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December 2006

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aspirations

digestables

on the nitestand.

  • william strunk jr., e.b. white, & maira kalman: the elements of style:  illustrated

    william strunk jr., e.b. white, & maira kalman: the elements of style: illustrated
    i remember having to read this back in high school... :) and now, to see myself pick this one up (though i promise you mine looks a lot cooler then the pic) at anthropologie the other day.. just because the illustrations intrigued me :) hehe.. ah, how lil it takes...

  • Thomas L. Friedman: The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century

    Thomas L. Friedman: The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century
    another work in progress... but my choral director from hs recommended this one while i was over there trying to get some contacts for ben...hehe..

  • Ross King: Michelangelo& the Pope's Ceiling
    i've only just started this one... but so far its really interesting... thanks vita!
  • Malcolm Gladwell: Blink : The Power of Thinking Without Thinking

    Malcolm Gladwell: Blink : The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
    i liked this one... it made you look at this differently. :) (****)

  • Steven D. Levitt: Freakonomics : A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything

    Steven D. Levitt: Freakonomics : A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything
    a very interesting book... picked it up b/c of the apple/orange hybrid :) but definately has a completely different perspective of things. (*****)

  • J.K. Rowling: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

    J.K. Rowling: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
    :)

  • Jacqueline Park: The Secret Book of Grazia Dei Rossi

    Jacqueline Park: The Secret Book of Grazia Dei Rossi
    let's just say the back cover was interesting... it's set in Italy :) and deals with struggles of a woman between her Jewish roots and the Christian world... now that i'm half way through it, i have to say that i like the book...it deals with a woman's struggle with her jewish family, the christian society, the political uprisings of the day, her hopes, her dreams, her desires... ok, i'm done! :) hehe... and i have to say i like the story quite alot.. especially since I've been to Rome...and will have seen alot of what has been described... it's a story weaved from some truths...which gives it an air of intrigue....but overall.. the story, the history, and the passions are nice to delve into even if it was only for a day or two. :)

  • Donna Tartt: The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt: The Little Friend
    a work in progress. about 2/3rds through it.. and its interesting.. a lil slow...but i'll give you a better picture when i'm done with it :) i know, i know.. i should be studying...but i can't help it! ;) ok, so i finished the book today... not really that thrilled by it... it was really slow to get through in the end...

  • Jodi Picoult: My Sister's Keeper

    Jodi Picoult: My Sister's Keeper
    i remember seeing this book a few times before i ended up buying it.... but i guess ethical whirlwinds like this have more of a chance to come to light in this day and age with all the modern advancements that we've made...and should be proud of? it's a thin line sometimes... and i liked the book.

  • Kate Atkinson: Case Histories

    Kate Atkinson: Case Histories
    a lil slow at first...but i picked it up b/c of the title ;) hehe... ah, the med student within is rearing it's ugly lil head ;) but it's actually an interesting story...or stories in this case... that don't really relate but end up doing so in an odd way...

i wish i may, i wish i might.

  • Claire Messud: The Emperor's Children

    Claire Messud: The Emperor's Children
    Review by MEGHAN O'ROURKE In this splendid new novel, Claire Messud has produced a formally nimble novel of formidable scale. Set mostly in New York City at the turn of the 21st century, "The Emperor's Children" is a masterly comedy of manners — an astute and poignant evocation of hobnobbing glitterati in the months before and immediately following Sept. 11. "The Emperor's Children" entwines the stories of Danielle Minkoff, Marina Thwaite and Julius Clarke, who met at Brown University and came to New York in the early 1990's, giddy with the parochial entitlement of expensively educated young Americans. Each expected to do something important and each, at 30, is still struggling to make something of him- or herself. "The Emperor's Children" is, on its surface, a stingingly observant novel about the facades of the chattering class — with its loves, ambitions and petty betrayals — but it is also, more profoundly, about a wholesale collision of values. -nytimes

  • Marisha Pessl: Special Topics in Calamity Physics
    this review made me laugh: Jonathan Safran Foer. Donna Tartt. Zadie Smith. Dave Eggers. Marisha Pessl. Mari-who? Don’t worry, no one else has heard of her, either. But that’s about to change, as Pessl joins the ranks of literary wunderkinds with her zany, erudite, page-turning debut, Special Topics in Calamity Physics. The novel’s narrator is hyper-literate Blue van Meer, daughter of a butterfly-collecting mother (who died in an accident when Blue was young) and a political science professor father whose lecturing schedule has them crossing state lines every semester. The pair settles in a small Southern town so Blue can spend her senior year at an elite private school. She’s befriended by a glam clique known as the Bluebloods and its charismatic mentor, film studies teacher Hannah Schneider. Things are looking up until someone is killed, the Bluebloods turn vicious, and Blue finds herself at the center of a murder mystery — without a clue. Special Topics is structured around a Great Works syllabus and cross-references a gajillion other texts. You’ll hear echoes of Salinger’s Glass clan, the subversive noir of Highsmith, a campy deadpan of Nabokov, and the manic gamesmanship of Pynchon. And Marisha Pessl? You’re going to be hearing a lot more about her.
  • Clifford Chase: Winkie

    Clifford Chase: Winkie
    "Ever think you’d find him contemplating his transgender past while fleeing the feds? Well, no. So Winkie, the title character of Clifford Chase’s first novel, will be something new. Surreal and Sedaris-esque, the book opens with teddy getting arrested for terrorism. Now, Chase might be using the bear as a postmodern allegory to critique the politics behind the war on terror. But maybe he simply had bigger plans for his plushies than the occasional genteel scone-fest. Apparently, that’s just not Winkie’s cup of tea."

  • clotaire rapaille: culture code

    clotaire rapaille: culture code
    so a friend mentioned this was on their nightstand - and after a quick glance - i've decided it intrigued me enough to add it to my future nightstand perusals. :)

  • M. Night Shyamalan: Lady in the Water

    M. Night Shyamalan: Lady in the Water
    :) a bed time story for children.

  • Zadie Smith: White Teeth: A Novel

    Zadie Smith: White Teeth: A Novel
    i thought it would be an interesting read... where cultures clash.

  • Marshall  Brain: Marshall Brain's How Stuff Works (Marshall Brain's How Stuff Works)

    Marshall Brain: Marshall Brain's How Stuff Works (Marshall Brain's How Stuff Works)
    cute huh? what can i say... my brain just NEEDS to know!

  • Teri Hatcher: Burnt Toast : And Other Philosophies of Life

    Teri Hatcher: Burnt Toast : And Other Philosophies of Life
    Burnt Toast... oh, do I hear her!

  • Dr. Robin Smith: Lies at the Altar: The Truth About Great Marriages

    Dr. Robin Smith: Lies at the Altar: The Truth About Great Marriages
    ok, before you flip out... hehe... i figure no problem in getting some info ahead of time

  • Noah McCullough: Essential Book of Presidential Trivia

    Noah McCullough: Essential Book of Presidential Trivia
    this one..made me realize i don't know enough about our nation's leaders :)

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Sunday, 17 December 2006

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