Leann’s
Comments
(group member since Dec 11, 2011)
Leann’s
comments
from the Off The Shelf group.
Showing 1-20 of 53

My thoughts so far, I read some reviews and a few people didn't like the gun parts, I actually loved them. My father is approximately the age of the Major and as he comes to visit me and speak with me at length at least once a week, I can tell you that these kinds of thoughts, motivations, are so much like his. He becomes fixated on things I cannot conceive the importance of but I am more resolved to understand or at least provide fellow feeling after seeing the way the son treats the father and how very despicable it seems.
I find myself becoming irritated with how horrible and shallow the son is, and yet, I can't help but think my own father views me this way sometimes. I get tired of his stagnant views on certain things, his inability to change, to grow and progress. Major Pettigrew's thoughts, fears, desires.... made me feel closer to my own father and made me actually like him a little better as I considered how much softer and more tolerable the Major's thoughts and desires were in comparison with the actual words he spoke aloud.
I love being in someone else's head other than my own. Maybe it's the introvert in me, but I love being able to have access to private thoughts, the secret things that marinate thoughts and actions. They are richer than their dialogue counterparts.
That's all I got for now... OH, one more thing, I have no idea what lugubrious means.



Karen and Shanan: It seems so odd to me that people would read a book that is either fiction or nonfiction and raise a fuss about a genre switch or finding out when it is more one than the other. If you loved it, you loved it.
ALTHOUGH... I kind of had an interesting experience with this recently. I read The Lovely Bones (fiction)which is the account of this girl getting raped and murdered and then what happens to her and her family and her murderer afterward. Then I got the author's other book which is a memoir of her actual rape account from when she was 18. I thought TLB wasn't actually that graphic for the subject matter it was portraying. When I read the memoir I was shocked at the raw details from her rape. It's awed me how the real story was so much more vivid.
Paula: You said "I tend to read a book with the genre in mind, for instance, if it's YA, then I don't expect the level of complexity that I would find in an adult novel. Again, however, that preconception is being challenged with the new crop of authors writing such awesome works like Harry Potter and others. My one criteria for a new book/author is: was I entertained and/or informed? If that happened, then it was a good use of my time. If there was more than that, awesome! Maybe I just found a new favorite author!"
Stop creeping into my brain and stealing my thoughts! This is exactly what I meant to say in my last post but failed miserably due to constant interruption while I was trying to type it.
BTW, Karen, I am quite enjoying Major Pettigrew so far. But it's not surprising, I actually enjoy realistic fiction. I also love hearing older people's thoughts, they feel so much more like my own.

Yes, Karen, I DO think that, within reason, we should expect stories of different genres, time periods, themes, etc to have a similar feel or similar qualities.
Yes, I would be very much annoyed with Anne Elliot of Persuasion were she to act in a contemporary setting the way she does in the time period of the book. I would hate that she allowed herself to wait for Wentworth to go out and make his fortune and come back a wealthy man before finally deeming him suitable marriage material. She would be completely shallow to me. BUT, in those days, that was just part of a woman's life.



On other notes, I'm having trouble getting into Pettigrew... I just started writing again yesterday and got 3k words done! Pretty stoked about it. I'm going to a "write in" this saturday for approx 4-6 hours so I may be able to get more done there too. JANO may be too much pressure for me, but I may shoot for 30 K by the end of this month, maybe like 80 k for the whole book.

BTW, Our pick for March, Her Fearful Symmetry, there are several copies available on www.paperbackswap.com. I have already interested Karen in this site because it's an easier way to BUY books and then swap them once you finish them.
They end up being about $3.50 per book, that includes shipping directly to your house and everything. If you swap a book and mail it to another member, then you get credit for one book that you can order from someone else. It's very cool. Give it a shot. The only book I was not able to get was Major Pettigrew, but that's ok. 2 out of 3 ain't bad!


I was totally up for Pettigrew, but karen listed it as already read this month. I like the idea of everyone experiencing the thing for the first time together.


Before I go To Sleep by S.J. Watson

The Return Journey, The Lilac Bus and Dublins 4.
All by Maeve Binchy.

Just my thoughts, if you make me plod through a mystery, can it be either really fast paced or really funny or a combo of the two? I will do some research and figure out some names for a couple that sound interesting so i can post them.