Monday 27 August 2012

Review: Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy


Ah, the Russian novel. Full of worthy philosophising, internal torment or potential bleakness on every page, this is not an endeavour to be taken lightly. I have thrice started on Russian novels without any success at completion. Perhaps Dostoyevsky was too deep, I thought. Perhaps I needed a love story. Passionate, tragic people in love. Another Heathcliff and Catherine. I can do that. 

Hmm. It seems not without a lot of help from my friends. On this second attempt (the first, a few years back where a very kind friend lent me her book and I didn't quite make it to the appearance of the heroine of the title, but kept the book for an embarrassingly long time to try and try again...), I needed 3 other friends to read along. 2 parts per week, it was at a gruelling pace but I am very happy to say that I have now finished a Russian novel. I am no longer a literary wimp. 

And what did I think of it? 

I would love to say that my efforts were richly rewarded. That necessary sleep was sacrificed because the story swept me away or I could not bear to part from the pair of lovers. But that would be a lie. I read because I had to. I had a deadline. 

No doubt, it was a worthy novel. It was dense. Of characters, of places, of ideas and ideals, the breadth of human experiences. A perfect social novel that explored a time, a place and a people through a carousel of multiple cast members, in the best tradition of Victorian literature. But I could not like it.

Tolstoy famously started his novel with,  
“Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” 
Happiness was an elusive thing for all the characters, and it was through his characters that we search for the meaning of life. No one is ever truly happy. Perhaps the happiest of the families in Tolstoy’s masterpiece was Levin and Kitty, and they provided the only lightness in the book, and for only a few amusing chapters in the middle at that. But even they were not immune to the mysteries and unhappiness of life, love and marriage. While Stiva acted like a guilty little boy, not quite as contrite as he should be, his unhappy wife, Dolly, struggled on and tried to bury her unhappiness by focussing on her children. The most unhappy, unsurprisingly, were the main couple, Anna and Vronsky. However, though I knew the unhappy end that was to come, I did not expect the tragic foreshadowing from the start of their meeting. 

This was a difficult read. Not because of the language though Tolstoy's grand philosophical concepts needed deep interpreting. It wasn’t his essays on farming, or the conversations depicting uncertainty between the old and the new Russia, nor Levin’s socialist struggles with his place in society, or that the plot centred on an extra-marital affair. Tolstoy packed a lot in his novel. His observations about people, both individually and as a society were insightful and most accurate. The central themes of the novel were big and important: What is forgiveness? How does one find faith? What is the measure of love and can love be too much to bear? 

But the difficulty lies in the main characters themselves. Selfish, entitled, and purposely blind, the impassioned characters who took action acted foolishly harming mostly themselves, whilst passivity dominated the others who allowed fear and an unwillingness to face the situation with moral conviction to rule. Everyone’s frozen despair hung over the novel like the icy Siberian winds. This was perhaps Tolstoy’s genius, that he wrote extremely unlikable characters that were at once fragile and wilful, frustrating yet pitiable. Of all who suffered, the jilted husband, Karenin, was perhaps the foremost example. Though he remained weak, despised and unbending, the slow stripping of his character revealed the tenderness of a broken heart. 

Tolstoy did not give clear easy answers. His internal monologues, so modern in its stream of consciousness style, revealed, to an extent, the motivations of these frustrating people, especially Anna and Levin, the parallels of the story. At many points I wanted to throw the book away (metaphorically!!) or incur violence on most of the characters. It is a testament to the undeniable power of the book, that we can feel so strongly one way or another for all of them. But in spite of this, I could not like the book because I could not like its protagonists, nor the motivations and actions that propelled the plot.

3 trains out of 5.  My head hurts.

Friday 24 August 2012

It's a team effort!


We are Annie, Tien, Jacklyn, Jonathan, Anthony & Robyn. 


Here is the list of books we are reading for the MS Readathon - 26 books altogether in 3 months…and hopefully raising $1,300!

M – Moby Dick by Herman Melville (Annie) READ (to be reviewed)
U – Ulysses by James Joyce (Robyn)
L – (The) Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery (Tien)
T – The Magic of Recluce by L.E. Modessitt Jr (Anthony)
I – (The) Iliad by Homer (Annie) READ (to be reviewed)
P – (The) Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett (Tien)
L – (The) Lady in the Lake by Raymond Chandler (Annie)
E – Emma by Jane Austen (Robyn?)
 
S – Suite Francaise by Irene Nemirovsky (Annie)
C – Child 44 by Leo Demidov (Jackie)
L – Love Letters of Great Men by John C. Kirkland (Annie) READ (to be reviewed)
E – Eifelheim by Michael Flynn (Annie)
R – Red Harvest by Dashiell Hammett (Annie)
O – On The Road by Jack Kerouac (Annie)
S – Shadow of Night (All Souls Trilogy #2) by Deborah Harkness (Tien)  COMPLETED
I – (The) Importance of Being Emma by Juliet Archer (Annie) COMPLETED
S – (The) Shack by W. Paul Young (Jacklyn)
 
R – (The) Reason by William Sirls (Tien)
E – (The) Egyptologist: A Novel by Arthur Phillips (Tien)
A – Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy -Read-a-long (Annie, Jackie, Robyn, & Tien) COMPLETED
D – Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak (Robyn?) OR Death comes to Pemberley by P.D. James(Annie / Jackie) if Robyn isn’t reading DZ
A – A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway (Annie)
T – Truth by Peter Temple (Next BC Read)
H - Hospital InPatient Waste Identification Tool (Robyn)
O – Ones a poner time by Ilsa Evans (Tien)
N – Novel Destinations by Shannon Mckenna Schmidt (Annie)

Wish us luck and good eyesight!!  
And remember, if you wish to sponsor us, please click here:

Review: The Importance of Being Emma by Juliet Archer

As I wasn't planning on actually reading any real Austen, I thought it would be fun to do a couple of related works, starting with Juliet Archer's retelling of one of my favourite novels for my first readathon book, The Importance of Being Emma.

Emma Woodhouse (along with Elizabeth Bennett) is arguably the most contemporary of Jane Austen's heroines; her beauty, intelligence and strong personality is easily translatable to the career woman of 21st Century. Ms Archer has set Emma in the world of gourmet foods
. She is the new marketing director of Highbury Traditional Foods, her father's business, a role one infers may have been devised and arranged by the lady herself. She is 23, has just graduated from Harvard and is set to drag the company, kicking and screaming into the modern world of online shopping. To help her gain hands on experience, her father engages Mark Knightley to be her new mentor; longtime family friend, brother-in-law and old schoolgirl crush. The story mostly follows the original with one or two significant detours. She acquires a new PA, trashy temp Harriet Smith, has to put up with the ever talkative Mary Bates, her father's assistant, is intrigued by the elusive Flynn Churchill, a celebrity chef from Australia, and gets frustrated with Jane Fairfax, an intern she considers her nemesis.

The irony of the new setting was rather amusing given Mr Woodhouse's love for thin gruel in the original. The characters mostly stayed intact although 'Gusty', Elton's new squeeze, was possibly less annoying than her predecessor. This is not a serious book. It is a complete mystery to me how Oscar Wilde got involved in the title. Did someone get confused about which retell it was??

My version was an ebook which took merely a few hours to complete at a very easy pace. It is published by Choc Lit, which probably should have been my first indication. I have since seen a cover that gave away the rest of the clues. 

 
This is pure chick lit fluff of the romance variety, from the blurb to the unexpected amount of sex in the plot. It isn't really that graphic but don't say I didn't warn you. 

I have previously read the next Austen retelling by the same author (Persuade Me) and had thoroughly enjoyed it, but this was a great disappointment. It could have taken more risks and veered further from the original to make the story fresh and less offensive. Instead, there were differences that did not make sense and did not ring true. Worse still, the charm of the characters were diminished. The main pull for me in Emma was how well all the characters were constructed by the incomparable Miss Austen. It took me years to come to love snobby manipulative Emma but saw exactly why the perfect hero, Mr Knightley, loved her so. It took the first page in the new book for me to go back to disliking Emma, and ye gads, even Mark Knightley has slipped many notches down the hero scale! To recover from this first misstep, I was compelled to watch Clueless, the adorable 90's movie by Amy Heckerling to see how a modern Emma can be done right. 

1 Highbury Hamper out of 5. "It was badly done, indeed!"

Next book: Anna Karenina.....

Sunday 19 August 2012

Supporting the MS Readathon

Being hopeless at sports of any kind had always meant that my participation in fundraising efforts had been dismal to non-existent. Walkathons, fun runs, bike rides had never appealed but I remember one charity event I was enthusiastic about and fairly successful at in school was the MS Readathon. Back then, even at $1 a book, I was able to get into fairly decent double, nearly triple, numbers when it came time to collect from my sponsors. Imagine my excitement when a friend from book club said that adults can also participate now!   

So, putting our hobby to good use, my book club has entered the 2012 MS Readathon to help make a difference in the lives of those affected by multiple sclerosis (MS), to raise funds for furthering awareness and services. There is one difference though; times and finances have moved on, so we've had to add a few more zeros to our target. Our fundraising goal is $1,300.00.

Check out our online fundraising web page and help us reach our fundraising goal. It's easy and will take no time at all. You can donate securely online using your credit card by clicking on the link below. 
https://msreadathon.org.au/FR/
MemberPage.aspx?participant=gracepointbc&Location=119&team=16604

All information is secure and all donations will be sent electronically to MS Australia. A tax-deductible receipt will automatically be sent to your inbox once the donation is verified.

Support us also by following our progress on our Facebook page as we read 26 books altogether across July, August and September. We will be posting our thoughts, pseudo-tweets, and reviews along the way. We welcome your comments re what we are reading and any notes of encouragement would be great! Click on  Gracepoint Bookclub here and show your support by "liking" our page!

Monday 13 August 2012

Welcome!

Welcome to the annals of austengirl, my very first foray into the blogosphere! 

It all started with my book club's participation in a charity fundraiser for multiple sclerosis, the MS Read-A-Thon,
that led to social networking, a Facebook page, and now, my very own blog to review the books I'm reading. 

I hope you will follow me as I venture beyond my usual abode of stately manors and refined manners to lands and times afar... 

So sit back, enjoy, and please join in with your comments that we may read and review together!