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Niagara on the Lake, Ontario, Canada
My virtue is that I say what I think, my vice that what I think doesn't amount to much.

Friday, February 24, 2012

The Descendants


This is a novel about family and responsibility. It takes place in the exotic garden that is Hawaii and I believe the location adds to its appeal. Matt King is a lawyer and also an heir to a vast tract of Hawaiian property. His wife has been critically injured in a boat-racing accident and is in a coma in hospital. Matt has to assume the care of their two daughters after having been a mostly hands off dad. He finds that both girls have significant problems. He also discovers that his wife was having an affair and that she may have been planning to leave him. He embarks on an odyssey. He wants to touch base with family and friends who were important to his wife and also to determine the nature of the relationship between his wife and the real estate agent she was bedding down with.
At the same time Matt is under pressure to make a decision regarding the family land he inherited from an Hawaiian ancestor. Despite the seriousness of Matt's dilemma this is a novel that addresses issues of cultural identity, family betrayal and even death through humor. Matt is a likable character despite his considerable shortcomings and The Descendants is also easy to like although it is not the greatest novel ever written.
Disclosure: It may be that picturing Matt as George Clooney colored my view of the book.



By Nightfall

Peter Harris is a middle aged, married (to Rebecca), New York art dealer who leads the sort of life that many would envy. Of course it is not perfect. Who among us has a perfect life? His marriage provides the sort of comfort that comes with time although the flip side of that is a lack of rip roaring excitement. His college age daughter appears to hate him, perhaps because she is not beautiful and he has let her know he thinks so. But she lives in Boston and Peter is able to put her out of his thoughts most of the time. On the whole he is semi-satisfied but there is something missing. Then his wife's lookalike, drug troubled, much younger brother arrives on the scene. He finds himself attracted to Mizzy (short for "The Mistake") and this is the Death In Venice crux of the novel.
I enjoy Cunningham's writing and I liked this book - it was perfect for a transatlantic flight because it is slim and could be devoured in one go. It describes continuums of happiness that most of us experience (if we are lucky). In this novel Peter is at the low point in this continuum.
Cunningham is a gifted writer and I liked By Nightfall but I felt there was something troubling about the story. I ended up shaking my head after reading it. I don't find it odd that a heterosexual guy involved in the New York art scene would be attracted to his brother-in-law. But the fact that he met said brother in-law when he was a little boy and that he had acted as a mentor to the boy make the attraction creepy a la Woody Allen.


Thursday, February 23, 2012

Oscar Wilde on reading


Via Holy Kaw!

Terrifying!


Via Libraryland

A Modest Proposal

I think this is one of the most romantic marriage proposals ever:
In 1936, after his first wife had left him, Evelyn Waugh sent a letter to her cousin Laura Herbert, asking whether “you could bear the idea of marrying me.”


“I can’t advise you in my favour because I think it would be beastly for you,” he wrote, “but think how nice it would be for me. I am restless & moody and misanthropic & lazy & have no money except what I earn and if I got ill you would starve.
Did Laura think Waugh's proposal was irresistible? Read more at Futility Closet.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Monday, February 20, 2012

Enchanting London

London is enchanting. I step out upon a tawny coloured magic carpet, it seems, and get carried into beauty without raising a finger. The nights are amazing, with all the white porticoes and broad silent avenues. And people pop in and out, lightly, divertingly like rabbits; and I look down Southampton Row, wet as a seal’s back or red and yellow with sunshine, and watch the omnibus going and coming, and hear the old crazy organs. One of these days I will write about London, and how it takes up the private life and carries it on, without any effort.


Virginia Woolf

Stacked teacup bookshelf


Purchase it at Etsy.

Via Holy Kaw!

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Repurposed Phone Booth Library


Architect John Locke has repurposed phone booths into communal libraries or book drops, installing bookshelves within the structures filled with books for residents to take, borrow, or exchange.
More at Designboom

A housewife's guide


Sober in a Nightclub

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

The top 10 most popular Dickens characters

This seems like an appropriate post on the 200th anniversary of the author’s birth.

1. Ebenezer Scrooge -A Christmas Carol
2. Miss Havisham -Great Expectations
3. Sydney Carton -A Tale Of Two Cities
4. The Artful Dodger -Oliver Twist
5. Fagin -Oliver Twist
6. Joe Gargery -Great Expectations
7. Pip -Great Expectations
8. Nancy -Oliver Twist
9. Abel Magwitch -Great Expectations
10. Betsey Trotwood -David Copperfield