Tuesday, March 20, 2007
The True Account
Need something for the trip D? This book will be an excellent choice to distract you in busy airports.
I am sick so I have been reading a lot. This has been the best of the lot. It has many Don Quixote references and for good reason. This pure imagination and adventure. It is a narrative written by a kid about his crazy uncle and all they do together. I am going to give you a quote from fairly early in the book, so I don't give too much away:
(from handbills printed by the kid)
RUNAWAY UNCLE. Run off from Kingdom Common, Vermont, and UNCLE, Private True Teague Kinneson, about 50 years of age. His stature is tall, his countenance fierce, his clothes and gear those of a knight-errant, consisting of chain mail, a belled night-stocking over a copper plate in his head, a red sash, and galoshes worn high or low as the occasion requires. A former soldier with the Continental Army, a playwright, and a clasical scholar, this UNCLE imagines himself to have explored from the Pacific up the Columbia River, across the Rocky Mountains, and thence overland to St. Louis and the United States. Whoever conveys him safely home, or into the care of his nephew, Ticonderoga Kinneson, shall have 5 dollars from
THE KINNESON FAMILY
KINGDOM COMMON, VERMONT
This book flies by much faster than I would want. Very fun.
Monday, March 19, 2007
The Travel Bug Bites Again!
Oh, dear... I'm supposed to be packing and here I am writing a post (read: wasting time).
I just read two really good books. One was expected to be good and the other was a risk taken in the library stacks. I read the second book by J. Maarten Troost, the author of "The Sex Lives of Cannibals." It is called, "Getting Stoned with Savages: A Trip Through the Islands of Fiji and Vanuatu." In this book, the author and his wife (the girlfriend from the last book) are holding down steady jobs in Washington, when they chuck it all (ok, he gets fired) and move off to an island in the South Pacific. He continues to write with a sense of humor which makes me laugh out loud. (While I was in the middle of this book, API walked into our bedroom to find me curled up with this book and snickering to myself. He thinks I am very strange.)
The title of Chapter 6: "In which the author ponders cannibalism and discovers that he just doesn't get it--not at all, cannot get past the icky factor--and so, left to his own devices by his beguiling wife, he decides to seek enlightenment on the island of Malekula, where until recently, within his own lifetime even, they lunched on people."
And, yes, you Spanish and French speakers out there, if you sound out the name of the Island you will understand that when Captain Cook named the island in French, he was not having a particularly good time.
You should probably read "The Sex Lives of Cannibals" first, but both are very, very good.
The second book, which was a risky selection at the library, is "On Mexican Time: A New Life in San Miguel" by Tony Cohan. While I very much enjoy reading about the young couple, or lone woman, or whomever chucking it all and moving to France (See Julia Child entry), I am very wary of the people who travel through Latin America. Most of this genre are travellers and they don't settle, so the book is usually about breadth instead of depth. I wanted depth, and this book delivered.
I'm also wary of the views from above of the lowly Latino, but these folks get right in there and mix it up! Sure, they have gringo friends and european friends, but they also have Mexican friends. It was surprisingly good.
Well, we're leaving for our own adventure in Mexico on Thursday night and I haven't started the packing process yet. This could be the trip which decides our summer plans, so keep your fingers crossed for us!
d
I just read two really good books. One was expected to be good and the other was a risk taken in the library stacks. I read the second book by J. Maarten Troost, the author of "The Sex Lives of Cannibals." It is called, "Getting Stoned with Savages: A Trip Through the Islands of Fiji and Vanuatu." In this book, the author and his wife (the girlfriend from the last book) are holding down steady jobs in Washington, when they chuck it all (ok, he gets fired) and move off to an island in the South Pacific. He continues to write with a sense of humor which makes me laugh out loud. (While I was in the middle of this book, API walked into our bedroom to find me curled up with this book and snickering to myself. He thinks I am very strange.)
The title of Chapter 6: "In which the author ponders cannibalism and discovers that he just doesn't get it--not at all, cannot get past the icky factor--and so, left to his own devices by his beguiling wife, he decides to seek enlightenment on the island of Malekula, where until recently, within his own lifetime even, they lunched on people."
And, yes, you Spanish and French speakers out there, if you sound out the name of the Island you will understand that when Captain Cook named the island in French, he was not having a particularly good time.
You should probably read "The Sex Lives of Cannibals" first, but both are very, very good.
The second book, which was a risky selection at the library, is "On Mexican Time: A New Life in San Miguel" by Tony Cohan. While I very much enjoy reading about the young couple, or lone woman, or whomever chucking it all and moving to France (See Julia Child entry), I am very wary of the people who travel through Latin America. Most of this genre are travellers and they don't settle, so the book is usually about breadth instead of depth. I wanted depth, and this book delivered.
I'm also wary of the views from above of the lowly Latino, but these folks get right in there and mix it up! Sure, they have gringo friends and european friends, but they also have Mexican friends. It was surprisingly good.
Well, we're leaving for our own adventure in Mexico on Thursday night and I haven't started the packing process yet. This could be the trip which decides our summer plans, so keep your fingers crossed for us!
d
Saturday, March 03, 2007
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