Sunday, 12 June 2011

Summer reading recommendations

The Pigman:
For sophomores John and Lorraine, the world feels meaningless;  nothing is important. They certainly can never please their  parents, and school is a chore. To pass the  time, they play pranks on  unsuspecting people. It's during one of these  pranks that they meet  the "Pigman"--a fat, balding old man with a zany  smile  plastered on his face. In spite of themselves, John and Lorraine  soon  find that they're caught up in Mr. Pignati's zest for life. In  fact,  they become so involved that they begin to destroy the only  corner of  the world that's ever mattered to them. Originally published  in 1968,  this novel by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Paul Zindel still  sings  with sharp emotion as John and Lorraine come to realize that "Our   life would be what we made of it--nothing more, nothing less."

White Oleander:
Astrid Magnussen, the teenage narrator of Janet  Fitch's engrossing first novel, White Oleander,  has a mother  who is as sharp as a new knife. An uncompromising poet,  Ingrid  despises weakness and self-pity, telling her daughter that they  are  descendants of Vikings, savages who fought fiercely to survive. And  when  one of Ingrid's boyfriends abandons her, she illustrates her  point,  killing the man with the poison of oleander flowers. This leads  to a  life sentence in prison, leaving Astrid to teach herself the art  of  survival in a string of Los Angeles foster homes.

Dangerous Angels:
"We cheer for these young women and men as they struggle with the   universal trials of growing up, finding love, and letting go--all   within the vivid, glittering, urban embrace of Los Angeles. Block's   stories about finding yourself, being true to your dreams, and   believing in what might seem impossible will inspire teens and adults   alike with the resounding messages of hope and the transformative  power  of love."

Summer Sisters:
the author again explores   the ramifications of love--and lust--on two  friends. Initially, the differences between Caitlin Somers   and  Victoria Leonard (or "Vix," as Caitlin christens her) draw them  together: privileged   Caitlin is wild and outspoken, beautiful but  emotionally fragile, while working-class Vix is shy,   reserved, and  plain in comparison. After Caitlin selects Vix to accompany her to her  father's home   in Martha's Vineyard for the summer, the two become  inextricably connected as "summer   sisters."

The essential Rumi:
Rumi's voice leaps off these  pages with an ecstatic energy that leaves  readers breathless. There  are poems of love, rage, sadness, pleading,  and longing; passionate  outbursts about the torture of longing for his  beloved and the sweet  pleasure that comes from their union; amusing  stories of sexual  exploits or human weakness; and quiet truths about  the beauty and  variety of human emotion. More than anything, Rumi makes  plain the  unbridled joy that comes from living life fully, urging us  always to  put aside our fears and take the risk to do so.

Emily Dickinson:
If Only, by Geri Halliwell: This is an amazing account of the Spice Girls rise to fame and Geris struggles. I love it because it gives you a real inside look at pop fame and how intense it can be for young women. It's a truly fascinating book.

Franny and Zooey:
Franny is an intellectually precocious late adolescent who tries to  attain spiritual purification by obsessively reiterating the "Jesus  prayer" as an antidote to the perceived superficiality and corruptness  of life. She subsequently suffers a nervous breakdown. In the second  story, her next older brother, Zooey, attempts to heal Franny by  pointing out that her constant repetition of the "Jesus prayer" is as  self-involved and egotistical as the egotism against which she rails.

Notes on a Scandall:
Schoolteacher Barbara Covett has led a solitary life until Sheba Hart,  the new art teacher at St. George's, befriends her. But even as their  relationship develops, so too does another: Sheba has begun an illicit  affair with an underage male student. When the scandal turns into a  media circus, Barbara decides to write an account in her friend's  defense--and ends up revealing not only Sheba's secrets, but also her  own.

Even Cowgirls get the blues:
The whooping crane rustlers are girls. Young girls. Cowgirls, as a  matter of fact, all “bursting with dimples and hormones”—and the FBI has  never seen anything quite like them. Yet their rebellion at the Rubber  Rose Ranch is almost overshadowed by the arrival of the legendary Sissy  Hankshaw, a white-trash goddess literally born to hitchhike, and the  freest female of them all.

A Jane Austen Education:
In A Jane Austen Education, Austen scholar William Deresiewicz  turns to the author's novels to reveal the remarkable life lessons  hidden within. With humor and candor, Deresiewicz employs his own  experiences to demonstrate the enduring power of Austen's teachings.  Progressing from his days as an immature student to a happily married  man, Deresiewicz's A Jane Austen Education is the story of one man's discovery of the world outside himself.

Pride and Prejudice:

Nymph:
These nine interconnected tales celebrate carnal delights and the  transformative power of love, with occasional lapses into syrupy  repetition, but they also peek compassionately into romances laced with  themes of grief, heartbreak and renewal.


The Virgin Suicides:
Eugenides's tantalizing, macabre first novel begins with a suicide, the  first of the five bizarre deaths of the teenage daughters in the Lisbon  family; the rest of the work, set in the author's native Michigan in the  early 1970s, is a backward-looking quest as the male narrator and his  nosy, horny pals describe how they strove to understand the odd clan of  this first chapter, which appeared in the Paris Review , where it won  the 1991 Aga Khan Prize for fiction.

memoirs of a Geisha:
"I wasn't born and raised to be a Kyoto geisha....I'm a fisherman's  daughter from a little town called Yoroido on the Sea of Japan." How  nine-year-old Chiyo, sold with her sister into slavery by their father  after their mother's death, becomes Sayuri, the beautiful geisha  accomplished in the art of entertaining men, is the focus of this  fascinating first novel.


Kiss the Girls:
"Casanova" works the East Coast, "The Gentleman Caller" works the West  Coast, and these two serial killers might just be working together.  Washed-up Washington, D.C., police detective Alex Cross gets involved  when his niece is abducted.

Bridget Jones Diary:

Lucky:
When Sebold, the author of the current bestseller The Lovely Bones, was a  college freshman at Syracuse University, she was attacked and raped on  the last night of school, forced onto the ground in a tunnel "among the  dead leaves and broken beer bottles." In a ham-handed attempt to mollify  her, a policeman later told her that a young woman had been murdered  there and, by comparison, Sebold should consider herself lucky. That  dubious "luck" is the focus of this fiercely observed memoir about how  an incident of such profound violence can change the course of one's  life.


The Tipping point:
The premise of this facile piece of pop sociology has built-in appeal:  little changes can have big effects; when small numbers of people start  behaving differently, that behavior can ripple outward until a critical  mass or "tipping point" is reached, changing the world. Gladwell's  thesis that ideas, products, messages and behaviors "spread just like  viruses do" remains a metaphor as he follows the growth of  "word-of-mouth epidemics" triggered with the help of three pivotal  types.

Dress Your Family In Corduroy and Denim:
In his latest collection, Sedaris has found his heart. This is not to suggest that the author of Me Talk Pretty One Day and other bestselling books has lost his edge. The 27 essays here (many previously published in Esquire, G.Q. or the New Yorker, or broadcast on PRI's This American Life) include his best and funniest writing yet. Here is Sedaris's family in all its odd glory.

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