I was first introduced to the writing of Mark Haddon through a guest staying at the Lied Lodge and Conference Center last summer. It was the beginning of my shift, approxiamately 6:30 am, on a Sunday. An elderly gentleman was getting his morning coffee and asking me questions about my education, major, and plans for life. I ended up spilling my guts about my love for British Literature. This gentleman gave me two titles that I simply had to read, The Curious Incident of the Dog at Nighttime and A Spot of Bother, both of which written by Mark Haddon. I read The Curious Incident and absolutely enjoyed the novel.
While doing research for this blog I discovered the Mark Haddon is a man of many trades. He also writes children's books (ie: Gilbert's Gobbstopper, Ocean Star Express, etc. ), poetry ( The Talking Horse and The Sad Girl and The Village Under The Sea), and screenplays for both radio and television. Mark also has many art works, my favorite is "One Very Important Thought."
So far I find the novel, Spot of Bother, to be really fun. The humor is very much what I enjoy and I totally understand the underlying jokes.
My personal homage to the world of literature and the effects it has had on my life. I have a passion and obsession with British Literature, among other genres. My first dose of British Literature occured during my trip to the United Kingdom while I was in junior high. That trip and that book, Pride and Prejudice, guided my decision to become an English teacher. I want to use this space as book reviews and how I may/may not use them in the classroom.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
The Hobbit
I am about halfway through the book and am trying to keep it straight from the Lord of The Rings. It is confusing how Bilbo is the main character in the book. I think it is an easy read and I like how the author talks to you as you read the book either to clarify or make a point about something. I like how Bilbo thinks he is weak, but he is actually very clever and brave. Also, I think it is funny how he keeps referring to the fact that he wants to go back to his hobbit hole. Bilbo a websit about Bilbo Baggins.
Friday, April 17, 2009
JRR Tolkien
I just finished reading a biography of Tolkien that was posted on the Tolkien society website. It was an amazing story of a man that I thought I knew. His full name is John Ronald Reuel Tolkien and growing up most of his friends called him Ronald. Interestingly, the name "Tolkien" is German in origin and means "foolishly brave" or "stupidly clever". He was actually born in South Africa on January 3, 1892. His memories of South Africa are few, but there was an encounter with an enormous spider that would influence his writing later (such as the spiders in The Hobbit and the enormous spider at the end of the Lord of the Rings). When he was four his father died and they moved back to England. Then in 1904 his mother was diagnosed with diabetes and died (this being, of course, before insulin). He and his brother were taken care of by the family priest. His gift for languages was becoming readily apparent. At the time he was roughly twelve or thirteen he had already mastered Latin and Greek and was learning others including Gothic and Finnish. I can't imagine having mastered both Latin and Greek by the age of thirteen even if, as was the case with Tolkien, they were part of the curriculum!
At the age of 16 he met Edith Warton, 19, and they became very close. Father Francis, worried at this development, forbade Tolkien to have any contact with Edith until he was 21. He obeyed the Father's wish to the letter, immersing himself in his classes at Oxford. As soon as he turned 21 he sought out Edith and they picked up their relationship (although it probably wasn't that easy).
When war broke out Tolkien didn't enlist right away, preferring instead to work on the languages he was creating. In 1915 he enlisted as a second lieutenant, but did not leave immediately. In June of 1916, after being given orders that were to send him to France, he and Edith were married. He was sent to the Western front just in time for the Somme offensive. He spent four months in the trenches before succumbing to trench fever. He was in the hospital for a month before he was well enough to return home. While in the trenches he started The Book of Lost Tales, which wasn't published until after he had died. He wrote these stories " . .. in huts full of blasphemy and smut, or by candle light in bell-tents, even some down in dugouts under shell fire [ Letters 66]. "
In 1918 after several reoccurring bouts of his illness he was appointed the post of Reader (basically professor) in English Language at the University of Leeds. While there he and a friend developed the Viking Club for undergraduate students, where they basically sat around and read Norse sagas while drinking beer. He rarely wrote scholastically although his most famous is "Beowulf, the Monsters, and the Critics".
He had three sons, John, Michael, and Christopher, and one daughter Priscilla. He was one of the founding members of "The Inklings", a group of Oxford friends, that included C.S. Lewis, who became one of Tolkien's best friends. I thought it was interesting that though we ooh and aah over the religious symbolism in Lewis's novels, it was Tolkien that helped bring him back to Christianity after the war.
As for starting The Hobbit, "However, according to his own account, one day when he was engaged in the soul-destroying task of marking examination papers, he discovered that one candidate had left one page of an answer-book blank. On this page, moved by who knows what anarchic daemon, he wrote In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. In typical Tolkien fashion, he then decided he needed to find out what a Hobbit was, what sort of a hole it lived in, why it lived in a hole, etc." He then told the story to his children before deciding to send it to a publisher. The publisher, Stanely Unwin, presented the story to his ten-year-old son Rayner, to test it on. Rayner loved it and it was published in 1937. Incidentally, it was Rayner who, as an adult, helped with the editing and publication of the Lord of the Rings.
Tolkien was completely taken aback by the popularity of the books, and in fact was shocked to find that he had become very rich. He is in part, greatly responsible for the immense popularity of fantasy literature today.
Tolkien died on September 2, 1973, two years after Edith. The tombstone reads:
"Edith Mary Tolkien, LĂșthien, 1889-1971
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, Beren, 1892-1973
This refers to the great love poem that Tolkien wrote of the mortal man (Beren) falling in love with an elvish queen (Luthien). This poem is found in the Fellowship of the Ring and the Simirillion. He wrote it for Edith.
Forgive me for writing so much, I started reading the biography and I couldn't stop. I found his life and character fascinating. He was obviously a genius, but just as obviously quite the dreamer as well. The link for the full biography is:http://www.tolkiensociety.org/tolkien/biography.html
Enjoy!
At the age of 16 he met Edith Warton, 19, and they became very close. Father Francis, worried at this development, forbade Tolkien to have any contact with Edith until he was 21. He obeyed the Father's wish to the letter, immersing himself in his classes at Oxford. As soon as he turned 21 he sought out Edith and they picked up their relationship (although it probably wasn't that easy).
When war broke out Tolkien didn't enlist right away, preferring instead to work on the languages he was creating. In 1915 he enlisted as a second lieutenant, but did not leave immediately. In June of 1916, after being given orders that were to send him to France, he and Edith were married. He was sent to the Western front just in time for the Somme offensive. He spent four months in the trenches before succumbing to trench fever. He was in the hospital for a month before he was well enough to return home. While in the trenches he started The Book of Lost Tales, which wasn't published until after he had died. He wrote these stories " . .. in huts full of blasphemy and smut, or by candle light in bell-tents, even some down in dugouts under shell fire [ Letters 66]. "
In 1918 after several reoccurring bouts of his illness he was appointed the post of Reader (basically professor) in English Language at the University of Leeds. While there he and a friend developed the Viking Club for undergraduate students, where they basically sat around and read Norse sagas while drinking beer. He rarely wrote scholastically although his most famous is "Beowulf, the Monsters, and the Critics".
He had three sons, John, Michael, and Christopher, and one daughter Priscilla. He was one of the founding members of "The Inklings", a group of Oxford friends, that included C.S. Lewis, who became one of Tolkien's best friends. I thought it was interesting that though we ooh and aah over the religious symbolism in Lewis's novels, it was Tolkien that helped bring him back to Christianity after the war.
As for starting The Hobbit, "However, according to his own account, one day when he was engaged in the soul-destroying task of marking examination papers, he discovered that one candidate had left one page of an answer-book blank. On this page, moved by who knows what anarchic daemon, he wrote In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. In typical Tolkien fashion, he then decided he needed to find out what a Hobbit was, what sort of a hole it lived in, why it lived in a hole, etc." He then told the story to his children before deciding to send it to a publisher. The publisher, Stanely Unwin, presented the story to his ten-year-old son Rayner, to test it on. Rayner loved it and it was published in 1937. Incidentally, it was Rayner who, as an adult, helped with the editing and publication of the Lord of the Rings.
Tolkien was completely taken aback by the popularity of the books, and in fact was shocked to find that he had become very rich. He is in part, greatly responsible for the immense popularity of fantasy literature today.
Tolkien died on September 2, 1973, two years after Edith. The tombstone reads:
"Edith Mary Tolkien, LĂșthien, 1889-1971
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, Beren, 1892-1973
This refers to the great love poem that Tolkien wrote of the mortal man (Beren) falling in love with an elvish queen (Luthien). This poem is found in the Fellowship of the Ring and the Simirillion. He wrote it for Edith.
Forgive me for writing so much, I started reading the biography and I couldn't stop. I found his life and character fascinating. He was obviously a genius, but just as obviously quite the dreamer as well. The link for the full biography is:http://www.tolkiensociety.org/tolkien/biography.html
Enjoy!
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
The Good Soldier
The Good Soldier, for me, was a bit of a bore to begin with, but once I got into it a little bit, I was hooked. It became sort of like a soap opera to me. I mean, seriously, when you break it down it really is like a chapter of the Young and The Restless. First of all, you have two boring, loveless marriages, and two adultering spouses. I hated how Edward almost became the victim in the story. "Good Soldier", my ass. I'm sorry, but I do not feel sorry for a guy who feels that he is bettering the world by sleeping with women who aren't his wife. I'm not falling for that. I also don't feel sorry for Leonora either, but maybe that's because I wanted her to embrace her "girl power." Hello!!! Dump the sorry bastard and make your own money! And Florence....I don't even know where to begin. All the characters are sorry excuses for people and the whole situation was just a mess. I really didn't like John's sarcastic, no big deal, way of telling the story. It was like he wasn't even involved, which clearly he was. He was very unattached from the story, which made all the deaths and betrayal seem like they weren't really a big deal, but in reality they should have been. Maybe I'm just a "happily ever after" kind of girl, but that is a sad way to live for half your life. And even in the end when he takes of "the girl" who is broken because of Edward, it's still a sorry way to live your life.
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