Friday, 21 November 2014

Awesome Quotes for Bookworms



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‘We read to know we’re not alone’ - William Nicholson 

“A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies, said Jojen. The man who never reads lives only one.” - George R. R. Martin

“If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.” - Oscar Wilde

“Classic' - a book which people praise and don't read.” - Mark Twain

“The books that the world calls immoral are books that show the world its own shame.”  - Oscar Wilde

“A great book should leave you with many experiences, and slightly exhausted at the end. You live several lives while reading.” – William Styron

“You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.” – Ray Bradbury

“A good library will never be too neat, or too dusty, because somebody will always be in it, taking books off the shelves and staying up late reading them.” – Lemony Snicket

“Books are mirrors: you only see in them what you already have inside you.” – Carlos Ruiz Zafon

“Isn't it odd how much fatter a book gets when you've read it several times?" Mo had said..."As if something were left between the pages every time you read it. Feelings, thoughts, sounds, smells...and then, when you look at the book again many years later, you find yourself there, too, a slightly younger self, slightly different, as if the book had preserved you like a pressed flower...both strange and familiar.” – Cornelia Funke

“A classic is a book that has never finished saying what it has to say.” – Italo Calvino

Reader's Bill of Rights
1. The right to not read
2. The right to skip pages
3. The right to not finish
4. The right to reread
5. The right to read anything
6. The right to escapism
7. The right to read anywhere
8. The right to browse
9. The right to read out loud
10. The right to not defend your tastes” – Daniel Pennac

Movie Lover and Bookworm Collaboration




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Guest blogger Stephanie Rattan is a film lover like I am a book lover. Since there have been many great movies that came out of books, Stephanie and I decided to collaborate on our mutual love – a good story.

We decided on the classic The Great Gatsby, a book set in the 1920s that has been made into a movie six times. She shared her thoughts on my blog on what she thought about the book and I shared what I thought on her blog what I thought about the latest movie remake (2013). Stephanie really enjoyed the book, even going so far as to say it is one of her favourites. However, I could not say the same about the movie. I found the movie confusing and ‘all over the place’. 

It was amazing to see how Stephanie and I could look at the same story and critique it so differently. It made our collaboration even more exciting, because we didn’t agree. Instead, we challenged each other’s ideas. Stephanie challenged me to look at the story in a more positive light and I dared her to pull apart what has been revered as a classic and reevaluate it.  

This lent to a more open collaborative experience which I thoroughly enjoyed. I learnt to be less critical of things and to learn to enjoy a story for what it was. I must say, this collaboration really jogged my thinking and made me reexamine how I critique movies – maybe I start off a little biased because I prefer books…who knows….

Food for thought.

The Great Gatsby



Guest blogger Stephanie Rattan usually blogs about movies but since this book impressed her, she decided to tell us why... 


www.wikipedia.org
The Great Gatsby is a 1925 novel written by the great American author F. Scott Fitzgerald. This novel follows a cast of colorful characters living on Long Island in the summer of 1922. The novel is narrated by Nick Carraway, a thoughtful young man who just moved to the fictional town known as West Egg. Nick tells the story of the title character, Jay Gatsby, a young and mysterious millionaire who lives next door to Nick in West Egg. The story primarily focuses on the hopeful Jay Gatsby and his undying passion for the beautiful Daisy Buchanan who resides in East Egg with her wealthy husband, Tom Buchanan. In this novel we also see the plight of the poor displayed in the characters of Myrtle and George Wilson who both live in The Valley of Ashes, another fictional place which is located between West Egg and New York City.

The Great Gatsby explores various themes such as decadence, idealism, excess and moral decay; we see how all of these aspects corrupted the American dream in the 1920s. The American Dream was supposed to be about individualism and pursuing one’s dreams but instead this idea became so deeply corrupted in the 1920s, as can be seen in the novel where everyone, regardless of class, were just aiming to become filthy rich through any means possible and by doing this they caused a significant moral decay in society. There was still no equality, no liberty and no real happiness so it was not surprising that this "American Dream" failed the characters in this book countless times.

This novel is overflowing with symbolism as a lot takes place through innuendo and suggestion. An aspect of this film that I really like and which stands out to me the most would have to be Fitzgerald’s clever use of setting throughout the novel. West Egg where Gatsby resides is seen as the place where the ‘new rich’ dwell, while East Egg is where the aristocratic families with old money live and then there is The Valley of Ashes, the home of the struggling working class. West Egg, East Egg and The Valley of Ashes are larger representations of the persons living in these places, therefore the geographical setting creates a divide among the different social classes. Most, if not all of the violent conflict in the novel takes place between the rich and the poor. All of the characters and their various settings can be looked at in relation to the wild and destructive state of the American Dream in the 1920s, from Jay Gatsby of West Egg and his “extraordinary gift of hope” which leads to his life finding an abrupt and horrible end, then to the character of Daisy, a beautiful socialite who lives her American Dream through her aristocratic husband, and then to Tom, a man who was fortunately born into his American Dream. The characters of George and Myrtle Wilson wish to achieve the American Dream but sadly did not make it far; they appear to have been doomed from the very start.

Fitzgerald created an enticing world, one where money was the object of everyone’s affection, whether it was the ‘new rich’, the aristocrats or the working class, greed possessed everyone. In the novel we see and understand what the American Dream meant to each character, how it related to them and how it failed most of them. Gatsby ran away from his poverty in rural North Dakota, he ran as hard and as far as he could. He kept running towards his dream of a life drenched in opulence and his prayer was answered the day he met Dan Cody, the man who changed his life. The fact that Gatsby’s reinvented himself from someone of a lower class to someone with a significant amount of wealth is truly admirable, but it’s the way in which he accumulated his fabulous wealth that is the problem; he did not do it through hard work and labor but rather through illegal activities. Gatsby became part of a dark, grim and shady world where all of his wealth was supported by taking advantage of the Prohibition in America at the time, therefore portraying the unattractive underside of wealth. Gatsby is dehumanized by the way he acquires his vast wealth and by what he intends to do with this money.

But other than Gatsby, the ban on alcohol meant nothing to most people in the 1920s because they drank their hearts out anyway; if anything, the prohibition led to people drinking more. Gatsby like many others is overtaken by the insatiable hunger for more, through any means available. Gatsby uses this money to decorate his life by building a house in West Egg that is described as “collosal,” and using this house to throw glamorous jazz parties on a regular basis, just to gain Daisy’s attention. The time when the book was set, was a time that some called the Jazz Age. This period in time was strongly reflected in Gatsby’s parties. At Gatsby’s parties people were not invited (with the exception of Nick Carraway), they simply went. Gatsby’s jazz parties were like an amusement park for adults, overflowing with alcohol, intimate dancing and other socially questionably activities. People just didn’t seem to have a care in the world, they lived to attend Gatsby’s parties, this was how meaningless life had become. 
The Valley of Ashes, another place of setting, really stood out to me in the novel. Here we turn to the characters of George and Myrtle Wilson who reside in the Valley of Ashes which immediately says a lot about this couple and their state of immense poverty. The Valley of Ashes is a solemn dumping ground and when I think of The Valley of Ashes, devoid of color and life, I cannot help but think of T.S Eliot’s poem The Waste Land. Eliot’s poem exposes the grim state of Europe post World War I, where people were severely wounded not just physically but mentally, emotionally, spiritually and sexually, and the same can be said for the characters in Fitzgerald’s novel. The Wilson’s American Dream can only come true with the help of Tom, but they don’t seem to realize that Tom has absolutely no intention of helping them. The Wilsons portray the novel’s representation of the wretched lower class and the ways in which these working class persons are kept at the very bottom of the social ladder and would remain there for the rest of their lives. The Valley of Ashes in the novel may be seen as the place of consequence for all the demoralizing acts that were taking place in America at the time. The Valley of Ashes is symbolic of a failed American nation which has been transformed from a time of genuine happiness to a time where everyone has foolishly trapped themselves in a moral wasteland.

In conclusion, I loved this book, it’s one of my favorites! So much was going on in the novel, it really got my wheels turning. The Great Gatsby is truly a phenomenal example of all that was wrong in the American society in the 1920s. All of the characters in this novel clearly portrayed how the American Dream failed ALL classes of persons.

Tuesday, 28 October 2014

Judging a Book by Its Cover



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Sometimes we find it easier to just judge someone based on what we see than to find out the truth. We judge people based on what they wear, how they speak and even what they read. And we also tend to be very close-minded about new things. This post by guest blogger, Leigh-Ann Brodber speaks about why we should be more open-minded about what we read, because we never know what we may learn and how it may help us or others. She also touches on why we should not judge others' reading preferences. Enjoy!

I’m pretty sure you’ve all heard the saying “don’t judge a book by its cover” so why do we continue to judge people by what they read?
I am a chronic reader of all sorts of books. I don’t like to discriminate – too much. Sure, I might turn a book down by how it looks but I’d have my reasons. For instance: if there seems to be a lack of creativity in the cover and it looks like it was designed using Paint or if I just want a taste of what the writing is like and turn to a random page just to find that the logic of a character is that of a five year-old, I wouldn’t even give the book a second glance. Other than that, I read anything I could get my hands on; romance, adventure, dystopian, sci-fi, erotica, historical fiction, self-help, comic, mystery, new adult, suspense/thriller, horror, biographies, young adult, pulp fiction, religious fiction, and the list goes on.
The thing is people assume that because you’re reading a book about a girl who’s been abused that you’ve been hurt yourself or are going through some kind of difficult situation. What if you just want to broaden your horizon? What if you were inspired to read the book so that you can be more aware of what the signs of abuse look like? What if you want to approach a friend who’s going through a tough situation and that book comes in handy? You never know why someone is reading what they’re reading and it’s ridiculous to judge someone’s personality on what they read.
Just the other day I was reading “Rock Star” by Jackie Collins. Now, if you’ve ever read a Jackie Collins novel you’d know that it’s filled with a sick and well thought out plot, characters you’d DIE to be friends, slightly explicit sex scenes and a twist at the end. Her books also centre on the lives of fictional Hollywood stars that always have enough skeletons in the closet to fill a hardware store. I binge read all her books and I’m going cold turkey waiting for her to release new books. Anyways, I was sitting in my school library reading “Rock Star” when a lady passed by, looked at the cover (a half-naked girl in sparkling silver Jimmy Choos stooping by a half closed door), sneered and muttered under her breath “youths these days”. As if to say all young people only think and read about sex to continue fuelling their unstable libido. If I wasn’t so occupied with what the antagonist was going to do to the famous blind musician, I would’ve thrown the book right at her upturned nose! (I’m not usually this violent but people with that kind of mentality really get under my skin). What if she caught me reading “Get Well Soon” by Julie Halpern or “Boy Meets Boy” by David Levithan? Would she have thought that I was gay or fighting some mental issues?
It’s time we stop being so closed minded and judgemental. People have a right to read whatever they want. Books take us on journeys far beyond our imagination. Who are we to hold someone back from that awesome adventure? Who are we to make someone ashamed or embarrassed to read a book?
The next time you see someone reading a book with a curious title or cover, don’t hate. Instead, go up to them and ask them what the book is about. Ask them if it’s worth the read or even why they decided to read it. Who knows, maybe you’ll find yourself on an adventure of your own.

You can visit Leigh-Ann's blog at  http://leeleebro.wix.com/disturbing-the-norms