The Hillside Meditations Logo-JPEG



Archive for the 'Books / Reading' Category

All´s well - The Deathly Hallows

Posted in regular, Books / Reading on Sat, 4 Aug 2007 18:36:08 +0200 by Marchal

All´s well. So although I tried to read slowly and sparingly I finally reached the “close” of both “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” and the whole saga today. I was not one of the early HP fans, I started to read in 2001, when I bundled up for a weekend with the first three paperback volumes all at once and worked through them. I always thought that JKR had a problem sorting out for whom the books were really meant - children or adults? Somehow style and content and size of the books did not always match in my view - a children’s book in adult clothes or vice versa? Today I think that perhaps I missed the point that the books aged with their heroes - and so did the intended audience. HP has never been great literature - the prose is not refined enough, but all the books have made a good read. And that is true for the final volume, as well. Indeed, I think, it is one of the best in the series - at the end it reaches moments were it becomes as fascinating, gripping, dramatic, moving, epic as Tolkien’s LOTR. And, yes, I did weep at some moments at the end of the book and I was sorry to say Goodbye to all those who do have aquired places in my life over the years after all. I belong to those who would have left away the very, very, very end which I deem needless and a bit too soft and rosy and candylike, but perhaps this is some of the things targeted at a younger audience. All in all the Deathly Hallows is a worthy conclusion to a remarkably successfull series - and who ever liked one of the six books about HP published previously will have some very fine hours enjoing this last installment. Well done, Mrs. Rowling, well done.

Technorati Tags , , ,

Meta information for this post:

Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • No related posts

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Librarything.com

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading on Sat, 28 Jul 2007 21:43:00 +0200 by Marchal

    I am cataloguing the books I own - quite a lot of work, but Librarything.com helps a lot and seems a good place to store my list of books.

    My list (go to http://www.librarything.com/profile/cnrenner
    is a work in progress - it will take a few weeks to be completed.

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • No related posts

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Book Review: Josephine Tey´s The Daugher of Time

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading on Wed, 27 Jun 2007 18:44:17 +0200 by Marchal

    “Smile I can and murder while I smile” is not all that is to know about Richard III Plantagenet . Author Josephine Tey aka Elizabeth MacKintosh aka Gordon Daviot managed to write a sparkling little mixture between mystery tale and investigative history journalism, first published in 1951: The Daughter of Time , quoting Sir Francis Bacon` s description of Truth.
    “Inspector Alan Grant of Scotland Yard, recuperating form a broken leg, becomes fascinated with a a contemporary portrait of Richard III, which bears no resemblance to the Wicked Uncle of history”…”who killed the Little Princes in the Tower”? The story is exciting and enlightening (if like me you have known only Shakespeare’s version of the Wars of the Roses), the approach is novel (Scotland Yard detective turns historian out of bordedom) and I felt stimulated to do some more and deeper reading on English history.

    The book is a fine read as a whodunnit, although it takes some energy to keep your course among all those Edwards, Margarets, Elizabeths, Warwicks and Richards (no idea why the Birtish nobility could not choose among a greater variety of names to keep things clear). I spent some very pleasant evenings with this novel.
    Recommended reading afterwards (or before): Shakespeare’s Richard III , of course, but also the wonderful historical-romantic Richardian novel “The Sunne in Splendour” by Sharon Kay Penman and Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Black Arrow” . A good idea as a preparation before you start: Wikipedias entry on the Wars of the Roses - and do print out that “simplified family tree” of the English royal family that helps a lot indeed.
    First rate - A Da Vinci Code “Between the Red Rose and the White”!

    Technorati Tags , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • Book Review - Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J.K. Rowling
  • Book Review - Who Let the Blogs Out? by Biz Stone.
  • Book Review - Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad
  • Dan Brown` s Da Vinci Code
  • Easter Reading 2

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Fido! … or what?

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading, Weird on Mon, 13 Feb 2006 20:55:41 +0100 by Marchal

    dogs´ names bookcover

    I saw this book (the German version) in a local bookstore today. I think we do not yet have to fear for our world too much, should we?

    Technorati Tags , , , , , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • Google Ego-Search
  • Pen Pals

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Wild Books

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading, Weird on Sun, 5 Feb 2006 16:42:50 +0100 by Marchal

    Bookcrossing Signpost
    I am always a bit late for the fad of the moment, and with bookcrossing it seems to be the same. As I discovered today the term has already got an entry in the Oxford Concise Dictionary:
    bookcrossing n. the practice of leaving a book in a public place to be picked up and read by others, who then do likewise.

    There is a relating Wikipedia article , as well, which points out an analogy with the ornithological practice of ringing birds to track their movements and informs about formalized rituals and standards like “Official BookCrossing Zones, which are sometimes called OBCZs or OBZs and are located in places like Starbucks coffee shops, restaurants or other places where accessible to the public. These OBCZs refer to bookshelves placed there so that BookCrossers could catch or release books”. “Contact between BookCrossing members (called BookCrossers) is facilitated through forums on the website, email lists (many countries have their own email lists as well as a main international list), an unofficial “wish-list” system, local meetups and national conventions.”

    Lorcan Dempsey quotes from the Guardian: “The concept is finders-keepers meets interactive virtual lending library. The rules are simple. First take a book down from your shelf. It should be one you love. (Ideally, if you ruled the world you would make reading of this book compulsory.) Log onto bookcrossing.com and register. Print out a label and a number for your book. Release it into the wild. The person who finds the book will see the invitation to the website where they can log their find, eventually write a review and then rerelease the book themselves. In theory, as the book travels around, it should build up an online profile of reviews.”

    Elizabeth Lane Lawley points out bookcrossing for all bookworms´ dilemma - space for their books: “It’s been a great catalyst for cleaning up and cleaning out some of our possessions, and a lot of those are books that are long overdue for new homes and new readers.”

    Joe Kissel gives additional details : “I’m going to “set them free.” That’s the lingo used by members of a rapidly growing movement known as bookcrossing, which aims to turn the entire world into a library. “Bookcrossing is the brainchild of Ron Hornbaker, an entrepreneur and book lover who was running a software company when the idea came to him in 2001. After learning about Web sites that enable people to track the movements of other objects around the world, including banknotes and disposable cameras, Hornbaker imagined using a similar process for books. After less than a month of work, he and his wife turned the idea into a unique Web site called BookCrossing.com.”
    As for those comparing bookcrossing with book-napstering: “Some authors and publishers have expressed concern that if the bookcrossing phenomenon becomes too large, it could damage sales. But so far, just the opposite appears to be true. Participants frequently buy extra copies of their favorite books just to give away, and people who get excited about a book by reading glowing journal entries are much more likely to purchase it themselves than to go looking for it in the wild.”


    My two cents on bookcrossing: The idea is appealing. Sending out your books as a new way of “weaving the web”, like showing my photos on Flickr or posting my ideas in a blog, as a way to do something good - provide free books to others and not just random books, but some that I like and found worth reading -, as a way of Sharing with others with the additional bonus of being able to watch my books´ (hopefully) interesting fates and destinies, even as a way to make space for new books that I might (and will most certainly) buy and own, definitely has something to it. I like the idea!
    But as for actually giving away my beloved books? No way, sorry. I am going to buy new book shelves, I am too much of a collector and like living in rooms stuffed with books far too much. Having written this I gather that aquiring more and more stuff might be one of the bugs-not-features of my style of living after all.

    OK, I will reconsider bookcrossing, I promise. And keep an eye on the interesting related websites. In the meantime I have already found out that there acually are German support pages and lists of meetings and OBCZs in Germany. Shucks, I had hoped this was an Anglo-Saxon fad only…

    Technorati Tags , , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • Books I ordered today
  • Personalised Photo Books
  • Book of the Week - Project
  • Wanting so much…
  • All´s well - The Deathly Hallows

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Coffee Break

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading, Stories and Poetry (by myself), Amateur Haiku on Thu, 27 Oct 2005 17:20:56 +0200 by Marchal

    Mugs on the table
    Hot Java steaming from them.
    Heart and Mind refreshed.



    In the Haiku Handbook by William J. Higginson, which I received today I found this:
    “We know that we cannot share our feelings with others unless we share the causes of such feelings with them…Most haiku present dramatic moments the authors found in common, everyday occurences - small dramas that play in our minds…Being small, haiku lend themselves especially to sharing small, intimate things.”

    No, I am not fancying me as an artist :-) - it is just that at the moment I have developed a liking for this very short and small art form. So I try it out a little bit. OK?

    Technorati Tags , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • The Art of Good Coffee
  • How to react to Adversity
  • MP3
  • Blog Break
  • Personalised Photo Books

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Autumn Day

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading, Poetry on Sat, 8 Oct 2005 19:27:39 +0200 by Marchal

    One of my favorite poems by Rainer Maria Rilke - I just found English translations here :

    “Lord, it is time. The summer was too long. Lay your shadow on the sundials now, and through the meadow let the winds throng.

    Ask the last fruits to ripen on the vine; give them further two more summer days to bring about perfection and to raise the final sweetness in the heavy wine.

    Whoever has no house now will establish none, whoever lives alone now will live on long alone, will waken, read, and write long letters, wander up and down the barren paths the parks expose when the leaves are blown.

    Translated by William Gass, “Reading Rilke: Reflections on the Problem of Translation” (Knopf)”

    Technorati Tags , , , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • Autumn Sunbeams
  • Autumn Photos
  • Easter Wells
  • Veggieblogging
  • My New Motorbike

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Reading Program on Andalucía August - October 2005

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading on Wed, 17 Aug 2005 21:10:35 +0200 by Marchal

    I have got some interesting books on Spain and Andalucía which I am going to read over the next weeks - so here is my planned schedule:



    I am not sure whether I will really be travelling to Andalucía in October as planned (I think I will not, unfortunately - high costs, little time, danger of terrorism), but my reading program should teach me a lot about that area and I am lookung forward to it.
    I´ll keep you informed by posting book reviews :-)

    Technorati Tags , , , , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • Review: Musical Spanish
  • Creative Lists
  • (No) Ads on Hillside Meditations
  • Quote of the Day - Specialization
  • Books I ordered today

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    Book Review - Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J.K. Rowling

    Posted in regular, Books / Reading on Sun, 24 Jul 2005 22:18:23 +0200 by Marchal

    I just read the last lines about a quarter of an hour ago. I did not want to rush through the book and yet could not really wait to reach the end, reading speed increasing over the last two or three chapters.

    HP is NOT a series of great literature, no doubt, (no, this is NOT up to Tolkien or Terry Brooks or the likes - not that they wrote “great literature” either) but like all the volumes before HBP makes a good read, generates quite an amount of suspense and illusion (after some chapters at the beginning of the book that I found almost a bit boring) and even made me fight with a tear or two at the end.

    Somehow I had started out with a bit of aversion towards another volume in a series that made its author really wealthy without being too original - but after the first third I was once again seized by some kind of author´s magic that J.K.Rowlings is able to conjure after all.

    As for any message the book has you might have a look at Logtar´s review ; for me another - a bit doubtful - message of the whole series is its “secularity”: we have all kinds of creatures, but no mentioning of a creator, God and religion do not play a role, which leaves me a bit worried although I do not really share too many speculations as to the Potter books corrupting their readers - I rather think they are mirroring the increasingly secular character of our modern world (and I think THAT is a very bad and unhealthy thing, after all).
    Whether the Harry Potter series is gnostic in its philosophical basis is discussed by Anna Abbot.

    To sum up my HBP reading experience: if you liked HP 1-5 you´ll like 6 - and eagerly wait for the next (and final?) volume (which must have 1200 pages, no doubt, in oder to resolve all the open problems and questions, and tell us all we still want to know about the character´s ways and futures).

    PS: I would have liked to write a more detailed review, but I was afraid of finally spoiling things and so refrained.
    PS1: HBP is quite a lot (!) shorter than Order of the Phoenix was. I definitely miss the lacking pages and I do think that the distribution of the pages that are there is definitely a bit lopsided - too little school, too much time spent on the time before we arrive at Hogwarts.

    Technorati Tags , , , , , , , , , , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • HP and the Half-Blood Prince - copy arrived
  • All´s well - The Deathly Hallows
  • Easter Reading
  • Book Review - Who Let the Blogs Out? by Biz Stone.
  • Dan Brown` s Da Vinci Code

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia

    HP and the Half-Blood Prince - copy arrived

    Posted in regular, digicam photos, Books / Reading on Mon, 18 Jul 2005 21:06:20 +0200 by Marchal

    book cover Potter

    No, don´t worry, I am not posting any spoilers to the Half-Blood Prince , mainly because I have just only started into chapter two and cannot really spill or spoil anything yet. :-)
    No, seriously, I think not-posting spoilers is a question of fairness and politeness towards the readers of any publication - after all they should have the chance and the fun to find out about the plot by reading themselves.

    Fortunately I did not have to get in any kind of frenzy or have to wait in line in a bookshop in the wee hours to get my copy.
    Like the truely far-sighted long-term-planning no-nonsense individual that I am :-) I had pre-ordered my copy through Amazon an unbelievably long time ago and could just sit back and relax and wait for the post-owl to drop the book on my desk.
    The only problem: dropping day was Saturday when my practice is closed and my desk unaccessible even to the smartest and most determined of post-owls - and I was away on a wizard´s meeting vocational training . So the owl dropped the parcel with my copy at the post office and it was delivered by a plain and boring postman in a plain and boring usual way only this morning. Which was when I interrupted ongoing business in my practice, ripped open the parcel, took out the book, vanished with it in a secret room, took the photo above and started to read the first chapter wich I am not going to spoil right now and here.
    Which in turn is when I learnt that - as levee put it - “of course, it’s one thing to receive the book, quite another to have the time to read it!”.

    Which still not covers the main dilemma: after having waited for two years to hold the book in my hands (and quite probably having to outlast another two to make it into the next sequel) should I go and rush through it as I would like to do, just like Lizzy or ceej ?
    No need to theorize on that dilemma right now, though, I am going to go to bed with my copy and see where it take me, which in my view is the best way to deal with any book, isn´t it?

    One thing I will spoil after all: the book´s outside is quite different from the previous parts of the HP saga (at least my copy - is there perhaps another edition?): the dust jacket is already quite darkly colored (see my photo), but the book itself is bound in totally black material with only a gold-colored printing of the title on its spine (not like the colorful covers previous HP books had). Can we deduct something from this already? …

    I´ll keep you posted - and try and find a way to write a book review without giving away any important facts about the plot. Stay tuned, will you?

    PS.: Dark Blaze has an interesting little entry on pirated HP e-books.

    Technorati Tags , , , , , , , ,

    Meta information for this post:

    Possibly (!) Related Posts from the Past:

  • Book Review - Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J.K. Rowling
  • Easter Reading
  • Veggieblogging
  • To Know Someone Famous
  • Books on blogging I own

  • ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: BBC Wikipedia