Chicks on Lit

Written by and for women who read books other than romance novels. And like them.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Check This Out. . .

"Pulp Fiction Week" At Slate

Do all y'all have any recommended summer reading?

Please share your favorite beach books, cool books for hot nights, light-reading and everything in between.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Interim Post - Current Recommendations

While we wait for everyone to sign up, do their first "test-posts" and start our discussion during the week of June 25th, I'd like to summarize our recent recommendations so we have a group of books from which we might draw for our next "assignment" or just to read in-between.

(1) My Sister's Keeper by Jodi Picoult (recommended by clodia, below)
(2) The Plot Against America by Philip Roth (recommended by me, to everyone I meet)
(3) Night (Oprah's Book Club version; new translation from the French) by Elie Weisel (recommended by me, to everyone who will listen)
(4) Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister by Gregory Maguire (recommended by me, because I love retellings of favorite stories)

Got any more recommendations? E-mail us!

Thursday, May 18, 2006

First Assignment - Memoirs of a Geisha

OK, I wanted to wait for the other people to join, but I think that they probably got lost in the instructions from Blogger, so I will try sending to them again.

We have all read Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden. By now, the film is on DVD, so it's easily accessible, whether we rent or buy, to view and re-view to get our thoughts in place.

This assignment is not aiming for a "compare and contrast the differences from the book to the film" discussion, rather I'm hoping that using the book as a lens through which we might "read" the film, what are the most intriguing ways in which the story was altered/compacted/expanded, etc., because of the limitations of a theatrical film release, rather than another option, like a miniseries on TV/cable, art-house film or complete departure except for names film version.

What are your reactions, insights, etc., to both? Does the film make the book carry less weight? Are you still experiencing the same emotions when you "read" either work? Do they serve as companion pieces or contrasting, stand-alone works?

In addition, if you have the opportunity to view the DVD, please feel free to add your comments about the "extras" and what kind of an impact they have on your overall view of the film as interpretation of the novel. Do they enhance or detract from the "magic" of movie-making, or do they give you a better view into the heads of the production company (actors, director, choreographer, composer/orchestra, etc.)?

With Memorial Day weekend coming up, we may actually have some big chunks of time to read, view, write and review/re-view/re-read our works before we head back to work. That being said, I'm still allowing us a month to finish because we're all busy people.

First postings on this "assignment" should appear during the week of June 25th.

Fascinating

I'm feeling that this Slate feature, Blogging the Bible, will be incredibly enlightening to a great many readers around the web. And it's also funny and insightful, in a quasi-reverent sort of a way, kind of like revisiting a favorite book, and writing about all the stuff you missed when you read it the first time.

Mr. Plotz is having a lot of fun with this and I am having a lot of fun reading it and almost as much fun remembering that I can read the Text itself (kindly provided by Mr. Plotz as links, I think to the KJV online) amidst his commentary.

Keep it up!

(This post has been copied from my personal blog because I feel that it's relevant to both sites.)