[stylist] what I've been reading

Gerardo Corripio gera1027 at gmail.com
Mon Feb 27 22:38:03 UTC 2012


Wow how do you get a hold of so many books? I'd especially enjoy reading
Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg  (1986, 2005); sounds very
interesting! For those who don't live in the US how to get a hold of the
book?
Gerardo

-----Mensaje original-----
De: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] En nombre
de Chris Kuell
Enviado el: lunes, 27 de febrero de 2012 12:47 p.m.
Para: stylist at nfbnet.org
Asunto: [stylist] what I've been reading

Here is a list of the books I've read in the last 6 weeks or so, if anyone
is interested.

chris
The Man in My Basement by Walter Mosley  (2004)

A somewhat interesting novel about an unemployed, drunken, loser black guy
who has a wealthy white man rent his basement for a few months at an
exorbitant rate. Mosley's African American protagonists are always
'players', and I find this aspect of his work overly stereotypical.  

Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand (2010)

A novel about an Italian kid in California who becomes an Olympic runner,
then joins the Air force in WWII, gets shot down and is a Japanese POW for 2
years. The POW scenes are one worse than the next, and in the end, with
God's help, he forgives all. Yeah, right.

Double Shot: A Culinary Mystery by Diane Mott Davidson  (2004)

Murder she wrote with a catering backdrop.

Writing Down The Bones by Natalie Goldberg  (1986, 2005)

Goldberg is a practicing Buddhist, and this book is about how she uses
journal writing as a daily meditative practice. It's interesting, and
probably a good way to open the unconscious to see what spills out.

Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks  (2001)

An excellent historical novel about a town in England that walls itself off
from the rest of the world to contain the plague for a year in the 17th
century. A novel based on real events. 

The Social Animal: Hidden sources of Love, Character and Achievement by
David Brooks  (2011)

 Brooks is a journalist/anthropologist/psychologist, and he used a fictional
couple's lives, from birth to death, to detail some of the plethora of
knowledge he has gathered over the years. He's a good writer, and makes what
could be very dry quite fascinating.

The House on Olive Street by Robyn Carr  (1999)

An entertaining novel about 5 women writer friends, one of whom dies in
chapter 1. The other 4 spend a summer screwing up and fixing their own
personal lives.

The Hero With A Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell  (1949)

An interesting, if a little boring, discussion of the basic aspects of the
hero myth, and how many different myths from all continents and cultures
contain the same elements. These include popular religions, and Campbell
proposes the myths are part of our psychological makeup. The book is dated
and he relies a little too much on dream research by Sigmund Freud for my
taste. 

The Fifth Witness by Michael Connelly  (2011)

A mediocre legal thriller, I wish Connelly had stuck to the Harry Bosch
novels.

Churchill and the Jews: A Lifelong Friendship by Martin Gilbert (2007)

Gilbert is an all-around Churchill expert, and this book details how from
Childhood Churchill had Jewish friends and always pushed for an independent
Zionist state, as early as 1920, despite anti-Semitism in England and
throughout Europe. .

Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard (1974)

This book won the Pulitzer prize for non-fiction in 1975. Dillard spends a
year at a cabin in the woods of Virginia, basically studying and reading
about nature. She is a fabulous writer and a few sentences can't do this
work justice, but she goes through all the wonders of all the seasons and
discreetly points out that this massively complex eco system we live in has
to be the product of a God. As she wrote--the agnostic asks 'who turned on
the lights?' while the person of faith asks 'why did they turn them on?'

 

 
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