Monday, August 27, 2012

Review: Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury cover art
Narrator: Christopher Hurt
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy
Series: No
Copyright: 2005 (first published 1953)
Publisher:  Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Buy: Amazon

Summary:
In an alternate time line Guy Montag is a fireman. Instead of putting out fires he starts them. In a day when all houses are fire proof one must take different measures if they wish to get rid of things that the government bans. He and the fire department are in charge of making sure everyone follows the rules. This means no books, and those who have books must be punished. Guy Montag enjoys starting fires to burn the houses with books. He enjoys the heat, the smell of kerosene. He does not question the reason why he must burn the books he just does it, until he meets a 17 year old girl who moves in next door to him and a professor who no longer teaches but hides in fear like everyone else. The girl is different and she makes him think about the world around him and how it got to be the way it is.

Feelings:
I really enjoyed listening to Fahrenheit 451. The descriptions were amazing. There is nothing like a good book burning when described with such beauty. This is the first Ray Bradbury book I have heard/read. I have to admit I'm surprised I didn't find him sooner. Guy Montag is an interesting man who starts out just like everyone else in the book he doesn't think for himself. He doesn't love. He doesn't feel anything. The world Bradbury creates is so like our own yet so different. I wonder if we are moving towards a world like the one in Fahrenheit 451 or if books will survive in this area of immediate pleasure. The characters in here were vibrant and full of life until the very end. The mechanical hound with eight legs is such a strange hound we wonder how it can be a hound. The fire engine named after the mythical salamander that breathed fire is such an interesting image. I don't imagine wheels but legs that crawl down the roads to start the next fire and then back to the station. I would recommend this to anyone that likes science fiction. It is a vibrant colorful book.  

5 Birds

Monday, August 20, 2012

Review: Time and Again by Jack Finney

Time and Again by Jack Finney cover art
Genre: Fiction
Series: Yes, next From Time to Time
Copyright: 1970
Publisher:  Simon  Schuster
Buy: Amazon

Summary:
Simon Morley is one of a very small number that is selected to be part of a project in New York City in the 1970s. This project believes that time is like a stream and we are only stuck in one place because we do not know enough of anther time to get off there. With some convincing of the project director and the board Simon, called Si, is going back to January 1882 in New York City. He has an apartment in the Dakota an old building which was around in 1882 and though it would have been on the outside of the city it was there. He prepares himself for the project by eating and dressing like they did during the time. It is not easy for him to disconnect himself from his own time but with a little help and lots of studying he is able to do it.
"You'll sleep for only a little while, Si. But it will be a marvelously restful sleep. Deep and dreamless. Restful as you've ever known. And when you wake, everything you know of the twentieth centery will be gone from you mind; it will dwindle to a motionless pinpoint deep in your brain, and lost to you....But you know what the world is like; you know very well. You know all about it. Why shouldn't you know what the world is like tonight, January 21, 1882? Because that is the date; that is the time we're in of course...Now hear what I say. I am going to give you a final, irrevocable instruction; you will hear it, you will obey it. You will sleep for twenty minutes. You will awake rested. You will go out for a walk. Just a little walk, a breath of air before you go to bed. You will be as careful as you possibly can be . . . that on one sees you. You will be absolutely certain to speak to no one. You will allow no act of yours, however small, to influence anyone in any way, however trivial." (p. 99-100)
Thus starts Si's adventures into 1882 to discover the mystery of a letter and a picture of a grave that Katie his girlfriend has wondered about her entire life.
"If a discussion of Court House Carrara should prove of interest to you, please appear in City Hall Part at half past twelve on Thursday next. In blue ink below the fold, in a large half-illegible scrawl, blot-stained in four places, it said: That the sending of this should cause the Destruction by Fire of the entire World (a world seemed to be missing here at the end of the top line where the paper was burned) seems well-nigh incredible. Yet it is so, and the Fault and the Guilt (another word missing in the burned area) mine, and can never be denied or escaped. So, with this wretched souvenir of that Event before me, I now end the life which should have ended then" (p. 72)
The grave stone is simple with no name just a nine pointed star within a circle all formed of dots. It had confused the decedents who did not know why such a thing would have been made. As did the letter that did not make sense to them.

Si is to go back and watch the mailing of the letter without interfering in what happens. The project starts small and grows with each trip Si makes to 1882, until the letter is decoded and Si is left with an important decision to make.

Feelings:
I had a really hard time liking this book to start with. Si really annoyed me at times. His attitudes were difficult to deal with because he thought of himself as good and self-riotous at times. I think this quote is a good example of how Si can be even when he doesn't realize what he is doing. It is clear to those reading yet not to others.
"I like women, I never run them down as somehow inferior to men, and I have a contempt for men who do. And I think, for one thing that women are just as principled as men--but they sure as hell aren't the same kind of principles. I knew I could trust Kate in virtually anything, relying on her absolutely, her sense of right and wrong as lively as mine. Yet now we argued interminably: Kate at the stove, where she'd taken over dinner preparations, I at the kitchen table, waiting; then, sharing my two chops, we continued the battle at dinner. ... With no trouble at all Kate saw through the transparency to the truth--the feminine truth--underneath the serious pretense. She knew this was really a great, big expensive fascinating toy; we were all of us playing with it, and like a determined tomboy on a playground shouldering her way into a circle of boys, she was damn well going to play, too." (p. 108)
This is the kind of attitude that made it hard for me to like Si. Although by the end of the book I did. I think for the most part this book might be better for the male reader than the female. It is in first person from a male perspective and it shows. That made it harder for me to read and really get into. I have a feeling I will read the next in the series because I did enjoy the contrast between the time periods and I liked the descriptions. I have to admit that sometimes the descriptions were over powering and really slowed the plot. However, I think that was a big part of the story, dwelling on the past and what comes of it.

I would recommend Time and Again by Jack Finney to men, but would really think twice before I suggested it to a woman just because of the narrator's views and how they made me feel.

4 Birds

Monday, August 13, 2012

Review: Blink by Malcolm Gladwell

Blink by Malcolm Gladwell cover art
Narrator: Malcolm Gladwell
Genre: Non-Fiction
Series: No
Copyright: 2005
Publisher:  Hachette Audio
Buy: Amazon


Summery:
An exploration of what our brain does without us knowing we are doing it. Those fast decisions that help us cross the road when a car is coming up faster than you expected, and you dash out of the way before you know you are doing it. How do we make these decisions and can we control or do we want to control these fast judgement we make. Also looks at micro expressions that we perceive but don't know we see because of the speed at which they happen.

Feelings: 
I enjoyed listening to Blink: The Power of Thinking without Thinking, it was read by the author which was enjoyable. Some of the book wasn't as engaging as other parts but I liked the opening where snap judgments and science were compared. I'm sure there are also examples that can go the other way where science was better than intuition. I think what I liked most was the part of the book that talked about micro expressions and the expressions we make and how they communicate more to us than what is said. We learn these expressions before we learn to talk they are vital to our communication with others as well as the way we feel about others after we meet them. This is a book I would recommend but not to everyone. There are some people that will really dislike this book because of the discussion about thinking without knowing we are doing it. Those that need to be in charge every moment will not enjoy this book as it is letting the subconscious take over for a while. However, we may be able to use snap decisions and judgments to our advantage with some amount of practice at which point we may be in control of them more than we would know.


4 Birds

Monday, August 6, 2012

Review: My Ántonia by Willa Carther

My Ántonia by Willa Carther cover artNarrator: Jeff Cummings
Genre: Fiction
Series: Yes last of the prairie trilogy
Copyright: 2007 (first published 1918)
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Buy: Amazon


Summery:
Told from the point of view of Jim Burden, who has just arrived in Nebraska as a young boy to live with his grandparents. Ántonia and her family arrive on the same train in Blackhawk as Jim. Ántonia is 14 and Jim 10 and they become friends from the first time they meet. They are neighbors out in the country. There are many characters from the old country out in the country that Ántonia and Jim visit. Ántonia's family suffers greatly in the first years they are there but they make it through by their own hard work. The story follows Jim on his way to being a lawyer in New York were we are first introduced to him in the introduction.

Feelings:
I liked and disliked the narrator Jeff Cummings. The language in the book was beautiful but I didn't always like the accent that he used for the Bohemians. It didn't seem completely authentic.  I really enjoyed listening to this book. I had heard about it before but it was never a book that I picked out at a bookstore to read. This book was an exploration of the country from a young boy's perspective. The heroine Ántonia, from Jim's perspective, is a strong girl who has a hard life. This is a story of friendship over time. What really drives the book is the language rather than plot or action. The grasses of Nebraska are described lovingly as are the sunflowers that line the roads. The characters are strong and enjoyable. It has been a while since I read/listened to a book in the first person. I was very aware of it being first person and that I was being told everything from Jim's perspective. I enjoyed the insight into life in the early years of settlement in Nebraska, yet I felt disconnected from many of the events that took place. I would recommend My Ántonia only to people who enjoy the beauty of language.

3 Birds