Friday, January 13, 2012

Feature Friday #1

Feature & Follow Friday is a weekly event hosted by Parajamlee and Alison Can Read where you meet and follow different bloggers.

This week's question: Many readers/bloggers are also big music fans. Tell us about a few of your favorite bands/singers that we should listen to in 2012.

Music is a HUGE part of my life and I love listening to it. I have a very eclectic taste in music (as you'll see below) and I love sharing music. Some of my favorites:











What are some of your picks?

Book Review: Keeping Corner by Kashmira Sheth


Goodreads Review: Ba slipped the gold bangles from my wrists. The gold ones were plain so I didn’t mind taking them off, but I loved wearing my milk-glass bangles and the lakkh bracelets.

"A widow can't wear bangles,” she said. "They are signs of a woman's good fortune. When your husband dies it's over."

"What if my good fortune comes back?"

“It doesn’t.”

Pretty as a peacock, twelve-year-old Leela had been spoiled all her life. She doesn't care for school and barely marks the growing unrest between the British colonists and her own countrymen. Why should she? Her future has been planned since her engagement at two and marriage at nine.

Leela's whole life changes, though, when her husband dies. She's now expected to behave like a proper widow: shaving her head and trading her jewel-toned saris for rough, earth-colored ones. Leela is considered unlucky now, and will have to stay confined to her house for a year—keep corner—in preparation for a life of mourning for a boy she barely knew.

When her schoolteacher hears of her fate, she offers Leela lessons at home. For the first time, despite her confinement, Leela opens her eyes to the changing world around her. India is suffering from a severe drought, and farmers are unable to pay taxes to the British. She learns about a new leader of the people, a man named Gandhi, who starts a political movement and practices satyagraha—non-violent protest against the colonists as well as the caste system. The quiet strength of satyagraha may liberate her country. Could she use the same path to liberate herself?

My Review: What a beautifully written book. With so many thoughts expressed with the intricate placement of words, it was hard for me to read quickly reading as after I'd finish a particularly thought-provoking sentence. I'd pause, reread the sentence, then look around my room so I could absorb the statement before writing it down on a sheet of notebook paper.

We listened to many stories that if you wrote them in the sky, they'd fill it up and there'd be no room left for the stars. - page 111

All of the loose ends were swiftly tied at the end of the book like a present and I felt complete after reading it. There weren't any questions left unanswered, except one. What happens to Leela now? In some books, the questions need an answer. Why did the protagonist do that? Where are they going? Why did they decide to get back together with him? But here, the answer wasn't necessary. I didn't need to know, and in fact, I'm happy the author didn't provide an explanation.

The rest of the day slipped from my hand so swiftly that I wrote it down in my notebook, "Happy times are light and fast, sad times are heavy and slow. They all end, though, and what remains is me. Just me." - page 165

The overall idea of this is hard for me to grasp. Not because it isn't explained well. But because this practice is actually continued in society in India. That the idea of equality between men and women is radical, and in a small town like Jamlee, this story has happened before. I knew about pre-arranged marriage, but I haven't heard the flip side, of what happens when there is a woman widow. Even though I may not agree with it, I do understand that different cultures have different customs.

Having a female widow in Indian culture is looked upon as having bad luck. There's even a word for it: raand. It's also a term for "widow," but used as a derogatory term. And if you're a female child widow, like Leela, you're not allowed to marry again and you must resist temptation or else shame the family. The subject matter is chilling without being chilling.

When I look at American society and the fact that celebrities, as well as people not featured in the news, can get married and then divorce after a period (a day) only to marry someone else, it makes me think. A lot. Of course, I think people should marry and divorce whomever they want at any time interval they want. Their marriage and divorce is not my business. But to read books where marriage is forced and divorce is not an option, it's a little unnerving and it seems like Americans are just throwing away the sanctity of marriage. And the fact that gays who love each other can't marry yet complete strangers who just met can marry and then divorce is a bit ridiculous. Sorry, that's my own personal opinion.

Anyway, back to Leela and Keeping Corner. This book opened my eyes to a time and culture that was different than my own and I really enjoyed that. I love learning. I love the beauty in words. And this provided a complete completion of both.

Leela was in the highest cast, brahman, in Indian culture. She had wealth, gold bangles and jewelry, and long, thick hair. When she became a widow, she traded in her lavish clothing for a chidri, a woman's sari worn in Gujarat, no jewelry, and she had to shave her head. I think it's extraordinary. I wish my copy wasn't a library book so I could place it on my bookshelf. Rating: 5/5

When she came to the part, "A widow's arms are forever quiet," she stopped and took me in her arms. "I'm glad you've filled your sounds with feeling. It makes you aware of who you are. As you go on writing and expressing your thoughts, it'll open up a whole world inside of you. Your inner self is like an onion: you keep peeling it, and a new layer is always there."

It was strange to think of my inner self as an onion, and it was impossible to think of a journey I could be taking while keeping corner. - page 261

Blogger Interview: JJ from Around the Modern Library

Please welcome JJ, the teenager who plans to read the Modern Library’s 100 Best Novels.

Can you tell us a little bit about yourself?

I'm a high schooler in the South, who loves to read, write, play music, and volunteer at church.

What do you do when you're not writing?

Play music, read, go to church, and the bane of high school, homework. And of course hang out with friends is a given.

Where did the idea for 'Around the Modern Library' come from?

I was looking up Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison because it is the most used book on the AP literature test, when it mentioned it was on the Modern Library 100 greatest novels. I looked it up and one of the entries wasedrants.com and I saw the challenge and decided to take it.

What books on the list are you most looking forward to reading?

Rereading Great Gatsby for one, an Ulysses just because of it's intriguing story. Animal Farm and Lord of the Flies look great, and Pale Fire sounds cool. I'm excited that I'll be able to say I read Finnegans Wake, but not excited to read it, if that makes sense. I'm actually excited to read a large portion of the Radcliffe list too, but I can't list them all. Two I'm not looking forward too, just for an extra tidbit, are Gone With The Wind because Scarlett is awful, and The Fountainhead since I've read it before and think there isn't really a redeemable character in the entire book, even Roark ticks me off.

Do you come from a family of readers and writers? Do they support you in your decision?

My grandpa was a literature professor, but other than that, not really. They support me, as long as I don't drop the ball with school while I do it haha.

Do you prefer ebooks, paperbacks or hardcover?

I've never read on an eBook but I feel like I might prefer it for ease of use, but a hardcover feels the best. It feels the most tangible, and paperback is too flimsy to be my favorite.

Who is your favorite author and what is it that really strikes you about their work?

Eoin Colfer who writes the Artemis Fowl series is an awesome children/young adult writer, but in the realm of real literature, I would have to say Joseph Heller, because of his wit, and his crazy writing style.

What do you think makes a good story?

An interesting writing style can make nearly any interesting story good, but I think a kind of real world, with just a bit of unrealistic bits (like Catch-22's extreme exaggeration, or in the case of Artemis Fowl, the real world, but magical creatures live far underground.)

Do you ever experience writer's block?

With school assignments on stuff I don't like, a lot, on anything I want to write about, it just flows. My newspaper articles I write in the student newspaper at my school, for instance, are easy to write for me.

Do you see writing as a career?

Not really, I writing is fun, but it's just a way to communicate to me, I'd just as well tell someone what in writing. I'm actually more scientific-minded, and my current career plan is a hospital pharmacist, so about the opposite end of writing I guess.

Do you have any advice for other book bloggers?

You have to be have a quirk, I'm young and people reacted well when they found out a teenager would be reading so much. If you have no unique aspect to your blog, it probably won't make waves. Also, you have to write about something you enjoy, not just write on anything.


Thanks so much for taking the time to answer my questions, JJ!

If you enjoyed this interview and want to learn more, visit his blog Around the Modern Library and follow along on Twitter.

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