Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Sunday, May 20

"That's what makes it an adventure."

Last week, I went into the library to pick up a book that was on hold.

I was particularly excited about this book, because I had heard good things about it.

To my surprise (and slight dismay, for I have little spare time on my hands) the book was over 4 inches thick.

There's no way I'm going to have time to read this.

But as I let it fall open in my hands, I saw pictures.

Pictures. Hundreds and hundreds of pictures.

YES. The whole book is in PICTURES!!!

It is quite possibly one of the most brilliant books I have read this year.

The writing and storyline themselves are not the most genius: after all my SAT studying I found myself rewording sentences every now and then. But there are a couple very beautiful, very powerful moments in it.

AND THERE'S A MOVIE. Which is...AWESOME. Brilliant, wonderful, beautiful book-to-movie adaptation.



My favorite quote in the entire book is quite possibly the main reason I love this so much.

"Did you ever notice that all machines are made for some reason?" he asked Isabelle.

"They are built to make you laugh, like the [windup] mouse here, or to tell the time, like clocks, or to fill you with wonder, like the automaton. Maybe that's why a broken machine always makes me a little sad, because it isn't able to do what it was meant to do. "

"Maybe it's the same with people," Hugo continued. "If you lose your purpose...it's like you're broken.

"Sometimes I come up here at night...just to look at the city. I like to imagine that the world is one big machine. You know, machines never have any extra parts. They have the exact number and type of parts they need. So I figure if the entire world is a big machine, I have to be here for some reason. And that means you have to be here for some reason, too."

Friday, April 20

I give into the fandom.

Oh snap, is this my 4th Hunger Games post in a row? I told you you'd be sick of it at some point.

Actually, the real reason behind the excessive Hunger Games fandom (besides the fact that it's amazing) is that I have been evading deep thinking lately, and so as a result, have allowed my brain to default to the easiest, most brain-free topic there is, which right now, would be the Hunger Games.

Not that it's a brainless, pointless series, but it's the kind of thing you don't need a lot of brain in order to process. If that makes any sense. Nothing like Shakespeare or Lewis or the Apostle Paul or anything, is what I mean.

Anyhow, I typically pride myself in not being obsessed with what everyone else is. I don't like screaming fangirls. I am not one of them. But this series was...absolutely amazing. So here we go.

!!!WARNING: if you have not read the books, PLEASE, for the love of reading a good novel, don't read this post!!! Perhaps, some other time, I will write a Hunger Games post specifically for those of you who have not read it, so as to use my persuasive skills as to convince you to do so.

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...there now. For those of you who are left...

First of all, I absolutely loved every minute of the Hunger Games trilogy. I don't really understand how people can "like the third book but not the second book" or something like that, because they all tell one story. You can't simply "like" one and not like the other. It only took me a timespan of....3 days to read all 3 books. It's been a painstakingly long time since I allowed myself to be completely lost in an alternate reality, and it felt really good to just curl up in a corner for hours.

Secondly, as far as I know, I am basically the only human being on the planet who is "Team Gale."

Yes, I'm sorry all you Peeta-lovers out there...I was rooting for Gale. After a long discussion with a friend on the matter, I have finally come to like Peeta quite well.

However, I just...really really hate perfect characters. Peeta literally has no character flaws whatsoever, and if that wasn't enough, he has like this unconditional love for a girl who deliberately shoves him around and loves someone else for a time. Even when he goes crazy, he's the one who's strong, he's the one who fights through it -- and it's not like it was his fault anyway.

I guess I'm just too firmly devoted to platonic love, and despite the fact that Gale only loved Katniss for 6 months, I feel like it was one of those moments where you just suddenly realize how much you love someone even though you've known them for forever. You know -- real lovers start out as real friends -- that kind of thing.

During the whole first book, I didn't get excited when Peeta and Katniss were kissing, but more of this achey sort of knot in the pit of my stomach for Gale as I imagined how awful it must have been from his perspective.

Given the amount of time that Suzanne Collins spent describing Peeta and the amount of time she didn't spend on Gale, I probably should have guessed Katniss would end up with him. But I'm just not that perceptive when it comes to reading books....

Anyways -- so despite how much I do really love Peeta now, part of me still roots for Gale somehow. He had this bond with Katniss that Peeta just didn't have. That best-friend love is something I will always fight hard for.

Thirdly, the whole series left me rather uneasy. I wanted just a few more sentences to know how Gale was getting on, whether there really was peace throughout Panem, whether the districts still existed to feed the capitol, if the capitol was a tyrannical terror to everyone, who mines coal now that District 12 makes medicine, and what in the world does District 13 do now? What type of government did they run, and was District 11 still a miserable place to live? Was everything still rural and run down or was it all modernized to be more like the Capitol and District 13? But perhaps that's the way Suzanne Collins intended it to be.

I was angry that Katniss was one of the ones who voted to have a final Hunger Games with the capitol's children. Seriously, I know she was losing her mind at that point, but had she really entirely forgotten why she was fighting this battle in the first place?

However, I do admit that it was entirely within her character, especially given that Prim had died. But I was annoyed that Katniss' love for everyone else was hinged on her love for Prim.

It actually reminded me a lot of Orual from Till We Have Faces -- in that her only reason for living was because of this overpowering love for Psyche. I guess I was just disappointed that Katniss' love for Gale was so thin that it would fade entirely, leaving nothing behind, with the mere prospect that his bomb could have been responsible for Prim's death.

Also, I didn't feel like Gale was so shallow as to simply move onto another district and probably be "kissing some other woman" so quickly. I won't sink his character so low that he would simply "move on" and forget Katniss like that. It was like Suzanne Collins had to get rid of him real quick so Katniss could be with Peeta, and that was the easiest way to do it.

However, I was very pleased that it didn't end "happily ever after." Despite how uneasy it made me feel, I was so glad that it wasn't a typical book. So many books end with this happy, all-is-right-with-the-world....but in reality, that's not the way it is. So maybe that uneasiness was intentional -- because that's the way it is in the world.

So yes -- I really liked the accurate picture it gave of the human condition and the whole political system in general -- that is: corrupt. That really, sometimes the only thing you can do in this life is not to let these things control or define you. It's never going to all work out in the world.

All in all, I think it definitely goes on my list of favorite fictional books. Even though it gave me this sense of despair at the prospect of the futility of the world in general...at the same time there's a renewed sense that fighting, even if nothing ever ends happily ever after...is worth it because of the people that you love.

So...fellow nerds? What have you to say? I long to hear your thoughts.

Thursday, March 29

The Hunger Games.

First off, this post is long overdue. Very long.

If it wasn't for the fact that school, speech, debate, and piano kept me from writing more frequent posts of this nature, you probably would have been as sick of me ranting about this as you were with Narnia. (what, you liked hearing about Narnia every other post? that's sweet of you to mention it.) (I hope you caught the sarcasm there...)

Secondly, I'm really not quite sure I have words to adequately describe the hunger games. I'm about halfway through the second book, and yes, I just started it 2 hours ago. (hurray for spring break!)

I love letting myself become completely absorbed in books. It's like...for a moment in time, you can escape your own reality and allow yourself to be completely sucked into another's. And right now, my mind is off somewhere in District 12...

Suffice it to say...I don't often find myself on the edge of my seat or audibly gasping while reading a book.

And the movie...definitely does it justice. I'll geek out later, if I feel up to putting it into words. Granted, it's a book that's way more conducive to screenplay adaptation than say...Narnia or Jane Eyre. But it's so good.

That's all I really have to say right now. Don't you love it when a book/movie is so good you don't know what to say? I think that's why people create art - to draw others into an alternate reality and leave them speechless...yet somehow hopeful in the prospect of their own.

Sunday, September 25

Books I've been reading lately.







The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to our Brains

by Nicholas Carr









The Reason for God

by Timothy Keller








Just Do Something

by Kevin DeYoung












Uncompromising

by Hannah Farver











My Utmost for His Highest

by Oswald Chambers















Mere Christianity

by C.S. Lewis












Thriving at College

by Alex Chediak











Humility: True Greatness

by C.J. Mahaney


Tuesday, March 22

IT'S TRUE!!!!

Rarely does something like this hit my blog moments after it hits the Narnia fan-base. But here it is.

Magician's Nephew is officially going to be the next movie.

That's right. Only a couple hours ago, The Christian Post published an article confirming that Walden Media was planning to make this movie next in the series. You can read our post at Aslan's Country HERE.

My first reaction: YES! WE GET ANOTHER NARNIA MOVIE!
My second reaction: NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.

I really really really really want to see Silver Chair made. I think it has fabulous potential if they market it correctly. It has a plot, contrasting characters, an evil guy too! It even has lessons, Aslan appears, and the opportunity to build characters is amazing.

While they're going to be able to market this as a prequel, they're going to have to be REALLY careful...with a lot of stuff. The Magician's Nephew has a magic to it that the other books don't - and while I could abide more plot changes in Silver Chair because of it's nature, I will not abide much for this one. They'd better get it right.

Hear that, Walden? You be careful this time. Aslan's Country is watching you.

What are your thoughts?

Saturday, October 30

It's that time of year again!

Narnia, tenth avenue north, purple, speech and debate....

Welcome to another post about something I love. (:

What should I do this year for my DI?

(vote on the poll)

For those of you not in speech (shame, you should be!) (just kidding) (well, sort of), a DI is a Dramatic Interpretation, and you basically act out a play with yourself, using material directly from a piece of literature you choose.

Last year I did it on Twenty and Ten. It was alright, but not nearly up to par with the rest of the stuff I was competing against.

Among this year's ideas are....
Pictures of Hollis Woods
I am in love with this book, but I'm really at loss as to how it would be interp'd. It's so....complicated. Not deep, like the next book. Just messy. =P

Till We Have Faces
I'm super excited about this one. It could be really good, but really, really hard because there's a lot of depth and quite possibly screaming and crying. Yeah. Dramatic.
The Tale of Despereaux
I'm not quite sure how I would do this, but I love the lesson/moral/simple depth/innocence of this book. It's sweet, and can be really dramatic if you make it.

Any other ideas? ::hopeful smile::