All Consuming


Items Fish Creek Library Calgary Public Library consumed in…

March, 2007



  1. Tuesday 6
    0143038702

    Finished consuming…
    Self-Made Man — 7 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: memoir gender feminism


  2. Monday 19
    0151013039

    Finished consuming…
    Be Near Me — 2 people

    Worth consuming!


  3. Thursday 29
    0142402516

    Finished consuming…
    Looking for Alaska — 32 people



Entries about these items

    0142402516

    Why I recommend "Looking for Alaska" — 1 year ago

    Finding Excellence in “Looking for Alaska”

    It has been years since I read a book intended for teens, but this award-winning debut novel has definately lured me back to that forlorn genre.

    Our protaginist is “Pudge”, a biography-loving high school student who decides to leave his familiar public school and attend boarding school in a quest for “The Great Perhaps”. There he finds friends, falls in love, takes risks, suffers a tragic loss, and begins to heal. The book is divided into two parts: the first leads up to the climax, and the second is the search for the resolution of that climactic event. Resolution is never achieved, and yet the book feels completely satisfying.

    The narrative is comic, endearing, and true to life. Perhaps its most impressive quality is the verisimillitude of the characters’ speech. Green has captured teens’ idioms and sarcasim (as well as hopes, fears, and reactions) exactly as I remember them to be. Accordingly, the novel seems current and relevant.

    I wholeheartedly endorse this novel! It would be a great suggestion for either young men or young women. It will certainly inspire young adults to read for pleasure, and would provide a great alternative to the “classics” which are the backbone of standard curriculum.

    “Looking for Alaska” is about love, loss, religion, friendship, longing, and tribute. Find a teen you care about, and give him or her this book!

    -katherine

    0151013039

    A cliche situation treated with delicacy and tenderness — 1 year ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Be Near Me is a poetically rendered fall-from-grace story, juxtaposing love, respect and tenderness with prejudice, ignorance and snobishness. Set in small town Scotland, a priest commits some stupid transgressions that preceed his ultimate demise. This book is filled with enough rich detail to merit a much longer novel, yet its sparse tightness vibrates with lifelike nuances. Despite some campy Oxford scenes, this is a near-perfect piece of work that will resonate inside you long after you put it down. Drop whatever you are doing and read it now!

    Laura

    0143038702

    Embedded Journalism cum Women's Studies 101 — 1 year ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    While the premise of this book (outright deception for the sake of sociological research) was somewhat unsettling, Vincent is forthcoming about her own hesitations, and is ultimately convincing that in order for a woman to have genuine experiences as a man, deception is the only available recourse.

    During the course of this year-and-a-half-long memoir, Vincent adopts the alter-ego “Ned”, and proceeds to join a bowling league, date women, find a job, and even infiltrate a monastery and a men’s self-help group. Her observations about life as and among men oscillate between humorous and piognant, and are unfailingly articulate. Her narrative is strong and sharp; I found myself hearing what I imagined to be her voice. There is graphic language throughout, but it does not detract from the clarity or sensitivity of her insight.

    I loved this book for the very reason which surprised me most about it: it is fair. Books about gender typically have a bias (in varying degrees of intensity) against men. Vincent’s project, however, accomplished the unpredictable: it actually had me feeling sorry for men, though not in any condescending sort of way. Though no one could ever convince me that men and women struggle equally, this memoir did foster in me a genuine sense of compassion for the struggles that men are compelled to face. The fact that we inhabit what is (clearly!) a man’s world, does not mean that men’s lives are easy in all respects. In fact, in light of Vincent’s memoir, whatever advantages men do have over women, now seem to be more marginal.

    —katherine


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