Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Book Review: ARM OF THE SPHINX (The Books of Babel # 2) by Josiah Bancroft

Arm of the Sphinx (The Books of Babel, #2)Arm of the Sphinx by Josiah Bancroft

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


"Do not allow small people to make large impressions. Do not fritter your beauty upon mirrors. Do not make wishes, for wishes only curse the life you have. Never forget, you stand at the end of a long line of short lives."

Book 2 of THE BOOKS OF BABEL SERIES was a pretty good sequel, although it must be said Book 1 was in another league of awesome. The 2nd book ended on such a cliffhanger, and now I simply MUST look for Book 3!

Why do I like this series so much?

Because it's a simple story, beautifully told, that can be read at its most basic level as the adventures of a teacher in his quest to recover his lost wife... But also, it can be viewed as one big metaphor for humanity's struggle with progress. And I'm just so emotionally invested, after the agony of witnessing an honorable man driven to do less than honorable deeds... for love.

See my review for Book 1 of the series here.

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Sunday, July 28, 2019

Book Review: ME AND SHAKESPEARE by Herman Gollob

Me and Shakespeare: Adventures with the BardMe and Shakespeare: Adventures with the Bard by Herman Gollob

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


"Why shouldn't I, why couldn't I, enlarge my field of vision before the screen went blank? ... I stood in the middle of the yard, an old man made mad by a love of Shakespeare...I could feel bursting inside me, still there with a vengeance... that heightened sensitivity to the promise of life."

Having endured a particularly rough past couple of weeks, I reached out for this book to fill my near-desperate need for civilization. And man, I certainly got it in spades!

Part graduate-thesis-substitute, part memoir, part lesson plan, and mostly a passionate fan's undertaking to list down any and all experiences relating to The Bard... this book was an unexpected joy to read. It is not an easy read, nor at times not even pleasant --with the author's tendency to name drop famous actors, directors, and intellectuals, and then insert a condescending line about them should their opinion differ from his -- but it shines with fervor and zeal for the pure joy of learning, of seeking civilized environments and the company of civilized men who seek to expand themselves through the study of literature, no matter what age they may be.

I read parts of it in public and couldn't help chuckle out loud at some parts! While far from being the humble narrator readers more easily warm to, the erudite Herman Gollob certainly CAN write! After all, he DID retire a Senior VP of Doubleday, having edited the likes of James Clavell and Leon Uris, among others. Despite the lack of formal academic credentials (he had yet to "get that goddamned M.A.!"), his literariness shone through with restatements of famous poems, assuming that his reader would be familiar enough with Gerard Manley Hopkins and others to pick up on the references.

The book is divided into four major parts: his background before embracing Shakespeare studies (informally) upon retiring, becoming a teacher at the age of 67 and jotting down outlines of his lectures, his adventures in Oxford during a Shakespeare summer course, and his quest to interview and watch Shakespeare experts direct professional actors.

Gollob saw the Divine Hand in everything, seeing the truth that there is indeed a divinity that shapes our ends. He also saw most clearly how self-enrichment had to have purpose beyond study for its own sake.

Gollob calls Shakespeare "The Cosmic Poet." His theses? That Shakespeare retold Holy Scripture, enacted in his multiple plays, all of them metaphors for how interwoven mankind is with God and the cosmos.

This is a treasure trove for teachers, actors, directors, and lovers of literature. And for anyone who grows old. In short, it's a must-read for all.



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Monday, July 15, 2019

Book Review: THE CITY OF BRASS by S.A. Chakraborty

The City of Brass (The Daevabad Trilogy, #1)The City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


I think what I enjoyed the most about this was the sheer novelty of reading a book with Middle Eastern mythic characters. Apart from that, there's not much to rave about. The plot was interesting but not un-putdownable.

It was interesting enough, and I feel mildly intrigued to the point that I may look for Book 2 in my next trip to the bookstore. Hence, a 3 star rating for "it was OK."



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Saturday, July 6, 2019

Book Review: FOUNDRYSIDE by Robert Jackson Bennett

Foundryside (Founders, #1)Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


"God. Why are you doing all this? Why are you out here risking your life?“
“Is justice such an odd thing to desire?“
“Justice is a luxury."
"No, it is not. It is a right. And it is a right long denied... The chance for real, genuine reform for this city... I would shed every drop of blood in my body for such a thing."

As much as we try not to judge a book by its cover... when the cover is THIS habdsome, one is dutybound to look it up on Goodreads. ☺ And when Brandon Sanderson gives it five ratings, one simply HAS to give it a try!

FOUNDRYSIDE is the first book of a trilogy, and I simply cannot wait to read the rest of it! I also can't help but think what a glorious movie series it would make. Heart-pounding action, characters that are both morally ambiguous yet endearing, and a spell-run world that is both exceedingly strange and familiar to our own... Written in terse and highly effective prose that seizes you from the first page and doesn't let go until you've finished.

Imagine a world where people can alter reality in small ways by writing down spells on every day objects, in a process called "scriving."

Imagine a desperate thief with the power to touch something and know everything about it... who ends up stealing an inanimate object, only to discover that it is conscious and can alter written spells in major ways.

Imagine the desperate search for answers that ensues, all the while dodging would-be jailers and killers. That's what Foundryside is, and I can't wait to re-enter this dark world when Book 2 is out!!

On a more personal note, I haven't had this big a literary crush on someone ever since Mr. Darcy and John Thornton. 😂 Let's go and add Gregor Dandolo to the list, shall we? A life lived for a cause bigger than himself is sooooo attractive.

"Don't hate Captain Dandolo... I think he's broken, just like you and me. He's just trying to fix the world because it's the only way he knows to fix himself."



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