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islandhopper flips pages

islandhopper flips pages

I can live without books. But what's the point?

http://gegeflipspages.blogspot.com

Blast from the Past: From a 2003 blog:

My dealer called me the other morning. She said she had a stash for me. The shipment I have been waiting for has arrived. It's pretty good stuff, not easily available in my part of town. She said... more »
  • South of Makati, Me, Philippines
  • member since August 16 2007

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 28 reviews
  • La Tia Julia Y El Escribidor/aunt Julia And the Scriptwritter
    • Rated 4 stars

    The Latin American vibe is dominant and gives the novel its energy. The soap opera theme influences much the novel's cadence and reading experience. I like that the book is a good balance of realism, satire, fantasy, and slapstick. I enjoyed the detailed account of what happens in the making of radio serials. I like the clever way of using the first few lines of each chapter as titles. Llosa certainly writes to amuse.

    The rest of my review at: http://tinyurl.com/o53f7z

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Sunday, May 17 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Para Kay B (o kung paano dinevastate ng pag-ibig ang 4 out of 5 sa atin)
    • Rated 3 stars

    Another book that would have lingered listlessly in Mt. TBR had it not been chosen as a book club book of the month. But no regrets. I was way overdue on reading a Filipino novel. And I’m a little glad that I did not have to read a Filipino novel replete with profound social relevance and/or a family saga of 6 generations. This is a light read. Campy, entertaining.

    And it’s written in Taglish. More at http://islandhopper.blogspot.com/2009/04/para-kay-b-by-ricky-lee.html

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Wednesday, April 22 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Blink
    • Rated 3 stars

    Blink is an easy, breezy, entertaining yet meaty read. To borrow a phrase from our book group, it's something to "cleanse the palate" after reading a lot of work-related books and novels with serious, heavy life themes. Gladwell sure knows how to present what could be boring research findings in a light, easy to digest manner devoid of pedantic verbiage.

    Gladwell's writing strength lies in his ability to tell stories. He weaves about a dozen seemingly unrelated stories in seemingly random order to say the same message: decision making need not always be over thought, over analyzed, over wrought. Sometimes all it takes is 2 seconds, a blink of an eye to arrive at an answer to a question, a solution to a dilemma.

    Of course, it's not as simple as that. It does take a lifetime of skill and knowledge building for someone to get to that expert level where instinct is on the dot. We also have to watch out when initial impressions based on society's conditioning and stereotyping can cause us to judge people or circumstances erroneously.

    I am not yet sure how I will use all the knowledge Gladwell poured into my head, but it was a fun way to learn about the world and "the power of thinking without thinking".

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Saturday, July 19 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Brave New World
    • Rated 3 stars

    The book is a minefield of topics for discussions on science, determinism, gods in lower case g, feminism, capitalism, consumerism and many other isms.

    As for me, I bought the book early this year only because someone recommended it. And well, uhm, it was on sale, which is usually a good enough reason to buy anything. It was destined to stay in my TBR pile ever after. Until it was chosen as June’s reading group book. (That’s what you get when you force a molecular biologist to moderate.) So I had no choice but to actually read it. I almost thought I would not be able to get through the convoluted foreword written many years after the original novel was published. I suspect that the foreword was just a way for the author to say, “hey, my writing has improved.”

    If you look at the novel as a literary piece, then you’ll be disappointed at the sophomoric writing and the one-dimensional characters. But if you lower your expectations and see it as an amusing satire on man’s burning desire to play God and control the world, then it is not all that bad. As one of the reading group members said, “I’ve read worse.”

    To be fair, the book made me think. And the discussions that followed illuminated to me not so much what others think of the world, but what I want the world to be.

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Saturday, July 19 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Invisible Cities (A Harvest/Hbj Book)
    • Rated 2 stars

    "You take delight not in a city's seven or seventy wonders, but in the answer it gives to a question of yours."

    I have heard of the term literary masturbation a few times before but I never really understood it until I read Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities. Maybe this is what people refer to when they say “writing for writing’s sake.”

    Beautiful, melodic prose. Wonderful weaving of words. A melee of metaphysical metaphors. Dizzying, dazzling details. Vivid imagery. Descriptions beyond the ordinary man’s ability to describe. Magical. Moving. But sadly, all these leaving me scratching my head thinking, what the fafaya is this guy talking about? Reading it, I had the feeling that someone somewhere is enjoying all these. But I’m not part of the fun. Hence, now I get what literary masturbation looks and uhm, feels like.

    "The city that they speak of has much of what it needed to exist, whereas the city that exists on it site, exists less."

    In this novel, if you could call it that, the very thin and loose plot revolves around the conversations between Marco Polo and Kublai Khan. Some exchanges are amusing. Silly, even. But mostly, it is about the cities. About the most fantastic ways anyone can ever describe cities.

    The invisible cities Calvino talks about is really just one city: Venice. But he describes Venice in the most interesting, peculiar, perplexing of ways. He never calls Venice Venice. Instead he assigns dozens of exotic names. Each name presents a different aspect of the city. He describes the city through its architecture and structures; through its culture; its inhabitants – dead, alive, imaginary, human or otherwise; through objects, mundane or extraordinary; through its daily activities of commerce and human drama; through nature and its elements; through demarcation lines distinct or blurred; through dreams; through entrances and exits; through myths; through events; through seasons; through its pathways. If there is a way of describing a city, Calvino has used it.

    "Not the labile mists of memory nor the dry transperence, but the charring of burned lives that forms a scab on the city, the sponge swollen with vital matter that no longer flows. the jam of past, present, future that blocks existence calcified in the illusion of movement: this is what you would feel at the end of your journey."

    Eventually, I warmed up to the story by the sheer beauty of language. By the time I got to the end, I felt like I had traveled a thousand miles, but still scratching my head with an ending as vague and confounding as the whole story itself. I still didn’t get it, but it sure was an amazing ride. To paraphrase a line from the book, "I regret having to leave the city when I barely graze it with my glance."

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Tuesday, July 15 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Perfume
    • Rated 4 stars

    diabolical! read this many years ago. can't remember the details, but there are some parts that stuck.

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Friday, June 20 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • To Kill a Mockingbird
    • Rated 5 stars

    It took me a long time to get to this book. Bought it in 2001 and started reading it only at the start of March. Took me a long time to read it as well since I was busy reading materials for work. Today as I go through its last pages, I wished I didn't have to stop reading it.

    The story is set in a sleepy town in Alabama and that's how it starts and progresses. Slow, meandering accounts of rural summers spent by the 9-year old narrator, Jean Louise Finch, or more aptly nicknamed Scout, with her older brother Jem and her "fiance" Dill. I felt at first that the book was just a series of vignettes but I eventually saw the strong, cohesive plot that ties all the charming stories together. But it's a slow, steady build to its climax, when their cool, calm, poker-faced father Atticus defended a negro in a rape case that rocked sleepy Maycomb. The ending, which is exciting, surprising, heart-melting, gasp-inducing and awe-inspiring, neatly brings together all the supposedly unrelated events and ends with what the book started with - how Jem got his arm badly broken.

    I have never fallen in love with a fictional family as I have with the Finches. Scout talks with the innocence of a kid, but narrates with the wisdom of an adult. Atticus, not a flashy character at all, endears you with his principles and his style of parenting totally devoid of any patronizing quality. The characters charm you, but the story makes you think. Today is about half a century from when the book was published and more than 70 years since the setting of this story, but the moral lessons and the views on race, real Christianity, equality, love are just as relevant today.

    This book makes a quick climb into my list of favorites.

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Tuesday, April 1 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Memories of My Melancholy Whores
    • Rated 3 stars

    The attraction to the book was the size. I was behind on my 2-book a month target and this one with its 115 pages offered a way for me to catch up. This, however, is not a lightweight by literary standards.

    Being an advocate of child protection, I was, of course, appalled by the theme of this book. There is nothing appealing about this unusual romance, if you can call it that, between a ninety year old man and a 14-year old virgin. Yes, worse than Lolita, but arguably better written. Of course, I always wonder about works translated from another language. Much praise should go to Edith Grossman -- I wonder why if she can use the English language the way she does, why she does not write a book herself.

    Back to Marquez. This book proves what a remarkable writer he is. As he writes from the point of view of the ninety year old man, you get to see life the way he does, rejoice, obsess, fear, grieve, panic and go through all the crazy emotions of being in love with him, and for a moment, for 115 pages, suspend judgment and forget how perverse his desires really are.

    To recap: iffy subject, remarkable writing, I'm back on target on my 24-books for 2008 goal.

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Monday, March 3 2008. ( reply | view 2 replies | permalink )
  • Heaven is so Real
    • Rated 1 stars

    I had high expectations from this book. I was hoping it would be inspiring. But there were a number of things that are off in this book; things that were contradictory to the Word.

    Yes, I believe that heaven is real, but I do not need this book to tell me that.

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Wednesday, February 27 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Operating Instructions: A Journal of My Son's First Year
    • Rated 4 stars

    It might not be the kind of book someone planning to get pregnant should read. Some parts can really scare, trouble, or depress a mother-to-be. But, Annie Lamott writes so vividly, so poignantly about her experience. She just gives you a realistic, non-romanticized story of motherhood. And so, I say anyone planning to be a mom should read this. Colic, baby acne, financial issues, one realizes, are all part of the motherhood package. But so is falling in love with your baby that your heart feels it's about to burst. This book made me an Anne Lamott fan. I'll be in the lookout for her novels.

    islandhopper flips pages wrote this review Friday, February 22 2008. ( reply | permalink )
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