 500 pages, possibly more, and that each page is worth it.  Rushdie is generally considered a master of his craft, and I think this novel totally proves that.  Saleem, The main character, and narrator, is an interesting and complex fellow, who is endowed with the magical midnight power of mind reading.  The imagery in Rushdie's novel is probably my favourite thing about it, and its seriously amazing the way he writes it all together.  I've written a couple papers on the way that Rushdie's command of his motifs is what holds this multi generational, cross-continental novel together.  Of the many motifs, my favourites are the blue Kashmiri eyes that distinguish many characters, and the "ticktock" clock of midnight.  I recognize that reading this book is a major feat, and that it won't be everyone's cup of tea, but I feel like any and all true lovers of literature NEED to read this brilliant work.

The God of Small Things - Arundhati Roy
I read this novel for my Major's Seminar class which focussed on Literary Prize Winners.  Roy's novel won the Booker in 1997, and for any who cares to know, tied for first place in the ENGL 490 showdown for best assigned text (it shared top place with Coetzee's Waiting For the Barbarians, another fabulous work, and the one that I was championing).  Roy's novel reads a bit like poetry, a bit like fairytale, and has a very folk-story vibe to it.  In my opinion, Roy's greatest accomplishment in this text is her treatment of structure.  The story centres around twin brother and sister Estha and Rahel, and the way in which a terrible tragedy affects both their lives.  Another highlight of the text is Estha and Rahel's secret language of sorts, and the way it works itself into the writing.  There is a technical literary term for this that I'm kicking myself for not being able to remember.  Like other novels in this set, Roy's considers the Indian caste system, although I must say her treatment of it is much more in depth and focussed than others I've read.  This is a beautiful read, and its not too long, so easy to handle.

Inheritance of Loss - Kiran Desai
This is another Booker Prize Winner, but I actually read it in my ENGL 204 World Literature class, which wasn't really world lit, but rather "worldly" lit.  All the set novels explored "cultural crossroads" of sorts.  The way this one fit in had to do with the Nepali uprising of the 80's, British citizens living at the foot of a mountain in Tibet, (including two funny old ladies and a young teenage girl), and an illegal Indian immigrant living in New York.  Its really hard to give a taste of the plot of this novel, but its a very interesting read, and gives a neat spin on the typical post-colonial literature of english department fame.  Some nice "setting representing theme" stuff going on. There's also a very well-written romance.

White Tiger - Aravind Adiga
So this is the only novel in this entry that I'm not crazy about.  However, it too won a booker prize (I'm starting to realize how stuck up my taste in lit is coming across), so I'm somewhat the minority in this opinion.  Actually, when I think about it, I'm sure lots of my blog readers would quite enjoy this book.  Its just not my type.  Adiga's novel is narrated in first person, structured by a series of letters that his protagonist, Balram, is writing to the President (if I recall correctly, thats the term Balram uses) of China.  I can't say much more without giving it all away, but Balram is a crazy, self-made man who goes through a lot of crap, but takes it mostly in stride.  Adiga does a nice job of representing a growing and changing India, to be sure.

Interpreter of Maladies - Jhumpa Lahiri
This text is another from my 204 class, and I loved it.  It is a short story collection concerning Indians living in India, Indians living in the states and Americans with Indian heritage living in both.  There is a story about a couple who lose a child, a story about an Indian cab driver (that one is so cute and sad), a couple who move into a house with a bunch of crazy christian objects left behind and kind of hidden around (hilarious), a sad Indian house wife, and many others.  We were only assigned a handful of Lahiri's short stories for class, but I read them all, and thought they were super great.  Again, short stories aren't for everyone, but if you're into them, you'll probably like these ones.


So there you go.  My fourth year at UBC ended up revolving fairly heavily around books from and about India, and for the most part, I found reading them a very rewarding experience.  If you've read, or end up reading, any of the books I've mentioned, let me know what you think!

And seriously, watch the Jai Ho videos, which are probably better than all of these novels put together.