Monday, April 26, 2010

The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova

The Historian turned into a two-week book...for a couple of reasons. For one thing, at the beginning, I was so creeped out that I had a hard time reading it near bedtime. Secondly, it was a really long book. As I neared the end of the book, I found myself wishing two things:
1) That I had read Bram Stoker's "Dracula" before reading this
2) That the book had ended much sooner than it did. At 79 chapters plus an epilogue, I felt that it took far longer to tell the story than it could have.

At first, I was intrigued by this varied group of historians hunting Dracula through the years. I was disturbed and completely creeped out by the librarian vampire who appears early on. But by the end, I was no longer surprised or scared by anything. The various encounters seemed to take on a formulaic pattern, and I was disappointed.

Still on vampires, but much lighter reading - this week I'm reading "Living Dead in Dallas" the second book in the Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris...

Monday, April 12, 2010

Dandelion Wine

I had forgotten just how much I loved Dandelion Wine. I remember now why I read it so often as a kid. For me, it was like I could have summer any time of the year. The way Douglas sees the world is so typical twelve-year-old...its a great book.

One thing I was interested to discover is that people actually did smoke corn silk. So, I have to take back everything I said about Grampy being a fibber when he talked about doing that. Guess he wasn't just making it up!

This week...The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova...don't know much about it except that its got vampires...

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Dandelion Wine

My pick this week is Ray Bradbury's "Dandelion Wine". It's an old favorite, one I took out of the library a hundred times as a pre-teen. Set in the summer of 1928, it is the story of twelve-year-old Douglas Spaulding - and also of Ray Bradbury's childhood as well.

I've been looking for this book for years and just acquired it with credits from Paperbackswap.com - I'm excited to get reacquainted with it.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

The History of Lucy's Love Life...

Well, thanks to some extra time off due to the flooding and sewer system issue in Warwick, I finished this book up early this week. It was a quick read, and good for something light after the serious and/or nonfiction books I've been reading lately.
Fairly predictable, but a cute story, and interesting to see the take on different guys from history.

As for me and who I'd travel back in time to "date" - William Blake and Jim Morrison top my list. Anyone want to share their picks?