Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Classic Book Suggestion for September 2009

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

Summary

First published in 1953, Fahrenheit 451 is a classic novel set in the future when books forbidden by a totalitarian regime are burned. The hero, a book burner, suddenly discovers that books are flesh and blood ideas that cry out silently when put to the torch.


Barnes & Noble Review

Fahrenheit 451 is set in a grim alternate-future setting ruled by a tyrannical government in which firemen as we understand them no longer exist: Here, firemen don't douse fires, they ignite them. And they do this specifically in homes that house the most evil of evils: books.

Books are illegal in Bradbury's world, but books are not what his fictional -- yet extremely plausible -- government fears: They fear the knowledge one pulls from books. Through the government's incessant preaching, the inhabitants of this place have come to loathe books and fear those who keep and attempt to read them. They see such people as eccentric, dangerous, and threatening to the tranquility of their state.

But one day a fireman named Montag meets a young girl who demonstrates to him the beauty of books, of knowledge, of conceiving and sharing ideas; she wakes him up, changing his life forever. When Montag's previously held ideology comes crashing down around him, he is forced to reconsider the meaning of his existence and the part he plays. After Montag discovers that "all isn't well with the world," he sets out to make things right.

A brilliant and frightening novel, Fahrenheit 451 is the classic narrative about censorship; utterly chilling in its implications, Ray Bradbury's masterwork captivates thousands of new readers each year. (Andrew LeCount)

Visit Ray Bradbury's website.
Interview with the author.
Book discussion questions.








Thursday, August 6, 2009

Popular Fiction and Bestsellers Book Suggestion for September 2009



A Beautiful Place to Die by Malla Nunn




Summary: Screenwriter Nunn draws on her true-life experience growing up in Africa to create this darkly romantic crime novel set in 1950s apartheid South Africa. Detective Emmanuel Cooper is caught up in a time and place where racial tensions and the raw hunger for power make for dangerous times.

Author Interview

Author Profile

Library Journal Review
Verdict: This skillfully constructed and involving debut-intended as the first in the Detective Emmanuel Cooper series-reveals the terrible toll of apartheid and belongs in all mystery collections. Background: Nunn, a South African-born writer, begins her series in 1952 with the murder of a white police captain in a small South African town riddled with apartheid. The victim was a son-in-law of a leader of the Afrikaner nationhood movement, and his five adult sons are out for vengeance. Arriving from Johannesburg to investigate, Det. Sgt. Emmanuel Cooper wrestles with the police Special Branch, whose officers are searching for communist connections to the crime. Making matters worse, he is targeted by official and unofficial law enforcers as he stretches the boundaries between black and white.-Michele Leber, Arlington, VA Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Beth's Book Suggestion for September 2009


Wish Maker by Ali Sethi
Riverhead Books, 2009

After reading The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns, I wanted to read another cultural book. This was not a quick book to get into and I laid it aside; after going back to it, I was very pleased with the insight I got into modern Pakistani life.
~Beth

"Through three generations of a Lahore family, Sethi charts the tumults within Pakistani political and social life since partition in 1947, including the regular vacillations between military rule and feeble attempts at democracy….But he is often less interested in providing a social critique than in interpreting juvenescence, which seems no different on the Indian sub continent than it is here. Zaki Shirazi, the book’s narrator, grows up in a household of women — his conservative, disenfranchised grandmother; a headstrong mother who advocates sweeping societal change through the magazine she edits; and his teenage cousin, who fasts only for the purest reason: to get the boy. Zaki presents these characters’ engaging histories, along with his own youthful searches for acceptance, the undulations in their lives echoing those in Pakistani society. By juxtaposing references to American pop culture (“The Wonder Years,” Mariah Carey) with, say, the machination of arranged marriages, Sethi exposes the essential friction of life in modern Pakistan..”-The New York Times Book Review

For more reviews and an interview with the author go to Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Wish-Maker-Ali-Sethi/dp/1594488754/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1249513729&sr=1-1

The author’s website is at http://www.alisethi.com/

Watch Ali Sethi on the Travis Smiley Show http://video.pbs.org/video/1156309466/program/1127859226
He discusses the cultural and economic differences among Pakistanis.