Archive for the ‘Female protagonist’ Category

Book review: Jane Eyre

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:Charlotte Bronte
Reading Level (Conceptual):Sophisticated readers
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Sophisticated readers
Genre:fiction, historical
Year of publication:1847

A difficult book; much, much sadder than I had remembered from when I'd read it to myself a very long time ago. It's about temptation and the definition of bigamy.

My daughter was really shocked by the way children (Jane Eyre and her classmates) were treated in the beginning of the book. She was horrified by the sacrifices that Jane felt required to make in order to resist temptation and preserve her good name.
I'm pretty sure that, although the book is fiction, the conditions it describes are ones that affected many women at the time depicted in the novel.
See also The Cider House Rules.
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Book review: Forsyte Saga

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:John Galsworthy
Reading Level (Conceptual):Sophisticated readers
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Sophisticated readers
Genre:fiction, historical
Year of publication:1918

Makes the case for either marriage for love or marriage for convenience, but that it's necessary to decide up front which it's going to be. Still relevant after all these years.

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Book review: Till We Have Faces – A Myth Retold

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:C. S. Lewis
Reading Level (Conceptual):Sophisticated readers
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Sophisticated readers
Genre:fiction, myths
Year of publication:1956

The legend of Cupid and Psyche is revisited in this beautiful but extremely sad consideration of the necessarily stressful interactions between humanity and its deities.

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Book review: City of Light

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:Lauren Belfer
Reading Level (Conceptual):Sophisticated readers
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Sophisticated readers
Genre:fiction, historical
Year of publication:1999

Kind of a Handmaid's Tale (without the explicit sex) that takes place in Buffalo, NY at the dawn of the 20th century.

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Book review: Empire Falls

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:Richard Russo
Reading Level (Conceptual):For grown-ups
Reading Level (Vocabulary):For grown-ups
Genre:fiction, school violence
Year of publication:2001

The best book about the relationship between a teenage girl and her father that I've ever read.

Great analyses of the teenage mindset and how bullying pervades society. Melodramatic scenes of horrific violence that are strongly foreshadowed early on.
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Book review: The Cider House Rules

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:John Irving
Reading Level (Conceptual):Sophisticated readers
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Sophisticated readers
Genre:fiction, historical
Year of publication:1999

Complex, heavily plotted, John Irving disquisition on how official rules/laws and unwritten norms are unequally enforced based on gender, social status, and other factors. In other words, it's about the politics and the realities of Making Hard Choices.

Unlike Jane Eyre and David Copperfield, orphans in The Cider House Rules are routinely well cared for and frequently give in to temptation (for good causes, of course). Irving bravely compares himself to these two, and to Dickens, and bravely proclaims the utility and necessity of lying (aka creation of fiction) in the face of unfair rules.
Once you finish reading The Cider House Rules, you will feel compelled to (re)read David Copperfield and Jane Eyre.
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Book review: Girl With a Pearl Earring

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Book review: The Mozart Season

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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\”Allegra Shapiro is me,\” says my daughter, who adores The Mozart Season. Granted, dear daughter, now 8, is not a 12-year old violin prodigy. But then few people are. In fact, there are actually few similarities between my daughter and Allegra. But the few there are are enough.

Both are intelligent, inquisitive, thoughtful, beloved children, children who are growing up in a world in which sometimes parents have to give their children away to save them. A world in which parents, no matter how loving, sometimes cannot save their children at all.

The Mozart Season is the story, told in the first person, of a young girl who comes to understand, deeply understand, the depths of good and evil in the world. This coming-of-age novel describes the process by which Allegra comes to cherish the eccentricities of her grandmother, (who is the daughter of a Holocaust survivor), her mother’s brilliant best friend (who lost her child and her equanimity in a dreadful accident), a street person (Mr. Trouble, who lost his brain to lead poisoning and his quality of life to an indifferent system), and Mozart’s Fourth Concerto.

My young daughter read The Mozart Season so slowly that my husband had to beg a special dispensation from our library. Allegra painstakingly describes the process by which she masters her violin piece. She collects challenging words, which my daughter wanted to master before she went on. Defining every single unfamiliar word in the book became an obsession. This mastery took time. \”I need to know what a delphinium LOOKS like NOW,\” my daughter cried. \”It’s a flower,\” I insisted. \”It’s time for bed. We can figure this out tomorrow.\”

The words of The Mozart Season flow smoothly and truly as if spoken by a precocious twelve-year old girl, but don’t let that deceive you. Parents who are reluctant to have their children think deeply about how evil in the world can destroy even the most ordinary family should steer clear of this one.

The virtues of The Mozart Season are those of The Giver or Ender’s Game, but the horrors it describes happened and do happen. Its matter of fact presentation adds to the power, and terror, of its message.

–Emily

Book review: Harriet the Spy

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:Louise Fitzhugh
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 12 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:Fiction, girl heroine
Year of publication:1964

My daughter initially resisted reading this book because the movie made such an awful impression on her. But she really enjoyed this story of a girl who "wants to know EVERYTHING" and gets into deep trouble for writing down what she knows.

Interesting slice-of-life of mostly upper-middle class children at school and play in Manhattan in the nineteen-fifties.
The sequel, Harriet the Spy: The Long Secret gets into all sorts of complicated topics such as menstruation, abusive-parenting, and the public expression of religious beliefs that my daughter did not find as compelling.
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Book review: The Last Samurai

Saturday, April 1st, 2006

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Author:Helen DeWitt
Reading Level (Conceptual):For grown-ups
Reading Level (Vocabulary):For grown-ups
Genre:Fiction, parenting
Year of publication:2000

This hilarious novel starts as a not-quite-five year old's mother gets so sick of answering his questions that she promises to teach him Japanese after he's read the Odyssey in the original Greek. Which he does.
Should be required reading for parents of gifted toddlers, but parents of gifted toddlers probably wouldn't have the time. An excerpt.
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