I bought this a few days ago and have just started reading it. I'm completely hooked. Marquez's style is just so beautiful and the story is so involving and poetic that I haven't wanted to put it down at all. I can just tell this book is going to be a major hinderance to any plans of doing my assignments and studying until it's finished! I really recommend it so far. I can't wait to see how it translates to the big screen! The cover picture above is the same edition I have and it's definately my fave of the ones I've seen.
This month so far I have finished:
Which was really good. It centres on three connected people living through
the Nigerian - Biafran war of 1967 - 1970. Something I knew absolutely
nothing about before I started!
I really liked this one, but it lacked the subtlety that made Atonement so great I think. I think I would have enjoyed it even more if I didn't have such high expectations of it. It's exploration of our moral compass and the selfishness of human nature was quite interesting.
I found Mansfield Park a tad dull in the beginning but I gradually warmed to it. Edmund is such a boring uninspiring love interest for a gal!
This month's purchases (apart from Love in the Time of Cholera):
I LOVE this edition!!!! I just love the cover art of it! I already had a second-hand copy but when I saw such a nice edition of one of my fave books I had to have it.
My web presence has been shamefully absent from this vox this year so far, so this is a part of one of my upteenth resolutions to post more regularly. Last month was a really poor reading effort - nothing was finished. This month things are looking up: so far I've finished:
Mansfield Park was my first Jane Austen. I quite enjoyed it but it isn't one of my favourites now or anything. I'm looking forward to getting into discussing it more at Rory's Book Club. I won't go into it too much here but Fanny really reminded me of the character Jane Eyre in some ways.
I enjoyed this and it was a very fast read. It didn't have the same subtlety of Atonement and On Chesil Beach that was part of what made those novels so good though. I thought the its main theme about the consequences of human selfishness was really interesting. I wonder if all of McEwan's novels end in tragedy? The three I've read all do. Maybe he's a tragedian (non-sequitor but that reminds me of Stranger of Fiction - good movie!)
Currently reading:
My friend Emma leant me this one as she thought I'd really like it. At first I'll admit I wasn't too keen - it didn't look like what I was in the mood to read. But I perservered and started it anyway and it instantly gripped me. I'm only 50 pages in and I'm totally hooked. It's basically about three people living in Nigeria whose lives intersect. That's all I've got so far, I'll update as more happens.
Next up on my tbr list:
I have to review these two for Vibewire
But it's really annoying me that I haven't read any of Allende's better known work so I've also added House of Spirits to my list.
After which I want to FINALLY read:
What fictional character do you relate to most and why?
To be honest I think that which character I relate to most is entirely changeable and dependant on what's going on in my life and my mood at the time. Also I guess the beauty of fiction is that you often get to see the world from someone else's perspective and be privy to someone's inner feelings and opinions. In that way you empathise with a character you might not actually have all that much in common to, you "relate" with what they're going through at times without necessarily having experienced it yourself.
That in mind, there isn't one character I've related most to. But characters I've related to over the years have included:
Nick from The Great Gatsby:
The way in which Nick was appalled by the shallow, hollow nature of his society and the selfish, irresponsible nature of his acquintances at the end of the novel mirrors how I think we have all thought about the world at some stage, in some moment of madness or after witnessing or being party to some thoughtless deed, or even during some moment of clarity surrounded by pumping music and shallow materialism at the mall.
Marie Antionette from Sophia Coppolla's film:
The feeling of being trapped by a society based the external is one many experience. Also the way in which Marie really has no control and little real meaning in her life was sympathetic, for much of the film she really is little more than a show pony.
Show us your favorite pair of shoes.
Ohhhhh this is such a hard question! I'm one of those stereotypical females who just LOVES shoes. Ok hmmm lets see:
These are a pair I bought this season from Pulp's Noir range, they're very vintage looking and cute.
These are my suede slouch boots. I love them because they're like wearing slippers everywhere they're so comfy! They're also handy because they can be worn in a casual or dressy way.
I think I bought these in 2006 and have probably worn them maybe twice? They're absolutely gorgeous shoes but I think they're the most uncomfortable ones I own. Theyre so high, the strap over the toes is really low and uncomfortable, the diamonte strands get stuck in between my toes and stuck to the carpet. But I still love them anyway... even if I never wear them!
These are also from the Pulp Noir range, I bought them a few days ago. I just love them they're so vintage looking, they remind me of something Lauren Bacall might have worn in The Big Sleep.