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The Paris Wife by Paula McLain/ Review

19 Dec

 Hey, remember me? I used to blog here. In fact, I even used to read books from time to time!

And then I got pregnant and developed a tragic reading aversion. And then I had a baby. And the books — much less the blogging — were few and far between.

Well, the books are still WAY fewer and farther between than they used to be. You can just take the crown this year, George W.  I recently began another blogging endeavor with a friend, and I thought I was finished with this blog. But I do miss really thinking about the books I do read.  And I appreciate those of you who have actually stuck around and might just read this post! So I’m back to tell you about The Paris Wife, a book with an enormous library wait list!

I don’t know if you know, but I happen to be a tremendous Hemingway fan.  In fact, silhouettes of Hemingway and Jane Austen hang side by side over my daughter’s crib. Two years ago, I travelled to Paris and dragged by husband all over the city just to see run-down buildings he used to write in. I love him.  I love him the way girls always love bad boys — I know he’s not good for me, but that fact just draws me in all the more.

As soon as I saw the advance reviews of this book, I knew that whether or not I really liked it, I would read it.  Thus, I bought it for my grandmother for her birthday, knowing full well that the novel would eventually trickle down to me.

The premise is pretty much what you would expect — the novel follows Hadley Richardson as she meets, falls in love with, marries, travels, loves, and self-destructs with Ernest Hemingway.  The novel spends most of its time in Europe with the couple where they famously lived and caroused with the likes of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ezra Pound, and Gertrude Stein.

For lovers of Hemingway, there aren’t really any surprises in this book.  The events seem pretty true-to-bio. All of the hallmarks of Hemingway are present — drinking and philandering and bull-fighting in Spain.  And even though McLain doesn’t bring anything tremendously new to the table, her rendering of Hadley’s voice is impressive. It doesn’t feel over-wrought or cheesy as I expected. The novel is thoroughly believable, indebted to McLain’s obvious research and careful reading of Hadley’s letters. What did manage to surprise me was just how sad this book — its ending known from the get-go — felt. I found myself truly grieving for Hadley and for Hemingway and what was lost.

Whether or not you have a literary (and personal) crush on Hemingway, I think lots of people would enjoy this sad, sad story the same way we enjoy sad romantic movies. It’s the Titanic of the literary world. And it for what it is, it works.

 

 

Big Reading Goals … Big Distractions

9 Jan

I have set some lofty reading goals for 2011. I even put it on GoodReads….so, you know, it’s legit. Immutable, even.

As you know, my ultimate goal is to finally beat that rascally Bushy. We’re a lot like the Roadrunner and Wile E. Coyote.

For all of my determination and good reading intentions, though, a lot gets in the way of my reading time. Often it’s my photography business.  A lot of times it’s grading my students’ copious papers. And those are good reasons.  Those are things I have to do when I’m not at work.

But something else has stolen my attention in the last few months. Namely the divine invention of Instant Netflix.  

I discovered this marvel of the modern world this summer after I had hip surgery. It saw me through a lot of Percocet-filled days. And that was just with random documentaries! Then I discovered all of the TV series I had always heard about but never watched.  Thus, a monster was born.

Though I am typically pretty good at reading and watching TV, Netflix has a way of drawing my undivided attention. In the last four months or so, I have watched : four seasons of Friday Night Lights, two seasons of Damages, one season of The Tudors, and two seasons of Dexter.

In particular, I am blaming Dexter for the fact that though I am thoroughly enjoying my current read, I haven’t finished it yet. And it’s an easy read. But Dexter is an easier watch.

*Sigh*

I promise to finish reading an actual book tomorrow and post a review. Otherwise, I fear we may have to turn this into an old-episodes-of-TV blog. And that just doesn’t have the same ring, does it? Mrs. O’Dell Watches Old Episodes of TV ?

P.S. I particularly recommend Damages. It’s the greatest! It watched that one in a weekend!

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