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Posts Tagged ‘reading list’

This novel was not what I was expecting!

However, it was very, very good. I devoured it as quickly as I could, flipping page after page in total disregard for the clock or anything on my to-do list. But, it’s nice to get completely swept up in a book every so often, especially in the summer, and it was a pretty quick read so I’m now able to move on a concentrate on other things in life once again.

I found myself on several occasions putting the book down for a moment or two just so I could sort through everything that I had read. It was easy to read, Murakami’s writing style is beautiful and thorough – like taking a deep drink of cool water on a hot day, but the metaphors were tangled amongst the prose in such a way that I had to stop and think because I didn’t want to miss out on anything!

I recently read Mrs. Dalloway, so the parallels between these two works were pretty clear to me. Both focus on human isolation even amidst a bustling city. The satellite metaphor Murakami uses to describe people on different paths, orbiting the same Earth, but completely isolated reminded me of Woolf’s image of the woman across the street from Clarissa – they could see one another through the windows moving about in their respective rooms, and all that stood between them was air, yet they were removed from one another and completely alone. It was the same comment, but each speaks distinctly of its own era.

While reading this, I was suddenly inspired to open up my NaNoWriMo novel from last year, and add a little more character depth! Sumire, a main character in Sputnik Sweetheart, was an aspiring novelist herself, and there are several discussions that take place amongst the characters on the subject of plot development, novel writing, and style. It’s wonderful to feel entertained, inspired, and inquisitive all because of the same book – well done, Murakami, well done.

If you’re itching for a good book to read, this’ll do it for you.

xx.

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Check another off of the list!

I’m a tragically slow reader, but since we’ve moved to our new apartment, Ryan + I have made it a point to get in bed at 10 pm and read until 11. Setting aside a specific time every single day to dedicate to our books helped me plow through The Richest Man in Babylon {upon request of my Dad}, my Grandfather’s war journal, and Lord of the Flies, all in record speed!

Unlike most people, my high school did not make me read Lord of the Flies. And, I think I’m glad about that. I’ve always gotten more out of the things I chose to do myself than the things others told me to do. Most of the books that I read for school I didn’t like simply because I felt like I was forced to read them. Immediately after serving my last term in college, I finished Fahrenheit 451 and fell in love with reading again. I read it because I wanted to, not because I had to – and what a book it was to start this chapter of my life!

Since then, I’ve made it my personal goal to read all of the classics for me {thus, the list was born} along with anything else that I think sounds good. I hate that it felt like reading was a chore for me in school, and maybe that’s one reason why I decided not to use my English Education degree – I didn’t have any good ideas about how to make reading really exciting for students because I myself felt like I didn’t want to read when I was told to. I’m a weird brand of literature lover…maybe I just have authority issues.

Anyway, my thoughts on Lord of the Flies are all positive. I know I’ve read a good book when after I’ve turned the last page, I attempt to go on with my life like I had before I opened it but find myself wondering about the characters in the book and missing them a little. This was certainly the case with my most recent read. Next up, Mrs. Dalloway!

What book are you currently working on?

xx.

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