MacsLady
CSI Level Two
Re: What Are You Reading?-#3
I finished 'Love Aubrey', it was good.
On holiday I read 'The Moon is Down' by John Steinbeck (thanks for the recommendation, lisa!). It's set in a small European country which has been taken over by an army. Steinbeck doesn't say outright that the occupiers are the Germans/Nazis, but it's pretty obvious that that's what they are. It's very short but really gripping and incredibly insightful. What really struck me is that as well making the town's occupants, the occupied, sympathetic characters, Steinbeck very much makes the occupiers, the Germans, sympathetic too. They don't want to be there, they just want to go home, and have the same flaws, longings and weaknesses as the townspeople. So it's a resistance novel, but also one that shows that the occupiers are human too.
I also read 'The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz' by Mordecai Richler. It's about a 17 year old Canadian kid, Duddy Kravitz, who grew up on St Urbain Street, a poor and gritty part of Montreal. Duddy comes from a working class family, and all he wants is to get hold of land, as his grandfather taught him that 'a man without land is nobody'. It's a coming of age story, we see Duddy grow up as he does literally everything he can to make money and buy land. He's a very flawed character, some of the things he does are really awful, but he's also a sympathetic character you can't help but root for. I enjoyed it a lot.
I'm listening to 1984 by George Orwell on my Ipod, have been listening to it for most of yesterday/today on the journey home. I'm enjoying it but I personally don't like it as much as I liked Fahrenheit 451, which deals with some similar themes. It's still really good though. Scary and grim, which I like.
I finished 'Love Aubrey', it was good.
On holiday I read 'The Moon is Down' by John Steinbeck (thanks for the recommendation, lisa!). It's set in a small European country which has been taken over by an army. Steinbeck doesn't say outright that the occupiers are the Germans/Nazis, but it's pretty obvious that that's what they are. It's very short but really gripping and incredibly insightful. What really struck me is that as well making the town's occupants, the occupied, sympathetic characters, Steinbeck very much makes the occupiers, the Germans, sympathetic too. They don't want to be there, they just want to go home, and have the same flaws, longings and weaknesses as the townspeople. So it's a resistance novel, but also one that shows that the occupiers are human too.
I also read 'The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz' by Mordecai Richler. It's about a 17 year old Canadian kid, Duddy Kravitz, who grew up on St Urbain Street, a poor and gritty part of Montreal. Duddy comes from a working class family, and all he wants is to get hold of land, as his grandfather taught him that 'a man without land is nobody'. It's a coming of age story, we see Duddy grow up as he does literally everything he can to make money and buy land. He's a very flawed character, some of the things he does are really awful, but he's also a sympathetic character you can't help but root for. I enjoyed it a lot.
I'm listening to 1984 by George Orwell on my Ipod, have been listening to it for most of yesterday/today on the journey home. I'm enjoying it but I personally don't like it as much as I liked Fahrenheit 451, which deals with some similar themes. It's still really good though. Scary and grim, which I like.