just reading

Lost Literature: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

I just love this. I heard on NPR this afternoon, that a previously unpublished chapter from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory has been revealed. With gems like the Vanilla Fudge Mountain and (my favorite) the Pounding and Cutting Room, we also get a glimpse at early characters such as Augustus Pottle, Wilbur Rice and Miranda Grope. Ultimately, scenes were cut as they were deemed too racy for impressionable young minds…such as this:

[after two vile little boys ignore Wonka’s warning, they jump into wagons that carry them off into an opening in the wall] “That hole,” said Mr Wonka, “leads directly to what we call the Pounding and Cutting Room. In there the rough fudge gets tipped out of the wagons into the mouth of a huge machine. The machine then pounds it against the floor until it is all nice and smooth and thin. After that, a whole lot of knives come down and go chop chop chop, cutting it up into neat little squares, ready for the shops.”

So good.

Thanks to The Guardian, you can read the chapter in its entirety here. And…we also get a peek at Sir Quentin Blake’s accompanying illustration (pictured below, courtesy of The Guardian).

Quentin Blake Charlie main illo

Do you have a favorite Roald Dahl book? The Witches tops my list.

What I’m Reading This Week – Chapter Seven

Book friends! It has been way too long. I have no excuse except to say that I’ve been exploring other passion projects and have neglected my first little passion of being blatantly bookish. Not cool. So, I’m putting it out into the universe and making a heartfelt pinky swear to myself to not let it happen again. We’ll see what happens. I make no promises.

I was going to get back into the groove of things by telling you about the book I’m currently reading…but that didn’t really seem fair. So, to make it up to you, thought I would tell you about ALL the books I’ve read since my last update. Just because I was selfishly neglecting my little corner of the internets, it did not mean I was neglecting to read. That’s the important part, right? Right?!?

So here it goes:

Book One. July 25. One Plus One // Jojo Moyes – Eh. While it was just fine for a fluffy summer read in Palm Springs, which is exactly where I started reading it, I ended up feeling like it was a waste of time. I was a fan of Me Before You (her “runaway bestseller”) but this just didn’t hit hard enough. 3 out of 5 stars

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Book Two. July 19. Saving Francesca // Melina Marchetta – It’s YA. I love YA. I did not love this book (sad face…I really wanted to love it). I had heard about it years ago and it kept popping up on my Goodreads recommends list. The last few chapters made up for a lot of the book because I thought they were really good…but hard to forgive the painfully long journey it took to get there (even though I read it in about a day and a half). 3 out of 5 stars

saving

Book Three. July 18. We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves // Karen Joy Fowler – I really, really loved this book. I had absolutely no idea what it was about (on purpose) and it completely surprised me. Totally interesting concept (albeit a little strange), well told. I don’t even want to tell you anything about the plot in fear that I’ll give something away. Just read it. 4.5 out of 5 stars

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Book Four. July 12. Americanah // Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie – This book is one of the highest rated books on Goodreads (4.22 stars with +20,000 ratings). It definitely was very, very good…but sometimes it felt like homework. Sometimes I was angry with the characters (which I’m totally fine with) but I sorta feel like this is one of those books that people feel like they need to rave about or they don’t feel smart/cool/good enough or something. But hey, I want people to think I’m cool. 3.75 stars out of 5

Americanah (1)

Book Five. June 27. Missing You // Harlan Coben – Just because I read everything of his and I needed something easy, this fit right in. It was just ok. 3 out of 5 stars

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Book Six. June 21. The Interestings // Meg Wolitzer – This book has gotten so much attention, I simply couldn’t stop hearing about it. It was already on my to-do list and then it turned into a book club pick. I really loved the first chapter. I was so excited about it. Young love, the yearning, a fancy artsy summer camp. Then it all went down hill from there. 2 out of 5 stars

interestings

Book 7. June 2. Eleanor & Park // Rainbow Rowell – So good. So sweet. So much talk about who they’re going to cast to play Eleanor and Park in the movie. I can’t wait. 4 out of 5 stars

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Book 8. May 27. Lexicon // Max Barry – I loved the concept of this super secretive linguistic school of spies (if you can even call it that) and I was totally into the insane plot and gobbled it up. What I didn’t love was the ending. Did I miss something? Someone! Please help me understand what the hell happened! 3 out of 5 stars

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(photo courtesy of My Subscription Addiction)

Book 9. May 17. Under the Wide and Starry Sky // Nancy Horan – When I first picked this book up I had no idea it was historical fiction about the life and times of Robert Louis Stevenson and his wife. Beautifully told. It made me want to go back and read all of his novels and I am still totally inspired by Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne. She was an amazing woman who led a truly adventurous life. 4.5 out of 5 stars

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Phew.

Read anything good lately?

On the List – May Edition

New month, more books. Here’s what’s on the list for May.

TheList_May

 

1. A Tale for the Time Being // Ruth Ozeki – I kept stumbling upon this book shortlisted for all these awards (like The Man Booker Prize). Finally bit the bullet and added it to the list.

2. Orphan Train // Christina Baker Kline – This was an NPR recommendation. OK, I’ll do it.

3. When a Crocodile Eats the Sun // Peter Godwin – Goodreads recommended it. Apparently I’ll take anyone’s recommendations these days.

4. The Skin Collector // Jeffery Deaver – The Lincoln Rhyme novels are some of my all-time fave thrillers. They really are that good, and smart.

5. A Visit from the Goon Squad // Jennifer Egan – So, I hated The Keep. I really did…ick. But, a girl friend of mine swears by this book and I promised I would pick it up. I think the time has come.

6. Eleanor & Park // Rainbow Rowell – This has been on my to-read list for a long time but with all the popularity of Fault in Our Stars and If I Stay…it seems to be buzzing again. I’ll just have to ignore her ridiculous name.

7. Geek Love // Katherine Dunn – Since I started reading Alice Hoffman’s new book, I was again reminded of this. I really don’t know how I missed it in the first place…everyone seems to have read it but me (and I hate that), so here we go.

8. The Weight of Blood // Laura McHugh – This was recommended for fans of Gillian Flynn…why not, huge fan of Gillian’s (but only Sharp-Objects and Dark-Places Gillian, not Gone-Girl Gillian).

9. Thrive // Arianna Huffington – I was lucky enough to hear Arianna speak at a recent Advertising Week event  (who is surprisingly hilarious, btw). Looking forward to reading her book.

10. Cutting Teeth // Julie Fierro – A story about 30-something parents coming together for a beach-house vacation on Long Island. Hmmmm, although I typically shy away from anything having to involve young children, people keep talking about this debut novel. I’m a sucker for good book PR so what the hell, I’ll give it a whirl.

 

Wanna see what was on previous months’ lists?

THE APRIL LIST

THE FEBRUARY LIST

 

 

Book Club: May Edition

Book Club time, yay!

Next up: Museum of Extraordinary Things // Alice Hoffman (classy cover, huh?). I’ve never read anything by Alice Hoffman before, and to be honest, probably never would have. This book caught my eye when it first came out because the cover intrigued me, but I never would have picked it up…but that’s just reason #147 why I love book club (ok, it’s really more like reason #6).

museum-of-extraordinary-things

I just started it and am already gobbling it up. Her writing is impeccable (I guess that’s why millions of people love her so much. I assumed it was because women of the late nineties loved cheesy movies about magic…and anything that starred these fabulous ladies). Not sure how much this will inspire great conversation at our book club meeting, but what the hell, it’s fun. And sometimes girls just want to have fun.

Last month: Advice to a Young Wife from an Old Mistress // Michael Drury

Last up was this little book that read more like a philosophical text than an eye-opening look at women’s sexuality in the sixties…and their presumed role in a marriage, the way I hoped it would. But…it really did make for an excellent book club meeting. We all had so much to talk about! For real. We talked more than we drank wine (sort of). We each had parts that didn’t sit well with us, we had passages underlined and dog-eared and we ultimately all had sections that totally resonated with us in our own relationships. Final verdict: it would have been a fascinating New Yorker article…not an entire book, even one as short as this.

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars.

  PREVIOUS BOOK CLUB POSTS:

Book Club: March Edition

Book Club: February Edition

Bestill My Heart, The Fault in Our Stars

I just finished reading Will Grayson, Will Grayson // John Green and was reminded just how much I love this man (John Green, not Will Grayson). If you’re a book lover than you know exactly what I’m talking about. If you’re not, than you should listen up. The Fault in Our Stars is one of the best books ever written. Ever. Seriously. While it is a YA novel, I promise you that you will get over it. It is beautiful. It is smart, and you will cry. You will remember lines from it and reply them over and over again in your head. And you will love it.

Now that the movie is coming out, I made this assumption that everyone knew about this book. Everyone had read this book. Silly me. I needed to be reminded that I’m a total book nerd, and only total book nerds think everyone else in the universe loves books as much as they do. A co-worker asked me if I had read #TFIOS (yes I just used a hashtag in a sentence, I’m even rolling my eyes) and I had to stop myself from gaping wide-mouthed and bug-eyed…but of course I had! Not only did I own two copies (one signed first edition, thanks to my amazing husband), specially handmade a cover for a gift, used quotes from it at our wedding and have since read all of John Green’s other books…but of course I had heard of it!

I definitely was not the first person to discover this book, nor will I be the last, but it truly is magical. As I said in my Goodreads review back in May 2012, “Devoured in mere days, yet will live with me for years.”

I love you, The Fault in Our Stars.

 

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Oh, and can I also say how much I love this poster designed by Lauren Schroer:

faultposter

…and these book cover re-designs? So cute.

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All I gotta say is the movie better be good.

fault_movieposter

 

What I’m Reading This Week – Chapter Six

This week I’m kind of eh about the book I’m reading. Don’t you hate that? I’m not going to give up on it because it comes from the most brilliant mind of John Green (and David Levithan). Yes, thee John Green. The incredible wordsmith of one of literature’s greatest book quotes ever…and probably only second to Nabokov in my book…but ya, it’s that guy. I’ve read all of Green’s other novels but for some reason hadn’t read this one, and a friend pointed it out to me the other day. Well, gosh darn, Will Grayson, Will Grayson // John Green was next on the list. The story follows two teen boys who paths unexpectedly cross and (probably) will change each other’s lives forever. Oh geez, I can’t believe those words just came out of my mouth…it sounds beyond cheesy. But you know what? This is YA, so it probably will be that cheesy. And I’ll love every minute of it.

willgrayson

 

Last week: The Leopard // Jo Nesbo (4 out of 5 stars)

I would have given this 4.5 stars if I could…oh, what the hell, I DO give it 4.5 stars. Probably my favorite Harry Hole novel yet. So sick and twisted I really didn’t see the end coming. The visuals were pretty amazing. I so wish some big Hollywood director would take on the challenge of making these into movies…if they even could. Although I always argue for starting at the beginning of a series, you could probably pick this one up first if you wanted to give him a whirl. You won’t be disappointed.

 

What I’m Reading This Week – Chapter Five

Have you read Jo Nesbo yet? Well, you should. I first discovered him a couple years ago as a recommendation for fans of Stieg Larsson’s Dragon Tattoo series. Although there are some similarities—these are set in Norway, Dragon Tattoo’s are set in Sweden, and both deal with brutal crimes—the comparisons stop there. The series stars the infamous police detective Harry Hole and are gritty, disturbing and complex. Some of the best detective writing I’ve ever seen. I’m totally addicted. I’ve read three in almost as many months and am about to be caught up. Uh oh, what am I going to do?

This one, The Leopard, is the eighth in the series and finds Hole returning from Hong Kong to be with his sick and dying father, only to be drawn into an investigation. The mysterious deaths of two young women found drowning in their own blood. Seemingly unconnected, Hole is convinced they’re acts by the same killer and is determined to uncover the truth…as he does. This one might be the best one yet.

Last week: What I Had Before I Had You // Sarah Cornwell (5 out of 5 stars)

I just really loved this book. Maybe it was because I was reading it while on vacation in Big Sur, maybe it was because I wasn’t expecting to love it so much, or maybe it’s just because it really was that good. But ya, totally worth the read.

 

On the List – April Edition

I had every intention of getting this blog post up at the beginning of the month…but, you know, life got in the way and the month has just disappeared. Just think, when I retire I’ll maybe actually be able to catch-up on my reading. A girl can wish…

But here’s my newest additions to the to-read list. I think I must have been in a “guilty” pleasure mood because it’s filled with easy-peasy thrillers.

TheList_April

1. The Luminaries // Eleanor Catton – Winner of the Man Booker prize, so why not?

2. Cut Me Loose // Leah Vincent – Promiscuous memoir about a young girl who was cast out of her super-Orthodox Jewish family…yes, please.

3. Runner // Patrick Lee – Because Lee Child said I should read it.

4. Police // Jo Nesbo – I’m addicted to Harry Hole! Honestly, just gobbling them up. So good.

5. The Lowland // Jhumpa Lahiri – I just keep hearing about this and needed to officially add it to the list. The Goodreads blurb starts, “Two brothers bound by tragedy…” Sold.

6. Lexicon // Max Berry  – A mysterious institution schooling on nuisances of language and influence. Sounds strange, but good strange.

7. Love Letters to the Dead // Ava Dellaira – Because Stephen Chbosky said so.

8. Frog Music // Emma Donoghue – I was such a fan of Room, I’m really excited to read her next novel.

9. The Encyclopedia of Early Earth // Isabel Greenberg – Although graphic novels are not always my favorite, I’m intrigued by this one. First, the author and artist is a woman (in a man’s world), and it’s about a boy traveling from the south to north pole where he finds his first, ill-fated, true love. Awwwww.

10. Shotgun Lovesongs // Nickolas Butler – The premise of small-town friends reuniting sort of reminded me of one of my favorite books ever, South of Broad. Plus, I like the cover.

Want to know what else I’ve been reading? Check out the February List.

What are you reading next?

 

What I’m Reading This Week – Chapter Four

Book friends! I’ve missed you! I’ve been so head’s down at the office that I’m behind on my reading…and the blog…and sleep…and having a life. But I guess that’s the trouble with being a high-powered middle-powered professional jeans-and-sneaks-wearing executive slave, right? But…I’ve come up for air and am really excited to tell you about the book I’ve been reading, What I Had Before I Had You // Sarah Cornwell. I can’t even remember where I heard about it (Daily Candy, perhaps?…and speaking of, can you believe DC is no more? I was shocked. And sad…sniffsniff), but I’m just loving it. Alternating between present day and a defining teenage year, we’re slowly uncovering the brutal truth of Olivia and her relationship with her erratic, beautiful and seemingly psychic mother. So far, so good.

whatihad.2

Last week: The Ocean at the End of the Lane // Neil Gaiman (4 out of 5 stars)

I really, really enjoyed this book. As I was saying from the last post, this was the first Neil Gaiman book I’ve ever read and it’s made me want to read more. American Gods is supposed to be amazing…maybe that will be the next one on my list. 🙂

Read anything good lately?

Book Club: March Edition

It’s that time again…Book Club time!

Next up: Advice to a Young Wife from an Old Mistress // Michael Drury

adviceyoung

I’m really looking forward to reading this. Written back in the sixties, it sounds super interesting and totally something I would never have picked up on my own (one of the best benefits of book club). Plus, it sounds like it will inspire some great conversation amongst us ladies, yay.

Last month: And Then There Were None // Agatha Christie

You may recall our last book club assignment was the incredible Ms. Christie. Although I had read this book many years before, I couldn’t remember whodunit…and, oh, was it fun. I had almost forgotten how much I enjoy reading Christie’s mysteries. They’re just so easy to slip into, and so satisfying since she’ll always tell you who did it and exactly how they did it…and there’s never any diddledaddling. As Mindy pointed out, “The first person died within the first 20 pages!” She ain’t messing around. Bring it on Agatha, bring it on.

Oh, and we played Clue. Yes, the board game. It was great.

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars.

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Book Club: February Edition