This year, I want to try and read more. This may mean I read two books all year, but I want to make the effort. I sincerely believe there aren't many things that are better for your mind than reading. Books hold worlds and dreams and ideas. There is nothing like a room full of books to inspire a person.
The first week of the year, I read Forest Born, the fourth book in a series of fantasy type children's literature by Shannon Hale (I've previously read the other three). And I found myself lost in their beautiful Forest world. I was particularly caught up in the thoughts of the main character, Rin, a person I'm sure I would've been friends with, a person I could understand so well. I love good children's literature - the simple complexity, stories woven with such precision that both a child and adult can fall into their pages.
Just yesterday, I finished The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. And for the first time in years, I read with a pen in hand. It's a novel told entirely through letters. Beautiful letters that speak so perfectly of heartache, love, despair, and with the most precise blend of wit and humor.The letters tell the story of a (fictional) author, Juliet, who finds unlikely friendships in a group of people who live in Guernsey, a city in the Channel Islands that was occupied by the German during World War II. The book takes place after the war, and the letters are a beautiful collection of their memories. Of course, the story is also one of Juliet and how she is changed by these people and their beautiful Guernsey.
I am in love with this book. Some of its passages were so perfectly crafted I wanted to eat them. I loved the format - the letters allow the characters, each of them instead of just one narrator, to speak so freely and with parenthetical asides that made me smile. I long to go to Guernsey and meet these (fictional) people, live in their world of survival and love. And so I plan on turning around and reading this book again. I can't wait to go back. With a pen in hand, of course.
4 comments:
I LOVE this book too! I'm glad you liked it.
This post made me think. I don't read as much as I used to either. And I think I've always felt kindof guilty about that. But I just kinda realized that it's not something I need to feel guilty about at all. We don't have much time for leisurely reading, we young moms. To every thing there is a season.
And yet at the same time I can feel a little guilty because I could be reading books more than I read blogs. Blogs are just so easy to "pick up" and "put down" when you only have a snippet of time to escape. But I think we're only just starting to see how getting lost in reading blogs is not as healthy as getting lost in books. Although I AM grateful for them to keep in touch with faraway friends like you. :)
And reading this comment can count as one of your novels :)
Next up, The Thirteenth Tale. :) Or The Book Thief.
I just started this book the other day. I love it so far. It's been sitting on my nightstand, untouched for several days because I have too much reading for school, but it's going to get picked up really soon. :)
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