Monday, February 25, 2008

Me, Too!


Was skimming through Bookworld the other day and ran across a meme that I empathize with so much it's scary. The concept was "Ten signs that a book has been written by me," and I nearly fell out of my chair when I got to #9 because it sounds EXACTLY like me!

"It is a daring blend of nit-picking historical accuracy (picture its author spending a week researching what the Georgians ate for breakfast, only to discover that it was probably something as banal as toast, and then eventually summing up the week's work with "after breakfast they went out") and outrageous inaccuracy and anachronism (when the author doesn't have a week to spare and decides to write a description of a shipwreck in half an hour without knowing where the ship is, what sort of ship it is, what the bits of the ship are called, what would have happened to the passengers or any other sort of actual helpful detail, but does manage to sweep a cursed box out to sea along with its fanatically obsessed owner. Who doesn't yet have a name.)"
The only way this description could be more like me was if the author spent a week researching Georgian breakfast habits, only to discover that she had glaring deficiencies in her understanding of Georgian tableware and food etiquette. Which would, in turn, send the author into a nervous tizzy of further research, culminating in a buying spree at Amazon.com of boxes of books that, when they finally arrived, would undermine her confidence more than enlighten her. The author would never get around to writing about the shipwreck because, weeks later, she would still be determining what shape teaspoon to give her breakfast-eaters. Ultimately, months later, the author would throw up her hands in frustration and declare that her characters all share a disdain for breakfast and (counter to all cultural practices of the time) refuse to eat it.

Who Says Books Aren't Helpful?

This is one of the funniest blog posts I've seen in a long time. ("Every freaking time I leave my house there’s a huge ship in my way"--who can't relate to that?)

Best Reason To Move To France


While my in-laws are ready to whisk themselves off to the French countryside for the "grilled cheese sandwiches" alone, I think I've found my big inducement to pick up stakes and move to France: the "City of Books."

"With 30 times as many books as people, the La Charite-sur-Loire has certainly earned the title "city of books," which has been proclaimed from the town sign for the past six years. Fittingly, regular book sales are held in the center on the third Sunday of every month. There's also a festival of words in August, an internationally known salon of old books in July and a book art fair in May."

(Thanks to The Literary Saloon for pointing out this story.)

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Strangest Book Titles of 2007

The Bookseller magazine has announced the shortlist for the Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title of the Year.

This year's illustrious contenders--

  • I Was Tortured By the Pygmy Love Queen
  • How to Write a How to Write Book
  • Are Women Human? And Other International Dialogues
  • If You Want Closure in Your Relationship, Start With Your Legs
  • People who Mattered in Southend and Beyond: From King Canute to Dr Feelgood

My vote goes to--

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Amazon.com Reviews of Ulysses

Inspired by this amusing article at The Morning News, I checked out some of the real-life, one-star reader reviews of Ulysses posted at Amazon.com.

As you might imagine, reviews ranged from the hilarious to the surprisingly thoughtful to the downright weird. And of course, a generous measure of the just plain awful. Here are some of my favorites:


"I could never pray the Lord's Prayer and read this book."

"The poor trees who gave their lives that _Ulysses_ might gather dust on countless shelves would have been put to nobler use as toothpicks."

"This is one of those books that "smart" people like to "read." Well if being smart means liking this, count me out! I don't know if it's modern, post-modern or what: but I know this much, I'd rather just curl up with "Bridges of Madison County" for a good cry! . . . I'd like to have seen Leopold patch things up with Molly, am I right? I mean, let's get down to brass tacks: don't we all hate those intellectuals who consider this one of the century's 'finest works of literary craft'? I mean these are the people who put "Citizen Kane" in the top ten...and totally ignored "Life as a House"! (No offense, but Orson Welles is no Kevin Kline!) Unless Oprah puts it on her book list, I won't be picking this one up again, that's for sure."

"This waste of paper is a genuine TEE-YOU-ARE-DEE"

"uggghhhh, after nine months i finally finished this rambling, incoherent string of words. i took this book on because i'm reading the 100 best books of the 20th century (as defined by the modern library). . . . whoever listed this as number 1 was smoking too much crack - since i can't afford a nine-month crack habit, i guess i'll never be able to truly appreciate it."

"There is a famous sex scene in this book where the mental thoughts of the individual coming to climax fills many pages. I asked around and no one I know thinks about anything while climaxing except for a sexual fantasy. Totally unrealistic."


(I'm still marveling that someone would "ask around" about people's thoughts while having sex, all in service of writing a book review on Amazon!)

Death (and resurrection?) by Ulysses

I'm considering resurrecting this blog, mainly as self-encouragement to keep better up-to-date with various literary happenings. Of course, I'm not promising much, as I realistically see my blogging enthusiasm lasting for a couple months, only to slip back to disinterest and inactivity (see posts below for a sterling example of this!). But hey--you never know until you try (again).

And, by the way, resurrecting this blog does not extend to resurrecting my pursuit of its namesake. I'm not currently up to another try at Ulysses (especially since I just bought Clarissa!), but one of these proverbial days, I'll get back around to it. In the meantime, I'm reading a lot of Elizabeth Gaskell and intending to do a lot of reading of Moby Dick.