Recent Reads & My Book Wishlist

For as much as I love to read and consider it critical to my daily happiness, I sure am bad at blogging about what I’m reading.  I always have this feeling that what I’m reading isn’t “relevant” if it isn’t what everyone else is reading (i.e. Gone Girl, 50 Shades of Grey, The Girl on the Train).  No one has ever actually said that to me and it’s probably all in my head but come on, Wuthering Heights was published in 1847, so A) probably not on the Best Seller’s List and B) anything I have to say about it has probably already been said at some point in the past 168 years.  Whoa, that book is old!

Still, I have read some things that were written a little more recently, so I thought I’d share those along with my future reads wishlist.  Suggestions are always, always, always appreciated!

The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey

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If you read the synopsis on the back of this book your first thought will probably be “Sounds like that movie with Jennifer Garner where they grow their son in the back yard.”  Yeah, I’m talking about The Odd Life of Timothy Green (which I embarrassingly choked back tears during on a flight home from Jamaica…) and I wish I could say The Snow Child awoke those same emotions (except maybe not in public this time), but it didn’t.  In fact, I’d say the plot took a major turn away from the direction I thought it was taking and ended up being nothing like Timothy Green.

Maybe it’s all in my mind, but when I read something by a first time novelist, I always feel particularly aware of it.  That is to say, I feel like I can detect their uncertainty about their characters and where the plot is headed exactly.  While I thought Ivey painted a beautifully mysterious setting and there were definitely moments here and there that felt magical, overall I thought it lacked real depth and originality.  An unfortunate let down.

Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan

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I hardly ever read non-fiction but the plot of Brain of Fire sounded too Bell Jar-ish for me to pass up.  And in the beginning, it really does read like some Sylvia Plath mental breakdown diary.  Cahalan’s writing is straight forward but also poetic in a way.  The latter being even more impressive when I learned that she’s a reporter and probably more used to facts and figures than flowery prose.  There’s no better way to describe her writing than enjoyable.

About a quarter of the way into the book I realized her illness wasn’t self-fabricated or even a psychological condition.  You learn later on that she’s the victim of an autoimmune disease that has her body attacking itself, something that is both incredible and terrifying at the same time.  She does a good job explaining the whole thing in semi-Layman’s terms (though I’ll admit my eyes glossed over some of the medical jargon at times), being concise and subtly raising the issue of mental illness vs. autoimmune disease without turning the whole book into some kind of soapbox.

The whole book was incredibly eye-opening, fascinating (some of the things she explains about brain/body behavior is truly incredible) and thought provoking.  That thought mostly being “how many people have conditions that with more time/research/financial resources could be cured, but without, are cast off as mentally ill?”  I would highly recommend this book.

Hemingway’s Girl by Erika Robuck

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Currently reading!  I picked this up on a whim because please save me, I’m Hemingway obsessed.  So far, I like it okay but something about the fact that the two main characters refer to each other as “Papa” and “Daughter” when I am pretty sure they’re about to become romantically involved kind of creeps me out.  Also European Hemingway > Key West Hemingway.

Book Wishlist

We Were Liars by E. Lockhart.  I just joined a book club that’s reading this and I’m already feeling disillusioned because I had to pick it up out of the Young Adult section.

Bread & Wine by Shauna Niequist.  Trying my luck with another fiction piece but it’s about food so it should be right up my alley.

Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood.  Because I just remembered how much I love The Handmaid’s Tale. 

Friday Night Lights: I Get It Now

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Just to preface, Joey watched Friday Night Lights when it was still on the air and since then I have had to go through life hearing, “Where do I know that guy from?  Oh yeah, he’s the quarterback in Friday Night Lights!” every time we watch TV.  Wait, just how many quarterbacks are there in this show?!  Then there was that time I tried to watch it on my own and six episodes in… I just wasn’t hooked.  Probably because “is the camera going to be all shaky like this the entire time?”

So I gave up.  That is, until Joey agreed to re-watching it along with me.  And just like that, I was hooked.  I got it.  I knew who Tim Riggins was (though I wasn’t sure how I’d made it through life before knowing who he was).  I was regretting not writing “Clear eyes, full hearts, can’t lose” into our wedding vows.  I understood why everyone looooves Connie Britton.  And most importantly, I finally knew who all those quarterbacks were!

But in all seriousness, I kinda fell in love with the show because when you watch a show so full of HEART, how can you not fall in love with it?  I went from hating Tyra in Season 1, to rooting for her in Season 3 and from groaning every time Smash bragged about himself to sincerely missing him after his character left the show (best farewell ever though!).  And while I’m sure Tim is the best part of the show for many people, it really all boils down to Coach and Mrs. Coach.  Two more perfect characters have never existed.

Really, this says it all.