Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Book Review - The Man Who Invented Christmas

Les Standiford – The Man Who Invented Christmas: how Charles Dickens’s “A Christmas Carol” rescued his career and revived our holiday spirits

Though the holiday has passed, anyone who loves Charles Dickens in any season will enjoy this slim, but hearty, book about how the world’s most famous Christmas story came to be. Standiford, who says he intended “this volume to be a fireside pleasure of the Fezziwigian type, and not a formal work of scholarship,” gives us the social and personal forces that brought Dickens to write and publish A Christmas Carol. Chief among that impetus was Dickens’s speech to an audience at a kind of public library in 1843.

At the request of his sister who lived in that city, Charles Dickens came up from London to speak to an audience at the financially imperiled Manchester Athenaeum, which had a “library of 6,000 volumes, classes for the study of languages, elocution, and music, exercise facilities; and regular programs of lectures and debate” supported only by the donations of those who had pooled their resources to better themselves and their society. “‘A season of depression almost without parallel ensued,” he told his audience, “and large numbers of young men … suddenly found their occupation gone and themselves reduced to very straitened and penurious circumstances.’”

He ended his speech with soaring words. “The more a man learns, Dickens said, ‘the better, gentler, kinder man he must become. When he knows how much great minds have suffered for the truth in every age and time … he will become more tolerant of other men’s belief in all matters‘” and long after institutions such as this one are gone “the noble harvest in the seed sown in them will shine out brightly in the wisdom, the mercy, and the forbearance of [others]” To add to my delight Standiford goes on the describe how Andrew Carnegie later took these ideals to America to fund the building of over 3,000 public libraries so that others could follow suit.

And so, as he walked the streets that night" the author tells us, "a new story began to form.” Dickens returned to London and, as a friend’s letter stated, “’a strange mastery it seized him.’ He wept over it, laughed and then wept again, as bits and pieces swam up before him, including the vision of two children named Ignorance and Want …Tiny Tim and Bob Cratchit and Scrooge and Marley and all the rest, stamp themselves on Dickens’s imagination and that of the world forever.”


The book goes on to discuss the writing, publishing, distribution, piracy, theatrical exploitations and variants of the most familiar Christmas tale ever told and how Dickens's story reinvigorated Christmas celebration. Within two months of the book’s release, there were three unlicensed stage productions of A Christmas Carol in London in February of 1844, and eventually Dickens, who also acted in later productions, and performed public readings until his death at the age of 58, also had to deal with frequent American piracy of his works which international copyright law gradually made better for him.
A Christmas Carol resurrected his then waning career and his work become the enduring theme of Victorian age Christmas that persists to this day. While other books such as the many biographies of Dickens led by Peter Ackroyd or Norrie Epstein's The Friendly Dickens and Michael Patrick Hearn's Annotated Christmas Carol necessarily go into much more detail, Standiford’s “Fezziwigian” armchair tale delights and informs those who love the drama and motivations of literature and the persons who create it.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Good Grief by Lolly Winston

A young woman's life takes a profound, unexpected turn, when her marriage of three years is cut short by tragedy. A widow at age 36, Sophie slips into depression and her life falls apart as she struggles with the pain of losing her husband. Her once bright future darkened, Sophie turns to her best friend, and together they embark on a sometimes painful, sometimes humorous, journey of self discovery.

Ultimately this is an uplifting, emotional story of a woman who, after facing terrible adversity in life, finds ways to overcome heartbreak, anguish, and devastation to begin living and loving again.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Cage of Stars by Jacquelyn Mitchard


At age twelve Ronnie Swan witnesses the brutal killing of her younger sisters in the backyard of their rural Utah home. Strong faith provides Ronnie’s parents with the strength to forgive the killer of these two girls, but Ronnie cannot. Years pass and eventually she discovers that her sisters’ killer has moved with his family to San Diego. Still angry, Ronnie follows him there and begins a new life, determined to get revenge on this man.

The compelling plot, realistic characters and comfortable writing style make Mitchard's latest book a worthy read.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

The Modern Girl's Guide to Life by Jane Buckingham


Hey girls! If you're looking for a fun read with practical advice about being a "Modern Girl", take a look at this book. Inside you'll find information relating to decorating, cleaning, diet and health, finances, car maintenance, sewing, recipes and so much more. You're almost guaranteed to learn something new from this enjoyable, easy-to-follow primer and will wish you had checked it out earlier!


The author is the host of the TV series Modern Girl's Guide to Life on the Style Network and a contributor to Cosmopolitan, the New York Times Syndicate and Good Morning America.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Night Swimming by Robin Schwartz


Overweight Charlotte Clapp is told she only has one more year to live. Stunned by the tragic news, she robs $2 million from the bank where she works and escapes from New Hampshire to Los Angeles. While in hiding, Charlotte manages to buy a posh apartment in the Hills, unexpectedly lose weight and make a few good friends.

This first novel by Robin Schwartz is a fun and worthwhile read. It's not perfect, and you may not believe every scenario that's described in the story, but you will have an enjoyable time reading it.

Monday, March 12, 2007

Book review: The End of Iraq

Anyone interested in learning about what's going on in Iraq should read The End of Iraq. Peter Galbraith is one of the few people who has been involved in that hapless country from before the current Administration took over and has continued his involvement there.

Galbraith, therefore, has a fairly unique insider's viewpoint, and his insights, gleaned from his years of service, are quite starkly presented in this book.

Galbraith minces no words, whether regarding Saddam Hussein's intransigence and genocidal tendencies, or our government's short-sightedness and failures. Galbraith outlines, in a concise and quite readable manner, how Iraq's 3 ethnic and religious groups are ill-equipped to sustain a stable government, let alone behave as the first "democratic domino" for the region.

Galbraith's frank appraisal of Iraq's current instability is buttressed by his knowledge of the country's history, but more grippingly by his conversations and interviews of the Kurds, Shiites, and Sunnis he has interacted with over the years. His conclusions are so commonsensical as to beg the question: why would anyone think anything different could have happened once the US stepped in? (Galbraith answers that with conviction as well.)

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

The Girls by Lori Lansens


Rose and Ruby Darlen are conjoined twins attached at the head. Given up at birth by a teenage mother, the girls are raised by a nurse from the local hospital, Aunt Lovey and her husband, Uncle Stash. In the style of a dual autobiographer, Rose and Ruby narrate together to guide the reader through their unusual childhood experiences and unique adult lives.

Sweet, uplifting, memorable and heartbreaking, the reader is guaranteed to feel a multitude of emotions from the first chapter through the end of the book. It's about more than the plot of their shared lives. This novel is about the relationships of twin sisters, family, and friends.

This story will stay with you long after you've finished the last page. Be prepared. You won't be ready to let these girls go.

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