still alice

Still AliceStill Alice by Lisa Genova
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

i am glad i gave this book a second chance. i unfortunately watched the movie first few months back and decided then that since i didnt enjoy the movie, i wouldnt enjoy the book. true they say, don’t judge a book by its movie.

reading Still Alice actually gives me a genuine curiousity to understand what a person with Alzheimer’s disease is going through. unlike the movie, i could finally understand better what is going on in Alice’s mind and feel her emotions, her frustration, her anxiety of having to face this illness alone, after all, she is an intelligent professor!

i appreciated that Still Alice go through the stages or phases of memory lapse and gradually succumbing to the wills of the disease. it did make me feel this disease is more scary than cancer, because it is true, losing your memory, not recognising the people around you, losing language, it is as good as a blank walking person, seeing hearing speaking but not truly comprehending

perhaps i could now have an interest to read other Lisa Genova’s novels.

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the world according to anna

The World According to AnnaThe World According to Anna by Jostein Gaarder
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

It is sad to think that I could not enjoy this book as much as i loved Sophie’s World. and believe me, I had truly love Sophie’s World. The World According to Anna feels like as though I am reading General Paper essay on geography and carbon dioxide and of animal extinction. Something perhaps I would read and appreciated the knowledge some 20 years ago when I would be sitting for some major exams, preparing to write a fantastic argumentative essay of sorts.

It was a mismatch of themes to me. An attempt of trying to relate to One Thousand and One Night, which I could not see how it relates to everything geographical and pollution, It tries to be magical with the red ruby ring and I honestly do not buy the idea that it belonged to Aladdin. It tries to be futuristic with ‘time travel’ but I could not be enthusiastic and awed about it. It tries to be a young love story between Anna and Jonas and I ended up feeling…well, where’s the emotion? And sometimes it took awhile for me to differentiate ‘she’ of Anna and ‘she’ of Nova. The chapters felt like it came out of nowhere, the frog? the umbrella? the balloons? I fail to see the significance of each chapter. and ‘game-ification’ has to be one of the lamest idea I have heard in trying to save the world. Suddenly, somehow the story ends with a conversation with Ester. Why should that be an ending?

I have nothing to say anymore about this book. I would read back Sophie’s World many times over and still be awed or find some new information I did not notice before. Anna’s World.. it is just a drag. 😦

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i am sad to say that the past few books i read were such a disappointment. i yearn to read a good engaging and intriguing book!!

or perhaps, tis not the season for good books. perhaps i was just too caught up with work that i was not able to enjoy the reading process and bring myself into the story at hand.

perhaps i may finally indulge in purification of the heart.

 

 

authors to read

you know in all of my reading years, i have not read books by some of the wellknown fantasy authors. i have always loved David Eddings’ and Mercedes Lackeys’ fantasy series and i have been lucky enough to grab hold of them in chronology. although, i admit, i pretty much stopped reading fantasy after knowing Tolkien. i felt like no other fantasy books/ novels could match up or sustain my fantasy thirst such as Tolkien. Maybe because i tend to love elves, fairies, and beautiful castles more than just war and magic.

i really have to expand my reading, the authors, at least.

some authors i hope to read some day:

1. Terry Brooks (i know, i know, how can i (self proclaimed fanatasy reader) have never read the Shannara series, right? it’s just that i like to read series in chronology and i can never get the Shannara series, from the library, from the first to the next series)

2. Stephen King
don’t scream at me yet. i just thought i am not ready to read any of king’s horror. that’s all. nothing personal.

3. Robin Hobb
I see his books a lot out there but the urge was never to pick his book. maybe the titles with assassin just doest give me that pull. im not a violent person.

4. Nora Roberts
Oh i have read hers before but i simply lost interest. Maybe i could give her another chance.

5. Enid Blyton
I miss Enid. i really do. i grew up reading her magic trees and my imagination soars and livened up by the illustrations that we usually see in her books. i love Enid. and you know what. i really don’t mind going to the children’s book section of the library and hog all Enid’s books one day.

6. JK Rowling
hmmm yup. don’t scream please. i know the hype. i know the love people have towards the harry potters series. i think its been a decade already. but honestly i have never touched any of harry potter in book form. never. just because those times, you have to queue and rush with the crowd just to get one copy of her book. so i wanted out of mainstream. but i did, watch the movies. i can very well say i am quite the harry potter fan, when it comes to the movies.
but now that the series …books and movies form…have so called ended (for the time being i guess, coz im hearing of more harry potters coming up?), i have the sudden recall of hei, i would love the own the series and read it to my child some time in the future. no child should be deprived from reading harry potter just because i’m not into them. but i am clever now. i will only buy the series when i like a particular edition.

so there you go, some project there. that can probably last me the whole next decade of reading!

everything i never told you

Everything I Never Told YouEverything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I seen this book around in bookstores and many times i contemplated to buy it. I was lucky enough to stumble upon it on my recent visit to the library and borrowed it. i am glad i just borrow it instead of buying! i did not fully enjoy it. it felt like i have read the storyline before, nothing fantastic about it. i read through it with such dread partly because it is, quite a depressing story, perhaps as intended by the author.

it’s about a family of mixed marriage, about death of a daughter and how its loss affected the family. ultimately about a family so engrossed with personal expectations they fail to see the signs of a troubled teenage girl. in the end, i only have a soft spot for Hannah, the youngest sister and how the family – father, mother and an elder brother, completely dismiss this little girl’s need and emotion upon her sister’s death, each family still engrossed and selfish with their own feelings.

the book goes back and forth from the present and the past, or days leading to the death of the girl, Lydia. the characters are all abit cliched. a mother who actually ran away, to continue her studies, which i find preposterous because why can’t she just talk about it with her husband, who is a professor, someone who would appreciate learning and education. how stupid the idea is, and eventually, the mother running away for weeks would be the cause of Lydia’s distorted understanding of the need to please her mother and lead the child to grow up trying to be what her mother couldn’t be, completely losing her sense of self. a father who does not know anything about parenting and losing out to temptation to a teaching assistant, on the night of her daughter’s funeral nevertheless, who also, despite being asian, lost all sense of asian values.

i understood the pain Lydia went through. but towards the end, i was just thinking, why the heck did i even pick it up and read it. maybe because the story started with the knowledge that Lydia died so that is pretty much the ending we are moving to, so there is no mystery to it. i probably would appreciate it more, perhaps even be surprised by the ending if the story started with what it intended to have, a ‘simple’ picket fence family who just wants to live an honest life, but ended up with a tragedy.

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off the page

Off the PageOff the Page by Jodi Picoult
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

it was a bit too YA for me and for awhile i dreaded reading through the lamentations of love and uncertainty that happened between delilah and oliver as teenage lovers.

From where we left off in Between The Lines, Oliver safe off the page and Delilah living her dream life of having a high school prince lover. all those teenage love rivalry and frustration is there although we have a happily ever after idea all along.

so things go well for a bit until Edgar, the human boy who is now living in the fairy tale have some leadership issues and his mother the author of the book apparently dying from cancer. some switches happen along the way including Delilah’s best friend Jules got into the book.

however, i felt there are some unfairness in the way that since Jules is quite a major character here, falling in love with Edgar, i thought she should be given the right to share her point of view, as a protagonist. and i did wonder how this whole switch-human-book character going to turn out, because i am no longer on Delilah’s side of hoping she can get her happy ending. i wonder what is going to happen to Jules? is it not unfair now to let Jules go through what Delilah went through? of course it also shows great friendship from Jules to ‘sacrifice’ leaving with Edgar inside the book now. i just felt we totally left Jules out just to give a happy ending for Delilah and Oliver, sounds a bit tad selfish.

also the two months after portion is really just to give people like me a ‘it’s ok everything is fine, don’t think too much’ haha.

i still feel Jules must have a say for herself.

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what i appreciate from this book are some quotes that quite touch the heart.

“What would you do if you only had one day left in this world? Spend it with the people you love? Travel to the far corners of the earth to see as many wonders as possible? eat nothing but chocolate?
Would you apologize for all your mistakes? Would you stand up to those you’d never had the courage to face? Would you tell your secret crush that you loved him or her?
Why is it that we wait till the last minute to do the things we should be doing all along?

“Everyone has a story…What you do, what you say, how you carry the plot, just might leave a mark on someone. Because that’s what stories do. They help you escape and they give you the chance to do things you never imagined you would or could.”

“…she somehow is able to create a story that is exactly what the reader needs at the moment she is reading. what one person takes away from a book might be different from what the next person takes away – almost as if the story is altered depending on who’s reading, where and when…..the real question is who’s doing the changing: the story, or the reader”

point on.

colorless tsukuru tazaki

Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of PilgrimageColorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage by Haruki Murakami
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

very haruki to leave us in the dark of whether sara accepted tazaki or otherwise. i am devastated by that fact that i have no answer to the ending when i was looking forward to it so much.

it was about tsukuru tazaki, colourless only because his name does not have ‘colours’ in him, whereby, in high school he was part of a close knit group of five friends. however, he was struck off from this group with just one phonecall and with no explanation whatsoever. hurt and depressed, tsukuru thought of death at the same time, living his life monotonously, albeit successfully achieving his dream of working at train stations. Years of pilgrimage probably refers to his 16 years of enduring this hurt. When he met Sara, on the verge of going deeper into the relationship, she suggested on finding his friends and requested tsukuru to find out what really happened between him and his friends.

he took up her suggestion and returned back to his hometown, meeting with two of his guy friends, taking a ‘virgin’ trip to finland to meet with one of the girl friends. unfortunately the fourth member of the group passed away many years ago and the story now diverge to revolve around the fourth member. tsukuru probably understood only half the reason of why they ditched him because eventually, the dead holds the answer. the good thing about his meetings then was to finally understand it is not entirely his fault that he was left out. perhaps that brings to him a new positive realisation to face his own demons.

however, somehow i am able to relate to tazaki a lot more. i understood perfectly how he felt of being ‘rejected’ by a group of close friends. of the pain he went through to kind of understand what really happened and how he felt he is the victim. and then toughened up to be independent of friends and relationships.

i could never imagined that the book is actually about friendships, lost and found, of finding questions unanswered, of loneliness, of forgiveness when not given and in search of an understanding when wronged.

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of course i was able to relate to tsukuru. i understood very well about being left out without any particular reason just like that. i so understood that. i also understood the journey of emotions he had just to digest what actually happened and finally became immune to it and learn to live with it but perhaps became a deep-rooted feeling he had to finally face up straight in order to come clean.

i also understood the ‘need’ to reconnect with friends when in your thirties. because now that i am in my thirties, i felt i should find back some of my friends i’ve lost and what do i know, i managed to, this year especially. i was able to reconcile with two friends i missed so much. and i am so happy and actually surprised that i did. i am never going to let them go. although the story also told of no matter how close you were once, there exist a spot of awkwardness when you meet your friends again for the first time after years of disconnect.

i also understood the feeling of loss and loneliness. of being alone in a crowd.

and i finally realise haruki’s style of writing. he will always have philosophy thrown in and some cool classics piece that his characters are obsessed with (and in turn makes me want to listen to these pieces) and there is a tendency of his characters having to deal with emotions and intuition and some spiritual, in the midst of straightforward human nature and responses.

i guess that’s what makes me enjoy reading his books, regardless of poor ratings.

a tale of time being

A Tale for the Time BeingA Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

i love the book. so many elements seemingly effortlessly intertwined into a beautiful story. there’s philosophy, there’s spiritual, there’s geography sciences, there’s psychology, there’s quantum physics, there’s relationships, bullying issue, and social media abuse. i mean, i feel so pleasantly overwhelmed by the many new information i am learning from a book.

here is another book that gives me a hangover when i reached the end of the story. it’s euphoric.

this is my first ruth ozeki’s and i am looking forward to reading more from her.

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we are all completely beside ourselves

We Are All Completely Beside OurselvesWe Are All Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I am surprised i loved reading it. the stories, although in flashbacks and such, was smooth reading. it is one of the books which makes me cry, laugh, surprised and anticipating for what is going to happen next. i love the play with words, big words. and especially appreciated the emotions put in the story. of a family lost and found. of an extraordinary love, the memories, the guilt, the uncertainty, its all very relatable to us. even though the character revolve within the story is about a sister Fern. i am surprised we could love Fern so much from Rose’s memories and desire to reunite with her brother and sister Fern.

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we are all completely

beside ourselves!

i am surprised that i am enjoying reading this book by karen joy fowler. i have seen this book featured a few times on book sites and instagram pics of it, and i have been contemplating to purchase it for so many times. i hold it i touched it and then i put it back on the shelf. i finally bought it, ironically, online from book depository.

i have been having a book hangover since it finished angelology and angelopolis. i took Sisterland, which i bought all the way from santorini but sadly, i am not meant to read it now. i couldn’t continue after the first few chapters. as much as i love reading about twins, this twin sisters couldn’t hook me at the moment.

i picked up purification of heart, which is academically spiritual and it is a book which is not to be read at one go but read and paused, digested, understood and applied. so its going to take a much longer time for me to finish it because it is not just reading, it is about self improvement mentally, emotionally and spiritually.

somehow, i just took We are all completely beside ourselves, and after reading its prologue, i am hooked and it brings me back to those periods where you just can’t stop reading it. it gives me that desire to just sit at home and read the whole book. i couldn’t put it down.

just totally me to rant about books and reading.