Thursday, October 31, 2019

Book Review: WAR : TALES OF CONFLICT AND STRIFE by Roald Dahl

War: Tales of Conflict and StrifeWar: Tales of Conflict and Strife by Roald Dahl

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


“I know that I am not a coward. I am certain of that. I will always keep going… and although I am so frightened that I can hardly think, yet I am going on to do this thing. There was never any question of not going or of turning back. I would rather die than turn back.”

Now THIS is, quite simply, excellent story telling! I'd always known Roald Dahl was a fighter pilot in the War, but I didn’t know of the details of his extraordinary adventures… until now. To me, they are far more amazing than the fantastic tales he wrote for children!

This volume contains his autobiographical novella, GOING SOLO, as well as seven short stories. They're all about his experiences during the War, and all are masterfully written, but the novella and the stories are completely different in tone. The novella is very optimistic and cheerful, while the stories are darker, more sinister… and one of them in particular struck me as being very timely for Halloween. “They Shall Not Grow Old” sent chills up and down my spine with the tale of a fellow fighter pilot who disappears for two days and comes back, reporting that he had been with “the pilots and air crews who had been killed in battle, who now, in their own aircraft were making their last flight, their last journey.”

No fictional glass elevator, no imaginary chocolate factory can compare with this amazing book, which leaves the reader grateful to live in a time of peace, with greater appreciation of the many blessings living in peacetime gives:

“All the things I want to do and all the things I want to see… like going home sometimes. Like walking through a wood. Like pouring a drink from a bottle. Like looking forward to weekends and like being alive every hour every day every year for fifty years.”

Penguin Books released seven other collections of Roald Dahl’s works (Lust, Madness, Cruelty, Deception, Trickery, Innocence, and Fear), and I can’t wait to get my hands on the rest!



View all my reviews

Monday, October 28, 2019

Book Review: THE HOLLOW OF FEAR (Lady Sherlock # 3) by Sherry Thomas


"Why only one croissant when she can have three instead?"

Why only read one Lady Sherlock novel when you can read three... Or four?!

Lady Sherlock is baaaaaaack with Book # 3, which I think is the best (thus far) in the series! Our favorite intellectual heroine-who-diets-when-she-has-reached-the-Maximum-Number-of-Tolerable-Chins returns, and once again, Sherry Thomas absolutely SLAYS with her skillful use of language, well-constructed plot, and pages that SHIMMER with passion eloquently parsed!

The stakes are higher. The big reveals are … BIGGER! And I love that characters and events from previous novels are brought forth, taking on even greater importance. It shows just how much thought and care went into the planning of this alternate universe where Sherlock is a lady, in a time when women were not as free as men.

This book will appeal to lovers of mystery and romance, and again, no one does *kilig* quite like Sherry Thomas.

“It didn’t matter what kind of seas they sailed, warm, cold, smooth, or choppy. It didn’t matter where they were headed, empty wilderness or teeming metropolises. It mattered only that they were together at last.”

*sigh*

With something that will light up both your dead-cold-heart and your mind, this book (and this series) is a winner! And hurrayness, Book 4 just came out this month!

(Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars)


Monday, October 21, 2019

Book Review: A CONSPIRACY IN BELGRAVIA (Lady Sherlock # 2) by Sherry Thomas

A Conspiracy in Belgravia (Lady Sherlock, #2)A Conspiracy in Belgravia by Sherry Thomas

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This was utterly lovely, although I preferred Book 1.

I think I spoiled the book for myself when I would read a couple of pages at a time, spread out over the better part of two weeks. It's one of those "shut yourself away and focus" books because there are so many important details and clues leading up to "THE BIG REVEAL" at the very end.

Sherry Thomas writes mystery so well, but she truly is a romance novelist master. She writes of heartache and longing so eloquently!

"And the sensation zipping all along her nerve endings -- as if she were taking on solidity and existence for the first time, as if until now she had been an apparition, drifting in the shadows, a mere shimmer under the sun."

Let's see how Book 3 fares!

My Review for Lady Sherlock Book 1

View all my reviews

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Book Review: A SINGER'S NOTEBOOK by Ian Bostridge

A Singer's NotebookA Singer's Notebook by Ian Bostridge

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


"Even small things can delight us." -- Bostridge, quoting Hugo Wolf

This is the very first book I ordered from abroad (thank you Book Depository!!!), and I spent three weeks praying nightly that the package would arrive safely from the UK! It is not available locally here in Manila, and I’ve been wanting to read it for ages, having been a huge fan for years! And I was not disappointed! The package arrived, and the book proved worth the wait.

It is one of the most difficult things in the world to write about something as intangible and abstract as music. And as if having the voice of an angel wasn’t enough, this book is proof that British tenor Ian Bostridge possesses the brain of a god as well. Reading this collection of essays (primarily on lieder and Britten but including a few book and opera reviews) was like listening to a very funny professor who blended incredible learning and vast performance experience with a delightfully hilarious sense of humor. Think Daniel Barenboim, but more opera buffa than seria.

For example, Bostridge writes: "My life is governed by phlegm to an extent that utterly disgusts my friends and family." Ahahahaha. Also, he speaks of Hugo Wolf's lieder having "Wagner's endless melody without the endlessness." Haha!

But also... Ian Bostridge’s first career was that of a legitimate historian (with a PhD from Oxford!), and IT SHOWS. The book is interspersed with a smattering of academic lingo, such as “noumenal,” “chary” and “dyspeptic,” with quotations from the likes of Wittgenstein, Jaspers, and the composers themselves. There's discussions of Teutonic "Kultur" versus French "Zivilisation" and pages where Bostridge waxes poetic over the dissolution of tonality and what it meant for Romanticism's language of irrationality.

This “notebook” brought memories of Music Literature classes in college. Ian Bostridge would have had a great career as a professor! He made me want to listen to all the recordings and works he discussed, and anyone who makes readers thirst to listen to Janacek or Hans Werner Henze FOR FUN truly has a gift.

Mind you, Ian Bostridge is no highbrow elitist, despite his qualifications. He writes of learning from Barbra Streisand and Bob Dylan, and speaks of what classical musicians can learn from the best of popular ones.

Highly accessible as well as being highly learned, this book is a treat for anyone interested in music (and that’s ALL of us)! I suggest that it be read in small doses, a few chapters at a time, so you can listen to the song cycles / operas he mentions on Spotify while drinking your tea with scones and clotted cream.

I am soooo looking forward to immersing myself in Ian Bostridge’s second book this coming sembreak!



View all my reviews

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Musical Review: SWEENEY TODD (Atlantis)


Part I:

GABI-LIVES-UNDER-A-ROCK-Trivia # 24601:I hadn't had the chance to watch SWEENEY when it came out as a movie, and so my first exposure was LIVE, today.

And BOOM! Fellow ignoramuses and I were cursing under our breath during the second act. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!! If you haven't seen it yet, go watch it live for maximum effect! If Lea Salonga isn't enough to make it an automatic buy... There's also the fact that the entire ensemble had golden voices! And truly beautiful music played by the ABS-CBN Philharmonic. Iba talaga ang Pinoy talent. And it's an Atlantis prod, so you know you're in for an excellent show! They run at Solaire until Oct. 27, 2019!

Now excuse me, I shall be shellshocked for a bit longer to process what I just saw. 😲 😱

***************************

Part II:

There are many glorious upsides to watching a show by one's self. But having no one to talk to about it afterward is not one of them. Haha. Pardon the short rave, but I need to get Sweeney Todd out of my system!

***Mild spoiler alert, so please read the rest only AFTER you’ve gone and seen the show!***.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

So it took around 24 hours until what I found so disturbing about Atlantis’ SWEENEY TODD dawned on me. It wasn’t the gore. Actually, there was none. Director Bobby Garcia treated his audience like intelligent beings capable of imagining the gruesome goings-on. The lack of blood did not detract in any way from the message of the musical. So if you’re a parent and you’re wondering if the play will traumatize your child, don’t worry. It won’t, for as long as you’re there to process the show afterwards. But be aware that the themes ARE difficult to discuss: rape, incest, cannibalism, and of course, (serial) murder most foul.

(Spoiler below!)
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

What I found so disturbing was the fact that there was no redemption to be had for the main character. Lea Salonga's Mrs. Lovett was, despite her ghoulish tendencies, human in her self-sacrificing love for Sweeney, and her belief in sparing the innocent. But Jett Pangan as Sweeney possessed a hatred so encompassing, it no longer made any distinction between guilty and guiltless. And it’s all sooooooo disturbing when you realize just how easy it is to make that single defining choice between damnation and salvation. Sweeney Todd is all of us.

When anger and aggressiveness are glamorized instead of dignified civility, this dark and bloodthirsty musical serves as a timely warning during dark and bloodthirsty times.

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Book Review: THE NAME OF THE ROSE by Umberto Eco

The Name of the RoseThe Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


"The young no longer want to study anything, learning is in decline, the whole world walks on its head, blind men lead others equally blind and cause them to plunge into the abyss..."

So starts this awe-inspiring novel, one that has been a “must-read” for every wannabe intellectual college freshman out there.

I remember buying a secondhand copy of this book after two of my college crushes either carried this novel to class or mentioned it was their favorite when I “casually” inquired after their favorite book. To my dismay, I found that the language was too dense for me to penetrate, at that time. :’(

Fast forward 15 years, and I was FINALLY able to finish it!!! But to be perfectly honest, it was more out of sheer determination, rather than love for the text.

What’s not to love? A medieval monastery where monks start dying, one by one, sounds like the plot of a blockbuster film! However, I had a HUGE problem with the pacing. This is a mystery intermingled with pages upon pages of theological, philosophical, artistic and historical discussions. I remember one chapter in particular where the author waxed poetic about a church door. For basically the entire chapter!!! Now this is all very well and good, had it not it been for the fact that these extra pages did nothing to advance the flow of the story. From a dramatic point of view, the plot suffered as a result of these dialogues and diatribes. I'm all for intermingling genres but I felt like the story could have been told more efficiently in half the number of pages.

Still, I thought the concluding scene was sheer genius! I felt it more than made up for any pacing problems, it had me shrieking and gasping in my room!

I particularly appreciated the care with which the author illustrated the historical context of the novel: 14th century Catholic Europe was torn apart by the Avignon Papacy, which led to the Western Schism. Church history has always been interesting to me, I’m forever wondering how one man’s teachings can have 33,000 different interpretations today.

Umberto Eco writes: “Fear prophets, and those prepared to die for the truth, for as a rule they make many others die with them, often before them, at times instead of them.”

This novel still feels very timely, when read as a warning on the political nature of truth and how authority figures seek to control or conceal it.

I’m looking forward to watching the Sean Connery film version of the book! Here's hoping the novel translated better as a film. And apparently there's a new German-Italian TV mini series out this month! See trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YpQ_l...




View all my reviews

Book Review: THE STATE OF WONDER by Ann Patchett

State of WonderState of Wonder by Ann Patchett

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


“She found a village of people in the Amazon where the women go on bearing children until the end of their lives.”

And thus began the premise of this remarkable novel, one which can be read as commentary on the struggle between ethics and capitalist priorities of pharmaceutical companies, as well as the morality of childbirth and medicine, the intimate relationship between teacher and student, the consequences of our actions and the definition of motherhood.

Deeply philosophical and yet written in flowing prose that brought the jungle to life, this novel sucked me in and didn’t let go until I finished it after consuming two gigantic mugs of chocolate latte and genmaicha.

Rated this book three stars out of five because I didn’t like the ending, it was too painful! My heart still aches! And it leaves the reader asking so many questions.

But yes, Ann Patchett is a goddess with a pen. And I need to read her other works!



View all my reviews

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Book Review: BALLET SHOES by Noel Streatfeild

Ballet Shoes (The Shoe Books)Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


*wipes a happy tear away*

Well goodness gracious, no wonder Meg Ryan loved this book in YOU'VE GOT MAIL!

I thought it would be a charming children's story about girls who took ballet lessons.

(You'd think by now I'd have learned not judge a book by its cover.)

The stakes are ever so much higher! The girls are taking ballet lessons, true, but out of necessity. They dance to put food on the table. They dance to earn enough to support their family. In a way... Dance becomes their salvation. And along the way, they learn valuable life lessons, such as:

"It's to do with happiness. It means hard work."

Pauline, Petrova, and Posy are now living, breathing characters for me, in that same special place in my heart along with the March sisters, Sara Crewe, and Anne Shirley!

I highly recommend it to adults as well, it has priceless gems on child rearing.

"It may be that you may find later that dancing is not the career for all of them, but the training will have done them good."

And at its core, the book is a loving tribute to growing up in the theatre... Something the author was intimately familiar with, having been a thespian before turning to writing. It's got so many interesting details about the theatre world in pre World War II London!

This book will appeal to readers of all ages, in any age. Definitely a five out of five! Go get your copy now!



View all my reviews