Sunday Post #83 – 03/19/2023

Sunday Post

The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by
Kimba @ Caffeinated Book Reviewer.
It’s a chance to share news.
A post to recap the past week on your blog,
showcase books and things we have received.
Share news about what is coming up
on your blog
for the week ahead.
See rules here: Sunday Post Meme

*** 

This post also counts for

Sunday Salon      Mailbox Monday2

 It's Monday! What Are You Reading2  IMWAYR  WWW Wednesdays 2

#SundayPost #SundaySalon
#MailboxMonday #itsmonday #IMWAYR
#WWWWednesday #WWWWednesdays

Click on the logos to join the memes

Nothing really special this week, except I am happy I managed to find the time, in the midst of lots of hours of teaching (French, online), to finish the lecture I’ll be giving to the sisterhood at my church on March 25.
And one result of exhaustion is reading more manga and comics!

I only posted once since last Sunday:

📚JUST READ/LISTENED TO 🎧 

Arvo Pärt_Out of Silence

📚 Arvo Pärt: Out of Silence,
by Peter C. Bouteneff
Published in 2015
231 pages
Nonfiction / Biography / Music / Eastern Orthodoxy

This was really excellent.
I really enjoyed how the author closely connected Arvo’s art with Orthodox theology.
Though his section of tintinnabuli could have been a bit clearer.
I discovered so many layers in his music I didn’t know were there.
Definitely making me want to relisten to so many pieces.
I wrote a review, with excerpts.

Éclipses japonaises📚 Éclipses japonaises,
by Éric Faye
2016
240 pages
Historical fiction

I finished this one late Saturday night, so I haven’t had time to write a review.
This is an excellent and quite eye-opening historical novel focusing on (mostly Japanese) people kidnapped and taken to North Korea, to use them as teachers to teach Korean spies to speak and behave as real Japanese people.
And possibly to perform some “special missions.”
This is very good, and it confirms I need to read more books by the author of Nagasaki.

Department of Mind Blowing Theories

📚 Department of
Mind-blowing Theories,

by Tom Gauld
2020
160 pages
Comics / Humor/ Science

This author/illustrator is absolutely amazing!
This time, this is not about authors/books/editors, but about science, all kinds of sciences, and all kinds of invention.
It’s both so hilarious and so smartly done, plus the illustrations are fabulous.
Very neat and detailed, the type of art I really enjoy.

Baking With Kafka

 

📚 Baking With Kafka,
by Tom Gauld
2017
160 pages
Comics / Humor/ Book about books

Maybe I like this volume slightly less than the others, because it’s not on one particular theme. And I’m afraid there are a few pages I actually didn’t understand.
Still, it’s always great to open a book by Tom Gaud: I love his humor (here on books, pop culture, and various themes) and his beautiful art is totally on target for the messages he wants to convey.
This is the kind of books I would love to own and revisit often, but I’m fortunate that my public library is walking distance from my house!
If you want to give a beautiful and smart book, Tom’s books are gold, lol.

Astra lost in Space 5

 

📚 Astra Lost in Space, #5
by Kenta Shinohara
彼方のアストラ 5
was originally published in 2018
Translated from the Japanese by
Adrienne Beck
12/4/2018, by VIZ Media LLC
288 pages
Manga / Science-fiction

Oh wow, this was a fabulous series.
I really enjoy all the events, discoveries, revelations of the last volume, and how things turned out at the end.
This is a very positive series, illustrating the difficult stages of growing up, but how a group of friends can stick together to make it eaier and even enjoyable – even if some pain is involved.
It’s also about finding one’s own identity, and learning to think – which may imply not always taking for granted what adults have told us.
There are very few books these days inviting people to think, this was refreshing.
There’s also the hope that newer generations could find better solutions to major problems than what previous generations did.
I also loved all the scifi and scientific details.
My only regret: this is already the last book in the series.
Shinohara says it’s the first time he writes scifi manga, he should definitely keep going, plus the last pages make me hope more discoveries could be in store for at least a couple of the main characters.

What's Michael Fatcat collection 1📚  What’s Michael?:
Fatcat Collection Volume 1,
by Makoto Kobayashi
Volumes 1-6
originally published 1990-2000
Translated from the Japanese by
Alan Gleason &  Hisashi Kotobuki
2/25/2020, by Dark Horse Manga
528 pages
Manga / Cats / Humor

This is a great collection of the first 6 volumes of the What’s Michael? manga series – though this collection is not presented in the usual manga manner, in the sense that you read it as a Western book, from left to right.
It’s full of hilarious details on cats’ personalities and quirky behavior, and common scenes for cat owners.
There are really funny passages, like with these 2 tough Yakuza members: Yakuza K has a cat, but works hard to hide the fact from his rival Yakuza M, for fear of looking too weak or sentimental.
The drawings are so well done, very detailed and with clean lines.
Every cat owner should have this book!
I hope to be able to read volume 2 of the fatcat collection soon.

Not done yet with my long but fabulous current audio – see below.

📚  CURRENTLY READING/LISTENING TO 🎧 

Why Read the Classics📚 Why Read The Classics?
by Italo Calvino
Perché leggere i classici
was published in 1991
306 pages
Nonfiction / Book on Books

Hmm, I don’t think I have read any pages from this one this week, too tired I guess.
Though it’s really good
and I’ll definitely keep going.

I am currently reading the essay on Orlando furioso, an Italian epic poem by Ariosto (early 16th century).

L'Arabe du future #1📚 L’Arabe du futur :
Une jeunesse au Moyen-Orient, 1978–1984
(L’Arabe du futur, #1)
by Riad Sattouf
Published in 2014
158 pages
Available in English as
The Arab of the Future:
A Childhood in the Middle East, 1978-1984
French nonfiction / Graphic novel / Memoir / History
Reading with French student F.

Almost done with this one. Really fascinating to see the evolution of his father’s ideas, as he decides to take his young family back to Syria.
Some scenes of daily life are quite appaling!

The Arab of the Future, the #1 French best-seller, tells the unforgettable story of Riad Sattouf’s childhood, spent in the shadows of 3 dictators—Muammar Gaddafi, Hafez al-Assad, and his father.
In striking, virtuoso graphic style that captures both the immediacy of childhood and the fervor of political idealism, Riad Sattouf recounts his nomadic childhood growing up in rural France, Gaddafi’s Libya, and Assad’s Syria–but always under the roof of his father, a Syrian Pan-Arabist who drags his family along in his pursuit of grandiose dreams for the Arab nation.

 

Babel 🎧  Babel, Or the Necessity of Violence:
An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution,
by R. F. Kuang
8/23/2022
544 pages
22 hours
Narrated by Chris Lew Kum Hoi
Fantasy / Historical fiction

OMG, I can see now why all the hype on this one, and definitely well deserved!
I love linguistics, and I almost made it my career, so there’s so much to enjoy for me in this book.
I love all the explanations, examples between languages, and data on research.
The author did an awesome job at finding a fantasy element that would fit with languages and with world history – here the growth and decline of the Birtish Empire. A very brilliant idea.
And the characters are so well described, you can’t but feel with them.
I’m glad I decided to listen to it, the narrator Chris Lew Kum Hoi is excellent, plus other voices insert words pronounced correctly in various foreign languages. This is unusual in an audio production and so so refreshing!

📚  BOOK UP NEXT 📚 

Les trois mousquetaires📚 Les trois mousquetaires,
by Alexandre Dumas
1844
896 pages
Historical fiction
I’ll be reading it with French student E.
It counts for The Classics Club

I read this novel a few decades ago, and at this point, I was actually not considering rereading it.
But my French student E. thought it would be good for her to read it, as she bumped into so many references to this novel.
I’m actually delighted to revisit it with her!

“Alexandre Dumas’s most famous tale— and possibly the most famous historical novel of all time.
This swashbuckling epic of chivalry, honor, and derring-do, set in France during the 1620s, is richly populated with romantic heroes, unattainable heroines, kings, queens, cavaliers, and criminals in a whirl of adventure, espionage, conspiracy, murder, vengeance, love, scandal, and suspense.
Dumas transforms minor historical figures into larger- than-life characters: the Comte d’Artagnan, an impetuous young man in pursuit of glory; the beguilingly evil seductress “Milady”; the powerful and devious Cardinal Richelieu; the weak King Louis XIII and his unhappy queen—and, of course, the three musketeers themselves, Athos, Porthos, and Aramis, whose motto “all for one, one for all” has come to epitomize devoted friendship. With a plot that delivers stolen diamonds, masked balls, purloined letters, and, of course, great bouts of swordplay, The Three Musketeers is eternally entertaining.”

📚  LAST BOOK ADDED TO MY GOODREADS TBR 📚 

 

Fenêtres sur le Japon

📚 Fenêtres sur le Japon : ses écrivains et cinéastes, by Éric Faye
2021
330 pages
Nonfiction

I did mention above how I definitely wanted to read more books by Faye.
So I added this one to my TBR: a portrait of old and new Japan, through its famous authors and movies. Perfect for me.

📚 MAILBOX MONDAY 📚 

A History of the Island

📚 A History of the Island, by Eugene Vodolazkin
Оправдание Острова
was first published in 2020
Translated from the Russian by Lisa C. Hayden
To be published on May 23, 2023 by Plough Publishing
320 pages
Historical fiction

I enjoyed a lot Laurus, so when I discovered there was a type of sequel, to be soon published in English, and that it was available through Netgalley, I didn’t hesitate.
My thanks to the publisher!

“Monks devious and devout – and an age-defying royal pair – chronicle the history of their fictional island in this witty critique of Western civilization and history itself.
Eugene Vodolazkin, internationally acclaimed novelist and scholar of medieval literature, returns with a satirical parable about European and Russian history, the myth of progress, and the futility of war.
This ingenious novel, described by critics as a coda to his bestselling Laurus, is presented as a chronicle of an island from medieval to modern times. The island is not on the map, but it is real beyond doubt. It cannot be found in history books, yet the events are painfully recognizable. The monastic chroniclers dutifully narrate events they witness: quests for power, betrayals, civil wars, pandemics, droughts, invasions, innovations, and revolutions. The entries mostly seem objective, but at least one monk simultaneously drafts and hides a “true” history, to be discovered centuries later. And why has someone snipped out a key prophesy about the island’s fate?
These chronicles receive commentary today from an elderly couple who are the island’s former rulers. Prince Parfeny and Princess Ksenia are truly extraordinary: they are now 347 years old. Eyewitnesses to much of their island’s turbulent history, they offer sharp-eyed observations on the changing flow of time and their people’s persistent delusions. Why is the royal couple still alive? Is there a chance that an old prophecy comes to pass and two righteous persons save the island from catastrophe?
In the tradition of Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose, Julian Barnes’s A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters, and Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant, Vodolazkin is at his best recasting history, in all its hubris and horror, by finding the humor in its absurdity. For readers with an appetite for more than a dry, rational, scientific view of what motivates, divides, and unites people, A History of the Island conjures a world still suffused with mystical powers.

Please share what books you just received at Mailbox Monday

📚📚📚

HAVE YOU READ ANY OF THESE BOOKS?
HOW WAS YOUR WEEK?
BE SURE TO LEAVE THE LINK TO YOUR POST

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Sunday Post #82 – 03/12/2023

Sunday Post

The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by
Kimba @ Caffeinated Book Reviewer.
It’s a chance to share news.
A post to recap the past week on your blog,
showcase books and things we have received.
Share news about what is coming up
on your blog
for the week ahead.
See rules here: Sunday Post Meme

*** 

This post also counts for

Sunday Salon      Mailbox Monday2

 It's Monday! What Are You Reading2  IMWAYR  WWW Wednesdays 2

#SundayPost #SundaySalon
#MailboxMonday #itsmonday #IMWAYR
#WWWWednesday #WWWWednesdays

Click on the logos to join the memes

This has been the most unusual reading week:

  • I DNFed a long classic that I enjoyed a lot and for which I wrote a fairly long review
  • I DNFed another book – the last book of a series I enjoyed a lot a few years ago
  • I read the weirdest maze-book ever!
  • I was starting a new audiobook when I received an audiobook I had reserved a long time ago through my public library, so I had to put book a) on the back-burner to listen to book b), the new arrival

I posted three times since last Sunday:

📚JUST READ/LISTENED TO 🎧 

The Fifth Rule of Ten📚 The Fifth Rule of Ten
(Tenzing Norbu Mysteres #5),
by Gay Hendricks and Tinker Lindsay
2016
384 pages
Mystery

I had really enjoyed the first 4 books of this series: you don’t often meet a detective who is a former Buddhist monk, and uses some of his wisdom to solve cases.
“Be mindful, both making and keeping commitments, that they be springboards to liberation, instead of suffering. That’s the Fifth Rule of Ten.
I realized I had never read the last book in the series so I set to do it.
But looks like I am in another mood, and this didn’t really work for me this time.
The beginning has a lot going on, with not a clear direction.
So I decided to stop. But I encourage you to read the first volumes!

Astra Lost in Space #4

 

📚 Astra Lost in Space, #4
by Kenta Shinohara
彼方のアストラ 3
was originally published in 2017
Translated from the Japanese by
Adrienne Beck
9/4/2018, by VIZ Media LLC
240 pages
Manga / Science-fiction

OMG, there’s so much in there, and so many revelations!
The big ones are well done, they go perfectly with the period and the theme.
We meet another character, and the revelations on what’s common to all the characters is awesome!
So many surprises, to the very end of the book!
I can’t wait to go pick up book 5 at my library. Too bad there are not more books in this series, I wish it were a longer series, as many mangas are.
I can’t say much to avoid spoilers, anyway you really need to read the books in order.
There are some really great vibes in this series, and how through adversity, the group becomes more and more a family, definnitely in this one.

Maze📚  Maze:
Solve the World’s Most Challenging Puzzle,
by Christopher Manson
1985, by Owl Books
96 pages
Puzzle book / mystery

I saw a reference of this in a book I recently read Rouvrir le roman – I think that’s where I read about it.
A narrator (the author as a new Daedelus?) is guiding you though his maze/labyrinth.
The book (landscape format) has 45 sets of pages: with a story on the left and an illustration on the right.
The illustrations are all in the same style, gorgeous drawings with lots of details.

Now, this is not your usual novel. In fact, starting from page 1, you are supposed to find clues, both in the text and the image, to figure what page to go to next (there are several numbers on each illustration).
The goal is to end up on page 45 and make it back to page 1 in as few moves as possible.
And there’s also a riddle to be found, and hen solved!
Originally, there was a big prize money for the winners when the book was published in 1985.
Each page story is written in such a way that the sentence going from one page to whatever over page makes sense. And depending on what journey you take, you end up with many versions of the story.

I had an idea where to go after page 1.
I was curious, so I looked online – there are forums of people totally obsessed with this book, very very serious stuff!
So I went there and of course discovered I had been oh so wrong about my choice.
It also took me a while to understand all the clues pointing in the right direction. I was like, wow, could I have found THAT!!
Obviously I’m not smart and logic enough to do the journey, and I ended up reading the story by turning the pages in chronological order from 1 to 45.

This is a very fascinating endeavor, showing that novels can have so many formats and variations.
With it, you can basically have your own Escape Room at home, and this will keep you busy for hours and hours. Good luck!

Fable Comics

 

📚 Fable Comics,
edited by Chris Duffy
2015, by First Second
124 pages
Graphic-novels/comics/fables

This is a fascinating collection of 28 famous fable retellings, by 26 different artists. I found it because I really enjoy Tom Gauld (see a nice example here), and he has one fable in this collection.
Most fables are actually originally from Aesop, but there are some also from Indian or Japanese tradition.
I love the concept and the result.
The only reason I didn’t give it 5 stars is that I found the art quality of some cartoons not too good. But some, like Gauld’s of course, are fabl-ulous.

This past week, I also finished a book on Orthodox spirituality. See my notes:
Book Notes on The Song of Tears: An Essay on Repentance based on the Great Canon of St Andrew of Crete, by Olivier Clément

The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman🎧 The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman,
by Laurence
Sterne
1767
735 pages
21H58
Literary fiction / Humor
It counts for The Classics Club

Alas, I had to stop, after listening to 15% of the work (that is about 3H30 out of 22 hours, and an equivalent of 110 pages out of 735 pages).
But what I listened to enabled me to appreciate the originality of the book and its qualities.
Check my review
(yes for once I wrote a long review of a book I DNFed!) to see why it’s an important book.

📚  CURRENTLY READING/LISTENING TO 🎧 

Why Read the Classics📚 Why Read The Classics?
by Italo Calvino
Perché leggere i classici
was published in 1991
306 pages
Nonfiction / Book on Books

Slowly plodding along.
This was another exhausting week, so I didn’t read as much as I wanted of this one, as it requires a bit more of effort – am reading it in Italian.
After the essays on antique literature, I’m now in la Renaissance. I read the essay on Tirant lo Blanc, a chivalric roamnce published in 1490 – Valencian literature. It has interesting parallels with Don Quijote.
And I am now in the one on Orlando furioso, an Italian epic poem by Ariosto (early 16th century).

Arvo Pärt_Out of Silence📚 Arvo Pärt: Out of Silence,
by Peter C. Bouteneff
Published in 2015
231 pages
Nonfiction / Biography / Music / Eastern Orthodoxy

Slowly but surely going ahead with this one as well.
The author now shows how new music emerged from Pärt‘s years of silence, and he parallels that to theological dimensions of silence.
Good meaty stuff!

“Listeners often speak of a certain mystery in the way that Arvo Pärt evokes spirituality through his music, but no one has taken a sustained, close look at how he achieves this. Arvo Pärt: Out of Silence examines the powerful interplay between Pärt’s music and the composer’s own deep roots in the Orthodox Christian faith—a relationship that has born much creative fruit and won the hearts of countless listeners across the globe.”

L'Arabe du future #1

📚 L’Arabe du futur :
Une jeunesse au Moyen-Orient, 1978–1984
(L’Arabe du futur, #1)
by Riad Sattouf
Published in 2014
158 pages
Available in English as
The Arab of the Future:
A Childhood in the Middle East, 1978-1984
French nonfiction / Graphic novel / Memoir / History
Reading with French student F.

Now the author, as a young boy of 4, has arrived in Syria, where his dad has finally decided to return, counting on his family’s support. He is shocked however to see the state and evolution of his country and its politics.
I am curious to see how things are going to go from there, especially for the author’s French mother.

The Arab of the Future, the #1 French best-seller, tells the unforgettable story of Riad Sattouf’s childhood, spent in the shadows of 3 dictators—Muammar Gaddafi, Hafez al-Assad, and his father.
In striking, virtuoso graphic style that captures both the immediacy of childhood and the fervor of political idealism, Riad Sattouf recounts his nomadic childhood growing up in rural France, Gaddafi’s Libya, and Assad’s Syria–but always under the roof of his father, a Syrian Pan-Arabist who drags his family along in his pursuit of grandiose dreams for the Arab nation.

Éclipses japonaises

 

📚 Éclipses japonaises,
by Éric Faye
2016
240 pages
Literary fiction

This is the random book from the titles I added to my TBR last month. Click here to read in the introduction of the post what I am talking about.

I read Nagasaki by the same author a few years ago, and gave it “5 Eiffel Towers”! So I thought to try this one.

I like the fluidity of the narrative, and the mystery aspect, as it will probably take most of the book to fgure out how characters are connected.
I’m now with Sae-Jin, this very intriguing brilliant young North Korean girl, who got recruted very early on, to help her nation thanks to her brains.
She was just sent to a very dangerous mission. 
As she was arrested right after her mission, she failed to swallow her poison pill, so she is in for interrogations.
The author nicely shows how little by little, she was basically trapped by her desire to help and honnor her country, into a very tough life she would never have chosen by herself, and how she tries hard to find a meaning to the fact she had sacrifice herself, to give up her boyfriend and family, in order to follow the government orders.
The political context is very contemporary, even though the book is set (so far) right before the South Korea 1988 Summer Olympics.

Éclipses japonaises hasn’t been pubished yet in French, so here is a translation of the official synopsis:
In 1966, an American G. I. mysteriously disappeared during a patrol in the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas. He is considered “missing”.
At the end of the 1970s, on the coasts of the Sea of Japan, men and women, of all ages and from all walks of life, vanished. Among them, a schoolgirl who came home alone from school, an archaeologist who was about to post her thesis, and a future nurse who wanted to buy an ice cream.
“Hidden by the gods”, as they say in Japanese.These victims left no trace, not a clue, thus puzzling the investigators. One by one, the cases got closed, the families left to incomprehension, and the disappeared  poeple forgotten.
In 1987, Korean Air Flight 858 exploded in midair. One of the terrorists, who got off the plane during a stopover, was arrested. She spoke in perfect Japanese. However, the police eventually identified a spy who came straight from North Korea.
Twenty-five years later, the Japanese “hidden by the gods” reappeared like ghosts, in the lands of Kim Jong-un.
Then, it is the turn of the G. I. to reappear in a North Korean propaganda TV movie, where the CIA saw him playing the role of a hated American.
Are all these cases related?

Babel 🎧  Babel, Or the Necessity of Violence:
An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution,
by R. F. Kuang
8/23/2022
544 pages
22 hours
Fantasy / Historical fiction

I was going to retry in audio a classic scifi that didn’t work for me years ago (The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy – what?? yes, I know!), but that same day, I got news that it was my time to get Babel in audio through my public library. So I’ll keep Douglas Adams for after.
So many of you read this one last year, it’s about time. I was hesitating at first because of the fantasy etiquette, as I don’t read much in that genre, but the linguistic aspect pulled me in.
So far, about 2H17 in, there’s not too much fantasy yet. Robin has just arrived in Oxford.
I like the descriptions and the main characters, smart Robin and mysterious Professor Lovell, so far.
The passages on books and languages are so fabulous. This woman knows how to write!
Here are a few lines I like a lot:

“That’s the beauty of learning a new language. It should feel like an enormous undertaking. It ought to intimidate you. It makes you appreciate the complexity of the ones you know already.’… ‘Every language is complex in its own way. Latin just happens to work its complexity into the shape of the word. Its morphological richness is an asset, not an obstacle.’
Chapter 2
Professor Lovell says that to Robin, as the boy is totally overwhelmed after his first day of heavy duty classes to learn both Latin and Greek

Inside, the heady wood-dust smell of freshly printed books was overwhelming. If tobacco smelled like this, Robin thought, he’d huff it every day. He stepped towards the closest shelf, hand lifted tentatively towards the books on display, too afraid to touch them – they seemed so new and crisp; their spines were uncracked, their pages smooth and bright. Robin was used to well-worn, waterlogged tomes; even his Classics grammars were decades old. These shiny, freshly bound things seemed like a different class of object, things to be admired from a distance rather than handled and read.
‘Pick one,’ said Professor Lovell. ‘You ought to know the feeling of acquiring your first book.’
Chapter 2

📚  BOOK UP NEXT 📚 

Kallocain📚 Kallocain,
by Karin Boye
1940
193 pages
Dystopia / science-fiction

I’ll be reading it for The #1940Club
It counts for The Classics Club

“This is a novel of the future, profoundly sinister in its vision of a drab terror. Ironic and detached, the author shows us the totalitarian World-state through the eyes of a product of that state, scientist Leo Kall. Kall has invented a drug, kallocain, which denies the privacy of thought and is the final step towards the transmutation of the individual human being into a “happy, healthy cell in the state organism.” For, says Leo, “from thoughts and feelings, words and actions are born. How then could these thoughts and feelings belong to the individual? Doesn’t the whole fellow-soldier belong to the state? To whom should his thoughts and feelings belong then, if not to the state?”
As the first-person record of Leo Kall, scientist, fellow-soldier too late disillusioned to undo his previous actions, Kallocain achieves a chilling power and veracity that place it among the finest novels to emerge from the strife-torn Europe of the twentieth century.”

📚  LAST BOOK ADDED TO MY GOODREADS TBR 📚 

The Cat's Table

📚 The Cat’s Table, by Michael Ondaatje
2011
269 pages
Historical fiction

The only book I read by Ondaatje, nonfiction, disappointed me.
But Davida at The Chocolate Lady’s Book Review Blog convinced me to try this one.

“In the early 1950s, an eleven-year-old boy in Colombo boards a ship bound for England. At mealtimes he is seated at the “cat’s table” – as far from the Captain’s Table as can be – with a ragtag group of “insignificant” adults and two other boys, Cassius and Ramadhin. As the ship makes its way across the Indian Ocean, through the Suez Canal, into the Mediterranean, the boys tumble from one adventure to another, bursting all over the place like freed mercury. But there are other diversions as well: one man talks with them about jazz and women, another opens the door to the world of literature. The narrator’s elusive, beautiful cousin Emily becomes his confidante, allowing him to see himself “with a distant eye” for the first time, and to feel the first stirring of desire. Another Cat’s Table denizen, the shadowy Miss Lasqueti, is perhaps more than what she seems. And very late every night, the boys spy on a shackled prisoner, his crime and his fate a galvanizing mystery that will haunt them forever.
As the narrative moves between the decks and holds of the ship and the boy’s adult years, it tells a spellbinding story – by turns poignant and electrifying – about the magical, often forbidden, discoveries of childhood and a lifelong journey that begins unexpectedly with a spectacular sea voyage..”

📚 MAILBOX MONDAY 📚 NO BOOK THIS WEEK

Please share what books you just received at Mailbox Monday

📚📚📚

HAVE YOU READ ANY OF THESE BOOKS?
HOW WAS YOUR WEEK?
BE SURE TO LEAVE THE LINK TO YOUR POST

Sunday Post #81- 03/05/2023

Sunday Post

The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by
Kimba @ Caffeinated Book Reviewer.
It’s a chance to share news.
A post to recap the past week on your blog,
showcase books and things we have received.
Share news about what is coming up
on your blog
for the week ahead.
See rules here: Sunday Post Meme

*** 

This post also counts for

Sunday Salon      Mailbox Monday2

 It's Monday! What Are You Reading2  IMWAYR  WWW Wednesdays 2

#SundayPost #SundaySalon
#MailboxMonday #itsmonday #IMWAYR
#WWWWednesday #WWWWednesdays

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This past week was our first week of Great Lent – I’m Christian Orthodox, so that’s a thrilling but also intense week, with a special prayer service every evening. So less reading time.
On the weather side, we were supposed to finally get the major February snow we didn’t get this year. Twenty four  horus before, they were still announcing very high chance f getting 6 to 10 inches. But I guess the wind got stronger and pushed everything south. Result: not 1 flake! Which is really fine for me, lol!

I finished four books this past week, a spiritual one and two easy ones (plus finally my long audio).

I posted three times since last Sunday:

📚JUST READ/LISTENED TO 🎧 

The Image of the Virgin Mary in the Akathistos Hymn📚  The Image of the Virgin Mary in the Akathistos Hymn,
by Leena Mari Peltomaa
2001, by Brill Academic Publishers
242 pages
Nonfiction/Christian Orthodoxy/Orthodox liturgics

I am scheduled to give a conference to our church sisterhood on the Akathist Hymn – a very old and extremely rich Marian text, so I read this excellent resource on it.

The best study I have read on the Akathist!
The way the Finnish scholar proves the date of the work makes total sense.
I really enjoyed a lot how she highlights the choice of the epithets to show the role of the Theotokos in the plan of salvation.
The numerous references and excerpts of the Fathers in relation to the text are extremely helpful.
It really helped me discover so many aspects of this hymn I didn’t know, even though I’m very familiar with it, for praying it several times every year.
If you want to dive deeper into this traditional text, this is the book to read. It is a scholarly study, but the part dedicated to the meaning of each stropha is also very spiritual.

Astra Lost in Space #2

📚 Astra Lost in Space, #3
by Kenta Shinohara
彼方のアストラ 3
was originally published in 2017
Translated from the Japanese by
Adrienne Beck
6/5/2018, by VIZ Media LLC
240 pages
Manga / Science-fiction

Wow, this is getting better and better!
You can check my review of volume 2 here.
We are discovering a lot more about three characters in this one, especially about the teen who is the most mysterious of the bunch.
I like the variety of backgrounds among them.
And the planet they are now on is also very different from the previous ones they visited.
To go back to the teens, we are also slowly discovering more commonalities between them, but not yet enough to disocver what would be really common to all of them and might be the reason someone could be after them. Though I’m starting having some ideas.
It’s nice how the author shows their evolution, their maturity as they face exterior dnagers, and come to terms with their education and identities.
I had to check what’s going on for Luca, and discovered there are more people in this character’s case than I thought. No spoiler here, so no more details.
I thoroughly enjoy this series, alas there are only 2 more books to go!

Goliath📚 Goliath,
by Tom Gauld
2012, by Drawn and Quarterly
96 pages
Graphic novel / Biblical

I am a big fan of Tom Gauld. Well, could someone not be??
This is a lovely rendering of Goliath and David story (see 1 Samuel:17).
I really liked the backstory Tom Gaul came up with.
Here Goliath is presented as a poor victim of his own government. He is a secretary, not interested in war, not good at fighting, more like a gentle and awkward giant (nicely depicted as often too big for the squares of the comic format, often his head is not visible).
His leaders trick him into going and nagging at the enemy for many days. Goliath has really no desire, and no idea what’s really going on. And what could happen to him.
The background story makes the story very sad for Goliath. We often tend to be enthralled with David’s smart idea.

The art is gorgeous as usual with Gauld.
I like the brownish variations used in this book.
Really so well done.

I am a Cat🎧 I Am a Cat,
by Natsume Soseki
吾輩は猫である
was first published in 1905
Translated by Graeme Wilson and Aiko Ito
470 pages
Narrated by David Shih
21H50
Japanese literary fiction
It counts for The Classics Club

The synopsis highlights the fact that it “satirizes the foolishness of upper-middle-class Japanese society during the Meiji era”, but I think that most of it can actually apply to human foolishness and hypocrisy in general!
What makes the whole thing even more hilarious is that this is presented from the perspective of a cat, who enjoys listening to gossips.
The first part is the best, to my opinion, and more dynamically written. Parts are unequal in value, I believe, and interest. In some long passages, we even lose the fact that all is seen through the eyes of the cat.
Because of that, I don’t agree with people considering it a masterpiece. I think other books by Soseki are better, especially And Then; The Gate; The Miner)
The focus is definitely on the social satire of Japanese people of the time, on authors, neighbors, problems to find a husband for the daughters, though there are also lots of funny passages on what humans physically look like, obviously from a feline perspective!
There are fun passages on clothings, on public baths, on cleaning, on story telling, on teenagers.
Soseki’s descriptions are spot on!
Near the end, Soseki’s views on the rise of individualism and its consequences for instance on suicide and divorce are sadly quite proohetic (written in 1905!).
So the end, though sad, was to be expected.
David Shih is an excellent narrator, and he made the book fun to keep listening to, nicely highlighting the main charcaters’ quirkiness thanks to his variation in tones.

📚  CURRENTLY READING/LISTENING TO 🎧 

Why Read the Classics📚 Why Read The Classics?
by Italo Calvino
Perché leggere i classici
was published in 1991
306 pages
Nonfiction / Book on Books

Slowly (because my readng in Italian is still on the slower side) going through the 36 essays, each focusing on a different classic.
After The Odyssey, Xenophon (430-355 BC – The Anabasis), Ovid (The Metamorphoses), this week I read the one on Piny the Elder, and his Natural History, where for instance he proves that the animal most similar to humans is the elephant!
And the one on Nizami Ganjavi (1141-1209), considered the greatest romantic epic poet in Persian literature. I had never even heard about his name. 
There are so many classics out there, outside the usual Euroepean ones!
Calvino mostly talks about one of Ganjavi’s words, Haft Peykar, which means seven beauties, and is translated in Italian as Seven Princesses, as indeed the story focuses on seven princesses.

Arvo Pärt_Out of Silence📚 Arvo Pärt: Out of Silence,
by Peter C. Bouteneff
Published in 2015
231 pages
Nonfiction / Biography / Music / Eastern Orthodoxy

Wow, more int the meat now.
The author highlights Pärt‘s technique, for instance his “rule” for putting some texts (like the Creed) to music, with longer notes for the end of a sentence, etc.
I had no idea of this. And some texts are used in various languages (Latin, Greek, Slavonic, English, among others), so it cannot be obvious to me in all cases.
But even though we may not be aware of this when we listen to his music, we feel an inner structure and balance. So how this works on us at an unconscious level is quite fascinating.

“Listeners often speak of a certain mystery in the way that Arvo Pärt evokes spirituality through his music, but no one has taken a sustained, close look at how he achieves this. Arvo Pärt: Out of Silence examines the powerful interplay between Pärt’s music and the composer’s own deep roots in the Orthodox Christian faith—a relationship that has born much creative fruit and won the hearts of countless listeners across the globe.”

L'Arabe du future #1

📚 L’Arabe du futur :
Une jeunesse au Moyen-Orient, 1978–1984
(L’Arabe du futur, #1)
by Riad Sattouf
Published in 2014
158 pages
Available in English as
The Arab of the Future:
A Childhood in the Middle East, 1978-1984
French nonfiction / Graphic novel / Memoir / History
Reading with French student F.

I am curious to see how the author’s father is going to evolve from his idealism, and discovery of reality in his own country of origin.

The Arab of the Future, the #1 French best-seller, tells the unforgettable story of Riad Sattouf’s childhood, spent in the shadows of 3 dictators—Muammar Gaddafi, Hafez al-Assad, and his father.
In striking, virtuoso graphic style that captures both the immediacy of childhood and the fervor of political idealism, Riad Sattouf recounts his nomadic childhood growing up in rural France, Gaddafi’s Libya, and Assad’s Syria–but always under the roof of his father, a Syrian Pan-Arabist who drags his family along in his pursuit of grandiose dreams for the Arab nation.
Riad, delicate and wide-eyed, follows in the trail of his mismatched parents; his mother, a bookish French student, is as modest as his father is flamboyant. Venturing first to the Great Socialist People’s Libyan Arab State and then joining the family tribe in Homs, Syria, they hold fast to the vision of the paradise that always lies just around the corner. And hold they do, though food is scarce, children kill dogs for sport, and with locks banned, the Sattoufs come home one day to discover another family occupying their apartment. The ultimate outsider, Riad, with his flowing blond hair, is called the ultimate insult… Jewish. And in no time at all, his father has come up with yet another grand plan, moving from building a new people to building his own great palace.
Brimming with life and dark humor, The Arab of the Future reveals the truth and texture of one eccentric family in an absurd Middle East, and also introduces a master cartoonist in a work destined to stand alongside Maus and Persepolis.”🎧

The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman 🎧 The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman,
by Laurence
Sterne
1767
735 pages
21H58
Literary fiction / Humor
It counts for The Classics Club

Some years ago, I listened to My Great Books, an excellent lecture given by Salman Rushdie at Emory University, where he shares about the great books in his life. If you love classics, I highly encourage you to watch this video.
The first classic he mentions is The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, published in 1767 by the Anglo-Irish author Laurence Sterne (1713-1768).

I am starting it as audio. The beginning is quite funny.
We’ll see, I might need to switch to a writtn format later on.

“”Endlessly digressive, boundlessly imaginative and unmatched in its absurd and timeless wit.
Laurence Sterne’s great masterpiece of bawdy humour and rich satire defies any attempt to categorize it, with a rich metafictional narrative that might classify it as the first ‘postmodern’ novel. Part novel, part digression, its gloriously disordered narrative interweaves the birth and life of the unfortunate ‘hero’ Tristram Shandy, the eccentric philosophy of his father Walter, the amours and military obsessions of Uncle Toby, and a host of other characters, including Dr Slop, Corporal Trim and the parson Yorick. A joyful celebration of the endless possibilities of the art of fiction, Tristram Shandy is also a wry demonstration of its limitations.”

📚  BOOK UP NEXT 📚 

The Fifth Rule of Ten📚The Fifth Rule of Ten
(Tenzing Norbu Mysteres #5),
by Gay Hendricks and Tinker Lindsay
2016
384 pages
Mystery

If you are curious to see why I’m planning on reading this one now, please check my explanation here.

“Be mindful, both making and keeping commitments, that they be springboards to liberation, instead of suffering. That’s the Fifth Rule of Ten.
Private investigator and ex-Buddhist monk Tenzing Norbu is wrestling with commitments on all fronts. He and his fiancée, Julie, can’t seem to commit to an actual wedding date. Ten’s dropped the ball on a pledge to find his assistant Kim’s missing brother, Bobby. Even his dreams hint at broken vows. And now his best friends, Lama Yeshe and Lama Lobsang, are about to land in Los Angeles with a Tibetan entourage for an unexpected 10-day fund-raising tour, sponsored by the local Buddhist Temple Ten abandoned 12 years earlier. Obligations are piling on, and for the first time in his life Tenzing Norbu is finding it hard to breathe.
Then an anonymous cell phone voice taunts Ten as he waits for his best friends at LAX, a mysterious missive lands in Tenzing’s mailbox, and the bloody evidence of foul play on a Griffith Park trail points directly to him. Tenzing knows that something dark is afoot, and the ensuing series of ominous events and disconcerting clues pull Ten into a dark mirror-world of Tibetan Buddhist tradition. He joins forces with Yeshe, Lobsang, his ex-partner, Bill, and his hack-tivist buddy, Mike, to track down the Patient Zero of this epidemic of criminal chaos. In The Fifth Rule of Ten, our hero is forced into a life-and-death battle with a powerful shadow presence whose roots reach way back in time. Tenzing must commit to fully embracing his own past, or lose everything he now holds dear.”

📚  LAST BOOK ADDED TO MY GOODREADS TBR 📚 

The Disappearance of Adèle Bedeau

 

📚 The Disappearance of Adèle Bedeau (Georges Gorski #1),
by
Graeme Macrae Burnet
2014
252 pages
Mystery

“Manfred Baumann is a loner. Socially awkward and perpetually ill at ease, he spends his evenings quietly drinking and surreptitiously observing Adele Bedeau, the sullen but alluring waitress at a drab bistro in the unremarkable small French town of Saint-Louis. One day, she simply vanishes into thin air and Georges Gorski, a detective haunted by his failure to solve one of his first murder cases, is called in to investigate the girl’s disappearance. He sets his sights on Manfred.
As Manfred cowers beneath Gorski’s watchful eye, the dark secrets of his past begin to catch up with him and his carefully crafted veneer of normalcy begins to crack. Graeme Macrae Burnet’s masterful play on literary form featuring an unreliable narrator makes for a grimly entertaining psychological thriller that questions if it is possible–or even desirable–to know another man’s mind.”

📚 MAILBOX MONDAY 📚 NO BOOK THIS WEEK

Please share what books you just received at Mailbox Monday

📚📚📚

HAVE YOU READ ANY OF THESE BOOKS?
HOW WAS YOUR WEEK?
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