The Bookends

The Bookends
Bookends at Bea's
Showing posts with label Marvel's Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marvel's Books. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2014

Garbo Laughs by Elizabeth Hay




July 21, 2006
Location:       Marvel's home                                          
Members:     Virginia, Françoise, Louise, Carmen, Margaret, Joanne, Louise, Bea, Marvel, Wilma, Gisela

Elizabeth Hay had been invited to join us but in the end was unable to come due to a dinner engagement.  This book had mixed reviews.  No one absolutely hated it but the general consensus was that it did not have a story line or theme. 

Everyone had a difficult time getting into the book but all found the second half much easier to read.  It was described as a story about every day life – your life or my life - an intimate tale.  Some people found the reference to the old classic movies interesting, some were pleased that the book was written about the Old Ottawa South neighbourhood and that it was interesting to see streets that we were familiar with.    

Overall it was agreed by those that had read Hay’s other book “A Student of Weather” that the Student of Weather was a better read. 

Also at the July 21st meeting the “ladies of the club”  gave me a wonderful gift certificate to my favourite boutique (The Clothes Secret).   I thank you all again what a terrific gift!

Respectfully submitted by Marvel on July 27, 2006

The Reader by Bernhardt Schlink




October 2, 2004

Location: Wilma’s cottage
Members: Virginia, Louise, Carmen, Margaret, Marvel, Wilma, Gisela

The discussion took place on the Saturday afternoon of Wilma’s annual cottage party while we drank warm-up drinks of Hot Chocolate and Bailey’s!

Marvel started the discussion of the book commenting that a friend had recommended it to her. She noted that it too was a book that you could not really say you enjoyed – due to the topic and circumstances of the times when it was written. The story of Hanna and Michael was a complex one, at first due to their love affair and later because of the circumstances surrounding Hanna’s imprisonment for war crimes and the relationship that they had during both of these events. It was almost like reading two separate stories. Was the book depressing or hopeful (an illiterate person overcoming the barriers of being an uneducated person and learning how to read through great perseverance)?

Each of us had an opportunity to offer an opinion of the book. Overall it was well received although Virginia did not really feel any enthusiasm for it.

Some comments follow:
The reason Hanna ended her life was because her identity was being someone who is illiterate. Once she learned to read she lost that identity.
Hanna ruined Michael’s life. He was never able to love anyone else. Would Hanna have taken up with Michael if she had been able to read?
Hanna was unable to forgive herself for the things that she had done while working for the SS. After the war all things were revealed. At one part in the book Hanna says “The dead came every night, whether I wanted them to or not.”
Hanna is guarding a secret she considers more shameful than murder.
When Hanna was imprisoned the relationship between her and Michael was very different from when they had first met. In the beginning Hanna was the one in charge. During the latter part of the book it was Michael who was in charge and Hanna could see that Michael did not feel the same about her as he did when he was a young man.
One thing that was noted was that in order to keep her dignity Hanna chose not to tell anyone that she could not read. This could have impacted the choices that she made. She said that she had written the report and it was at this time that Michael knew she was lying.
If she had learned to read when she was a young girl her life choices would have been different. She would not have likely joined the SS and could have had a totally different career and therefore a totally different life. She was a lost soul.
The question of who the Reader actually was came up. Some people felt that it was Michael and others felt that it was Hanna. I think in the end we agreed that it was both of them.
After her death Michael gives the proceeds of Hanna's estate, to an organization devoted to teaching illiterate Jews to read.

Although the subject of this book was a very sensitive one and some of our Bookend members had family and personal experience with wartime Europe, we had a very good discussion about not only moral/ethical issues but also about how fortunate we are to live in a peaceful country as Canada. Also how fortunate we are to be able to enjoy books and how important reading is to us.

It was also mentioned that it is nice to read books that challenge us to think.

The author, Bernhard Schlink, was born in 1944 near Bielefeld, Germany, to a German father and a Swiss mother. He grew up in Heidelberg and studied law in Heidelberg and Berlin. He is a professor of Constitutional and Administrative Law and the Philosophy of Law at Berlin's Humbolt University and a justice of the Constitutional Law Court in Bonn.

Mr. Schlink has authored works in both fiction and nonfiction. Before publishing The Reader (original title: Der Vorleser) in 1995, he wrote several prize-winning mystery novels.

Since its publication, The Reader has become a phenomenal international bestseller and has been translated into 23 languages in 26 countries. The movie rights to The Reader have been sold to Miramax Films, and it is to be directed by Anthony Minghella.

Respectfully submitted by: Marvel on October 5, 2004

The Tennis Partner by Abraham Verghese



 Bookends Meeting Thursday May 15, 2014

                         
Location:         Marvel's home                                                                
Members:        Virginia, Carmen, Margaret, Joanne, Bea, Marvel, Wilma, Gisela
                       
We had a lovely meal of Lebanese food prepared by Cedars on Bank Street.

"The Tennis Partner" was chosen mostly because Cutting for Stone by the same author was a very good book.  The Tennis Partner was autobiographical and was very interesting.  The author wove both Tennis and Medicine throughout the book and quite often made comparisons between the two.

It was interesting to read a book about male friendship as well as learning about addictions (especially among physicians).  The majority of books that we read are about female relationships so it was nice to read something from the other perspective.

A lot of discussion focused around the relationship between Abe and David Smith,  the resident who was a former pro tennis player.  At the hospital Abe was the teacher and on the tennis court David was the teacher.

The tennis stories were interesting, and Abe’s love of tennis beginning in childhood and his obsession with watching the pros play and keeping track of the highlights of all of the games he watched on television was well written.  Not being a tennis player some of the descriptions were lengthy but still interesting.

The discussion around addictions and how they affect the lives of people other than the addict was also enlightening.  Is addiction a disease? A genetic disorder? A brain wiring disorder? Does one addiction lead to other addictions?.  For instance David admits to being a sex addict as well as being addicted to street drugs.

Overall the book was well received; most people felt that it wasn’t as interesting as Cutting for Stone.  They were two different types of book one fiction, one autobiographical. 

Personally, I don’t think that I would read the other book he wrote regarding being a foreign medical graduate, although I am sure it would be interesting. I do enjoy his writing style and his ability to make his stories come to life.

The next meeting is on Thursday, July  17, 2014 at Gisela’s to discuss A Week in Winter by Maeve Binchey.    

Notes respectfully submitted by:

Marvel on May 16, 2014