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sweetafton

sweetafton

Reading is like breathing; there is no life without it.

"A home without books is a body without soul."
So sayeth Marcus Tullius Cicero, and I am inclined to agree.

"I care. I care about it all. It takes too much energy not to care. Yesterday I counted twenty-six gray hairs on the top of my head all from trying... more »
  • Chitterling Heights
  • member since May 13 2007

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 438 reviews
  • Portuguese Irregular Verbs
    • Rated 3 stars

    McCall Smith turns his keen eye on three German philologists, professors of minutiae, to often chortle-worthy ends.

    sweetafton wrote this review Sunday, September 13 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Just a Simple Wedding: A For Better or For Worse® Collection (For Better or for Worse Collections)
    • Rated 3 stars

    A bittersweet fizzle of an end to an otherwise wonderful collection of strips from the last 20+ years.

    sweetafton wrote this review Wednesday, August 19 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Death of a Witch
    • Rated 3 stars

    Entertaining enough, but immediately forgettable.

    sweetafton wrote this review Sunday, June 14 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Isadora Duncan: A Graphic Biography
    • Rated 4 stars

    A clever and edifying approach to biography--one that actually manages to add to the discourse on Duncan, modernity, dance, biography, and autobiography.

    sweetafton wrote this review Sunday, June 14 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Right Attitude to Rain
    • Rated 4 stars

    Satisfying tale of a woman who simply cannot mind her own business.

    sweetafton wrote this review Sunday, June 14 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Girls in Trucks
    • Rated 2 stars

    The protagonist-cum-narrator is far too cynical with too little wit--she is, very simply, tiresome. So is this book.

    sweetafton wrote this review Saturday, June 13 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Friends, Lovers, Chocolate
    • Rated 4 stars

    In the second installment of The Sunday Philosophy Club series, we find that "Edinburgh [is] a nosy town. People should mind their own business" (228). I am glad that Isabel Dalhousie does not, and that McCall Smith invites us along for the ride through her equally bumbling and comfortable intrusions into other people's affairs. Now, in the next one will she get hers all in order? One can hope not.

    sweetafton wrote this review Wednesday, June 17 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
    • Rated 3 stars

    Bound and determined to write the same story over and over, Sherman Alexie has written his first book for young adults. Newsflash: he's finally found the perfect protagonist for all his insecurities, a pimply faced, scrawny, bookish, hydrocephalic Spokane Indian who leaves the rez to attend the all-white high school in nearby Rearden.

    Arnold Spirit and his cast of thousands are all characters you will recognize if you have read any of Alexie's novels or seen any of the movies he's penned or listened to him talk. Like a latter-day Lowawluwaysica (though One-with-Salmon-Mouth would be more appropriate here) Alexie is a noise maker, but his noise is all the same: misfit Indian kid in glasses too big for his face; Indians too drunk to notice a fire burning them up; tough Indian kid who plays basketball and struts around like Geronimo; lies, lies, and more lies; speck of hope in maw of despair--he's all raw & rezzy.

    But where this tale has been preachy and arrogant in the past, the adolescent narrator works in The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. He tried the teen talker before in Flight, but wasn't quite able to sustain a constancy of voice with Zits, who would move from angry teen hellbent on destruction to something out of Gerald Vizenor's short film "Harold of Orange," taking on the whole of history and anthropology. Alexie ironed out some kinks in Arnold Spirit, and Ellen Forney's illustrations help to further distinguish Arnold's voice, making him first a kid, then an Indian kid-- a human being more than an identity politic.

    sweetafton wrote this review Wednesday, June 3 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Sunday Philosophy Club
    • Rated 4 stars

    A delightful, inviting read. Though mislabeled a 'mystery' and (routinely) mistakenly compared to his Botswana series, this first in Alexander McCall Smith's Isabel Dalhousie suite is like sitting in a chaise longue on a warm day, sipping frappe--warm, frothy and slightly sweet. I'm curious to see how this series and its protagonist develop.

    sweetafton wrote this review Saturday, May 30 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Ain't My America
    • Rated 4 stars

    In case you didn't know, the neo-cons have been conned, and they are neither none the wiser nor are they actually conservative. In this politically sweet & historically astute volume, Bill Kauffman very thoroughly divorces non-interventionist, small government Main Street, U.S.A conservatism from the Bush-Cheney warmongering oligarchic plutocrats.

    sweetafton wrote this review Saturday, May 30 2009. ( reply | permalink )
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