Author Archives: Rebecca

100 years of pondering

Every once and a while I really enjoy reading a book that I don’t get right away. A book that reads well on one level, but has such deep undertones that it isn’t until weeks, months or years later that you actually understand what the author was trying to say. I am always intrigued by the way that authors layer meaing in their works, and how those ideas come back to me later on and suddenly make sense.

My studies in Education have led me to believe that this is really how we learn anything. Step one: read or hear a bit of new information. Step two: tuck it away in your mind. Step three: many years later, remember and make a meaningful connection to your current situation.

I have just finished reading Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s novel ***One Hundred Years of Solitude|http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060740450/*** and I would love to say that I completely understand it. The story of a fictitious Latin American town and the family that founded it was fascinating. The characters were complex and confusing. I found the plot to be, at times, extreem and unbelievable. But that is the nature of novels. 10th Grade English class is full of lessons on the Hyperbole and its use as a literary tool.

The tale of the six generations of the Buendia family was a captivating one and I can’t wait for the day that it all comes clear.

Ai-Ya!

Have I ever mentioned to you how much I love Amy Tan? I do. Her novels based on Chinese-American immigrant families (especially mothers and daughters) always lure me in.

You may have met Amy the way I did, through her Book, The Joy Luck Club, or the movie of the same name. My latest read of hers was The Bonesetter’s Daughter.

Throughout the book we jump back and forth between life stories of a Chinese immigrant (LiuLang) and her Chinese-American Daughter, Ruth. Tan takes the reader on a journey that travels from present-day San Francisco to the early 20th century China and back again.

Although Amy Tan writes about a Chinese mother/daughter relationship, there are universal connections to every reader; dealing with Alzheimer’s, romantic relationships, and much more. I find Tan’s novels to be engaging to read and offer insight into the Chinese-American culture that I would not find elsewhere.

Law and the Beast

Okay, maybe I’m the last person on the planet to discover this (and, if so, I’m okay with that)… I just found out that my beloved Jerry Orbach, Detective Lenny Briscoe of Law and Order fame, moonlighted as Lumiere, the candlablra of Beauty and the Beast fame.

Going back and listening to Lumiere I can totally hear Lenny. Why did I never know this before? I know that Jerry has a life outside of L&O… He played the Dad in Dirty Dancing and has been in several Broadway musicals and plays. I just never knew he sang “Be Our Guest” in a great French accent. My life will be forever changed for the better. On other articles, if you need accident lawyer near Vancouver, checkout ICBC Car Accident Lawyer Vancouver.

TV vs. Logic

There is nothing good on TV tonight. Don’t bother searching all 600 channels, I’ve done it for you. Believe me.

Never fear, however. I have found you something better to do. A logic puzzle! These were a favorite of mine in school and I found this one on the web a couple nights ago. It took me about half an hour to solve…but that half hour was between 11:45pm and 12:15am… so you might finish it quicker. Good Luck!

(oh. I’ll post the answer if there is a public outcry for it…)

———-
There are 5 houses in 5 different colours, all in a row. In each house lives a person with a different nationality. The 5 owners drink a certain type of beverage, smoke a certain brand of cigar, and keep a certain pet. No owners have the same pet, smoke the same brand of cigar, or drink the same beverage. The question is:

‘Who owns the fish?’

Hints:

The Brit lives in the red house.

The Swede keeps dogs as pets.

The Dane drinks tea.

The green house is on the immediate left of the white house.

The green homeowner drinks coffee.

The person who smokes Pall Mall rears birds.

The owner of the yellow house smokes Dunhill.

The man living in the center house drinksmilk.

The Norwegian lives in the first house.

The man who smokes Blend lives next to the one who keeps cats.

The man who keeps the horse lives next to the man who smokes Dunhill.

The owner who smokes Bluemaster drinks beer.

The German smokes Prince.

The Norwegian lives next to the blue house.

The man who smokes Blend has a neighbour who drinks water.

Crisis

Sometimes it is good to be a follower. Jennifer read a book and said it was good. So now, months later, I have finally read it.

WithThe Quarterlife Crisis, Alexandra Robbins and Abby Wilner have written a thought provoking book about “The unique challenges of life in your twenties.” They pose the idea that although the ‘midlife crisis’ is well known and accepted in our society there is also a panic crisis that affects people in their 20’s.

It was interesting to read about the causes and effects of this crisis through the stories of college grads who are dealing with post-grad life. These stories give a thorough look at how twentysomethings adjust to life on their own after college. Thier struggles and eventual epiphanies bring to life the sometimes not so easy job of being in your twenties.

I found this book to be interesting in the theoretical sense. As a twentysomething myself I found myself comiserating with many of the ‘case studies’. However, the authors asked alot of questions, but did little in the way of answering them. I also thought that the authors (young, female) could have done a little more to make their book a bit more professional. The language and ‘voice’ of the narrative was often juvenile.

Even with some reservations I would still reccomend reading The Quarterlife Crisis to anyone in their twenties or quickly approaching. It offers another view of the life of a college grad; in sharp contrast to what we see on tv and in the movies.

Let me know what you think about it.

Mutiny!

On the recommendation of a friend I checked out ***”Batavia’s Graveyard (The true story of the mad heretic who led history’s bloodiest mutiny”)|http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0609807161/qid=1082132840/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/103-1737192-3980660?v=glance&s=books***

The verbose title should be a warning for the story that is to follow. Mike Dash explores the true and harrowing tale of shipwreck, mutiny, and massacre that took place off the Western Coast of Austrailia in 1629. The story is by all means exciting, enthralling and macabre. I found myself longing to find out what would happen. Dash gives such detailed histories of the main players that it is statisfying to read the Epilogue that attempts to follow up with them at the end of the story.

Although I found the combining of Dutch history and the story of the ship “Batavia” very cumbersome to read I appreciated the history lesson. In most good American public school history classes the early 17th century is dedicated to the voyage and plight of the Pilgrims and puritan settlers in Massachusetts. There is passing mention of the Dutch and English East India Companies, but only in reference to the slave, rum and molassas trades.

Mike Dash fills in the blanks for those of us on this side of the pond. Detailed accounts and descriptions of the Dutch spice trade in the East Indies and the voyages of many of their “Indiamen” ships. The historian in me loves the facts and dates and such and the detail that Dash goes into to really gives the whole story.

Long story short, It was an interesting story, lots of history and my new favorite Dutch word… predikant–preacher.

Nicky and Alicky

Over the last few months I have done a considerable amount of reading. These novels were great reads, but the historian in me was aching for a good work of non-fiction. Enter “***Nicholas and Alexandra:|http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0345438310/qid=1081047035/sr=2-1/ref=sr_2_1/002-3544245-8267202*** The love that ended an empire” by Robert K. Massie.

I purchased this book at ***Bunch of Grapes|http://www.bunchofgrapes.com/*** bookstore, in Vineyard Haven, with a gift card just after my college graduation. It has stayed on the shelf the last few years due to its intimidating size (613 pages). As luck would have it, upon closer examination I discovered that the last 80 or so pages were all footnotes. Silly me.

Having decided to put in the time to read I settled in for what would be a very rewarding three weeks. I have always been interested in Russian History, and especially the story of the the last Romanov Emperor, Nicholas. Massie seemlessly intertwines his biography of the Romanov family with Russian political and social history at the turn of the 20th Century.

The book is full of names you may recognize; Lenin, Trotsky, Nicholas II, Alexandra, Kaiser William; Anastasia and Rasputin. Their stories are set with the backdrops of World War I, the March Revolution and the Bolshevik Revolution. Not only did I learn the dates and facts of many historical events, but I was privy to the thoughts and personal journals of many main players.

Although the book was a “dense” read (meaning that there was alot of information packed into small spaces) I never felt as if I was reading a text book. If you like politics, conspiracies, history and a bit of mystic healing, you might want to check it out.

Road Wonders

During my drive home from Boston today I witnessed several interesting things:

1. 1 cab, 2 cars and 1 bus zipping through the red lights at the same intersection. Yikes!

2. Two unrelated cars with bumpers wearing identical “South of the Border” bumper stickers.

3. My windshield wipers, which after 2 years, finally decided to work perfectly. It’s a MIRACLE! If they had only left an image of Mary, mother of God I might have made a few pennies in the deal.

Gil and Sully

A while ago I heard about the movie ***Topsy Turvy|http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0151568/*** and had wanted to see it. Now, four years later, I finally had my chance.

This film is the story of the creation of Gilbert and Sullivan’s operetta “The Mikado”. It was a thick, witty and entertaining film. The beginning and the end were kind of (sometimes extreemly) slow, but the great Mikado production numbers and songs in the middle make up for it. All in all it was a fun movie.