Review: Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami

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Great ending. This sure was the saddest book I’ve ever read. Seems very dark and depressing, but the light comes out at the very end and you can see the sunshine through the clouds. I’ve never read a book like this and to be honest, I’m not sure I ever want to read another one. It just takes a piece of you and leaves you feeling a little empty. I don’t even know how to explain it. It’s like traveling up a mountainside on a dark gray day. Yes, the beauty is still there, but you have to look for it. You don’t even notice the beauty before you because of the overcast skies. The higher up you go, the more drained you feel. At the very end, as you reach the top, you’re bone weary and exhausted, both mentally and physically, but suddenly you can see above the clouds and it’s so bright that your eyes hurt and the whole mountain suddenly looks different…you suddenly feel renewed…the world you thought was gloomy and gray is suddenly bright and new….and beautiful…..

  ~Urania

Buy It Now Norwegian Wood (Movie Tie-in Edition) (Vintage International)

Review: A Good Time by Shannyn Schroeder

This book is combination of a bad soap opera and The Maury Povich Show. Almost every clichéd trope that you can think of is in here.

The heroine, Indy, has a lot of TSTL moments that make me not care for her. Example? Indy is a real estate agent during the day and a server at a bar in the evening. She’s waiting for that large commission to get her career going. She has an opportunity with Griffin, a millionaire, who hired her as a favor for his best friend. For their first meeting, she shows up late and hungover.

Another example? She keeps telling him that she doesn’t sleep with her clients. Guess what she does almost immediately?

Now, let’s talk about Griffin. He has a tragic past that includes his father, whom he doesn’t want around. He is described as video game developer, but you don’t see him doing this in the book. It’s more about him trying to establish a charitable foundation to help troubled youth.

Indy broke up with her boyfriend and decides that Griffin would be the perfect rebound guy. Despite them having lots of sex, I really didn’t feel the chemistry. I was also very bored by the blandness of Griffin and the stupidity of Indy that I didn’t care if they made it as couple.

ARC provided by publisher via NetGalley.

~Thalia

Buy It Now A Good Time (O`Learys)

Review: The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera

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I used to only read books that entertained me….now I think I prefer the kind that challenge me. Books that force me to look upon the world and peer into all of her dark corners. We are told that we need to stop and smell the roses….but what about the dark stuff too? Y’know….that dark stuff we call human nature….

This book has a few main characters, but centers mostly on Tomas and Tereza. This is a book that is odd in its writing style, but it suited the book perfectly. It is not only written by Milan Kundera, it is also narrated by him. It is almost as if he has thought out what he wants the book to be and then sits down to present it to a potential reader. He explains what is happening to the characters, explains their thoughts and actions as if he is looking down upon them from above, watching them as if they are players on a stage. He wants the reader to not only see what is going on with the characters, he wants them to understand it as well….

First, the book itself….wow…just wow…This one has opened my eyes wide…..We all have our romantic images of love. We all have our “Darcys” of the world…our “Roarkes” of the world…but what about an honest look at love? Darcy and his kind show us a romantic love…but this book shows you an honest love.

How many of us justify our wrongs by telling ourselves what we want to hear? How many times do we hurt one another and then blame it on our nature? How many times do we promise ourselves we will change and then slip back into the our old ways, justifying it by telling ourselves that it has always been that way with us. Yes, Tomas is very selfish. But he was selfish from day one, so whose fault is it if others are hurt?

On the flip side of that, how many others take the wrongs that we feel and justify them? This is Tereza. She doesn’t try to reason or change her husband’s many hurts. She only blames herself for not being enough. In her own way, she too, is just as selfish! It is all about her.

Do we make excuses for others just as much as we do ourselves? If we love someone enough, what lengths will we go to make their actions part of “our script”? How long will we let it play along until we come to the ending that we have imagined in our mind?

In real life, is this not how it is? Do we not have thousands of little conversations within our own mind that we would never dare share with someone else? Well, Kundera does exactly that. He dares to say out loud what should never be voiced. The thoughts we ALL have and never voice….The dirty little lies that we have all thought….knowing in one part of us that it is wrong, but if we continue to tell them, we might just come to believe them one day…

yes the countless love affairs are outrageous and it will turn many away from the book right away. There is a lot of sex in this book, and that to will turn many away…it is not romantic love…this is all about selfish love. For me, it was about how selfish human nature is. No, it doesn’t mean that we are all selfish, but if we are honest, our first thoughts are of ourselves, is it not? Even if we are thinking of others, it is still with thoughts of ourselves. We can talk ourselves out of anything. This novel makes it perfectly clear that we can also talk ourselves into anything as well…if that is what we desire.

Kundera paints a picture with beautiful flowing words that we long to take in….but as soon as we take those words in, we can taste the bitterness that they cause. He lets us know that the lies we tell others always start with the lies that we tell ourselves.

Tereza is with Tomas only because she has created a romantic image of love and how it will be. She looks for the signs she wants to see and finds them….if she hasn’t decided that it was to be Tomas, she could have found those same signs in any other man….but because she picked him…based on a single moment in time, she is bound and determined to make it into what she desires it to be….no matter the cost…

The author goes to the extreme in this novel to point out the obvious. But sometimes that is what it takes. If one were to read this book at face value they would only see Tomas as a man who has dozens of lovers…but what one might overlook is how hard it becomes for Tomas to continue to justify his actions, even to himself, because of his love for Tereza. It is a love he is afraid of. One he can not imagine living with….or without….He too had imagined his life in a certain way…a way where he would not be tied down to any one person. Now he feels that he is *forced* into this difficult position through no fault of his own…yet he is powerless to walk away…

As each character struggles with their choices and their own thoughts, you have Kundera, the author, looking down from above just laughing at their follies. He laughs with great affection to be sure, but it is also with great amusement as well.

I listened to this book and await a hard copy to look at, so it is difficult to review without the actually book, but this is a book that I stayed up late into the hours pondering, long after I had stopped actually listening to it….

~Urania
Buy It Now The Unbearable Lightness of Being: A Novel

Review: The Bookstore, by Deborah Meyler

Buy It Now The Bookstore

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3.5 stars

Smart, studious young Esme is living in New York, studying at Columbia. She falls in love, and then learns to navigate the stormy seas of a relationship while trying to hold onto her Self. The bookstore she works at becomes her emotional home base, and where she finds unexpected but real friends.

I loved the plot. I liked experiencing Esme figuring out her life against the backdrop of her figuring out New York living.

The writing enchanted me. Meyler uses precise and impressive vocabulary. We get to know Esme through Meyler’s smart word choice.

However, at times the book was too wordy. There were entire pages worth of descriptions of art or writers that didn’t contribute to the plot. For me, the numerous art and academia allusions held me up and disrupted the storyline.

Characterization was done well… Esme was a brilliant, idealistic student. Mitchell’s family was blue-blood hilarious and provided a backdrop for a nice bit of social class commentary. Nick’s fondness for Esme made my heart skip a beat.

Because of the wordiness, this was a slow book for me. It took twice as long as usual to read. But I’m so glad I did. Esme was magical, sad, fanciful — and by the end — hopeful.

I received this ARC free from NetGalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.

-Calliope

Review: Crumbs Aren’t Enough, by Raquel Whiting Gilmer

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Crumbs aren’t Enough tells the story of a young woman, Charlie, and her self-esteem issues around men. We follow her professional career in DC and Ohio, her journey through therapy, and her growth in the “find a man” department.

This book is written like a monologue– imagine yourself sitting down on a comfy couch with your best girlfriend and a glass of wine. And then your friend tells you everything that’s happened to her in the past five years. The author uses a lot of phrases like “you remember when,” “let me tell you,” and “you see.”

All that familiarity brings a reader in… But it was off-putting at the beginning, hence the 3.5 stars. I wanted to say Whoa, I barely know you, slow down a bit!

By the end, I was crying with my new best friend, and rejoicing with her too!

This was fun chick-lit with some serious words about self-esteem issues. I enjoyed it.

I received an ARC from NetGalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.