Saturday, June 27, 2009

I Want to Kick Jodi Picoult in the Shin...

because of how she ended My Sister's Keeper. I hear that the movie ends differently. Probably because they knew how mad the audiences would be if it followed the novel. Other than the ending I really liked it. The shifting narration worked really well and kept me engaged. It also allowed me to appreciate all the characters, particularly Sara (the mother) for whom I may not have had much sympathy otherwise. I will read another Jodi Picoult someday, but not right away. I'm still mad.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Yummy for my mind...


Finally read The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman. I bought it a couple of weeks ago, and I actually put off starting it and read some other stuff instead because I knew once I started it meant the book would be over sooner rather than later. I really liked it and wanted it to be longer. Every word, ever sentence, every page was good writing and the characters were real. Yes, I know it's a children's book, but Gaiman could kick J.K. Rowling's butt, easy! Don't get me wrong, I like Harry Potter, but I will take a one-off Neil Gaiman over the entire Potter series. He's just that good!

Friday, June 5, 2009

Afghanistan, those burkha days...

I just finished A Thousand Splendid Sons (Khalen Hosseini). It is by the same guy who wrote The Kite Runner. It was so sad and so good. It ended leaving you invested in the characters so that you wanted to know more about what happened to them. I do not know what it would be like to live in that kind of a culture, where women are chattel and valued only as bearers of sons. This book, if it is a true telling, confirmed for me my fears about what the burkha means. If just one woman is wearing it because her husband/father has made her then that is one woman too many. I realize some may wear it because they want to. But how can we be sure the choice is a free one? How can we not fear that the cloth covers bruises and broken teeth? It would be one thing if the men were also wearing such things, but it is clearly so one sided. Shiver. What will those men do with the parental rights granted by Bill 44? Will they keep their daughters home and prevent them from being educated? That is the fear I have.