Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 September 2010

Bloggers Book Club Review: Like Water For Chocolate by Laura Esquival

Sorry to have such a belated review - I read this so long ago, and started off the review as soon as I finished it, that I just never got round to finishing it!

"Like water for chocolate" was my suggestion for the August Bloggers Book Club because I had heard some good reviews for it, although I had not read it myself til last month. I think next time I suggest a book I will read it first! I think I was perhaps blinkered by the word chocolate - oh, yes, that sounds good me thinks!
I started off quite enthusiastic for the idea of the book. I liked the fact that the book was short and I knew I wouldn't have to spend weeks reading it. I also liked the romantic idea that the love between Tita and Pedro was so strong that he would do anything, including marry her sister(?) to be close to Tita. However, on closer inspection I thought ... what?? What a ridiculous thing to do!! He should have fought for her, instead of being weak and crumbling at the first hurdle. Although in all fairness, Tita's mother was a complete cow and would be tough opposition. I thought he was a bit of a fool to be honest - he must have known how hard it would be for Tita to watch him marry her sister and have a family with her. There is a quote in the book later, I can't remember which character it was about (Pedro I think, which would suit him well) "Next time you fall in love, don't be such a coward".

There is a quote from the book "Tita was not meant for the losers role. She played her role with dignity. When she was 14 "she controlled wild horses, shoved the driver aside and brought them to control singlehanded". I found it hard reconciling this version of Tita with the one that let her mother beat her constantly for the smallest of things, and let her mother turn Pedro towards her sister. Although I had great sympathy for her because as is quoted in the book "She had been killing her a little at a time since she was a child". It's easy to say she shouldn't have let Mama Elena have such a hold over her, but she was obviously worn down after years of abuse. It would have been nice to have read that she walked out with Pedro and left her mother to it.

Reading about the relationship between Tita and her mother really upset me. Being very thankful for having very good relationships with my parents, I found it hard to fathom that a person could be so cruel to Tita, right from birth. Thankfully Tita had Mama Elena who was a mother figure in her life. I was very sad to read about her death.

Food in this story takes on a magical power, which was completely unbelievable, much as I tried to go with it. It has an aphrodisiac power - everyone who eats the cake comes over with a wave of longing; the rose petal scene with Gertrudis and Juan the soldier - need I say more??? I thought it was interesting the way every situation/relationship was referenced with food though : Rosaura & Tita are so different, like Tacos & enchiladas; as red as the apples beside her; she understood how dough feels when plunged into boiling oil etc.

All in all, an easy read, and I did enjoy it. I started off thinking I would make the recipes as I went along, but when I saw what went into some of them, that notion was quickly abandoned! I'm going to draft my review for next month's book now, as it's finished. This time I'll make a note to publish it on time!!

Saturday, 1 May 2010

Bloggers Book Club Review, May 2010: Brooklyn, by Colm Toibin

Quick Synopsis:
The book begins in Ireland in the 1950’s, with the central character Eillis Lacey. Employment opportunities are scarce and Eillis is lucky enough to get a part time job in a shop, albeit for a condescending, rude & ungrateful woman. Almost without involving Eillis in the decision, her family arranges for her to emigrate to New York, and she finds herself leaving her family and country for the first time. When she arrives in Brooklyn she is homesick, but slowly begins to build a life for herself in Brooklyn, until one day she receives a phone call from Ireland which leads to her returning home and facing the dilemma of whether to choose duty or love.

Some reviews of this book:
- Brooklyn moved me more than any other book this year (Nicholas Hytner Observer, Books of the Year )
- A beautifully crafted work that transformed ordinary lives into something extraordinary (Daily Telegraph, Books of the Year )
- No book this year gave me greater pleasure (Nell Freudenberger Financial Times )

After reading the rave reviews above, I was really looking forward to reading this book, and as it is a way of life I consider alien to my own (being only 31, I have not experienced the Ireland that is written about in the book), I was fascinated by the differences between them. There were so many issues within the book, I scarcely know where to begin, so if the following is a bit muddled, please bear with me.

Overall, I was disappointed that although there were so many issues within the book - family relationships, social issues in America, her female supervisor’s lesbianism, the Jewish night school teacher who escaped from WWII concentration camps, duty, love, sacrifice ... I feel that these issues were all very much understated. I appreciate that this is the very thing that others will love about the book, but for me, I wish Toibin had explored them more. At the end of the book I felt that I came away knowing as little about Eillis as I did in the beginning, and perhaps liking her even less.

Eillis seems to be swept along with the flow, fickle, rather than having her own opinions and being a person in her own right. I would have liked to see her get a bit excited about something. I actually feel that I know more about the characters she shared a boarding house with, than Eillis herself. She seemed to make no real effort with the girls in the boarding house, and even with the landlady, she appears less than interested. She is downright rude to the new boarder, and went way down in my estimation after the scene at the dance hall.

Eillis has an uncomfortable experience with her supervisor, but we hear no more about it. She finds out that her teacher has been in the concentration camps, but again we hear nothing else about this character.

Eillis’ relationships with her family members were suggested, rather than hinted at. They love each other, but yet cannot speak openly together, cannot confide in each other, cannot comfort eachother. The relationships she has with the two leading men in the story did not feel passionate or emotional, and at the end of the book I didn’t feel like Eillis was breaking her heart to leave her “one great love”. She only makes her decision in the end because someone forces her hand. Otherwise she’d have dithered on and prolonged the agony.

All in all, the concept of the book is fantastic but it's execution is not to my taste. Whilst Toibin describes things well (the trip over to America is very graphic, and I could feel myself on the ship with Eillis), he loses the definition in the characters, and because he doesn’t engage them, neither did I. It’s not something I’d keep on my bookshelf, but at the same time I’m glad to have read it to see what all the fuss was about.

The other Bookclub Bloggers:
I'm dying to know what the other bloggers thought. If you want to see what the other bloggers have to say about it, here are their links (Please forgive (and correct me) if I have any details wrong:

Lily (Lilly’s blog)
Lorna (Garrendenny Lane)
Marian (Made Marian)
Treasa (Irish Mammy on the run)
cathy (Irish Rumbling Strips)
Val (Magnum lady)
Jenn (SmurfetteJenn’s blog)
Edie (Munchies & Musings)
Catherine (Dispatches from the Deis)
Marie (Diary of an Irish country wife)
Kirsty (Kirsty Road )
Ann
Last of the Mojitos
Winifried
Susan (Queen of Potts)
Una (Justuna)
Steph (The Biopsy Report)
Paysan

June's Book Club Read is 'Let the Great World Spin’ by Colum Mc Cann. Our reviews will be online the first Sunday in June.