Showing posts with label British Literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British Literature. Show all posts

Sunday, March 8, 2015

In Celebration of International Women's Day

Here are Encyclopedia Britannica's 10 Women Who Changed Literature:

Anna Akhmatova 
Jane Austen 
Colette 
Zora Neale Hurston 
Emily Dickinson 
Alice Munro 
Toni Morrison 
Sappho 
Murasaki Shikibu 
Virginia Woolf

Friday, March 6, 2015


The Giving Book: A Review of the Library Book


 The Library Book, fitting in with my trend of loving to read books about books, is a collection of short stories and essays all centered on the theme of the importance of libraries.  The range of stories includes essays that describe the writer’s formative personal experiences in a libraries, essays on the politics of libraries, and creative short stories emphasizing the magic that is held inside a library for many people.  As a whole it is a strong collection of writing, but a few essays stood out as particularly apt in my mind.  The first piece that really caught my attention was Hardeep Singh Kohli’s story “The Punk and Langside Library”.  This tale took to heart one of the most important writing lessons I have ever learned: show, don’t tell.  Kolhi’s unexpected encounter with the punk teen demonstrates how not everything a library has to offer is contained in a book.  As a community meeting ground, libraries can also help to foster cultural understanding in the simplest of ways: allowing people of all backgrounds to come together and just be.  On the other end of the spectrum was the last essay prior to the afterword by Karin Slaughter.  Reprinted from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Slaughter’s article argued passionately that libraries are an essential element of freedom.  Interestingly enough, it is the only essay in the collection written from an American perspective.  This to me seemed a fitting way to end the book.  Because though it clearly has a different voice and setting (a refreshingly familiar one to an American reader) than the essays written by the British authors, its themes were identical and show the universal nature of the impact libraries can have.


But what makes this book special is not just the stories it contains but purpose behind the book itself.  Published in February 2012 by Profile Books in London, all royalties produced by this book go not the contributors, but to the Reading Agency, a charity based in England that works to improve libraries as a community resource and to encourage reading among both adults and children throughout the UK.  While I believe that reading any book is always personally empowering, it is always nice to know there is a measurable effect in the outside world as well.  For this reason alone, I would encourage people to go out and buy this book regardless of its quality.  Because readers don’t encourage others to read who will?

For more information about the Reading Agency check out their website at: http://readingagency.org.uk/


Friday, April 2, 2010

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

Many people are often put off by Austen because they think that it will be too difficult because she wrote in the 1800's. Yes, there are some language differences but not enough to make it impossible to understand for the average person. It does take a little bit more effort than the average contemporary novel, but it's well worth your time. Think of it as a precursor to the romance novels of today, but significantly more well-written. For those who love romance it is definitely a good in to more classic literature. Any Jane Austen novel is. I know it's cliche for girls to like Jane Austen but, hey, it became a cliche for a reason right? Give it a try and I think you'll be surprised. I know my mom was.

Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf

For those feeling they are up to some literary adventures one book that would be great to try, though, maybe not first is Mrs. Dalloway. Though confusing and difficult on the first and sometimes second read, it contains interesting bits and pieces if you can put them together. There are little stories woven through the larger story of the novel which are like mini episodes which are part of the whole. If you are in the mood for piecing together a puzzle, its definitely a good pick or even if you just want to feel smart. Either I would keep it in mind because Virginia Woolf is definitely a writer studied in English classes around the world for good reason.