The Displacements

Hi. I hope everyone had a great week. We had a very cold one here, but we’re starting to come out of it now after getting about a foot of new snow. It made things look all pretty and white and should be good for the ski trails. I heard that even Southern California where my parents are received a few snowflakes — how rare is that?! But can you believe we will start March this week? Wow spring is not too far off now. Have we turned a corner on winter? I think pretty soon … just knowing March is about to start is good news. 

You might like to see the Live Web Cam of the eagles nest in Big Bear in the mountains of SoCal. Jackie, the bald eagle is sitting on the nest with two eggs about to hatch, and Shadow, her spouse is nearby. I hope they will be all right. The big storm there has watchers worried. Apparently 15,000 viewers are tuning in to see when the eggs will hatch, while Jackie is doing her best to incubate them during the snowstorm and winds. She’s a tough bird so I’m hopeful and pulling for her. Her eaglets could appear this week, fingers crossed for all.

In book news, lately I’ve been reading about the controversy over a decision in the U.K. to edit hundreds of words in Roald Dahl’s children’s books in order to update them for today’s world and make the stories and characters more inclusive. Have you heard about this? Well, apparently it’s caused such a firestorm that now both versions in the U.K. will be available — the edited one and the original version, so you can take your pick.

I think in general most people are troubled by the idea of censoring previous literary works, even if the books seem offensive or out of touch with the times. Perhaps people can just bring their own context to them, or decide to read them less. It seems if you start editing and trying to fix books from decades ago, where do you stop cleansing them? What do you think about this recent controversy?

And now I will leave you with what I finished lately. 

The Displacements by Bruce Holsinger / Riverhead / 448 pages / 2022

I must be on a climate-change disaster binge this year after earlier reading The Light Pirate by Lily Brooks-Dalton and now listening to this one on audio. I don’t think I’m doing it purposely or am I? Both novels take aim at Florida falling apart, and man, does it ever. Sorry to all who love and live in the Sunshine State. For you especially, these books might be hard to take. And Houston, too, is rocked in this one. 

The Displacements is a lengthy novel about a hurricane disaster — a Category 6 (!) that lays waste to Miami and Houston — and its aftermath. It chronicles a mass displacement of swaths of the population — the “Hurricane Luna Migration,” which heads inland and into camps. The novel has multiple storylines of the people impacted that includes: a doctor’s wife (an artist) in Miami and her three kids and dog who flee and get bused to an Oklahoma mega-shelter; the FEMA official who runs the shelter there; and an insurance agent/drug dealer who tries to suck the evacuees dry. 

Oh yeah this is a doozy of a story … and it goes from bad to worse for most of it. In places it’s pretty dramatic, and I was particularly focused on the main story of the well-off family who evade the hurricane only to lose everything while on the run and in the long weeks after in the shelter. The mother Daphne seems not totally astute for losing and not having access to their funds, while her stepson, Gavin, 19, gets involved with dealing drugs, and her younger daughter Mia naively implicates a friend picked up by ICE. 

Surely being in a displacement camp as a Luna refugee without cash is rough. The novel does well painting the picture of the chaos in the disaster’s aftermath and those made destitute by it — as well as the economic and racial divides in the U.S. along the way, but the story also felt to me over-the-top and bloated — and even a bit hard to believe especially the part about Daphne’s missing doctor husband. 

There’s a lot in this, and maybe too much stuffed in. It’s ambitious in its portrayal and the characters undergo some tough changes. The easiest part to believe is the huge disaster that causes the massive disruption and the large fleeing migration, which unfortunately seems all too real of what more swaths of the population could face in our future. The novel complements well with the other Florida disaster novel in 2022 The Light Pirate (about a girl staying put during such a hurricane), but in terms of how it’s put together and the story, I liked The Light Pirate a bit better. 

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read many climate-change disaster novels and if so, what did you think? 

Posted in Books | 39 Comments

Head in the Clouds

Happy Valentine’s Day everyone. I hope you are enjoying this day wherever you are. Perhaps you received a card, or chocolates, or flowers, or planned a night out with your partner. That would be fun. Or maybe you’re staying home and enjoying a nice meal and show. Speaking of which, we are just starting to watch Season 3 of the drama series Your Honor as well as the post-apocalyptic series The Last of Us, which was filmed near here in Alberta. I haven’t seen any Zombie-like creatures yet after we moved in, but you never can tell when they might suddenly appear. I was looking for a few on the lawn when I took this photo of the clouds at sunset. Nothing much else is new, but we are settling in and getting some unpacking done. 

Meanwhile in book news, I see that Washington Post critic Ron Charles wrote a fun article last week asking readers about what annoys them most when they come across it in a book. Some said historical and factual inaccuracies, others said copyediting and grammatical errors, or when authors choose not to use quotation marks in dialogue, or to use foreign words without defining them. That usually ticks readers off. 

Others mentioned not liking confusing timelines, dream sequences in plots, gratuitous violence, and explicit sex scenes. Readers also don’t like to see cliches, or old sexist tropes in books. And one that I especially agreed with: is books that include long passages in italics. Ugh. Reading pages of novels with italics can be sort of torturous. What do you think — is there something that annoys you the most when you’re reading along and see it in a book? Any pet peeves?

And now I will leave you with a few reviews of the books that I finished lately.

The Light Pirate by Lily Brooks-Dalton / Grand Central / 336 pages / 2022 

I was a bit skeptical of this novel going into it, but man author Lily Brooks-Dalton delivers a page-turning tale about a family living in a near-future Florida ravaged by climate change. Hurricanes and rising sea levels have decimated the southern parts of the state and residents are starting to leave in droves. 

The story follows Wanda, a young girl, and her family who try to stick it out. Wanda learns the way of survival from a lady on her street named Phyllis who gives her the tools to persevere. I can’t say much more without giving too much away, but the writing of Florida and the elements are very well done, and there’s even a bit of an unknown element about how water affects Wanda that leaves you wanting more. It feels quite realistic and post-apocalyptic at the same time. It likely was my favorite read of January. And now sometime perhaps I’ll go back and read the author’s 2016 debut novel called Good Morning, Midnight, which inspired the 2020 film The Midnight Sky with George Clooney that was pretty good.

Nightbitch by Rachel Yoder / Doubleday / 256 pages / 2021

This novel follows the story of a new mother who finds herself on the brink of her wits. She’s given up her job as an art gallery director and put her ambitions and advanced degrees aside (much to her dismay) to be a stay-at-home mom to her infant son while her engineer-y husband is off traveling for work during the week and she is left to care for their son alone. 

By the time her son is two, the harried mom with little sleep and without a shower in a week begins to lose it and finds herself transforming into something feral. Worried about her sanity, she takes home a book from the library called A Field Guide to Magical Women that she thinks speaks to her situation, and she meets a group of other moms who might be more than what they seem and want her to invest in some kind of herbal marketing scheme. 

I loved this smart, darkly satirical tale and found it funny, weird, and a feminist manifesto of sorts. I laughed through much of it and sympathized with the mother on the brink who offers much to think about on society, art, and what women go through and sacrifice … in marriage, motherhood, and roles in the working world. This is smart and well done and I gave it 5 stars on Goodreads! It seems in recent times there’s been a slew of “motherhood madness” kinds of stories that have raised pertinent issues and questions … and of those this novel is gleefully a favorite.

Run Towards the Danger: Confrontations With a Body of Memory
by Sarah Polley / Penguin / 272 pages / 2022

Canadian film director Sarah Polley delivers a pretty gripping book of essays about her life story growing up as a child actor, then evolving into a screenwriter and director. Much of it deals with her personal life with her parents, her husband and kids, and what she experienced over the years in her life on and off the screen. I had no idea she’s had so many serious health issues, which I felt terrible about – that she’s been all through that. 

I first came upon Polley’s work from her directorial debut of the 2006 film Away From Her, which sort of rocked my world. It’s a sad film about a woman with Alzheimer’s that hits the heart. I also hope to see her latest film Women Talking soon. 

I listened to the audio version of Polley’s book, which she narrates and I would recommend. She talks among other things about her stage role in Alice Through the Looking Glass in 1994 and how she cut short her run of the role while going through severe stage fright and scoliosis; and how she did not come forward during the sexual abuse trial of Canadian radio broadcaster Jian Ghomeshi who she said assaulted her when she was 16; her fused back operation and her high risk pregnancy; her terrified time as a child on the film set of The Adventures of Baron Munchausen; her visit to Prince Edward Island years after being an actress in the TV series Road to Avonlea (1990-6); and lastly the severe concussion she suffered from an accident that took 3.5 years of her life away and the recovery that eventually saved her. 

What I liked is how she reflects back on her life candidly trying to come to grips with things that had happened to her and what she experienced. She really uncovers it in a forthright kind of way that is quite refreshing and engaging. And she seems to do it with much integrity and courage, unsparing of herself, or any possible embarrassment. So after hearing her tell of her life, I’m even more a fan for her projects to come.

Vacationland by Meg Mitchell Moore / Morrow / 384 pages / 2022

This was an entertaining, women’s fiction kind of drama that I listened to as an audiobook as I was packing and unpacking after the move. It held my attention as it went along more than I thought it would and had some laughs amid the drama too. 

The story alternates mostly between Louisa’s life as a mother and college professor who takes her three kids to stay for the summer to her parents’ estate in Owl’s Head, Maine – and Kristie, who arrives in Owl’s Head from Pennsylvania, is about broke and grieving after her mother’s death.

The two women whose paths eventually cross are contrasted nicely, Louisa is pretty well off – though her life is not without troubles as her father is suffering from Alzheimer’s, and Kristie in need of cash has creditors after her. Moreover, Louisa is trying to work on a historical book she’s been procrastinating over, while Kristie is trying to hold onto a waitressing job she picks up along with a boyfriend there. But what’s their connection? You eventually find out as it goes along. 

It’s a story that branches entertainingly into quite a family saga: Louisa’s kids’ summer lives add flavor along with Louisa’s tension with her workaholic husband back in NY – and Kristie’s boyfriend who is so nice she’s not sure she deserves him. 

It might end a bit predictably, but the author does well breathing life into these characters that you care to stick around to see how it will play out all the same. It would make for a good summer beach read or listen, though for me it was a nice wintry escape. The setting of a summery Maine was pretty blissful.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read any of these books and if so, what did you think?

Posted in Books | 20 Comments

February Preview

Hi. I hope everyone is enjoying the start of February. Sorry I have been AWOL lately. I just got too busy at the end of January. Whoosh that was a crazy month. We had a funeral, a move, and my niece’s lovely wedding in Colorado, which was a blast … along with renovations going on and a re-certification test for officiating tennis tournaments, which I do. Oh my, luckily life is beginning to settle down now. We can rest for a moment before starting to unpack gradually more of the boxes. We are liking our new place and area. The photo is of the farmland near our house. It’s serene here and is only about ten minutes from the nearest town. 

Now let’s check out what’s releasing in February. The reason I make a post like this each month is basically to find out about titles and put them on my radar for either the near future, or for the year ahead. It’s not always to get to them this very month. Often other readers give me helpful feedback on what I’ve picked that can change how soon I pick them up.

One February release The Queen of Dirt Island (due out Feb. 28) by Irish author Donal Ryan is one I received an early copy of last year and really liked — about “the daughter of a single mother growing up in a family of formidable women in rural Ireland.” It ended up on my list of 2022 favorites, and author Donal Ryan is a wonderful writer. This was my first novel of his and I hope to read more of his books in the future.  

I’m curious now about Shelley Read’s debut novel Go as a River (due out Feb. 28). It’s receiving a lot of favorable hype and according to the publisher is “set amid Colorado’s wild beauty, a heartbreaking coming-of-age story of a resilient young woman whose life is changed forever by one chance encounter.”

Author Adriana Trigiani says the woman “Victoria Nash is a character for the ages as she navigates loss and despair on the road to redemption. The vast plains and desert canyons of her Colorado home are filled with ghosts until a mysterious drifter arrives and changes the course of her life forever.” It’s been called a “stunning debut” so what are we waiting for? I usually like outdoorsy stories set in Colorado, where I once lived for a few years after college. 

Next up is Rebecca Makkai’s new novel I Have Some Questions for You (due out Feb. 21) about a 1990s boarding school murder and its repercussions decades later … as a podcast explores whether the man convicted of the crime was wrongfully charged. Author Jennifer Egan says the novel is “part boarding school drama, part forensic whodunnit … a true literary mystery—haunting and hard to put down.”

I’m game since Makkai’s last novel The Great Believers sort of blew me away in scope and sentiment, and boarding school stories like the new one are hard to resist. Academia novels are often like catnip to readers like us, am I right?

Then there’s Margaret Verble’s new novel Stealing (due out Feb. 7) about a Cherokee child in the American South removed from her family and sent to a Christian boarding school in the 1950s. It’s been hailed as a powerful coming-of-age tale of Karen “Kit” Crockett, and Publishers Weekly says “Verble’s skillful storytelling does justice to a harrowing chapter of history.”

There’s been much in the news the past couple of years about abuses of indigenous children who were sent to residential schools in Canada and the U.S. decades ago, so I’m keen to read this — as well as other books about this topic set in Canada. I have not read Verble before but she’s been hailed as an exceptional storyteller and a citizen of the Cherokee Nation.

In honorable mentions, I’m also curious about the novel Hungry Ghosts by Kevin Jaren Hosein that is set in Trinidad in the 1940s as well as the novel A Spell of Good Things by Ayobami Adebayo set in contemporary Nigeria. Both novels seem to depict the lives of the rich and poor intersecting and present portals into their home countries. I had read Adebayo’s debut novel Stay With Me from 2017 so I’m interested to see where her new one goes.

On the screen this month, there’s the new series Dear Edward (starting Feb. 3 on Apple+) based on the melancholic 2020 novel by Ann Napolitano about a 12-year-old boy who is the lone survivor of a large plane crash and tries along with others to make sense of what happened.

I have not been able to get the stomach yet to read the novel or see the series, but I put it out there for those whom the book touched. Actress Connie Britton is on a roll lately with The White Lotus series and now she’s in this one. She plays a housewife who loses her husband in the crash and whose privileged life is upended by the tragedy. Apparently her role is not in the novel but did that ever stop Hollywood before? 

Next up is C.B. Strike: Troubled Blood (starting Feb. 6), which is Season 3 of the HBO series based on the Robert Galbraith novels of J.K. Rowling. I think we tried an episode of Season 1 but my husband nixed it — maybe thinking it was too slow. It’s about a war veteran turned private detective named Comoran Strike who teams with his partner Robin Ellacott to solve murders. Comoran lost part of his leg in an attack in Afghanistan and wears a prosthetic limb.

I read one of the novels in the series (there’s actually 6 now!) and thought it pretty good but could’ve been edited down a bit. The actors in the TV series seem good with Tom Burke as Strike and Holliday Grainger as Robin. Grainger is also in the series The Capture on BBC One — wow she’s busy. Have you seen any episodes of C.B. Strike?

In other things to watch … there’s this “little thing” called the Super Bowl on Feb. 12. Check your local listings, but it starts here Mountain Time at 4:30 p.m. This year it features two teams: the Chiefs vs. the Eagles, which I have no care in the world about. Do you? Apparently Rihanna will be the halftime show, so stay for the nachos perhaps. I always make sure the jalapenos are separate on the side. My tip for you, ha.

In music this month, Pink, Shania Twain, Ron Sexsmith, and Inhaler have new albums out. I will pick Irish band Inhaler’s upcoming album Cuts & Bruises (due out Feb. 17), which features vocalist Elijah Hewson, the 23-year-old son of a man named Bono.

Now that might be some big shoes to follow after, but Elijah seems to be having fun and doing his own thing. Still you can hear the similarities in their voices. Here’s the video of Inhaler’s song Love Will Get You There

That’s all for now. What about you — which new releases this month are you looking forward to? 

Posted in Top Picks | 26 Comments

New Beginnings

Hi. We made it to our new house. We are liking it already even though we have so many boxes to unpack and things to fix. It’s a great relief to have the move part over. The house is spread out mostly on one level (except for the basement) and that is a welcomed change from the flights of stairs we used to climb in the city house. We are also liking the farmlands and wide open spaces around here. So things appear good and we will take our time to get set up.

But first we are headed to my niece’s wedding in Colorado this weekend. Woohoo. We are very proud and excited for her and her fiance — both of whom are great people and so well-accomplished. Hopefully our flight will go as snow is expected on Friday. 

In book news I see that Prince Harry’s memoir Spare sold 3.2 million copies in its first week, making it likely that it will rank among the bestselling memoirs of all time. It’s not actually something I plan to read, but it’s interesting to note that novelist J.R. Moehringer, who also helped write Andre Agassi’s acclaimed memoir Open, worked on the book with the Prince. I didn’t realize that. 

The Kirkus review calls Harry’s book a “royal tell-all with some substance.” And says: “the prose is competent, and the author’s tales are consistently engaging—and far less smarmy than the self-aggrandizing tone set in the Netflix series. Readers may question Prince Harry’s motives, but his emotional struggles, though occasionally rendered in an overwrought fashion, feel palpable and heartfelt.” Harry says his beef is mainly with the press who cover the palace and not with the monarchy per se. Hmm, still it seems to me a sad public rift with his brother, father, and siser-in-law that seems to have caused some irreparable harm. Do you plan to read it?

And now I’ll leave you with a couple reviews of what I finished lately. 

Still Life by Sarah Winman / Putnam / 464 pages / 2021 

This novel is quite the epic saga about a close group of friends who are like family to one another. They all know each other from a pub in London. At the heart of it is: Ulysses, a young soldier who has an impactful chance encounter with Evelyn, a 64-year-old art historian, at the end of WWII in Italy. After the war, Ulysses goes back to London and to his pub friends: Peg (his ex-wife), her daughter Alys, piano player Pete, old man Cressy, and pub owner Col and his parrot. 

A couple years later, in the 1950s, Ulysses inherits a large house in Florence, Italy, from a man whose life he saved during the war, and moves there with old man Cressy, step-daughter Alys, and the parrot. Over the decades, the friends from the pub come and go, and Ulysses, a globe maker, endears himself to life in Florence, raises daughter Alys, and goes thru the historic flood of the Arno in 1966, eventually bumping back into Evelyn, who had much to tell him about art and Florence so long ago. 

This lengthy novel took me quite awhile to complete. It’s easily told with some nice writing but not a lot of plotting as it meanders among this lively group of friends as it goes along. At times I sort of wanted it to cut to the chase about their lives and what would happen, but then it also adds much flavor and themes to the mix. Indeed so much is in the novel. There’s themes of art and beauty; unconventional families; various forms of love: platonic, gay, straight; men who take on child-caring roles and women who don’t. Even the author E.M. Forster makes an appearance in it and its homage to his novel A Room With a View is evident.

Certainly the novel seems a love letter to Florence, Italy, and this close group of friends who move there. I read the novel for book club, whose members were a little mixed about it and thought like me it could’ve been edited down but still liked its endearing qualities and the characters such as Ulysses, a generous kind-hearted soul, and Evelyn, a wise, straight to the truth person who appreciated the transcending power of art.

My Antonia by Willa Cather / Classic / 166 pages / 1918 

I listened to the audiobook narrated superbly by Patrick Lawlor as I was packing up for the move and it took my mind away to the prairies of Nebraska and to the immigrants who came there as pioneers at the end of the 19th century.

I had remembered the novel a bit differently from my childhood where I mythologized it as being solely about the young immigrant girl Antonia, who back then seemed larger than life. Really the story is narrated by Jim Burden as he recounts his move at age 10 to the Nebraska prairie, his life thereafter growing up with his grandparents, his later college pursuits, and his friendship with Antonia over the decades. 

And just as Jim becomes enamored throughout his story with the Bohemian girl Antonia (age 14 when he is 10), I, too, was taken with her and their lives playing and working on the prairie. She is a little mysterious and I wanted to know her better. She comes with her immigrant family who are poor to live at a sod house that is nearby Jim’s grandparent’s place. They are neighbors and start to know each other when Jim begins teaching her to read English, but they become more friends when Jim kills a big rattle snake when they are off playing, which really impresses Antonia. From then on, they seem fast friends as their lives grow and change, becoming townies for awhile in nearby Black Hawk. 

But when Jim goes off to college in Lincoln, he sort of loses close touch with Antonia and the story becomes more about him and Lena, another local prairie girl they knew, who starts a dressmaking business. They go to the theater together and spend time at her shop, until he later goes off to Harvard. Still through the grapevine Jim finds out about Antonia and what marriage misfortunes have befallen her. He keeps in touch and 20 years later after becoming an attorney, Jim visits Antonia on the Nebraska farm she has with her Bohemian husband and their 10 children. Whoa.

It’s an endearing friendship story and Antonia is certainly a shining light to Jim. She has a spark about her and never lets her foreignness, misfortunes, or poverty hold her back. I sort of had hoped Jim and her would get together, but that never materializes. Still by the end, her life is full and happy with seemingly just the right partner and kids, while Jim‘s is a little wishful.

My Antonia remains my favorite Willa Cather novel, but I have only read O Pioneers! in addition to this. I’d like to read more of her novels.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read these novels and what did you think? 

Posted in Books | 24 Comments

Packing It Up

Hi everyone. I hope you are having a great start to the new year. We are in the midst of packing up the house right now in order to move. It’s been a bit crazy because we are still waiting for the renovations to finish at the new place. It’s coming down to the wire for when our movers are coming in a week, argh. 

Anyways, I’ve filled a lot of boxes in preparation. And who knew you could accumulate so much in 14 years. It’s just all the closets, drawers, and books, oh goodness! I think I forgot about it when I last moved in 2008 from Arlington, Va., and had to get rid of all my furniture to come to Canada. I sold it on Craigslist, or something. People came and drove it away. Now I’m trying to pare down the books, which is hard. 

In other news, the Oscar nominations will be announced Jan. 24 and I’ve been seeing some films that will likely be Oscar contenders. So far I’ve seen these films below: 

  • Elvis for which actor Austin Butler gave an amazing performance
  • She Said which is a strong #MeToo flick
  • The Fabelmans based on Steven Spielberg’s family and early childhood 
  • Tar in which Cate Blanchett plays a star orchestra composer-conductor, and 
  • The Whale that tells the story of a morbidly obese man’s troubles

I just saw The Whale with Brendan Fraser and it’s quite powerful. I was sort of blown out of my chair by the end. It all takes place in the lead character Charlie’s apartment as he goes about his life as an online English teacher while dealing with his health issues and trying to reconnect with his estranged daughter.

When you see it, you can tell it’s based on a play (by Samuel D. Hunter in 2012) because the dialogue and characters play out in close proximity. There’s a nurse who comes by to check on Charlie and then his teenage daughter and ex-wife, as well as a young missionary boy who says he’s trying to save Charlie. So it’s interesting how these characters interact and what comes to pass in Charlie’s life. There’s much pain and anger in this story! But man it cuts to the heart too. See it at your own discretion.

Other likely Oscar contenders I still want to see are the Irish film The Banshees of Inisherin about a lifelong friendship that stars Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell, Women Talking about a Mennonite colony, and Living that’s set in 1950s London, starring Bill Nighy. Have you seen any of these movies or the ones above? 

And now I’ll leave you with a couple reviews of novels I finished lately. 

Trespasses by Louise Kennedy / Riverhead / 304 pages / 2022

Whoa this is a tragic story but so well told. The novel and circumstance really gave me a flavor of Northern Ireland in the 1970s during the Troubles and it seems certainly one of the best novels I’ve read about the time, place, and people caught up in the ongoing violence. 

The story is about: Cushla, a 24-year-old Catholic woman, who lives outside Belfast, works as teacher during the day, and takes care of her alcoholic mother at night. Sometimes she fills in at her family’s pub, which her brother runs. There she meets an older Protestant married barrister (Michael) who invites her to attend Irish/Gaelic language classes with a group of his friends. Pretty soon a clandestine affair develops between them, which Cushla tries to control and keep under wraps — while also trying to help out a young boy (Davy) at school who’s being bullied. Later when his father is attacked by sectarian violence and put into the hospital, things begin to unravel and play out for all. 

Uh-oh Cushla has a lot on her plate: her alcoholic mother, her student’s problems, and her secret affair that will have grave consequences if anyone finds out. 

The story starts out pretty slowly but picks up from late middle to the end. The gritty descriptions of the time, place, and violence seem spot on (much alcohol, cigarettes, and sex in this) and captivatingly reveal Cushla’s emotions of getting involved with an older married man who’s Protestant. You’ll want to find out what happens to them all. By the end I was pretty ripped apart. Kudos to the author. It’s hard to believe this was her first novel. 

Women Talking by Miriam Toews / Bloomsbury / 240 pages / 2018

Yep this was my first completed book in 2023! I picked it up so I would get a better idea of it when I see the feature film coming out starring a wide array of actresses. I listened to the audiobook read very well by actor Matthew Edison.

And whoa this is quite a dark and disturbing story about a Mennonite colony whose women are being attacked at night while they sleep. At first they think it’s demons or something, but then they realize it’s some men in the colony who are drugging them (this is not giving anything away as it’s told early on that’s what has happened).

Thereafter most of the novel consists of two days of eight women — who are illiterate and never been out in the world — discussing how they plan to proceed to what’s happened. Around and round they go making arguments for and against about whether to stay and fight for their safety and security, or to leave the religious colony altogether. Their discussions get quite philosophical as they explore the rationale behind their thinking and what they want for their future and how their faith shapes their beliefs too. Granted I got a bit impatient waiting for them to make up their minds on what to do when I felt ready from the get-go.

But the women here are at a big disadvantage since in their Mennonite colony all the power rests with the men: the rules, how they live, and that the women are not allowed even to learn how to read or write. Cripes it’s hard to fathom that this horrible society exists (like the Taliban?), but the novel is based on a true story of a colony in Bolivia in 2009

I thought it was clever how the story is narrated by August Epps, a former ex-communicated male colony member, who takes the minutes of the women’s meetings, writing them down and sympathizing with their cause. And though at first I couldn’t seem to keep track of the various female characters in the story and their points of view, as it went on I became more familiar with them and a couple heroes in their midst began to step forward: namely Ona and Salome. These women show much courage by plotting a way forward for the women, and a sense of suspense and danger emerge towards the end. Perhaps the story’s middle had a little too much talking and not enough action but that was my only qualm in a story that otherwise was very effective and scary to contemplate.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read these books or seen the movies and if so, what did you think?

Posted in Books, Movies | 26 Comments

Year End Stats and Favorites

Greetings. Below are my reading stats and favorite books of last year. I don’t know about you, but I don’t really plan out my reading as I’m going along … I’m mostly a mood reader, picking up whatever seems good at the time. But it’s interesting to look back at the end of the year to study one’s own reading trail, and from my stats I can see that I overwhelmingly read fiction by female authors. Most of it I’d say is literary or contemporary fiction. I try to diversify mostly by race and country, but I still need to do more of that, especially in reading more authors from my adopted country of Canada.

One of the other things I notice from below is that for the first time ever my audiobook listens outnumbered the books I read, which seems a bit unusual. But I am a bit of a slow, meticulous reader, while I enjoy audios on walks with my dogs and doing chores like yard work. So I guess I was walking a lot last year (see the sunrise from my window), or doing laundry, lol.

I have included 10 favorite novels pictured below with links to my reviews. The Yoko Ogawa novel The Housekeeper and the Professor from 2009 was probably my sentimental favorite. I read it for my book club and thought it was a small, quiet gem of a story about a friendship between a math professor with memory issues and his housekeeper and son. Then I have five novels from 2022 on my list and I found it hard to pick which I liked best. But I think Lessons in Chemistry and Lucy by the Sea are at the top, followed closely by Claire Keegan’s Small Things Like These. The others pictured are also quite excellent. Three on the list are Irish authors: Claire Keegan, Lisa Harding, and Donal Ryan. And lately Irish authors and Asian-born authors are knocking it out the park for me. I will look for more in 2023.

I’ve also included a picture of my top 5 nonfiction reads from last year. Granted, I don’t read a lot of nonfiction, but the ones I do, I really like. The Daughters of Yalta is my top pick followed closely by A Spy Among Friends and The River of the Gods. I love compelling history reads and all three of these blew me away and took me far, far away to various incredible times and dynamic people. Also Ann Patchett’s essays These Precious Days and Michelle Zauner’s memoir Crying in H Mart are memorable books that indelibly put me in the author’s shoes and circumstances. I’d recommend these.

And now without further ado here are my numbers and books of 2022!

  • 65 books completed
  • 28 print or ebooks 
  • 37 audiobooks 
  • 51 female, 14 male
  • 55 fiction, 10 nonfiction
  • 17 for Publishers Weekly 
  • 48 for The Cue Card
  • 47 white authors, 18 non-white authors
  • 35 American authors
  • 8 British authors
  • 6 Irish authors
  • 2 Canadian authors
  • 2 Korean-American authors
  • 2 Japanese authors
  • 2 Chinese born/raised authors
  • 1 Middle Eastern author
  • 1 African author
  • 1 Danish author
  • 1 French author
  • 1 Mexican author
  • 1 India born/raised author
  • 1 Scottish author
  • 1 Australian author  

5 Top Nonfiction

The Daughters of Yalta: The Churchills, Roosevelts, and Harrimans: A Story of Love and War by Catherine Grace Katz (2020) 

Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal by Ben Macintyre (2014) 

River of the Gods: Genius, Courage, and Betrayal in the Search for the Source of the Nile by Candice Millard (2022) 

These Precious Days: Essays by Ann Patchett (2021) 

Crying in H Mart: A Memoir by Michelle Zauner (2021) 

Top 10 Fiction

The Housekeeper and the Professor by Yoko Ogawa (2009 English translation) 

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus (2022) 

Lucy by the Sea by Elizabeth Strout (2022) 

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan (2021) 

Bright Burning Things by Lisa Harding (2021) 

The Queen of Dirt Island by Donal Ryan (2023) 

Swimming Back to Trout River by Linda Rui Feng (2021) 

The Space Between Us by Thrity Umrigar (2006) 

The Daughter of Dr. Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (2022)

The Swimmers by Julie Otsuka (2022)

Mothering Sunday by Graham Swift (2016) – #11 pick, an honorable mention 

That’s all for now. What about you — did you read any of these and what did you think?

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January Preview

Happy 2023. We are starting anew. I hope everyone had great holidays and feels rested up and replenished. I meant to take a photo of me with my First Read of the Year but then I forgot and the print copy was due at the library. Alas, I am now reading the ebook version of Sarah Winman’s 2021 novel Still Life for my book club discussion this month, and I’m also listening to the audio of Miriam Toews’s 2018 novel Women Talking, which is out as a movie soon. The subject matter of it is rather dark and disturbing, but I’m gearing up to see it after I finish the audiobook. So these are my first two books of the year and both seem pretty strong.

It’s going to be a busy month as we are packing up and moving around Jan. 23rd week as well as going to my niece’s wedding in Colorado at the end of the month. So it should be quite a start to the new year. If all goes well, we should be in the new place in the countryside soon. 

And now let’s see what looks good in books releasing for January. First off, many are talking about Deepti Kapoor’s fast-paced novel Age of Vice (due out Jan. 3),which is a story of corruption set in modern-day India. Apparently, it’s about a poor boy who joins up with a ruthless rich family; I hear they’re like the mob and the tale is slightly said to be like Mario Puzo’s novel The Godfather. Hmm.

I think it’ll be quite violent but it’s also noted for having spellbinding storytelling. The author grew up in Northern India and worked for several years as a journalist in New Delhi. This is her second novel. I can’t wait. I’ve heard it’s explosive.

There’s also Jessica George’s debut novel Maame (due out Jan. 31) about  a young British woman from a Ghanaian family trying to find her own way in the world and reassessing her responsibilities after a loss. It sounds like it’s a charming and lively coming-of-age novel that has a complicated but sharp protagonist in Maddie Wright. She is in her mid-20s and balancing her unconventional family, her job, and her dating life all at once.

It seems to be one woman’s journey through her awkward 20s. The author was born and raised in London to Ghanaian parents and wound up working for Bloomsbury Publishing. 

Next up, is a tie between Kai Thomas’s debut novel In the Upper Country and Ilyon Woo’s nonfiction book Master Slave Husband Wife: An Epic Journey From Slavery to Freedom. Both look really good and touch on stories of battling slavery. Kai Thomas’s novel (due out Jan. 10) is set in a Canadian town at the end of the Underground Railroad and deals with the fates of two women in 1859 — one beginning a journey and the other completing her last vital act — that become intertwined.

The author is an African-Canadian born and raised in Ottawa, which is good because I am always looking and hoping to read more Canadian authors. 

Historian Ilyon Woo’s Master Slave Husband Wife (due out Jan. 17) also looks compelling and is said to be a gripping true story of an enslaved couple’s escape to freedom in Georgia in 1848. I have not heard of Ellen and William Craft, but they were a real married couple who seemed to have risked everything, traveling more than 1,000 miles in four days on steamships, carriages, and trains (using disguises) to get to the free states of the North. There they joined the abolitionist speaking circuit and risked being caught.

It sounds like a suspenseful tale about a couple who showed remarkable courage and had a “love that conquered all.”

As for what to watch this month I’m likely going to see the movie Women Talking (due out Jan. 13) from the Canadian director Sarah Polley, which I actually wrote about in my December Preview. Its wider release must have gotten held up, but it should be out soon. It looks pretty scary about a Mennonite colony whose women are being attacked while they sleep.

I am reading the novel right now by Canadian author Miriam Toews, which dreadfully is based on a true story that happened in a Mennonite community in Bolivia in 2009. The case seems horrific, but much of the novel involves the women in the community’s discussion about their response and what they should do next. The movie’s trailer looks like the movie differs from the book, but we will see. 

Next we will likely watch Season 2 of the TV series Your Honor starting on Showtime Jan. 13. It’s a crazy, unlikely story that stars Bryan Cranston as a judge whose son gets embroiled with a mob family when he’s involved in a hit-and-run car accident. The father (Cranston) tries to protect his son.

That was Season 1, I’m not sure where Season 2 will go, but it’s safe to say that Cranston’s character — the judge — is reeling from the final episode in the first season, which was crazy violent. It’s said to be the final season of the show, which is set and filmed in New Orleans.

For new music releasing this month, I’ll pick the new album by Canadian husband-wife duo Whitehorse called I’m Not Crying, You’re Crying due out Jan. 13. Their music is folk rock-y and I like what I’ve heard so far from this new album. They hail from Hamilton, Ontario. You can see their first single off it here on YouTube called If the Loneliness Don’t Kill Me.  

That’s all for now. What about you — which releases are you looking forward to this month?

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Review Roundup

Hi. I hope everyone had a very Merry Christmas and will have a happy New Years too. These novels below were all sort of short and were my last completed of the year. They helped me get to my year-end goal of 65 books on Goodreads. Lately that seems to be about the right number for me to read each year. I don’t like to rush with books. What about you — do you follow yearly reading goals and does it help or hinder your enjoyment?

During the past couple of years while reviewing here, I’ve also been reviewing other fiction regularly for Publishers Weekly, which took considerable time (as well as getting ready for our move in January). I’m glad I did it, but in 2023 I plan to not be a regular contributor there so I can read more for the blog here and perhaps try doing some other freelance. We will see if it works out. And now without further ado, I’ll leave you with reviews of the last books I finished in 2022. 

The Hero of This Book by Elizabeth McCracken / Ecco / 192 pages /2022

This is a poignant, loving tribute of the author to her parents, especially her mother whose death 10 months earlier is reflected upon along with her life as the author is on a trip to London. It’s a clever book in that it’s not only about her mother, her own upbringing, and her grief over her parents’ being gone, but it’s also a book about writing, fiction, and what she says is her dislike of memoir and autofiction, which is pretty much what the book seems to be, so perhaps she is being a bit facetious. “I hate autofiction,” she says, “What is it written by robots?” 

There’s some irreverent humor in it and I liked her thoughts about teaching creative writing and the difference between fiction and memoir. And I felt much sympathy for her over the loss of her mother, who seemed to face hard health difficulties in her life yet was still to her daughter the “most exciting person she knew.” 

It’s a touching book overall (I gave it 3.7 stars), so I think my only drawback to it was that I didn’t realize it was going to be about this beforehand — perhaps it’s my own hesitancy about reading autofiction type books. It’s sort of a personal story between the author and her parents, which jumps around a bit, but not really a novel about London.

Very Cold People by Sarah Manguso / Hogarth / 208 pages / 2022

This is a pretty unhappy novel to be finishing right around Christmas. I’m not sure I was aware it would be so bleak, even though the title sort of screams it, lol. I listened to the audiobook narrated by Rebecca Lowman, who does a great job as usual. Rebecca gives the young girl who narrates this coming-of-age story set in the 1980s a sympathetic humanity. 

Ruthie grows up poor in Waitsfield, Massachusetts, and her parents don’t really treat her with much love or attention. As she gets to high school, her and her friends all suffer some terrible things including abuse, teen pregnancy, drugs, and self-harm. The dark undersides of class come through in a town that was once a place of the most well-to-do families such as the Cabots and Lowells. 

There’s some effective writing in this debut novel of this stifling town where her parents seem consumed by one’s status, but for some reason the novel didn’t sweep me up along with their lives or propel me. Perhaps it’s because it jumps around a bit or doesn’t fully realize some of the lesser characters. All I knew is that I didn’t want to be in this town or in this girl’s shoes.

Foster by Claire Keegan / Grove Press / 128 pages / 2010

This is a poignant Irish novella — it seems more like a short story — which I listened to on audio. It cuts to the heart of this young girl whose father drops her off one summer at a relatives’ farm to stay. There, she blossoms under the couple’s care, experiencing happiness that she never felt before with her family. The man and wife too experience some healing during her stay after the earlier loss of their young son. The ending feels sad and you wish you could change things. 

Irish author Keegan’s writing is transportive, exploring belonging, emotions, and loss in a concise way. It is often the things unsaid that get your attention. Though I liked this one, I still liked her other novel Small Things Like These a bit more. It felt more expanded, and this one perhaps seems too short of a wallop. It actually was written in 2010 but came out in North America this fall. I like Keegan’s writing and I hope she is working on something new and perhaps a bit longer.

A Girl of the Limberlost by Gene Stratton-Porter / 250 pages / 1909

This is a children’s or young adult classic written in 1909 that I recently became aware of thanks to Liz — and I found it quite the saga. It’s about a young girl and her widowed mother who live in a cabin among the swamp land of Indiana. The mother is in grief over the death of her husband, which she appears to take out on her daughter Elnora Comstock, the main character.

The mother is hard on Elnora, but despite that and poverty, Elnora finds ways to rise above and go to high school in the town, three miles away. She puts herself through school by collecting and selling various moths from the swamp lands and takes up playing violin (like her father) while succeeding at school. Much of the story details her love of nature and the colorful moths she collects. 

In the novel’s second half, Elnora and her mother seem to reconcile, Elnora graduates high school, and a young man named Philip Ammon comes to stay and help Elnora collect specimens around their land. Much ensues thereafter with Phil’s girlfriend back home the socialite Edith Carr and whether he will marry her, or if his time with Elnora might change that. 

It’s an endearing coming-of-age story with vivid characters and reminded me a bit of the writing of Laura Ingalls Wilder, L.M. Montgomery, and perhaps even Frances Hodgson Burnett — who were all writing then. The love of nature and of young girls persevering despite various hardships are themes that I liked in it and I found it an enjoyable read.

It is admirable too to learn that the author drew attention to saving the wetlands of Indiana during her lifetime, which this novel certainly does with its lovely portrait of the swamp lands and the creatures that live there. It was way before the “Crawdads Sing” novel!

Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White / Harper / 192 pages / 1952

My last book of 2022! Yep it’s a re-visit from my childhood. I wanted to remember all the details of the farm where Fern lives and the barnyard animals that include Wilbur (the pig), Charlotte (the spider), and Templeton (the rat) — and this classic still holds up 70 years after it was written. 

This time I listened to the novel read by the author himself, which is wonderful. He is the master of how each sentence was meant to be delivered and I liked his New England accent. What more can you say of this simple but brilliant and endearing story? Is it the best children’s book ever? Well it’s certainly hard to beat. 

The novel’s themes of friendship, loyalty, and hope are touching, and the characters of Charlotte and Wilbur are indelibly sketched in my mind. Thanks to EB White who was no stranger to farm life (he had one in Maine) and the wonders of creatures large and small.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read these and what did you think?

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Sleigh Bells Ring …

Hi everyone. We still have about 10 days left before Christmas and I hope you’re enjoying the holiday season whether it’s Christmas, Hanukkah, or your own tradition, I hope it’s great. On Monday, I picked up our tree and we just decorated it, listening to traditional holiday songs, which helped me get into the spirit.

Will you be having a white Christmas or a green one this year? We’ve had pretty good snow so far this winter, and next week it looks like a huge cold front with Arctic temps will be moving in, yikes! There’s nowhere to escape, so I’ll be staying right in front of the fireplace, hopefully with a good book. 🙂 

And during this time of year, I just want to thank those who visit this blog and comment on my site. You all are really wonderful and I appreciate it very much. I’ve enjoyed discussing books with you and hearing about where you live and your thoughts on what you’re reading and a host of things. So thank you for being a blog friend and visitor here. 

And now I’ll leave you with a few reviews of what I finished lately.

Lucy by the Sea by Elizabeth Strout / Random House / 304 pages / 2022 

Thankfully Lucy Barton is back. This time her previously divorced husband William, a scientist, whisks her away from New York City in the early days of the pandemic to ride out what turns out to be months in the seaside town of Crosby, Maine. Lucy is still mourning her second husband David, a cellist, who died the year before. But soon thoughts of the pandemic and the lockdowns take over their lives and Lucy and William navigate as best as they can staying isolated and watching the news late at night. Lucy walks the beach sometimes with their friend Bob Burgess and talks on the phone with her two grown married daughters Chrissy and Becca — who have problems of their own as the pandemic goes on.

It’s a place we’re all familiar with — those early chaotic days of the pandemic before the vaccines came out, and it seems Strout captures it very well with the character of Lucy. Her wide-eyed disbelief of what is happening and the deaths she hears about. She replays the thoughts to a T. There’s a bond with Lucy, the person she is, and the conversational way the novel is written. 

I continue to follow her, and the characters of her family and their problems: William and the two daughters have bigger roles in this story. I won’t say how the story plays out exactly. Though since Lucy and William go to stay in Crosby Maine — I immediately thought of Strout’s other character Olive Kitteridge who’s always lived there and is mentioned in this book. Wow the two heavyweights: Lucy Barton and Olive Kitteridge spoken about in one book! 

Of all the Lucy novels, perhaps this one is my favorite so far. And Kimberly Farr reads the audiobook like no other. She becomes the character. And with the writing and story, we can all feel like we’ve come to know Lucy so well.

River of the Gods: Genius, Courage, and Betrayal in the Search for the Source of the Nile by Candace Millard / Doubleday / 368 pages / 2022

Ever since seeing the movie Mountains of the Moon in 1990, I have been fascinated by the late British explorer Sir Richard Burton — his talents as a linguist, knowing 25+ languages, and his appreciation for other cultures — as well as his expedition with John Hanning Speke to search for the source of the White Nile. This book includes the epic adventure of Burton’s East African Expedition that took place in 1857, which had much hardship and drama. Not only did they confront continual fevers and diseases, but dealt with desertions, not enough provisions, storms, drought, and each other’s egos and personalties. 

Millard does well capturing the two explorers who were vastly different, the African terrain, and how their African guide Sidi Mubarak Bombay and others really helped them along their arduous 650+ mile journey from Zanzibar Island to Lake Tanganyika and beyond. Burton and Speke were the first Europeans to get there, but it took quite a toll on them. I was particularly aghast at how debilitating their afflictions on the journey were: Burton became nearly paralyzed and Speke temporarily blind and also deaf from stabbing a beetle with a penknife that had crawled into his ear.   

What happened when they returned to England was quite a falling out. Speke had many pent-up resentments toward Burton, who was the captain of the expedition, and believed Lake Nyanza was the Nile’s source, while Burton said he hadn’t proved it and thought Lake Tanganyika might be. Speke was able to mount another expedition to East Africa without Burton, while Burton married, worked at a couple consulates, fell into despair, and took up translating ancient erotic texts. 

It’s quite a tragic story since the two explorers really became adversaries, though were still close from their years together on that epic trek. Millard details what became of each of them: Burton, Speke, Bombay (whose life and travels were amazing), and the quest for the White Nile’s source. I enjoyed finding out what happened to them all.

The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett / children’s classic / 1911 

I haven’t read this 1911 children’s classic since I was very young — when I was enthralled by the garden on the other side of the wall. This time I listened to the audiobook read by actress Helena Bonham Carter and it was lovely to revisit the tale whose details I’d sort of forgotten over many decades. 

But you remember: the surly orphan Mary Lennox, age 10, from British India who comes to live on her uncle’s estate on the Yorkshire moors in England. And eventually comes to find an old buried key to a locked away garden. Soon after, she befriends Dickon, a boy in tune with nature, and Colin, the uncle’s neglected son whose mother had died and thinks he’s a hunch back that will die soon too. Ahh but Mary brings them to the secret garden that gives the children such joy and healing. And you know the rest.

I had long imagined this secret garden as a kid. What it looked like and how they cultivated it. I had my own garden growing up where I grew vegetables. It wasn’t exactly secret, but the rest of the family didn’t really care, so it was my own space, which was wonderful. I grew cantaloupe and lettuce and such. Every child could use a secret garden, which makes this classic novel so relatable. But this time around, the novel surprised me a bit in how it sort of turns from Mary’s secret garden story to the sick kid Colin’s. I guess he’s the heir of the estate in a patriarch society of the early 1900s. Still Mary is the cog in the wheel that gets it turning.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read these books and what did you think? Have a wonderful holiday and I’ll chat with you later. 

Posted in Books | 34 Comments

December Preview

Hello. How is everyone doing? Getting ready for Christmas? It’s a little bit early for me, but I hope to break out the decorations this week … and maybe even bring home a Christmas tree if we see a good one.

I just came back last week from Thanksgiving in California. I had a really nice visit with my parents, brother, sister, nephew, and brother-in-law. They all live in various places, but we were able to get together. And check out the photos I took at the beach — and the view of Catalina! There were some pretty big waves for the days I was there, and I didn’t even stick my toe in the water. Too cold and crazy. But we had a great turkey dinner and visit, and I hope yours was lovely as well. 

Now I’m back in North Country, trying to acclimatize to the cold temps. We had a few days below 0F, so my system was completely thrown off after the time in California, see the sunset at left. Still I’m getting back into it and we had a great cross-country ski on Sunday with the doggies. It’ll be nice to have a white Christmas here as we don’t plan to travel during the holidays. Will you be?

Meanwhile in book news I noticed that a few publications have put out their Best Books of 2022 Lists. I always like to look at these in case I want to add a few to read in 2023 that I missed. So here they are:

  • The Washington Post’s 10 Best Books
  • The New York Times’s 10 Best Books
  • Publishers Weekly Top 10 Books
  • The Guardian’s Best Fiction Picks
  • The 10 Best Reviewed Books of Fiction in 2022
  • Usually December is not a time when notable new fiction releases, but I see that Jane Smiley has a new novel called A Dangerous Business (due out Dec. 6) set in 1850s Gold Rush California, and Lily Brooks-Dalton has a new novel called The Light Pirate (out Dec. 6) set in a near-future Florida beset by calamitous climate change. Also Cormac McCarthy has his follow-up novel Stella Maris (also due out Dec. 6), which is Book 2 to his novel The Passenger that came out in October. I have heard the first book is better than this one, but I still need to give them both a go. I have read his novels All the Pretty Horses and The Road but those were long ago now. 

    As for movies this month, there’s several I’m hoping to see as contenders for the Oscars get rolling. I still haven’t seen Cate Blanchett in the movie Tar, which came out in October, or the Steven Spielberg film The Fabelmans released in November, but I saw She Said recently which was quite good — and all of these films will likely be getting some nominations.

    Now the Sarah Polley film Women Talking is out (Dec. 2) based on the novel by Miriam Toews. It looks a bit intense about a religious colony whose women are facing a brutality going on in their midst. Perhaps I should read the novel first. Have you read it? I love seeing these book-to-film adaptations. They’re usually excellent and this one features Rooney Mara, Claire Foy, and Frances McDormand among others.

    There’s also the movie The Eternal Daughter (out Dec. 2), which looks pretty spooky with Tilda Swinton playing two roles — as a filmmaker, Julie, and her mother, Rosalind, who come to stay at a remote Welsh hotel for a few days before Christmas. The hotel appears haunted and the daughter and mother apparently confront long ago buried secrets. If you’re looking for a Gothic ghost story, this seems to be one to check out.

    Swinton has long had a distinguished career (often playing oddball characters) but perhaps this will be a crowning achievement. I was too scared to see her play the mother in the 2011 movie We Need to Talk About Kevin adapted from the Lionel Shriver novel, but she was pretty amazing I heard.

    Next is the movie The Whale (due out Dec. 9) starring actor Brendan Fraser playing an overly obese reclusive man who tries to reconnect with his estranged teenage daughter. It looks sad and moving and has received much acclaim already.

    Brendan Fraser apparently gained some weight for the role, but prosthetics and makeup really transformed him into appearing severely obese. He had to wear up to 300 pounds for the character in a “fat” suit and apparently plays the character with much dignity and respect. He and the director Darren Aronofsky will likely get Oscar nominations for this — as well as perhaps the screenplay writer Samuel D. Hunter. 

    Lastly I’m looking to see the movie Living (due out Dec. 23) starring the actor Bill Nighy as a civil servant in 1950s London who decides to take time off work to experience life after receiving a grim diagnosis. Apparently the movie is a remake of the 1952 Akira Kurosawa film Ikiru and was written for this adaptation by novelist Kazuo Ishiguro, one of my favorite writers today. Woohoo! 

    The movie looks to be inspiring and awesome and has gained a big following already. I loved Bill Nighy in Love Actually and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and this one should be even better with him. 

    So there you have it: some of the big 2022 movies that are due out at the end of year.  

    What about you — do you plan to get to any of these? And will you be making a Best Of list for your reads in 2022?

    Posted in Top Picks | 24 Comments