Friday, October 18, 2002

House of Spirits by Isabelle Allende


The novel follows three generations of Trueba women—Clara, Blanca, and Alba—as they struggle to establish their independence from Esteban Trueba, the domineering family patriarch. The political backdrop to this family story is the growing conflict between forces of Left and Right, culminating in a military coup that leads to a stifling dictatorship. While the country is never specifically named as Chile, its political history reflects that of the author's homeland.

About the Author
Allende (pronounced "Ah-yen-day") was born August 2, 1942, in Lima, Peru, the daughter of Chilean diplomat Tomás Allende and his wife, Francisca Llona Barros. Her father was a first cousin of Salvador Allende, her godfather, who later became president of Chile. Allende's parents divorced when she was just two-years-old, and her mother took her to live with her grandparents. Allende's grandparents had a profound influence on her, and she has said they served as the models for the characters of Esteban and Clara Trueba in The House of the Spirits. 



Friday, September 13, 2002

The Binding Chair by Kathryn Harrison


"The Binding Chair" tells the intertwined stories of two women: May, the daughter in a well-to-do Chinese family growing up in the last decades of the 19th century, and Alice, an English girl born in the first decade of the 20th. When May is 5 years old, her grandmother "sits her on a red chair decorated with characters for obedience, prosperity and longevity" and binds her feet -- a literally bone-breaking and flesh-annihilating process that Harrison describes in loving detail. From this inauspicious beginning, May's situation worsens. Married to an abusive silk merchant at the age of 14, she runs away and supports herself in a Shanghai brothel, where she forswears everything Chinese and waits for a Western "benefactor." After seven years, he arrives in the person of a gentle, unemployable Englishman who belongs to a society dedicated to eradicating the custom of foot binding. He promptly becomes erotically obsessed with May's tiny feet, he marries her and brings her home to the Shanghai household he shares with his sister, his banker brother-in-law and his two nieces. The Chinese prostitute May thus becomes Mrs. Arthur Cohen, aunt to the strong-willed, rebellious Alice Benjamin. ~about the book

Foot Binding
In Chinese foot binding, young girls' feet were wrapped in tight bandages so that they could not grow and develop normally.  The process  made her
 completely incapable of any strenuous physical labour. If a girl's feet were bound in this manner, four toes on each foot would break within a year; th
e first ("big toe") remained intact. The arch had to be well-developed for the perfect "lotus foot" to be formed.

Bound feet were considered intensely erotic. Qing Dynasty sex manuals listed 48 different ways of playing with women's bound feet. Some men preferred never to see a woman's bound feet, so they were always concealed within tiny "lotus shoes".

Zhou Guizhen, who is 86-years-old, shows one of her bound feet where the bones in the four small toes were broken and forced underneath the foot over a period of time, at her home in Liuyi village in China's southern Yunnan Province, February 2007. Villages in China where women with bound feet survive are increasingly rare but the millennium-old practice nevertheless took almost four decades to eradicate after it was initially banned in 1911. ~feet binding




Friday, June 21, 2002

Seabiscuit by Laura Hillenbrand


Seabiscuit: An American Legend is the ultimate underdog story. Seabiscuit was an unlikely champion; his legs were crooked; he had a sad little tail; and he was precisely the color of mud. For two years, he floundered at the lowest level of racing, misunderstood and mishandled, as slow as growing grass, before his dormant talent was discovered by three men. One was Tom Smith, known as "The Lone Plainsman," a virtually mute mustang breaker who had come from the vanishing frontier, bearing the secrets of horses. One was Red Pollard, a half-blind failed prizefighter and failing jockey who had been living in a horse stall since being abandoned at a makeshift racetrack as a boy. The third was Charles Howard, a former bicycle repairman who made a fortune by introducing the automobile to the American West. Bought for a bargain-basement price by Howard and rehabilitated by Smith and Pollard, Seabiscuit overcame a phenomenal run of bad fortune to become one of the most spectacular, dominant and charismatic performers in sports history. Competing in the cruelest years of the Depression, the rags-to-riches horse emerged as an American cultural icon, drawing an immense and fanatical following, inspiring an avalanche of merchandising, and establishing himself as the single biggest newsmaker of 1938. ~about the book

Horsey Terms
Also Ran - Any selection not finishing 1st, 2nd, 3rd or 4th in a race or event.
Bat -  A jockey's whip.
Blow-out - A short, timed workout of about a mile in distance, usually a day before a race, designed to sharpen the speed of a horse (blow him out).
Breakdown - When a horse suffers a potentially career-ending injury.
Bug Boy - An apprentice rider.
Chalk - Wagering favorite in a race. Dates from the days when on-track bookmakers would write current odds on a chalkboard.
Colors (Colours) - Racing silks, the jacket and cap worn by jockeys. Silks can be generic and provided by the track or specific to one owner.
Fast (track) - Optimum condition for a dirt track that is dry, even, resilient and fast.
Gelding - A male horse that has been castrated.
Hand - Four inches. A horse's height is measured in hands and inches from the top of the shoulder (withers) to the ground, e.g., 15.2 hands is 15 hands, 2 inches. Thoroughbreds typically range from 15 to 17 hands.
Mare - Female horse five-years-old or older.
Nose - Smallest advantage a horse can win by. 
Over The Top - When a horse is considered to have reached its peak for that season.
Place - Finish in the top two
Scratch (Scratching) - To be taken out of a race before it starts.
Show - Third position at the finish.
Sire - Father of a horse.
Wire - The finish line of a race.

Seabiscuit vs. War Admiral - 1938 Match Race



Friday, May 10, 2002

Girl With A Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier


Girl With a Pearl Earring tells the story of Griet, a 16-year-old Dutch girl who becomes a maid in the house of the painter Johannes Vermeer. Her calm and perceptive manner not only helps her in her household duties, but also attracts the painter's attention. Though different in upbringing, education and social standing, they have a similar way of looking at things. Vermeer slowly draws her into the world of his paintings - the still, luminous images of solitary women in domestic settings. ~authors website


Little is known for certain about Vermeer's life and career. He was born in 1632, the son of a silk worker with a taste for buying and selling art. 

Vermeer himself was also active in the art trade. He lived and worked in Delft all his life. His works are rare. Of the 35 or 36 paintings generally attributed to him, most portray figures in interiors. All his works are admired for the sensitivity with which he rendered effects of light and color and for the poetic quality of his images. ~complete vermeer


What the Author Read in 2002 (update to current reads)

December 2002 :

Mansfield Park by Jane Austen 
The No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency by Alexander McCall Smith 
Under the Eagle's Shadow by Mark Hertsgaard 
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

November 2002 :

The Little Friend by Donna Tartt 
Life of Pi by Yann Martell

October 2002 :

Bad Blood by Lorna Sage 
The Children Who Lived in a Barn by Eleanor Graham 
The Necropolis Railway by Andrew Martin

September 2002 :

Enemy Women by Paulette Jiles 
About the Author by John Colapinto 
Embers by Sandor Marai 

August 2002:

Affinity by Sarah Waters 
I Don't Know How She Does It by Allison Pearson 
We Made a Garden by Margery Fish 

July 2002:

Everything Is Illuminated by Jonathan Safran Foer 
Disturbance of the Inner Ear by Joyce Hackett 
Daughter of Venice by Donna Jo Napoli 
A Parrot in the Pepper Tree by Chris Stewart

June 2002:

The Nanny Diaries by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus
The Piano Tuner by Daniel Mason 

May 2002:

The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton 
Driving over Lemons by Chris Stewart 
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress by Dai Sijie

April 2002:

The Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman 
The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman 

March 2002:

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters 
The Orchard on Fire by Shena Mackay 
Little Boy Lost by Marganita Lasky 
Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri 
The Bad Beginning by Lemony Snicket 
Northern Lights (aka The Golden Compass) by Philip Pullman

Alexandre Desplat - Girl with a Pearl Earring