Tuesday 31 January 2012

"Why do the people I love always leave me?"

My Week With Marilyn is a wonderfully comical, touching, and informative story of author Colin Clark's time spent working on the movie The Prince and the Showgirl in the 1950's.  The majority of the book is Clark's account of the goings on (both on and off camera) while the movie is being filmed.  This section provides a really interesting view of the world of film making, especially in his accounts of the major problems created by the film's two big stars, Marilyn Monroe and Sir Laurence Olivier.  The second part of the book was published at a later date and is where a lot of the interest in the book lies.  In the original publication of this memoir, Clark writes a journal entry almost every day, with the notable exception of one missing week in September during the filming.  This missing week is what is covered in the last section of the book and where the memoir got the title, My Week With Marilyn.  Without giving anything away, the descriptions of Monroe are really quite heartbreaking.  Clark show her as a very fragile and somewhat emotionally unstable woman.  She had just entered into her third marriage with play write, Arthur Miller, and was outside the USA filming the movie that she thought would finally paint her as a serious actress.  A very well written memoir and one that provides an interesting insight into the famous blonde bombshell.

My Week With Marilyn has been turned into a film starting Michelle Williams as Monroe and Kenneth Branagh as Olivier.  I haven't seen it yet but I think they did a wonderful job casting and look forward to seeing it in the future!  Here is the trailer for the film:

"Pound for pound, Warwick Davis is one of the funniest men I know" - Ricky Gervais

I found out that Warwick Davis had put out a biography completely by accident.  I was surfing around Amazon and it was recommended as something I would enjoy.  At its discovery I got so excited I immediately went to the library and had it specially ordered in (Such an amazing library feature!) so I could read it.  For those of you that are wearing confused faces wondering who on earth is Warwick Davis, I will tell you! Or better yet, I will show you:

Ohhh that guy!! Yes, Warwick Davis has been in A LOT of movies (this is just an assortment!)!  Since he has been in several of my favourite movies (Star Wars, Willow, Harry Potter) I have always been a fan of his and was very excited to find out more about his career.
Davis' book is a great read for not only fans of his work but also for fans of movies and the process of making them.  He recalls many anecdotes from his times on and off the set, from the trecerous slide down a snowy hill will Val Kilmer during Willow, to visiting George Lucas during the last day of filming of the third Indiana Jones film (the infamous rats scene!), and to Mark Hamill graciously giving an 11 year old Davis the entire Star Wars toy collection.
Not only is Warwick Davis an excellent story teller but you can also tell that he really loves what he does for a living and is very proud of all the films he has worked on.

Tuesday 24 January 2012

Literary Sidenotes

I meant to post this awhile ago when it was first released by AbeBooks.  It gives a really nice and comprehensive summary of a number of literary based news throughtout 2011.  A fun way to look back on the past year!
A Literary Review of 2011

And on the other side of the spectrum, I recently discovered that the British literary magazine, Literary Review, gives an annual Bad Sex in Fiction Award! This yearly tradition started in 1993 and is presented to the author who produces the worst description of a sex scene in a novel.  The rationale for such an award is "to draw attention to the crude, tasteless, often perfunctory use of redundant passages of sexual description in the modern novel, and to discourage it"  I find this absolutly delightful! Check out the link below to find a list of all the past winners:
Bad Sex in Fiction Award Winners 1993-2011

Sunday 22 January 2012

And Now For Something Completly Different!

I have been reading a lot of non-fiction lately (well, a lot for me!) and have had the opportunity to read some really fantastic books.  First up was The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin.  I had seen this book everywhere and the concept for the book was one that really interested me.  Rubin tells the reader upfront that while she is considers herself to be a fairly happy person she felt that she wasn't meeting her full potential and that there were simple things she could do in her day to day life that would increase her happiness; as she puts it so perfectly, in order to change her life she doesn't have to change her life.  She manages to do this by making changes that are actually attainable and almost seem like not very life changing things at all.  Like smiling more, singing in the morning, being silly, and remembering birthdays.  So many time while reading this book, I found myself pausing and going 'huh...that doesn't sound so hard.  I bet I could do that'.  I almost found myself becoming happier the more I read; I was inspired by how an everyday person can do things that seem so small yet make such a big impact on your wellbeing.  I have taken many of Gretchen's tips and put them to good use, one in particular is the One Minute Rule (if it can be accomplished in under a minute they just do it now, don't put it off!).  A wonderfully inspiring book.

I also recently picked up Amy Chua's biography Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother and got so hooked that I finished it within 24 hours.  This is the story of Chua and her decision to raise her daughters in the Chinese Way, something that is totally at odds with the Western parental style.  Here is a snipet from the book:

"A lot of people wonder how Chinese parents raise such sterotypically successful kids.  They wonder what these parent do to produce so many math whizzes and music prodigies, what it's like inside the family, and wheter they could do it too.  Well, I can tell them, because I've done it.  Here are some things my daughters, Sophia and Lousia, were never allowed to do:
* attend a sleepover
*have a playdate
*be in a school play
*complain about not being in a school play
*watch tv or play computer games
*choose their own extracurricualar activities
*get any grade less than an A
*not be the #1 student in any subject except gym and drama
*play any instrument other than the pizno or violin
*not play the piazno or violin
Chinese parenting is one of the most difficult things I can think of.  You have to be hated sometimes by someone you love and who hopefully loves you, and there's just no letting up, no point at which it suddently becomes easy.  Just the opposite, Chinese parenting - at least if your'e trying to do it in America, where all odds are against you - is a never-ending uphill battle, requiring at 24-7 time commitment, resilence, and guile."

I was so fasinated by this book because it is something that I have never experienced and really did not know a lot about.  It was sometimes hard to keep an open mind about Chua's parenting style and I was often wondering if she had gone to far (for example, when she threatens to burn all her daughters stuffed animals if she doesn't go practice the piano), but all in all I feel like I learned a lot about a culture that I was unfamilar with.  A really interesting, humourous, and heartrbreaking read and one that I would definetly recommend.

Two great non-fictions books in a row! We will have to see if I can go for three!

Wednesday 18 January 2012

My Best Reads of 2011

Due to moving and not having Internet, it has been quite awhile since my last post!  This is really late coming but I wanted to talk about the best books I read in 2011.  While I read so many great books last year (according to goodreads, 136) some stood out from the bunch.  Here they are, in no particular order:

Across the Universe by Beth Revis
I have read so many teen books in the last few years that if often seems that I keep rereading the exact same plot with only some minor difference.  Revis' debut novel really impressed me for a number of reason, for one, that it took place in space! How cool is that?  She presented strong characters, an interesting setting, and just the right amount of mystery and potential romance.  The sequel, A Million Suns, has just hit stores and I'm looking forward to reading it.

Delerium by Lauren Oliver
I loved Oliver's book Before I Fall so I picked this one up with high expectations and wasn't disappointed.  She has created a really interesting society and one that I haven't actually seen before (which is hard to do since the dystopian theme is huge in teen fiction right now); a society that literally removes the ability to love and feel any similar emotions.  Really interesting and well written, the sequel comes out soon.

Bossypants by Tina Fey
I love Fey on 30 Rock and when she was on SNL so when I heard she had written a memoir I knew it would be delightful and lo and behold, it was.  Very funny and clever, Fey manages to pull off writing a memoir that uses its humour in a way that doesn't make every line feel like a punchline to some joke.  Loved it!

Cotillion / The Grand Sophy by Georgette Heyer
This was the year I discovered the amazing Georgette Heyer and that alone was very very exciting.  I can't believe I hadn't read her stuff up until now and I have been doing my best to rectify this.  Cotillion was the first novel of hers I read and it definitely solidified me as a Heyer fan.  The Grand Sophy was the best Heyer I have read to date.  Both novels contain sassy, non-conformist heroines, dashing and rakish young men, balls and carriages, and meddling families and I loved every minute of it. Think of Heyer as a slightly more scandelous version of Jane Austen.  You are going to love her.

Beauty Queens by Libba Bray
I have read every novel that Bray has put out and have thoroughly enjoyed them all.  Beauty Queens is a stroke of genius with its satirical, and very very funny, look at the subjects of beauty pageants, reality TV, women's roles, and The Lord of the Flies.   Bray really can do no wrong with her books.

Silent in the Grave by Deanna Raybourn
2011 also marks the year that I discovered Deanna Raybourn which was a very very good thing.  Recommended to me by fans of Lauren Willig, Raybourn writes smart novels with fun and believable main characters (a sassy leading female and a dashing hero), great elements of mystery, interesting settings, and excellent writing.  I really recommend reading anything written by Raybourn, I have read them all now and they are all excellent.

Gone With The Wind by Margaret Mitchell
My only epic read of the year and it was well worth the time and energy spent with this very large novel.  I picked it up at random at the library, thinking, 'hmmm, I should probably read this'.  What a wonderful, heartbreaking, epic, tragic, and lots and lots of other wonderful adjectives, read!  I can't recommend it enough.

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
I have already written about how much I loved this book so I won't go into it again.  Lets just say that I continually prowl her blog to see when her next novel comes out.

Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor
This one was on many 'Best Reads' lists this year and it definitely deserves all the praise it got.  A wonderfully unique, engaging, and different story; I quite literally couldn't put it down until it was done.  This books stood out for me because it is so different then anything I have read and I loved it for that.  Really well written, Taylor is definitely an author I'm going to be watching from now on.

“Most of the time, there is no truth, only various levels of interpretation. Fact is a construct we provide to the public.”

The Ashford Affair  by Lauren Willig I really enjoyed Lauren Willig's Pink Carnation series and thought I would give one of her stan...