Friday, November 27, 2009

Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West, Gregory Maguire

Wicked, by Gregory Maguire is the story of the Wicked Witch of the West from L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.  This is an effort to flesh out the character of the Witch from the story.  In Baum's book, the Wicked Witch of the West is the penultimate evil figure who even hates terriers.  I'm looking forward to this book, hoping that it is what Grendel is to Beowulf.

Started: November 25, 2009
Completed: December 14, 2009
Recommendation:  A fun read, great beach book for those who like a quick paced story with some literary skill mixed in.
Recommended By:  Numerous friends who have suggested that I would really enjoy this book.  Most recent recommendations came from a local book sale where one of the people working on the sale put the book aside for me.

Words I looked up:
fewmetsthe droppings of an animal, by which the hunter identifies the prey.
deshabelle - in a state of undress or wearing one's underclothes
deliquescence - the process of melting away or becoming moist from absorbing moisture from the air

Review:  
I wonder how many people missed the lovely irony of the tornado having deliquescence in its description because they didn't know what the word meant.  I have a habit of looking up words that I don't recognize when I come across them.  In this book, I started the list late in the book (usually, I look up the word then move on, but I've lately thought it would be good to have these words and their definitions down somewhere else, so I put them here), so the few words listed are not representative at all of the dozens of times I reached for the dictionary.  This rich use of language made the book more pleasurable to me, although it could be a stumbling block for others.

This book represents an Oz re-imagined in many ways.  It talks about the financial arrangements among the different parts of Oz.  It also discusses political strife.  Moreover, the witches of Oz are not quite the figures in the book that they are in, say, the movie.  The clever touches, such as the jokes that run through Munchkinland after the house drops help make Oz less of a fantasy land and more of, well, a strange land.

I enjoyed this book although, in my opinion, it did little to reveal "the other half of the story;" it did tell another, very engaging story with a much more interesting and rich environment.  It also left the joy of the original Wizard of Oz as a fun fairy tale that can be seen as such through the lens of one's childhood or through the lens of the sad story of the Wicked Witch of the West.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

House of Sand and Fog, Andre Dubus III


House of Sand and Fog By Andre Dubus III is an Oprah Winfrey Book Club Selection in 2000 and a National Book Award Finalist in 1999.  There are plenty of descriptions, reviews, and analysis from this time frame, so I'm not even going to try to provide a decent introduction here.

Started:  November 22, 2009
Completed:  November 24, 2009
Recommendation: Not recommended
Recommended By: Picked this up at a yard sale.  I had no real knowledge of it, but the back caught my attention.  I read the first few paragraphs and found the approach interesting.  There was a note about the National Book Award on the front, but I didn't know about Oprah until I started writing this review.
Review:  The book is well written and the change of perspectives are very well done.  That having been said...the plot just sucks.  The events that are described are awful.  Now, some people like that but I don't.  This book doesn't have a happy ending and there is no "message" being sent.  There is an argument to be made that this is a character study, but I don't see the characters being developed as the book progresses (the time frame is much too short to allow that).  At best, this strikes me as a modern tragedy (in the Greek sense).  Fundamental flaws in each character are exploited by the plot line and run, arguably, to their logical conclusion.  The result is a sad, sad book where everyone makes reasonable decisions within their own selfish point of view but no one is made better by the book.  There is a meager effort to look at what is "right" or even altruistic but the very mildness of the approach suggests that this is not a course to be pursued, but a character flaw in itself.  I found the book very dissatisfying.