Five Book Friday!

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http://favim.com/image/1545830/

I don’t know about you, dear patrons, but it feels like it’s been a really long week.  I’ve been snowed on, rained on, discovered holes in the soles of my shoes that I never knew existed…and that’s only the beginning.

You know what this calls for?

A blanket fort.

Thankfully, the interwebs has provided yet another list of Do’s and Dont’s for Blanket Fort Construction–which specifically states that Blanket Forts go better with books.  And, if your feeling really ambitious, take a look a this...the world’s largest blanket fort, made by Challenge12, Big Box Education, North London Collegiate School, Benchmark Scaffolding and Mace Group in London last summer:

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Courtesy of http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com

Can you imagine the sheer number of books you could fit in a 3,304 square foot fort?! 

Here are a few titles to get you started, selected from the new books that clambered up onto the library shelves this week.  Come in and find some to stock your blanket fort for a lovely restorative weekend!

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3729031Tuesday Nights in 1980: For all you who remember hammer pants and shoulder pads–get ready.   Molly Prentiss has crafted a tale of lost souls and fortuitous meetings, set in SoHo at the opening of the 1980s, bringing together a synesthetic art critic, and an exiled Argentinian painter and revolutionary.  Both men are wandering, somewhat aimlessly, through the New York art scene, until they are brought together by the arrival of a stunning woman and a lonely orphan, who help these two men rediscover themselves, and begin to change them irrevocably.  I am in loved with the brilliantly-colored cover of this book, and there are a number of critics and readers who are equally as enamored of the words between those covers; Booklist gave this one a starred review, saying: “An agile, imaginative, knowledgeable, and seductive writer, Prentiss combines exquisite sensitivity with unabashed melodrama to create an operatic tale of ambition and delusion, success and loss, mystery and crassness…she also tenderly illuminates universal sorrows, “beautiful horrors,” and lush moments of bliss. In all, a vital, sensuous, edgy, and suspenseful tale of longing, rage, fear, compulsion, and love.”

3703578The Last Painting of Sara de Vos: The enduring hero of Dominic Smith’s latest novel is actually a painting that spans four centuries and brings together two remarkably talented and passionate women.  In Amsterdam in 1631, Sara de Vos becomes the first woman to be admitted as a master painter to the city’s Guild of St. Luke, and defies all convention and tradition by refusing to paint indoor subjects, and instead paints the portrait of a young girl standing by a window.  Nearly three hundred years later, in New York of 1957, young and hungry art student Ellie Shipley agrees to paint a forgery of Sara de Vos’ painting in order to help her wealthy patron dupe an art dealer…but it is a choice that will come back to haunt Ellie later in life, threatening to expose all the secrets she has so carefully hidden away.  I am fascinated by books that use words to describe the visual–like the painting at the center of this story, and it would seem that Smith has mastered that unique art in this book.  Kirkus gave this novel a starred review, hailing, “This is a beautiful, patient, and timeless book, one that builds upon centuries and shows how the smallest choices—like the chosen mix for yellow paint—can be the definitive markings of an entire life.”

3703582Cold Barrel Zero: Former journalist Matthew Quirk’s debut novel was an international hit, and is currently being developed as a major motion picture–and, just in time for your weekend, his second thriller is being hailed as a sure-fire hit, feature two men who were once close as brothers–but now are caught in a desperate game of cat and mouse.   Special Operative John Hayes went rogue on a deep-cover mission and betrayed his own comrades, and is now trying to return to his wife and daughter before launching his final revenge.  The only man who can stop him is Thomas Byrne, a former combat medic who fought by Hayes’ side.  As their quests bring them treacherously closer, both men will be forced to consider–and re-consider–whom they can really trust, in a world where the rules are constantly changing.   Publisher’s Weekly loved this book, cheering, “Quirk goes flat-out explosive in this superior military adventure novel. . . . There’s plenty of cool cutting-edge technology, but in the end it comes down to action, and the riveting battle scenes are among the best in the business. Readers will look forward to seeing more of the skilled and deadly John Hayes.”

3707748The Story of KullervoThere’s always a risk in publishing a dead author’s unpublished works–the stuff that probably was never meant to see the light of day.  On the one hand, there is an uncomfortable invasion of privacy that need to be considered, but, for scholars and dedicated readers, these pieces can immeasurably add to an author’s legend and cannon.  The latter seems to be the case with this ‘previously unpublished’ story by the great J.R.R. Tolkien.  Dedicated fans will see inklings of The Silmarillion here, as the ugly, sharp, and magical Kullervo, son of Kalervo launches on a plan of revenge against the magician who destroyed his family and his life.  This copy of the story includes a forward and introduction by Verlyn Flieger, who transcribed this work from Tolkien’s original manuscripts.  Booklist said of this work–considered the foundation of many of Tolkien’s fantasy novels–“The tale blends Tolkien’s trademark prose and epic poetry, and it is fascinating to catch this tantalizing glimpse into his brilliant mind . . .Will please readers who wish to unveil how Tolkien’s creative process evolved.”

3733523The Rise of the Rocket Girls: Many of us grew up hearing about America’s Space Race, and the impressive brains that made it all possible…but no textbook ever told you about the women who worked at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.  Amazon’s reviewer mentions that they invented the pant suit…le sigh.  These women were some of the brightest minds of their generation, consistently broke down barriers, not only in their workplace but in academia, and Nathalia Holt has at last put their story on the page in a tale that Library Journal says “seamlessly blends the technical aspects of rocket science and mathematics with an engaging narrative, making for an imminently readable and well-researched work.”.  Now…once and for all…who says women can’t do math?

Until next week, dear patrons–happy reading!

BIG NEWS!

Quite seriously, we ran out of words to convey just how excited we are about this summer’s blockbuster program–and we want you to be a part of it, beloved patrons!  

Join in the Oral Tradition of Homer’s The Iliad at the Peabody Institute Library

Hey Homer!
Hey Homer!

The Peabody Institute Library is seeking reader/performers for The Iliad: An Epic Reading Event, a marathon tandem reading of the complete text of The Iliad. The event will take place outdoors in Peabody’s East End Veterans’ Memorial Park on June 18th beginning at 9 a.m. and finishing around 1 a.m. Each reader will be given a section of The Iliad to read (10-20 pages) and will be asked to attend a few short rehearsals at the Peabody Institute Library between April 21 – June 18.

Deeply rooted in the oral tradition, before it was ever transcribed, The Iliad was first a story passed down from generation to generation by bards, or poet storytellers. With this production, the library hopes to capture the spirit of that tradition with the help of the community.

No acting experience is necessary to participate in this event (though actors are welcome); an interest in the Classics, a comfort with reading aloud, and a passion for storytelling are the only requirements.

The Library will be holding interest days on April 16th from 12-4 and April 17th from 2:00-4:30; you may register via the library’s online events calendar or by calling 978-531-0100 ext. 10. Drop-ins are also welcome. Feel free to come with a short story to tell or something brief to read (1-2 minutes of material). If you are unable to attend the interest days but are still interested in participating, or if you have any questions at all, please e-mail director Liz Carlson (elizcarlson@gmail.com).

East End Veterans Memorial Park is located on Walnut Street in Peabody, MA. In the event of rain, the program will be held at the Peabody Institute Library, located at 82 Main Street in Peabody.

“The Iliad: An Epic Reading Event” is generously funded by the M. Theodore Karger Fund; the Peabody Institute Library Foundation; the Friends of the Peabody Institute Libraries; and is supported in part by a grant from the Peabody Cultural Council, a local agency which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

The Romance Garden!

It’s that time again, beloved patrons, when your genre devotees here at the Library give you a taste of their favorite reads from the past month and encourage you to broaden your literary horizons, even if (especially if) it includes the scandals, secrets, and seductions of romance…because, as we say here at the Romance Garden, every mind needs a little dirt in which to grow.

'Book garden' by Ray Maclean
Courtesy of blog.sutherlandlibrary.com

Bridget:

3738795All Chained Up by Sophie Jordan

There are trends in romance that seem to crop out weekly, and I personally find it fascinating to see what is currently “hot” for our heroes.   For a while, you couldn’t toss a cat without hitting a jaded millionaire/billionaire entrepreneur who was absurdly young and even more absurdly wealthy (not that you would want to throw a cat, obviously).  Lately, motorcycle “clubs” or “gangs”, depending on the author, have been garnering quite a bit of attention–and bending a number of laws about the definition of “heroic”.  Most recently, and this one I find particularly interesting, has been prison inmates.  What this says particularly about our culture is a matter for another post, but I figured I’d give this book a try, since Sophie Jordan is an author I’ve always enjoyed.

Nurse Briar Davis has agreed to volunteer at the infirmary at Devil’s Roack prison in the hopes of putting herself in line for a promotion, but the reality of the work is completely overwhelming, as is the stoic, stony-faced prisoner who becomes her first patient.  As someone who’s learned to fear violent men, Briar can’t rationalize the effect Knox Callaghan has on her, but she also can’t deny it.  Knox realized early on that in order to survive prison, he would have to become as hard and as tough as the walls around him.  But when Briar and Knox meet by chance after he’s been paroled….

I appreciated the way that Jordan confronted a lot of the traditional stereotypes around the judicial system and the people who “deserve” to be there, and, over and above everything, I really enjoyed the relationship between Briar and Knox, the mutual respect they eventually developed, and the ways in which they both grew over the course of the story.  This is probably the raciest book that Jordan’s published to date, but she does what she does very well, so it certainly worked.  Though I’m still not entirely sure I’m sold on their genre overall, I will definitely be keeping my eye out for the next Devil’s Rock novel when it’s released in June.

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Kelley:

3680944 Forever Your Earl by Eva Leigh

It’s rare that a romance novel gets a 5 star GoodReads rating from me, but the first book in Eva Leigh’s The Wicked Quills of London series is an exception to that rule. In Forever your Earl, when newspaper owner and scandal writer Eleanor Hawke has the opportunity to shadow her most popular subject, Daniel Balfour, the Earl of Ashford, she suspects there is an underlying reason for his invitation, but doesn’t hesitate to seize the opportunity. What follows is an impossible to put down series of adventures that take Daniel and Eleanor to places like gaming hells, phaeton races, and masquerades, just to name a few.

So what makes this romance so exceptional that it deserves a five-star rating? At the risk of sounding very Downton Abbey, it’s smart. When they are first introduced it’s clear that both Daniel and Eleanor are independent, strong-willed, and intelligent characters. Eleanor is drawn to Daniel’s kindness and intellectual curiosity, while he admires her dedication to and passion for her work, as well as her quick wit. In this romance, both the hero and heroine are equally experienced in relationships and life, and their banter, as well as their growing love for one another, is much the better for it.

If the next two books in this series are even half as good as the first, I will be one very happy romance reader. Well done, Eva Leigh. The Wicked Quills of London is definitely a series to watch.

Claude Monet, The Reader
Claude Monet, The Reader

 

Until next month, dear readers….here’s to a little romance!

Saturdays @ the South: Wanderlust – Paris

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Today is the first Saturday in April, the month I most associate with Paris. I’m sure it’s at least partly because the Cole Porter song “I love Paris in the springtime” has wended its way into our culture, it’s but also because my vacation in Paris several years ago took place during April. There were daffodils and tulips in bloom (ironically, many more so than when I went to Amsterdam several springs later), trees were starting to bud in that pale green we associate with the earliest moments of spring and somehow the city was decked out in primrose with a concerted effort usually put into action in Disney parks.

I’ve written about my love of Paris before on the blog and those who know me well (and even some who only know me a little), are well acquainted with my fondness for the city. What often surprises DSC01268most people is that I’ve physically visited Paris just once.  This isn’t to say that I won’t find my way back there, hopefully many times over the course of my life, but my admiration has stemmed from more than just my limited in-person experience. In a way, I feel like I’ve been to Paris dozens of times, mostly through books.

I’m addicted to travel memoirs; I find that few other reads can take me away quite like living vicariously through someone else’s experiences, wherever they may be. Naturally, I’ve read several books in this vein about Paris that make me feel like I’ve traveled DSC02088there myself. The best thing about books like these is that they can make you feel like you’ve transcended both time and space. Reading
Sylvia Beach’s Shakespeare and Co., took me not only to Paris, but to the 1920s as well. I spent Christmas with a family in Paris by reading A Paris Christmas: Immoveable Feast by John Baxter. I enjoyed lunch, romance and the desire to uproot and move to Paris in Lunch in Paris by Elizabeth Bard. Emile Zola took me into the Belly of Paris in the late 1800s and Clotilde Dusoulier brought me into the modern belly of Paris in Chocolate and Zucchini.

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My appetite for Paris never seems to diminish and fortunately, neither have people’s appetite for writing about this city. My Goodreads list is filled with books about Paris that I haven’t read yet, but I’m looking to change that. This month, I’m planning on making a dent in that list and make April my month of Parisian reading. In case you’d like to read along with me, here are a few books that I’m hoping to enjoy in the coming weeks:

3636798Five Nights in Paris: After Dark in the City of Light by John Baxter 

Native Australian John Baxter has lived in Paris with his French wife since 1989 and has written several books on the topic. I mentioned his Immoveable Feast above which was delightful and while I’m not immediately jumping into his more popular work The Most Beautiful Walk in the World, I still expect to enjoy this as Baxter wanders through five iconic Parisian neighborhoods during a time when most tourists are asleep. Books like this are always intriguing to me because they seem to invoke the sense of everyday life, not the romance of a whirlwind vacation, while still managing  to find beauty and excitement.

2681069Clotilde’s Edible Adventures in Paris by Clotilde Dusoulier

Blogger Dusoulier has written several books about Parisian food and the discoveries she’s found. A native Frenchwoman, she knows her way around the Paris markets and, fortunately for us, is happy to share what she’s learned in her local travels. Her books are complete with recipes so that readers can create their own little part of Paris in their kitchens.

3594945The Little Paris Bookshop by Nine George

How can I possibly resist a book that puts books and Paris (two of my favorite things!) together? Monsieur Perdu appears to have an innate sense of bibliotherapy, as he prescribes books for visitors to his floating Seine bookstore with a sense of exactly what they need at that moment. This is a fiction book, but I firmly believe that fiction can be every bit as transportive as non-ficiton, and this book seems to have a solid sense of what makes Paris, Paris.

2341301The Judgment of Paris: The Revolutionary Decade that Gave the World Impressionism by Ross King

I’m a bit obsessed with Impressionism and the paintings that were the result of that movement and I took great pleasure in visiting as  many museums that had great Impressionism collections as possible. This book puts that movement into historical perspective as King discusses the upheaval that was taking place in Paris during the decade when Impressionism was beginning to gain ground as a movement. Using the Salon des Refuses in 1863, the scandalous exhibition of the Paris Salon “rejects” and the first Impressionist showing in 1974 as benchmarks to explore the time when Paris was the center of the world for art and revolution.

Till next week, dear readers, whether it’s Paris or some other wonderful, fascinating destination, I wish you wonderful bookish travels, be the in person or on the page!

Five Book Friday!

Happy April, Dear Readers!

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The weather is topsy-turvy, the world seems a bit…out of whack, to put it mildly, and my tea has gone cold.  But there is still (and always) reasons to celebrate!  Here are a few quirky, off-the-beaten-track holidays in April that you might consider recognizing as a way to brighten up the month:

April 1: April Fool’s Dayapril_fool
Well, obviously.
There is no single origin for this holiday, though many cultures had traditionally celebrated some sort of widespread-day-of-hilarity at the beginning of spring; in Rome, it was known as the festival of Hilaria, while in India, it is known as the festival of Holi.  Chaucer wrote in The Canterbury Tales about his characters playing tricks on each other sometime at the end of March, as well.  So feel free to join with tradition today.  Just play nice, ok?

April 10-16: National Library Week!
And you can bet we’ll be celebrating this week in style!

April 13: Scrabble Day
True story: Once upon a time, my neighbor played the word “zucchini” on a Triple Word tile, and scored 122 points in a single move. I wouldn’t challenge him to another game, but today is as good excuse as any to give this classic game a try.

April 25: Penguin Awareness Day
I want to hug a penguin.

And do you know what you can do anytime in April (or any other month, for that matter)?  Come into the library and check out something fun to read, watch, or hear.  Here are a few ideas to get you started, selected from the books that appeared on our shelves this week:

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3719010Mrs. Houdini: Remember how we were celebrating Harry Houdini’s birthday just last week?  Well now, thanks to author Victoria Kelly, we have a novel about Bess Houdini, and the pact that she and her husband made to try and communicate beyond the grave.  Following Harry’s death, Bess begins seeing Harry’s coded message to her in the most unlikely of places, leading her to suspect that Harry as an urgent message to convey.   Her quest leads her to the doorstep of a young photographer, who indeed has plenty to tell Bess about her husband, and the magic that he created.  Kelly makes this fictionalized Bess Houdini into a three-dimensional, complex, and wonderfully strong character, and expertly conveys her intelligence and determination, making her an ideal heroine for this novel, which the Associated Press called,  “A marvel that gallops through time and space…Mrs. Houdini offers a rollicking ride from a Coney Island music hall and a traveling circus in the 1890s to Hollywood and Atlantic City, New Jersey, in the 1920s. It’s a ghost story, a love story and a great tale of suspense…Without a single misstep, Mrs. Houdini is a pure delight from the first page to the last.”

3713549A Little Life: Though this book has been out for some time now, we just got our paperback versions in, which may make it easier to bring along with you on your daily adventures.  Hanya Yanagihara’s novel tells the story of four college roommates who, like all of us, really, are adrift and a little scarred, but kept hopeful by their friendship with each other, and the bond with Jude, a  brilliant and mysterious man whose life has been forever marked by his traumatic childhood. As the men grow up, grow apart, and grow into their own particular vices, they find themselves drawn back again and again to Jude, whose very presence becomes the challenge that will define each man’s life.   Her book has become one of the most celebrated books of the year, being shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and the National Book Award, and winning the Kirkus Award for Fiction–in giving the award, the judging panel of the Kirkus noted “The phrase ‘tour de force’ could have been invented for this audacious novel”.

3718730Interior DarknessPeter Straub is an undisputed master of the horror novel, reinventing classic themes of the genre to continue terrifying generations of readers.  This book brings together sixteen of his shorter works, written over a period of twenty five years, and might very well solidify his place as a master of the short story, as well.  Those ostensibly horror stories, each of these tales deal far more with the darkness in human nature, rather than the threat of ghosts or demons–which frankly makes them all the scarier, as far as I am concerned. These bite-sized pieces of devilry have been receiving rave reviews from all quarters, but my favorite quote comes from Neil Gaiman, who said of this book, “Peter Straub’s shorter fictions are like tiny novels you drown in: perfectly pitched, terrifyingly smart, big-hearted, dangerous, and even cruel. Interior Darkness shows off his range, his intelligence, his bravery and, sometimes, at the edges, allows glimpses of his fierce sense of humour. Straub deploys a host of voices that cajole and whisper and talk to you from the darkness. If you care about the short story, you should read this book, and watch a master at work.”

3718059Spain in Our Hearts: Adam Hochschild made his career with King Leopold’s Ghost, telling the harrowing story of imperial slavery in the Belgian rubber plantations of Africa.  Since then he has gone from strength to strength, and currently, that strength is this work on everyday Americans who left their lives behind to travel to Spain and fight Fascism during the Spanish Civil War in the 1930’s.  The picture he paints is nothing like Hemingway’s depictions.  Instead, he emphasized the full complexity of this war, the looming threat of Naziism in Europe, and the global significance that this war would have.  Historian Jill Lepore has provided an excellent review of this book, saying, “Few writers grapple so powerfully with the painful moral and ethical choices of past actors as does Hochschild, who brings to Spain in Our Hearts his exceptional talents — and his moral seriousness — as a reporter, as a historian, and as a writer.”

3720362Tasting RomeAs a history student, and someone who really likes food, this cookbook represents All The Things that make my heart go pitter-patter.  Chef Katie Parla and photographer Kristina Gill take us on a round-trip tour of present-day Rome, and offer recipes that reflect the city’s 2,000 year history, and the unique groups of people, visitors and residents alike, that make it such a unique (and delicious!) place.  The snatches of narrative and description found throughout this book help you feel that you’re not only re-producing a recipe, but really taking part in a tradition of food and family.  Saveur magazine called this lovely work, “A fantastically detailed look into Rome’s most remarkable dishes… a new classic in the Italian food library.”

Until next week, dear readers, Happy Reading!

Happy Birthday, Gogol!

“The longer and more carefully we look at a funny story, the sadder it becomes.”

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So wrote Nikolai Gogol in his novel Dead Souls, and I can think of no fitter tribute to him that his own observation.  Gogol, born on this day in 1809, is considered one of the pioneers of Russian letters, who brought Surrealism and gothic horror to the nation’s literature in a way no one had before, and continues to inspire writers, composers, and readers to this day for his ability to make you laugh, cry, and squirm, all at the same time.

Gogol was born the Ukrainian village of Sorochyntsi, to parents of Polish descent.  His father, who passed when Gogol was 15 was an amateur playwright, which may have given Gogol the idea to begin writing himself.  He was not popular by any means as a young man (his fellow students apparently referred to him as a “mysterious dwarf”), but he came away from those years with the resolve to keep writing, and to achieve lasting fame through his works.

detail-of-the-monument-to-nikolay-gogol-in-st-petersburgHis wishes were very soon achieved.  His short stories, which first documented life in rural Ukraine, and his poems, which were Romantic idylls by and large, met with enormous public success.  Gogol had always loved history, and worked as much of his homeland’s past into his stories as possible, eventually enrolling in University at St. Petersburg to study history.  He wrote several successful plays during this time, but it was after he left Russia to travel around Europe (especially Italy) that he began to produce the masterpieces for which he is remembered today.  These writings, including Dead Souls, which was intended to be a re-telling of Dante’s Inferno, are deeply satirical, viciously funny, and deeply, sometimes painfully insightful.

Gogol suffered from severe depression (it is assumed that he may have suffered from manic depression or bipolar disorder), and it took an enormous toll on his person, his relationships, and his work.  He burned large portions of his writing more than once–towards the end of his life, he burned the entire manuscript for the second part of Dead Souls, and later said that the Devil played a practical joke on him and made him destroy the book.  Soon after this, he took to his bed and refused all food, finally dying nine days later in agony.

51JIBDUkuvL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_What he did leave us, however, is a body of work that changed Russian literature.  Gogol had a unique ability to take the events, the people, and the stories of the day, and present them in the most fantastical light possible, turning the mundane into something fascinating, wonderful, and, often weirdly unsettling.  Though his work fell into relative obscurity in the 19th century, he was ‘rediscovered’ after the First World War by modernists who realized just how progressive and powerful his work really was.  Since then, his work has remained at the forefront of Russian–and, indeed, world literature.

So, if you’re looking for something definitely different to read this week, I can’t recommend Gogol more highly.  Be sure to wish him a happy birthday as you do.  I have a feeling he’d appreciate it knowing he finally achieved his goals.

Here are some suggestions to get you started:

1179810Dead SoulsGogol’s only surviving novel is one of the most significant–and oft-debated–works of 19th century literature.  This tale follows the journeys of Pavel Ivanovich Chichikov, an enigmatic traveler who calls on a number of landowners and civil servants in order to add to his collection of “dead souls”.  The story, you see, is set just after the emancipation of serfs in Russia, and Gogol’s book is very much a commentary on what the practices of slavery and ownership can do to society.  But for all that it is a political satire and a truly odd, picaresque novel, it is also quite readable and, in some places, genuinely funny.  It might not be the easiest of reads, but it absolutely worth the effort.

2181408The Overcoat: This is probably one of Gogol’s most accessible stories, and thus is the first introduction many students of literature have to Gogol (it certainly was for me).  It is also a perfect example of his later style: satirical, utterly impatient with bureaucracy and willful ignorance, and deeply empathetic with the people who are almost always overlooked by The System.  This story introduces us to one Akaky Akakievich Bashmachkin, an underpaid, overworked government clerk who spends his entire salary on the finest overcoat, dreaming of the day when he can stride through St. Petersburg in all his wintery glory.  But tragedy strikes…and then things get really weird…..

1888006Diary of a Madman:  This is my favorite of Gogol’s works, and the story that is guaranteed to make me curl up in a corner and hum quietly to myself after reading.  Trying to explain this story just doesn’t do it justice…A man who has been generally overlooked all his life gradually becomes convinced he’s secretly the King of Spain…and that he can communicate with a dog.  But Gogol makes his descent into madness so subtle, so realistic, and so…normal that by the end, you’re forced to wonder who, in this story, is really the crazy one…As you read this, keep an eye on the dates in the diary.  I’ll be over in the corner.

2880030The NoseDmitri Shostakovich, one of the foremost composers of the Soviet Era (indeed, of the 20th century in general) used Gogol’s bizarre little story about a man whose nose runs away and has adventures all around St. Petersburg as the inspiration for a short light opera.  Which is equally as bizarre, and surprisingly fun.  This opera was specifically written so that Shostakovich could prove that classic literature, and the medium of opera could be entertaining for the Proletariat, and it turns out he was right.  I took my Dad to see this opera once, and yes, it featured a six-foot-tall man wearing a giant nose costume dashing around the stage.  He says he enjoyed it.  He’s a really good sport that way.

Wanderlust Reading List: Finland

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About two years ago, I was lucky enough to be accepted to an academic conference in Helsinki.  And because I don’t really deal in the world of reality all that well, I immediately went to the Library Catalog and found some books set in Helsinki in order to get a feel for the place.  Though these books didn’t really help me navigate the streets of Helsinki, it did give me a few wonderful weeks of reading, and the incredible range of stories that were currently being told in Finland.

Finland-MapThe facts, so to speak, are these: Finland is the eighth-largest country in Europe by area, and with a population of roughly 5.5 (including over 9,000 indigenous people known as the Sami) , it is also the least sparsely populated country within the European Union.  Historically speaking, it was considered a part of the country of Sweden, before becoming incorporated into the Russian Empire in 1809.  Though it declared its independence during the Russian Revolution in 1917, it was still deeply effected by the lasting violence of the Russian Civil War, which divided Finland’s population, and resulted in the Soviet Union maintaining political influence over the country throughout the Cold War.  Finnish nationalism was sustained, particularly during the time it was under Russian rule, through folk tales and poems.  Novels by Finnish authors began to appear in the late 19th century, beginning with Aleksis Kivi’s Seven Brothers in 1870.  Because of literature and identity are so bound together, Finland is a highly literate country that genuinely loves its books.

akateeminen-kirjakauppaFinland has been ranked among the top performers by international organizations for education, civil liberties, quality of life, freedom of the press, and human development.  It is also home to the Akateeminen bookstore, one of the most beautiful bookstores in the world, according to a number of tourist and literary sites.  From personal experience, I can also say that the people I met were genuinely kind–especially the reindeer herder I met at the Hakaniemi Market (a beautiful outdoor market featuring crafts, food, and reindeer pelts), who very patiently explained all about the reindeer in Lapland to me, even after I got all excited, because the only thing I knew about Lapland was that the Snow Queen lived there, and maintained an impressive equanimity when I face-planted into the display of reindeer pelts he had for sale (the softest. things. ever.  Seriously).

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Hi Reindeer!

So pull up some salmon, and come along with me on a brief tour of the literature of Finland in all its many and wonderfully varied forms, with the benefits of remaining jet-lag free!

2940388Tales from MoominvalleyTove Jansson is probably the most well-known of Finland’s authors, mostly because of her utterly charming Moomins, a family of fairytale animals who kind of resemble hippos.  The Moomin family is made up of Moominmamma, Moominpappa, and their son, Moomintroll, who live in the Moominvalley with their many friends and neighbors.  Though the Moomins were created for children, the lessons and messages in the stories are just as meaningful and engaging for adults, perhaps even more so, because Jansson’s stories are so multi-layered and the messages are presented subtly.  She stated in interviews throughout her life that the characters in the books were inspired by her friends and family, but that she herself was a combination of Moomintroll and Little My, the little girl who lives with the Moomns and is brash, disrespectful, delights in disorder, but, ultimately, is a good friend to those she loves.  I love that Jansson made her own bad qualities into the protagonist of her book, because it makes it so much easier for readers to appreciate everything about themselves, good and bad, as well.

TheUnknownSoldierThe Unknown SoldierVäinö Linna’s first major novel is considered a classic work of Finnish literature, and offers a stunningly, often brutally honest look into the lived experience of the Continuation War, fought between Finland and the Soviet Union from 1941 to 1944 (though a part of World War Two, it was also seen as a war for Finnish independence).  Linna specifically wanted to combat the notion of the stupidly loyal Finnish soldier, and thus portrayed men from all across the country, their inner thoughts, fears, and dreams, and their very, very real experiences on the front-lines of war, with many stories drawn from Linna’s own battle experiences.  Though the English translation of the book edited the harsh language that Linna used, it is still an eye-opening read that deserves a much wider audience.

3248379The HealerAntti Tuomainen’s dystopian crime thriller was an enormous hit in Finland, and this translation by Lola Rogers conveys the intensity of the story deftly, making for an engrossing, and sometimes genuinely unsettling read.  Set in a near future where climate change has led to Helsinki disappearing under flood waters, ravaged by diseases and torn about by social collapse, Tuomainen tells the story of Tapani Lehtinen, a poet who had resolved to remain in Helsinki, along with his journalist wife, Johnana.  But when Johnana disappears while hunting down a serial killer, Tapani risks everything to find her–and, in doing so, uncovers the deadly secrets his wife was hiding.  Secrets that tie her much closer to the murders than Tapani ever dreamed.  Antti Tuomainen has a very sparse writing style, making the emotions and revelations in this book feel like a sucker-punch.

3018967The Year of the Hare: Arto Paasilinna’s utterly charming story was first published in 1975, at the height of the “return to native” movement, but this modern-day-fable is just as readable and prescient today.  Helsinki journalist Kaarlo Vatanen accidentally hits a young hare on the road one night, but rather than driving on, he stops and tends to the hare (who survives, Mom!), ultimately abandoning his job, his wife, and his life to follow the hare into the wild.  Together, Kaarlo and the hare stick together, getting into a number of odd, surreal, and bizarrely funny adventures together, gradually wandering father and farther away from civilization.  Though some have said the translation is a little clunky in places, this is a gentle, charming story of two of the most unlikely friends you can imagine, on a journey of self-discovery and solitude that can be read in a few hours–but will brighten your entire day.

Until next time, dear readers…safe travels!

"Once you learn to read, you will be forever free." ~Frederick Douglass