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ExUrbanis

Urban Leaving to Country Living

Cultural Definitions: Social Class Quiz

April26

Hey guys, this is downright scary.

I took this quiz, suggested by Kate at Books are My Favourite and Best, and it told me: “Your cultural tastes are most similar to a middle-class woman, aged 60+ with a postgraduate education.” Spot on.

I’d be interested in your results.

P.S. The quiz is hosted by ABC News and researched by the Australian Cultural Fields project, sponsored by Western Sydney University. On a couple of the quiz questions, I substituted “Canadian” for “Australian”. You’ll see what I mean.

 

I Spy Challenge April 2018

April11

I saw this on Cleopatra Loves Books blog and wanted to do it for the same reason as Margaret at Books Please – I love lists as well as books. I tried to stick to fiction on my physical ‘unread’ shelves, and was able to do it in the time provided except for a couple of problem categories which necessitated a second sweep.

The instructions: Find a book on your bookshelves that contains (either on the cover or in the title) an example for each category. You must have a separate book for all 20, get as creative as you want and do it within five minutes!! (or longer if you have way too many books on way too many overcrowded shelves!)

1. Food

American Pie by Michael Lee West

 photo American pie_zpstormmdu5.jpg

I was attracted to this by its title, since I love theme reading and I have a nonfiction Kindle book of the same name, and Canadian Pie by Will Ferguson also in my stacks.

 

2. Transportation

The Automobile Club of Egypt by Alaa Al Aswany
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This was an impulse book store buy that I haven’t cracked open yet.

 

3. Weapon

Big White Knuckles by Brian Tucker

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I had a hard time finding something for this category, but knuckles can be a weapon, right? Since this is set in a Cape Breton coal-mining community, I’m going with ‘yes’.

 
American Pie

4. Animal

In the Skin of a Lion by Michael Ondaatje

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Canadian content that I should have read in high school. I have good intentions. . . .

 

5. Number

A Hundred Secret Senses by Amy Tan

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I’ve read a couple of books by Amy Tan, but never this one.

 
6. Something You Read

Postcards from the Edge by Carrie Fisher

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I would have had more success from my nonfiction shelves where I have books about books galore, but we do read postcards.

 

7. Body of Water

In the Lake of the Woods by Tim O’Brien

 photo in the lake of the woods_zpsuimu253n.jpg

I thought O’Brien’s The Things They Carried was a powerful and moving book, so I’m looking forward to this one.

 
8. Product of Fire

Louisiana Power and Light by John Dufresne

 photo louisiana power and light_zpsdznsgwlv.jpg

I was so busy looking for the after-products of a fire, that I completely missed this book on my first sweep. I’m going with ‘light’ as one of the things a fire produces!

 

9. Royalty

The Puzzle King by Betsy Carter

 photo puzzle king_zps9dmz9kyn.jpg

New York City! Immigrants! Jigsaw Puzzles! How can this miss?!

 

10. Architecture

The Four-Story Mistake by Elizabeth Enright

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Although you wouldn’t know it from the cover of this modern reprint, this classic children’s book is all about the Melendy family’s move to, and life in, the country house known as the four-story mistake. I cheated a bit on this category because I’ve read this book at least a dozen times in my life, but I’m sure I’ll read it again too.

 

11. Item of Clothing

A Cupboard Full of Coats by Yvette Edwards

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I put this in my stacks when it was longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2011, intrigued by the title and the charming cover on my edition, as much as the synopsis.

 
12. Family Member

Travels with My Aunt by Graham Greene

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I started to read this last year but found I really wasn’t in the mood to finish. Rather than give up on this vintage classic, I reshelved it for another try.

 

13. Time of Day

Sunset Park by Paul Auster

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I’ve never read Auster and I’m not sure what to expect from this piece of literary fiction. I just hope the story is more “on” than the colour of this cover – it doesn’t much look like a sunset to me.

 

14. Music

Accordian Crimes by Annie Proulx

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Another that I read several years ago and hope to reread. I remember this as wickedly funny – in the end.

 

15. Paranormal Being

Pluto’s Ghost by Sheree Fitch

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Since I never read anything with paranormal beings, I thought this category would go unfilled. Then I came upon this little gem by local author Sheree Fitch, that I picked when visiting her Mable Murple’s Book Shoppe & Dreamery in nearby River John NS last summer. I’m pretty sure this has nothing to do with a real ghost.

 
16. Occupation

Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress by Dai Sijie

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China’s Cultural Revolution, a hidden stash of Western Classics, and a love of reading. Yum!

 

17. Season

Autumn Laing by Alex Miller

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Every time I look at this Miles Franklin Award nominee from 2012, I want to curl up on the couch and lose myself in it. Soon, I promise myself.

 

18. Colour

The Blue Light Project by Timothy Taylor

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From Vancouver author Taylor, this story of a hostage taking at a filming of a children’s talent show sounds promising.

 

19. Celestial Body

The Almost Moon by Alice Sebold

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I was attracted to this novel because it unfolds over a twenty-four hour period, a structure that I very much enjoy.

 

20. Something That Grows

Roses are Difficult Here by W.O. Mitchell

 photo roses are diffcult here_zpsxppxrasx.jpg

This category was bound to be a Canadian classic: either Roses or Anne of Windy Poplars by Lucy Maud Montgomery (which Kindle edition is free as of time of writing).

 

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How many are on your bookshelf? Want to give this challenge a try yourself? Consider yourself tagged.

 

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

posted under Book stuff | 5 Comments »

Mystery Books Read in October 2015

April6

 
My reading theme for the month (‘last’ in the title) spilled over into my mystery reading as well. I’m glad – because I discovered a couple of excellent new-to-me series.

 

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1. THE LAST POLICEMAN by Ben H. Winters #1 Last Policeman series (Fiction, Literary, Trilogy, American) 4.5 star rating

Although I’ve listed this among my mystery books for the month, The Last Policeman could really be classified as a non-genre examination of what happens to society when people know the earth is going to be destroyed.
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Scientists have determined that a meteorite will smash into earth in October and destroy life as we know it. Society is crumbling around Henry Palace, still trying to do his job as a Concord NH detective, a job to which he was recently promoted. He’s working on an apparent suicide that he feels is murder.

Winters say in understatement: “The end of the world changes everything, from a law-enforcement perspective.” We might question why even bother to investigate. But Winters convinces us that Henry is doing the only possible thing he can do.

I’m very much looking forward to reading the rest of the books in this trilogy.

4½ stars

 

2. SAVAGE RUN by C.J. Box #2 Joe Pickett (Fiction, Mystery, Series, American) 4.5 star rating

 photo savage run - Copy_zpsz8n7ijst.jpg
Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett is called to investigate an act of counter-eco-terrorism in the Bighorn Mountains.

This is a sometimes funny, sometimes angry sequel to Open Season which I read and very much liked in April 2015. Reviewer Barry Trinkle says: “Box depicts the spare beauty and cussed individualism of the Intermountain West with the sure hand of a seasoned writer.”

I’m definitely continuing on with this series.

4½ stars

 
3. THE LAST DETECTIVE by Peter Lovesey #1 Peter Diamond (Fiction, Mystery, Police Procedural, Series, English) 4 star rating

 photo last detective_zps28by4lmx.jpgThis was published in 1991 when computers had been in the general work force about 15 years but were not nearly as developed as today. Peter Diamond is the ‘last detective’ because he still insists that leg-work, and not computers, is what will solve a case.

I like Peter Diamond and enjoyed seeing him rely on the ‘old’ methods of detecting, while not completely ignoring the advantages of computer technology. This had a good mystery, with lots of dry humour.

By degrees, the pain spread and became less intense. Diamond opened his eyes. They watered copiously. Just as well, he told himself grimly, because he doubted whether the organ intended for watering would ever function again.

I do intend to carry on with this series. A big thank you to Cathy at Kittling: Books for bringing Lovesey— & Diamond—to my attention.

4 stars

 

4. A LAST GOODBYE by J.A. Jance (novella) Ali Reynolds & Joanna Brady (Fiction, Mystery, Private Investigators, Series, American) 3.5 star rating

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I believe A Last Goodbye was a free Kindle novella that I downloaded because I once read a J.P. Beaumont novel by Jance that I really, really liked.

This book has the protagonists of two of her other very popular series meeting to . . . I can’t remember. There was hospital visiting and a dog (as evidenced by the cover) involved, but I forget the rest.

It was well-written, but forgettable.

3½ stars

 

5. THE DEVIL’S MAKING by Sean Haldane (Fiction, Mystery, Historical, British author – set in Canada) 3 star rating

 photo devils making - Copy_zpsicde5omu.jpgIt might be stretching it a bit to say this was set in Canada because in 1869, the Pacific-bordering territory of British Columbia had not yet joined Confederation. Nonetheless, Chad Hobbes, newly arrived in Victoria, finds himself made a police detective and sent to investigate the death of Dr. McCrory, a new age doctor who was found stabbed with his cut-off penis in his hand (it had been in his mouth).

My notes tell me that I thought the period details were incredibly well-researched but that the author was trying too hard to be crude. There were heavy-handed red herrings to one of the suspects, and the actual murderer was someone only on the very peripheral of the story.

I was also disturbed by the details of Chad’s awareness of women as sexual beings once he was no longer a virgin. Are men so constantly thinking these things?

Overall, as a period history perhaps, but as a murder mystery poorly done.

3 stars

 

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Have you read any of these? Do any appeal to you?

 

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

Books Read in October 2015

April3

October 2015 saw me recovering from back surgery: clear-headed and alert, but limited in my activities. A perfect month for reading!

A couple of library reserves with the word ‘Last’ in the title arrived so I gathered up as many other ‘Lasts’ as I could find. In total, between mysteries and others, eight of the twelve books I read were titled ‘Last’-Something. The theme gave me a wide range of books.

I’ll cover the mystery books in a separate post.

 

1. THE LITTLE SHADOWS by Marina Endicott (Fiction, Literary, Historical, Canadian) 4.5 star rating

 photo little shadows_zpsmghs36m6.jpgI do love Marina Endicott, who departs from her usual current day settings to tell this story set on the vaudeville circuit of the Canadian prairies and Montana in the years 1912 to 1917. It follows the fortunes of three sisters who form a singing and dancing act.

It’s a thoroughly absorbing story and I thought the ‘placard’ chapter titles were a delightful touch.

This was first recommended to me by the late Kevin from Canada.

4½ stars

2. LAST MAN IN TOWER by Aravind Adiga (Fiction, Literary, Indian) 4.5 star rating

When a real estate developer offers to buy out the residents of Bombay Co-operative Housing Society Tower A, planning to use the site to build a luxury apartment complex, initially not everyone wants to leave; many of the residents have lived in the tower for years, and many of them are no longer young. But it’s an everyone-or-no-one deal.
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As tensions rise among the once civil neighbours, one by one those who oppose the offer give way to the majority, until only one man stands in Shah’s way: Masterji, a retired schoolteacher, once the most respected man in the building.

There are humourous moments but the story takes a dark turn as one by one the community turns on Masterji, and the suspense rises to an almost unbearable level. It’s a rich story peopled with a large cast of well-developed characters. I very much enjoyed this book.

Although it was Oxford County Library’s monthly newsletter that first alerted me to this book, I thereafter read Lisa’s excellent review at ANZ Litlovers.

4½ stars

 

3. THE HEN WHO DREAMED SHE COULD FLY by Sun M. Huang, translated by Chi Young Kim, illustrated by Nomoco (Fiction, Literary, Translated, Korean) 3.5 star rating

 photo hen who dreamed_zpsnkifrj4m.jpgCalled a Korean ‘fable for our time’, this is the tale of Sprout, a self-named battery laying hen who has one dream: to be a yard hen so she can hatch an egg and raise a baby. She escapes a mass cull operation, and finding herself outside the fence, finds an egg in the hedge to sit on. She hatches a duckling, which she raises, to find that it is accepted as neither duck nor chicken.

Although it examines themes of freedom, motherhood and prejudice, its effect on me was only so-so.

Thank you to Diane at Bibliophile by the Sea whose review first prompted me to add this to my TBR list.

3½ stars

 

4. LAST NIGHT AT THE LOBSTER by Stewart O’Nan (Fiction< American) 3.5 star rating

 photo last night at the lobster_zpsl7bg55zl.jpgLisa at Lit and Life recommended this short novel about a Red Lobster restaurant in a Maine mall on its last night of business. The last shift sees a motley crew present (many have already found work elsewhere), and a blizzard that keeps away the supper trade.

It’s character-driven, but there’s not a lot of time for character development. Again, I was mildly disappointed.

3½ stars

 

5. THE LAST PILOT by Benjamin Johncock (Fiction, Historical, American) 3.5 star rating

The last pilot is set in 1960 and 1961, during the early days of the American space program when US Armed Forces pilots were ‘testing-driving’ jets over the Mojave Desert and dying at an alarming rate in crashes.

 photo last pilot_zpsmgicfmum.jpgJohncock has peopled his novel with the real players in the game – the real astronauts, the real bar owner, and so on, except for the main characters of Jim Harrison and his wife Grace. This fictional couple desperately want a child and think constantly about new life even as the news in the bar almost weekly seems to be the death of another colleague.

There are problems inherent in using actual historical figures that limit the possibilities for the fictional ones. The story never seemed to really take-off (no pun intended). In addition, I was irritated that the author moved between calling the protagonist ‘Jim’ and ‘Harrison’ for no apparent rhyme not reason. There was also a mention of placing clothes in large black trash bags which were not available for home use until the late ’60s – early ‘70s.

On the balance, I found the book to be somewhat interesting (the actual history) but ‘meh’ as far as the story.

 

3½ stars

 

6. THE LAST DAY by Emily Organ (Fiction) 3 star rating
 photo last day_zpscwbwkauk.jpg
When George was 11, he dreamt the day of his death – and now it’s here.

That much is included on the author’s website – and that much, I remember. But, honestly, although I finished the book, it seems that I thought it only so-so at the time, and now cannot remember another thing about it.

3 stars

 

7. THE LAST KINGS OF SARK by Rosa Rankin-Gee (Fiction) 2.5 star rating

 photo last kings of sark_zpstmaqzjcb.jpgI included this in my reading because of the setting on Sark, one of the Channel Islands, from which my mother-in-law’s family emigrated,(Guernsey), and because it has lovely cover.

The story follows three teenagers over the course of a summer on Sark. It’s beautifully written but the plot ends about halfway through and then the book drones on and on.

2 stars

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I love months like this because I can choose such a variety of books, some of which I’d never have gotten to otherwise. Have you ever had a month when you read on a theme such as the word ‘last’ in the title?

 

P.S. The links are affiliate links so I will receive a small percentage of any purchase you make after clicking through from this blog.

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