Thursday, July 7, 2011

Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut

Slaughterhouse-FiveSlaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Although I understand the appeal of the book, I wasn't that impressed. The strange jumps in time and place makes it hard to follow occasionally. Certain sections in the book are never completed and left me wondering, which was probably done for that reason. The repetition of "so it goes" got a little annoying but after awhile I suppose I got used to it. I appreciated that it wasn't a very long novel. If I had to read 500 pages of it I probably would have just put it down and left it. It was long enough to be entertaining short enough that it was easily readable.



The time travel and abduction put me off a little and I'm guessing that Billy was experiencing some form of PTSD from the war. No matter how strange the book, my guess was that the character Billy created the whole alien abduction in order to deal with other mental issues stemming from his time in the war.


Even with its flaws I can see why some people call it a "classic."


View all my reviews

Sunday, April 17, 2011

The Maze Runner (Maze Runner, #1) by James Dashner

The Maze Runner (Maze Runner, #1)The Maze Runner by James Dashner

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This book was OK, but could have been better. The main character Thomas wakes up in an elevator with no memory other than his name and when he is let out he is surrounded by a large group of boys in something they call "the Glade," which is surrounded by walls that shut every night. There are some crazy weird machine things in the maze (outside the walls of the glade) that will try to kill you and if they sting you you get memories back that apparently are bad. But you don't know much of anything during this book because as soon as Thomas is going to be told what's going on something happens and it's like "I was going to tell you but I'm busy now so never mind." This is pretty much the entire book! SO frustrating!

I was hoping this would be another Hunger Games futuristic end of the world type book but too much of nothing happens for so much of the book that you get tired of it. Now this is supposed to be a trilogy and I think I'll probably read the other two books just so I can know what happens. Because, apparently, even though I'm frustrated with Dashner's writing style, the story is still interesting and I want to know what happens. You're left with a cliffhanger and I'm interested with where the story was going.



View all my reviews

Friday, April 15, 2011

The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien

The HobbitThe Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Probably my favorite book or at least one of my favorites. It seemed to start a little slow but as soon as Bilbo goes running out of his little hobbit house I feel like I'm swept into another world. I love the characters, the scenery and the story that pulled me in (almost from the start).


They started filming The Hobbit and I'm really excited about it! Can't wait to see it! Below is a video blog from Peter Jackson.




View all my reviews

Saturday, February 26, 2011

It's here!

I got my Kindle today, which has me all sorts of excited. I've been in a lull reading wise lately and haven't really found anything around that I've wanted to read. But, oh happy day, my Kindle finally arrived today (as a late Christmas present). I think it's awesome how many books are available and how many you can find for free. I've wanted to start reading classics so now I can do so leisurely without worrying about returning them to the library on time or having to buy them and have them just sit on my shelf... which really lacks in space. I think my husband will be glad for the space saving as well. Well, I'm off! Happy reading!

 A small sampling of the books I own. I need more shelf space... 
the rest of my collection is in boxes, the poor dears.

Friday, January 7, 2011

Top 10 Censored Books- According to TIME

As I was wandering the interwebs today, I came across an article on the TIME website titled "Removing the N Word from Huck Finn: Top 10 Censored Books" and being the word nerd that I am, I had to check it out. The books below are on that list.


1. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens)
 When good ole' Sammy wrote this, he didn't think using the N word or anything else he wrote would be a big deal (it wasn't at the time, but later people suddenly were upset). Even Louisa May Alcott (author of Little Women) decided to stick her nose in the air for other reasons. As quoted from TIME, she said "If Mr. Clemens [Twain's original name] cannot think of something better to tell our pure-minded lads and lasses he had best stop writing for them." First of all the fact that she thought "lads" and "lasses" were all pure-minded she was delusional. Kids know stuff (I was a kid once after all) and holding things back from kids can have consequences.


2. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
I don't know much about this other that it is really sexual and has something to do with pedophiles.


3. Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
 A teenage boy who swears and likes prostitutes? Automatic uproar from the masses I suppose. Combining cuss words and sex is bound to have people crying foul.


4. Harry Potter Series by J.K. Rowling
A school that teaches witchcraft (& wizardry) to children (go Hogwarts!) can't be that bad. By simply reading the books you can see it is about good triumphing over evil. But some religious fanatics in Maine claimed these books promoted devil worship and wanted to have a book burning. Even though no devil worship is mentioned... in fact not even close. Hmmm, did they even read one of these books? I seriously doubt it.


5. The Anarchist Cookbook by William Powell
In 1971 Willy was just 19 and angry about the Vietnam War (in which he was drafted) when he wrote this. In 2000 even HE tried to keep it from print but no longer owned the rights.


6. I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
Written in 1970, Maya discusses racism, sex (and most disturbingly being raped by her mother's boyfriend when she was 8). She wrote the truth and sometimes, people just can't handle the truth.


7. Candide by Voltaire
In a quote from the article, because I haven't read this: "This classic French satire lampoons all things sacred: armies, churches, philosophers, even the doctrine of optimism itself."


8. 1984 by George Orwell
"Written in 1949 by British author George Orwell while he lay dying of tuberculosis, the book chronicles the grim future of a society robbed of free will, privacy and truth." Wow, you go George.
"Some reviewers called it a veiled attack against Joseph Stalin and the Soviet ruler's infamous "midnight purges," though, oddly enough, parents in Jackson County, Florida, would challenge the book in 1981 for being "procommunist.""


9. The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie
"This book sparked riots around the world for what some called a blasphemous treatment of the Islamic faith (throughout the book, Salman Rushdie refers to the Prophet Muhammad as Mahound, the medieval name for the devil)." 
People were killed and injured in riots. It's crazy that a book can cause such an uproar. I'm going to put the rest of what the article said because it's so unbelieveable.
"In 1989, five people died in riots in Pakistan and a stone-throwing mob injured 60 people in India. Although Rushdie issued an apology, Iranian spiritual leader Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini publicly condemned the Indian-British author to death, putting a $1 million bounty on his head (an Iranian assassin would get $3 million, Khomeini promised). While European nations recalled their diplomats from Tehran, some Muslim authors, like Nobel Prize winner Naguib Mahfouz, defended Rushdie and accused the Ayatullah of "intellectual terrorism." Meanwhile, Venezuelan officials threatened anyone who owned or read the book with 15 months of prison. Japan fined anyone who sold the English-language edition, and a Japanese translator was subsequently stabbed to death for his involvement with the book. Two major U.S. booksellers — Waldenbooks and Barnes & Noble — removed the book from their shelves after receiving death threats. And while Rushdie's publisher, Viking Penguin, denounced such "censorship by terrorism and intimidation," threats of violence forced the company to temporarily close its New York City office to improve security. Under the protection of British authorities, Rushdie lived in hiding for nearly a decade."


10. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
"Huxley's 1932 work — about a drugged, dull and mass-produced society of the future — has been challenged for its themes of sexuality, drugs and suicide." Is it just me or does the world not sound so brave?