Friday, April 25, 2008

Books to be read over the summer (hopefully)

This class reminded me that there are a lot of books that I have been wanting to read for quite some time but have put them off to the side to read later on for one reason or another. So I figured that since my course load this summer is realitively light I am going to try to read everything that I have been putting off. The easiest way to keep track of these books is to post them here so that I can mark them off as I read them. So here goes....

The Chronicles of Narnia

  • The Magician's Nephew
  • The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
  • The Horse and His Boy
  • Prince Caspian
  • The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
  • The Silver Chair
  • The Last Battle

The His Dark Materials Trilogy

  • The Golden Compass (already read)
  • The Subtle Knife
  • The Amber Spyglass

Inkheart

Inkspell

The Higher Power of Lucky

The Anne of Green Gables Books

The Wednesday Wars

Jane Austen (already some of them but I want to do it just for fun)

  • Emma
  • Lady Susan
  • Mansfield Park
  • Northanger Abbey
  • Persuasion
  • Pride and Prejudice
  • Sense and Sensibility

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Francis Hodgson Burnett

Born Frances Eliza Hodgson in Cheetham Hill, Manchester, her father died in 1854, and the family had to endure poverty and squalor in the Victorian slums of Manchester.
She emigrated to Knoxville, Tennessee in the United States in 1865. The move, which they made at the request of an uncle, made no difference to the family's poverty, but at least they were now living in a better environment. Following the death of her mother in 1867, an 18-year-old Frances was now the head of a family of four younger siblings. She turned to writing to support them all, with a first story published in Godey's Lady's Book in 1868. Soon after she was being published regularly in Godey's, Scribner's Monthly, Peterson's Ladies' Magazine and Harper's Bazaar. Her main writing talent was combining realistic detail of working-class life with a romantic plot.
She married Dr. Swan Burnett of Washington, D.C. in 1873.
Her first novel was published in 1877; That Lass o' Lowrie's was a story of Lancashire life.
After moving with her husband to Washington, D.C., Burnett wrote the novels Haworth's (1879), Louisiana (1880), A Fair Barbarian (1881), and Through One Administration (1883), as well as a play, Esmeralda (1881), written with William Gillette.
In 1886 she published Little Lord Fauntleroy. It was originally intended as a children's book, but had a great appeal to mothers. It created a fashion of long curls (based on her son Vivian's) and velvet suits with lace collars (based on Oscar Wilde's attire). The book sold more than half a million copies. In 1888 she won a lawsuit in England over the dramatic rights to Little Lord Fauntleroy, establishing a precedent that was incorporated into British copyright law in 1911.
In 1898 she divorced Dr. Burnett. She later re-married, this time to Stephen Townsend (1900), her business manager. Her second marriage would last less than two years, ending in 1902.
Her later works include Sara Crewe (1888) - later rewritten as A Little Princess (1905); The Lady of Quality (1896) - considered one of the best of her plays; and The Secret Garden (1909), the children's novel for which she is probably best known today. The Lost Prince was published in 1915, and The Head of the House of Coombe was published in Canada in 1922.
In 1893 she published a memoir of her youth, The One I Knew Best of All. From the mid-1890s she lived mainly in England, and in particular at Great Maytham Hall (from 1897 to 1907) where she really did discover a secret garden, but in 1909 she moved back to the United States, after having become a U.S. citizen in 1905.After her first son Lionel's death of consumption in 1890, Burnett delved into Spiritualism and apparently found this a great comfort in dealing with her grief (she had previously dabbled in Theosophy, and some of its concepts are worked into The Secret Garden, where a crippled boy thinks he can heal himself through positive thinking and affirmations). During World War I, Burnett put her beliefs about what happens after death into writing with her novella The White People.

Monday, April 21, 2008

A Little Princess


I can't believe that it has taken me this long to read A Little Princess! I was first introduced to it in the form of the Shirley Temple version of the movie and later with the version that was directed by Alfonso Cuaron. And yet, for reason I had yet to read it by the time I graduated high school. I have to say that while I have love aspects of both movies, neither of them compares to the book. I stayed up late every night for a week to finish this book (I didn't want to put it down but I needed to sleep).
This book is about a little girl named Sara Crewe and her life at Miss Minchin's Seminary for Young Ladies. Because Sara's father is rich, she is allowed a much more extravagant life then the other students; she had beautiful clothes, dolls with entire collections of clothes and expensive furs, and most important of all a very gifted imagination; however, none of these things go to Sara’s head, she is a very kind and caring girl. It is her imagination that first draws Miss Minchin's censure. She dislikes Sara because she believes that Sara is spoiled little girl (simply because her father has raised her as if she were a princess). When Miss Minchin receives word that Sara’s father has died and is penniless to boot she makes Sara into a servant for the other pupils to use. While Sara endures all kinds of indignities (many at the hands of Miss Minchin) she never gives up hope that her father is a live and will one day come for her.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory


This has always been one of my favorite books. I have always loved the sense the of wonder and excite that this books exudes. I remember the first time I read this book; I had seen the movie Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (the one with Gene Wilder) and never really thought about it actually being a book. I was so excited to discover that it was based on a book and decided that I just had to read the book. If I remember correctly I sat down and read it completly through in one day. Ever since then I always come back to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. For some reason there is just something about this book that reminds me of my childhood. I sometimes think that it is the books ability to make you believe that anything can happen (something I often don't believe anymore, I am far too cynical for that now). So if you feel that you are becoming jaded and cynical this is definately to book to bring back into the world of infinate possiblities.