Monday, December 26, 2005

December Meeting Reminder

It's not as cold as the Alps
so join us at Lisa's
house
Wednesday
December 28th
1:00 P.M.
1324 Bryant Ct.
Manteca
239-4452 if you're unable to attend
As is our tradition
please bring along a holiday leftover to share.
We'll be discussing
The Magnificent Ambersons.

Christmas Books Anyone?

(I just figured out how to add images to our blog! Woo hoo!!!)
Ho Ho Ho!
Did anyone get books from their wishlist for Christmas?
I was lucky enough to receive:
A Breath of Snow and Ashes- Diana Gabaldon A side note here: my sister Sue got this one for me and I had bought it for her!
A Million Little Pieces- James Frey
Milk Glass Moon-Adriana Trigiani
Rococo-Adriana Trigiani
I gave a ton of books this year.
To my 8 year old niece,Lauren, who is a voracious reader:
A 3 book Collection of E.B. White
The entire Little House on the Prarie set
A Beverly Cleary Collection
plus 3 magazine subscriptions:
Zoo Books
National Geographic for Kids
Ranger Rick
To my husband John, who has discovered the joys of reading later in life:
the new Beatles Biography
a biography on Keith Moon (drummer for The Who)
a biography on the band Cream
a biography on Charlie Watts(drummer for Rolling Stones)
The Illustrated Dead (coffee table book on Greatful Dead)
The Complete Lyrics of the Greatful Dead
Anyone sense a theme going on here?
He also got the book 700 Sundays and The Know-It-All:One Man's Humble Quest to be the Smartest Man in the World.
For my mom I got 7 different titles from the NY Times bestseller list.
Unfortunately, I didn't write them down so I can't remember them all. But one was by the author of the No.1 Ladie's Detective Agency. Another was a Suduko number puzzle book-trying to stimulate her cognitive abilities.
I hope you all got some new reading material
and were able to give some as well.
Share with us!

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Kablook.com

Mary Ann shared this site with me and wanted it passed on to our members. Check it out! www.kablook.com A great space to rate books and read other reviews and ratings.

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Mary Ann!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

How could I forget you! It was so great to see Mary Ann at the Nov. meeting and see the latest pics of her wee one! A thousand lashes with a wet noodle to me for not putting your name in the Nov. attendees!

Did you Miss Out on November's Meeting?

Cathy and La Dean co-hosted our discussion of The Kite Runner at The Kabob House Restaurant in Manteca. Those in attendance were our hosts,Kim, Lisa, Victoria, Sarah,Katy. I hope I didn't leave anyone out. We feasted on a delightful assortment of Afghan foods: eggplant appetizer, potato appetizer, assorted meat kabobs deliciously marinated and served with a tasty rice. Dessert was Afghan Tea and baklava.

Those who had read the book were intrigued with learning of life in Afghanistan and the atrocities committed upon their people. It made for some difficult reading at times. I for one, cringed more than once at the violent acts described in grueling detail. But it was necessary for the reader to grasp the severity of life in that country. The characters were realistic and many wondered aloud if the author was sticking to factual events. It was learned that, indeed, many of the events were taken directly from the author's life experiences. Kim brought her laptop and the book on CD so we listened to parts of the story.

One of the restaurant owners shared some of her family history with us. Male relatives were used as human shields by the Russians during fighting there in the late 1970's and as a result she lost part of her family. They fled to Fremont, CA and settled in "Little Kabul" as she called it with many other Afghan families. Her family came to Manteca shortly after 9/11/2001 and was fearful that there would be racial retaliation on them following the attacks on our Americans in the east. Luckily, that was not their experience. If you are looking for a delightful dinner or a take out meal, check out this restaurant and support our fellow Americans.

Cathy and La Dean make the book vote difficult this month by offering so many good choices! Those up for the vote included:
Middlesex- Jeffrey Eugenides
A Walk in the Woods- Bill Bryson
A Million Little Pieces-James Frey
Bee Season-Myla Goldberg

The Bill Bryson travel book was the winner, with Frey's memoir a close second.

Our December Book Choice

A Walk in the Woods-Bill Bryson


About The Book

Back in America after twenty years in Britain, Bill Bryson decided to reacquaint himself with his native country by walking the 2,100-mile Appalachian Trail, which stretches from Georgia to Maine. The AT offers an astonishing landscape of silent forests and sparkling lakes--and to a writer with the comic genius of Bill Bryson, it also provides endless opportunities to witness the majestic silliness of his fellow human beings.

For a start there's the gloriously out-of-shape Stephen Katz, a buddy from Iowa along for the walk. Despite Katz's overwhelming desire to find cozy restaurants, he and Bryson eventually settle into their stride, and while on the trail they meet a bizarre assortment of hilarious characters. But A Walk in the Woods is more than just a laugh-out-loud hike. Bryson's acute eye is a wise witness to this beautiful but fragile trail, and as he tells its fascinating history, he makes a moving plea for the conservation of America's last great wilderness. An adventure, a comedy, and a celebration, A Walk in the Woods is destined to become a modern classic of travel literature.

Praise

"Choke-on-your-coffee funny."--The Washington Post Book World

"Bryson is . . . great company right from the start--a lumbering, droll, neatnik intellectual who comes off as equal parts Garrison Keillor, Michael Kinsley, and . . . Dave Barry."--The New York Times Book Review

"A Walk in the Woods is an almost perfect travel book."--The Boston Globe

About our December Author

Bill Bryson was born in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1951. A backpacking expedition in 1973 brought him to England where he met his wife and decided to settle. He wrote for the English newspapers The Times and The Independent for many years, writing travel articles to supplement his income. He lived with his family in North Yorkshire before moving back to the States in 1995, to Hanover, New Hampshire, with his wife and four children. In 2003 he and his family moved back to England, where they currently reside.

The Lost Continent, Bill Bryson's hilarious first travel book, chronicles a trip in his mother's Chevy around small town America. Since then, he has written several more, including notable bestsellers, A Walk in the Woods, I'm A Stranger Here Myself (published in Britain as Notes from a Big Country), and In a Sunburned Country (published in Britain as Down Under).

His other books include Bill Bryson's Dictionary of Troublesome Words, Neither Here nor There: Travels in Europe, Made in America, The Mother Tongue and Bill Bryson's African Diary. His latest book, A Short History of Nearly Everything, was published in Spring 2003.

Especially for Kim



Holiday Books
Paris

By ELSA DIXLER

A burning car may temporarily have replaced the Eiffel Tower as its iconic image, but Paris remains the City of Light. This season brings several books that evoke an earlier, more romantic Paris.

Peter Barberie, in LOOKING AT ATGET (Philadelphia Museum of Art/Yale University, $45), presents 110 photographs by Eugène Atget (1857-1927), mostly from the collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Atget made photographs for sale - as many as 10,000 of them - chiefly to libraries and museums. He documented Paris's parks and buildings, but also its interiors, the kitchens and bedrooms of Parisians of every social class. In "Looking at Atget," the reader can compare, for example, the "Small Bedroom of a Working-Class Woman, rue de Belleville, 1910," with the "Interior of Monsieur M., Financier, avenue Elisée Reclus, Champ de Mars, 1910" (his is less cluttered, and he has a bigger bed). Atget's photographs of prostitutes (from the 1920's) and ragpickers (a decade earlier) provide glimpses of a vanished world, but those of the statues on the grounds at Versailles look absolutely contemporary.

While Atget made prints in his darkroom in Montparnasse, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901) was at work in the emerging artists' neighborhood of Montmartre. TOULOUSE-LAUTREC AND MONTMARTRE (National Gallery of Art/Art Institute of Chicago/Princeton University, $60) - by Richard Thomson, Phillip Dennis Cate and Mary Weaver Chapin - collects posters, paintings, drawings and prints from 1885-95. In addition to these indelible images of fin-de-siècle Paris at play, the book includes reproductions of work by artists who influenced Toulouse-Lautrec, as well as essays on the history of Montmartre, cabarets and dance halls, and Toulouse-Lautrec's contribution to the rising culture of celebrity.

The cancan dancers in Toulouse-Lautrec's posters could be nowhere in the world but Paris; neither could the young couple in Robert Doisneau's famous "Kiss at the Hôtel de Ville." ROBERT DOISNEAU: PARIS (Flammarion, $60), is a feast of 560 of his photographs, edited by his daughter. Doisneau (1912-94) specialized in pictures of Parisians in their everyday lives. He shows them trying to get across the Place de la Concorde, leaping filthy gutters in Les Halles and staring at a painting in a gallery window. He also shoots the city tourists love: the banks of the Seine, the gargoyles of Notre-Dame, the stalls of the bouquinistes. He even gives us Paris in the snow, just in time for a Joyeux Noël.

NY Times 10 best books of 2005


December 11, 2005
Holiday Books
The 10 Best Books of 2005

Fiction

KAFKA ON THE SHORE
By Haruki Murakami.
Alfred A. Knopf, $25.95.This graceful and dreamily cerebral novel, translated from the Japanese by Philip Gabriel, tells two stories - that of a boy fleeing an Oedipal prophecy, and that of a witless old man who can talk to cats - and is the work of a powerfully confident writer. • ReviewFirst ChapterFeatured Author

ON BEAUTY
By Zadie Smith.
Penguin Press, $25.95.In her vibrant new book, a cultural-politics novel set in a place like Harvard, the author of ''White Teeth'' brings everything to the table: a crisp intellect, a lovely wit and enormous sympathy for the men, women and children who populate her story. • Review
PREP
By Curtis Sittenfeld.
Random House, $21.95. Paper, $13.95.This calm and memorably incisive first novel, about a scholarship girl who heads east to attend an elite prep school, casts an unshakable spell and has plenty to say about class, sex and character. • ReviewFirst Chapter

SATURDAY
By Ian McEwan.
Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, $26.As bracing and as carefully constructed as anything McEwan has written, this astringent novel traces a day in the life of an English neurosurgeon who comes face to face with senseless violence. • ReviewFirst ChapterFeatured Author

VERONICA
By Mary Gaitskill.
Pantheon Books, $23.This mesmerizingly dark novel from the author of ''Bad Behavior'' and ''Two Girls, Fat and Thin'' is narrated by a former Paris model who is now sick and poor; her ruminations on beauty and cruelty have clarity and an uncanny bite. • Review

Nonfiction
THE ASSASSINS' GATE America in Iraq
By George Packer
.Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $26.A comprehensive look at the largest foreign policy gamble in a generation, by a New Yorker reporter who traces the full arc of the war, from the pre-invasion debate through the action on the ground. • ReviewFirst ChapterGeorge Packer Answers Readers' Questions

DE KOONINGAn American Master
By Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan.
Alfred A. Knopf, $35.A sweeping biography, impressively researched and absorbingly written, of the charismatic immigrant who stood at the vortex of mid-20th-century American art. • ReviewSlide Show

THE LOST PAINTING
By Jonathan Harr.
Random House, $24.95.This gripping narrative, populated by a beguiling cast of scholars, historians, art restorers and aging nobles, records the search for Caravaggio's ''Taking of Christ,'' painted in 1602 and rediscovered in 1990. • ReviewFirst Chapter

POSTWAR A History of Europe Since 1945
By Tony Judt.
The Penguin Press, $39.95.Judt's massive, learned, brilliantly detailed account of Europe's recovery from the wreckage of World War II presents a whole continent in panorama even as it sets off detonations of insight on almost every page. • Review

THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING
By Joan Didion.
Alfred A. Knopf, $23.95.A prose master's harrowing yet exhilarating memoir of a year riven by sudden death (her husband's) and mortal illness (their only child's). • ReviewA Profile of Joan Didion Audio: An InterviewFeatured AuthorAn Essay Adapted From 'The Year of Magical Thinking'