stapsreads: 'The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them' (Default)
I'm no particular fan of the Lake poets, but I rather found that this didn't matter. (In fact, had I been a passionate devotee of W. Wordsworth, for example, I'd have found some idols to have feet of clay.) This is a fascinating biography of the women of the Lakes circle - Sarah Coleridge, Dorothy Wordsworth, Mary Wordsworth, Edith Southey, Sara Hutchinson in the elder generation and, in the younger, Sara Coleridge, Dora Wordsworth and Edith May Southey. Drawing extensively on the women's own writings (correspondence, poetry, journals etc) and letting them speak for themselves where possible, Jones has brought together a sympathetic, convincing and very readable biography.

http://www.bookcrossing.com/journal/10056780
stapsreads: 'The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them' (Default)
The most recent book club choice - and goodness knows it's taken long enough to get round to actually getting a meeting together and talking about it (over Dark and Stormys, Espresso Martinis, and Mojitos, and all on a Tuesday night). The choice was announced in May. How, then, did I find myself having to order it off Amazon the preceding Thursday and read it in three days? Sheer incompetence, and other people taking the communal copies on holiday with them.

I wish I'd had longer, because it was very heavy-going in every sense of the word. Three hundred pages, counting the contextual notes at the end, very small print, and harrowing content. It was a frustrating book and, if I'm honest, stylistically a bit of a let-down. In the introduction Janice Boddy, one of Aman's co-authors, enthuses about the Somali tradition of poetry and story-telling, which wasn't borne out in the narrative itself. The style was very same-y all the way through, no matter what was going on. Opinions at book club were divided as to how effective this was - whether it highlighted the horrors of colonialism and misogyny even as it presented them as part of everyday life, or whether it blended everything into a vaguely depressing mush.

Like I said, I read it too quickly.

http://www.bookcrossing.com/journal/10125792/
stapsreads: 'The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them' (Default)
I used to be very into ballet stories, not so much because I was keen on ballet, but because they tended to be about people knowing what they wanted, and getting it. Though this is a true story, it's no exception. Firstly, it's about Jin Xing's ambition to be China's greatest dancer. Secondly, it's about her identity as, and journey to become, a woman. Two interlinked destinations, and a route that takes in the People's Liberation Army, Korea, America, Rome, and Belgium, an array of lovers, and a (mostly) supportive family.

I enjoyed this one a lot; one gets a real sense of the force of Jin Xing's personality, and it's interesting from the dance perspective, too. My only complaint is that some all but insurmountable challenges get passed over in a couple of sentences, and I would really like to know more about some of them.


Extract:

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