changeling67: (Default)
I finished the Kim Noble book, very interesting.  i would have loved to have seen more of her paintings and maybe an explanation from each personality.  I seeming am picking up more biographies on artists. Long ago, I had one on Dali - recently I bought one on Tracey Emin, who interests me.  I understood the concept of the bed and definitely the tent, though I am a bit confused about her neon work. Not everyone's cup of tea, I know, but I appreciate her journey.

Two Christmases ago, Hubby bought me a biography of Roald Dahl, which was fascinating and now I have one of C.S. Lewis.  I am hoping to start the latter, as soon I have cleared the last of The Wide Sargasso Sea and made a proper effort with Fahrenheit 451.
changeling67: (Default)
widesargasso

I mislaid Fahrenheit 451, so I have read Wide Sargasso Sea. Bewitching book - I thought as I wasn't a Jane Eyre fan, that this would fall flat for me. Au contraire - Jean Rhys' descriptions conjure not only the Jamaican landscape, but the decline of the western colonial rule and the tensions between the indigenous population and the white Creole. Displaced and conflicted, the culture has an impact upon the already-established fragility of Antoinette's family and their weakened mental state.  It is told in three parts via Antoinette, her new, unnamed husband (who is presumed to be Rochester) and the eventual return to England.

It is but an imagined prequel; it could be argued that Bronte's Jane Eyre is a Gothic novel, the Wide Sargasso Sea could be seen as a post modern portrayal of a much-maligned woman's life from a wholly different angle.  Countless Literary Theory documents have been written about this, mostly fem-lib, but it is an interesting plot twist on an old story. Well worth the read - I will resume Fahrenheit 451 (recently reclaimed from a pile of office junk).
changeling67: (Default)
It's been a strange day. I had to act out the part of Nora in A Doll's House but portray it differently than in the book.  Now, I am a bit too long in the tooth to play the coquettish type - but I had to play the Nora character as more domineering part and Steven (God Bless him - gangly 23 year old and so very sweet) had to play the part of Torvald differently and had to portray him as the down-trodden husband. Actually, we didn't do too badly; in fact, with a bit of polish, we may have been able to pull it off - but I am no drama student and I suspect, nor is Steven.

Anyway, I have had to use some of my student loan on yet more books (covers under cut for size).

A Doll's House by Henrik Ibsen )

Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys )

The Book Thief by Mark Zusak )

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