Showing posts with label History of Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History of Love. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

31 Days of Books: History of Love

I've talked about this book a lot, so I thought I should give it a proper review.   It will also be forever connected, in my mind, to yesterday's book because I read them in an Honor's Seminar on "Memory, Emotion, Space, and Place" - in which my final paper was on how the human mind copes when lacking interpersonal relationships... anyway, it was a very interesting class and these two books are very dear to me because of it.

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Title:  History of Love

Author:  Nicole Krauss

Published:  2005

Year I read it: 2011

One sentence summary:  A "beautifully sad," multiple-narrator novel about an aged and lonely holocaust survivor named Leopold Gursky and the lives his writing unknowingly changed--including his own.

Interesting fact:  Krauss incorporates Bruno Schulz's Street of Crocodiles in her novel, a book which her husband, fellow NYT-bestselling author Jonathan Safran Foer, literally carved up to form a new book, Tree of Codes.

Three reasons to read it:
  •  Leopold Gursky.  He remains one of my favorite characters - romantic, tragic, comic.  I love his grumpy self.  And his writing... his writing is like a romantic poet's, but without being pretentious; it's like a post-modern's without being depressing.
  • This is a writer's mystery novel - working out the tangles Krauss has woven takes 4 narrators and several intriguing twists.  [After reading this for class, my professor had us each create a chronological sequence of events - only a few people were accurate, and I didn't pick up everything until a read-through] 
  • This book is "beautifully sad" in a remarkable way.  It somehow is both happy and sad, but, overall, extremely satisfying.  Krauss's language, intertextuality, and symbolism is really lovely.
One reason you maybe shouldn't:
  • Some adult content.
Great quotes:

"All I want is not to die on a day when I went unseen."

 When I saw a Starbucks I went in and bought a coffee because I felt like a coffee, not because I wanted anyone to notice me. Normally I would have made a big production, Give me a Grande Vente, I mean a Tall Grande, Give me a Chai Super Vente Grande, or do I want a Short Frappe? and then, for punctuation, I would've had a small mishap at the milk station. Not this time. I poured the milk like a normal person, a citizen of the world, and sat down in an easy chair across from a man reading the newspaper. I wrapped my hands around the coffee. The warmth felt good. The next table over there was a girl with blue hair leaning over a notebook and chewing on a ballpoint pen, and at the table next to her was a little boy in a soccer uniform sitting with his mother who told him, The plural of elf is elves. A wave of happiness came over me. It felt giddy to be part of it all. To be drinking a cup of coffee like a normal person. I wanted to shout: The plural of elf is elves! What a language! What a world!

“Once upon a time, there was a boy. He lived in a village that no longer exists, in a house that no longer exists, on the edge of a field that no longer exists, where everything was discovered, and everything was possible. A stick could be a sword, a pebble could be a diamond, a tree, a castle. Once upon a time, there was a boy who lived in a house across the field, from a girl who no longer exists. They made up a thousand games. She was queen and he was king. In the autumn light her hair shone like a crown. They collected the world in small handfuls, and when the sky grew dark, and they parted with leaves in their hair.
Once upon a time there was a boy who loved a girl, and her laughter was a question he wanted to spend his whole life answering.” 


“there are two types of people in the world: those who prefer to be sad among others, and those who prefer to be sad alone.” 
"When will you learn that there isn't a word for everything?"

"Life is a thing of beauty and a joy forever."

Friday, January 4, 2013

Hello!  Happy New Year, again.  I feel like I've been away for a while.  Between Christmas festivities and having my dear friend Kristina visiting [post forthcoming],  I've only had time for the brief word / picture, but nothing very substantial.  Hoping that changes now that things return to their quieter routine :)

I wanted to share the results from books read last year.  After a personal best at 53 books in 2011, I thought I'd challenge myself with 60 for 2012 - ha!  Well, 2011 was very much an "on" year for reading.  My schedule was rather conducive to it, I took some great courses, breezed through 2 fantasy/sci-fi series (The Auralia Thread and The Hunger Games), was introduced to what good contemporary fiction looks like (thank you History of Love), and came across a host of other good books... mostly shorter books. 


2012 turned out entirely different.  I began the year with Clarissa.  That alone should count for something.  But I also spent time with modernist poetry.  Reading and attempting to understand the Wasteland doesn't feel like reading a whole book - but it sure takes effort, more effort for me in a lot of ways. 

But then I graduated.  And it wasn't like "Whew! I've graduated, I want a break from the books" - far from it.  Rather it was, "I've finally graduated and can get around to all of the coffee dates I've been putting off."  Throw graduation parties, catching up on sleep, and job applications on top of that and it didn't exactly translate into reading as much as I'd like.  But then in July I re-entered Middle Earth... now I'm just 30 pages from sailing away from it  [too cheesy? meh].  Could I have read the "Concerning Hobbits Tetralogy" faster?  Sure... but spending the last 6 months roaming from the Misty Mountains to Mordor has washed me.  It's clarified the way I see life.  It's made me laugh and cry countless times.  It's provided a great connection with my boss :)  It's made me feel the total nerd that I am--complete with hobbit ears. 
It's made me realize that I am a hobbit and that this life is an unexpected adventure.  As of 3 weeks ago I had finished "Mount Doom" and, yes, I've been busy, but part of me wasn't ready for it to end.  I know that tears await me at the Grey Havens.

But I feel ready now to bid the Shire goodbye, and tonight I will.  Though statistically it means I've read only 8 novels since graduating (32 total for 2012), it's been a gift.


Now I have the books of 2013 calling my name.  There's a whole stack already by my bed that I can't wait to dig into.  It's a "farewell" to Tolkien, but it's a "hello" to Green, Kraus, Niffenneger, and countless others.


2013 - I can't wait to crack your cover!


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Updated so you can see the full list:



1  The Rainbow
2  Othello
3  Macbeth
4  Katherine Mansfield's Short Stories
5  Clarissa
6  King Lear
7  To the Lighthouse
8  Measure for Measure
9  Waterland
10  The Winter's Tale
11  History of Tom Jones
12  Atonement
13  The Tempest
14  Man Who was Thursday
15  A Severe Mercy
16  Sign of Four
17  Poems of TS Eliot
18  Metamorphosis
19  Trials of Socrates
20  Six Characters in Search of an Author
21  Protagoras
22  Gorgias
23  Mrs. Dalloway
24  Bald Soprano
25  Endgame 
26  Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
27  The Archivist
28  Woman in White
29  The Hobbit*
30  JRR Tokien - Biography
31  Fellowship of the Ring*
32  Two Towers*

Key: 
*re-read
___ read for school

Friday, December 9, 2011

writing final papers...

 [This is what my well loved books look like]

 [London Fog]

 
[thinking and scribbling]

[I've spent all day in History of Love and I still adore it!]

Skipped class this morning and opted for a writing day [I love you, Aeneas, but I'd say I'm fairly familiar with Rome's foundation myth].
On page 9 of 15 for my final paper for English honors. That's good, right? =/

Happy friday night!

Monday, November 21, 2011

Home early today because my last class was cancelled. Now for a cozy night of research and re-reading.
But look what just got delivered: motivation!


That's right, Surprised by Oxford just showed up.
[sorry its backward... my computer can only take mirror images]


Tonight I'm close reading and analyzing portions of these two lovely books, Room by Emma Donoghue and The History of Love by Nicole Krauss. I have an outline due tomorrow for my final paper in Honors. I'm writing about extreme loneliness and how it can effect characters--even to the point of creating imaginary friends or personifying inanimate objects.


It's going to be really fun.
But I may be back on here a bit later for a break/free write to clear my head =)

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Wow! I'm so blessed that so many of my friends have expressed interest in The History of Love. Honestly, sharing art and watching people enjoy what I am passionate about--I think that is my love language! Sometimes I almost pity my husband in advance:

"Honeeey, would you read Jane Austen?"
"Hon, can I read this amaaaazing passage to you?"
"Babe! We have to watch this film!!"

Ok, ok. I promise I won't be terribly nagging... especially about the Austen novels and girlie movies.

All that being said... I'm thrilled that other people are looking into this novel. I do feel like I owe you a disclaimer, however. I've shared what I've found beautiful and moving. But, just so you know, the book is not filled entirely with loveliness and Keats-quotations. There is death and separation and sadness. There is the eccentric Leopold Gursky who--though in his 80's--would pose as a nude model for an art class because, in his words, "All I want is not to die on a day when I went unseen." There is the lonely, but eager Alma Singer whose kisses never work out like quite she plans. There is her mother, Charlotte, who Alma just wants to be "not sad" after her father died:
My mother never fell out of love with my father. She's kept her love for him as alive as the summer they first met. In order to do this, she's turned life away. Sometimes she subsits for days on water and air. Being the only known complex life-form to do this, she should have a species named after her... She chose my father, and to hold on to a certain feeling, she sacrificed the world.
I just wanted to give a more rounded representation of The History of Love. I don't mean to deter any of you. To be quite honest, I think I am just in love with the many lonely and akward moments as I am with the beautiful. And in the midst of both, I found the tought process of an author and one of th most sentimentally striking passage that I've read documenting the treck of one small book across continents. [I'm having to restrain myself from posting the whole glorious passage up here. But I don't want to ruin it for you... but let me know when you've read it ;]

I think the history of love is all of these things, but also so much more. The thing this History is largely lacking is the One who makes "life a thing of beauty and a joy forever." There are so many people searching for a love, for a word they can't seem to define. I wanted to jump into the narrative, take characters by the hand, and tell them, "He's the One who has 'words for everything.'"

Monday, November 14, 2011

Just finished The History of Love. Another book that reminded me just how much I love literature.
I love it as a medium.
I love it as a mode.
[ha! unintended math pun!]
No, no... I just love it!

This particular book fueled my fantasy of marrying an author. I don't think I could a novel justice. But to be married to an artist? To perhaps even be a source of inspiration? To pass life "at the side" of a MacDonald or Tolkien or even a Dahl? 
Its just a dream. I don't require a fantastical author-husband... but it would be lovely =)

Just an excerpt, from the perspective of an author within the novel:
When I saw a Starbucks I went in and bought a coffee because I felt like a coffee, not because I wanted anyone to notice me. Normally I would have made a big production, Give me a Grande Vente, I mean a Tall Grande, Give me a Chai Super Vente Grande, or do I want a Short Frappe? and then, for punctuation, I would've had a small mishap at the milk station. Not this time. I poured the milk like a normal person, a citizen of the world, and sat down in an easy chair across from a man reading the newspaper. I wrapped my hands around the coffee. The warmth felt good. The next table over there was a girl with blue hair leaning over a notebook and chewing on a ballpoint pen, and at the table next to her was a little boy in a soccer uniform sitting with his mother who told him, The plural of elf is elves. A wave of happiness came over me. It felt giddy to be part of it all. To be drinking a cup of coffee like a normal person. I wanted to shout: The plural of elf is elves! What a language! What a world!
 Isn't it irresistibly happy? I really appreciate Nicole Krauss's writing style... this is only a snippet.

A girl in my honors course recently shared a quote: "A picture's worth a thousand words; and a word is worth a thousand pictures."
I want to spend my life exploring the trail of pictures the words leave behind...

Sunday, November 13, 2011

"Once upon a time there was a boy who loved a girl, and her laughter was a question he wanted to spend his whole life answering." - Nicole Krauss, The History of Love


Krauss is an incredible writer! I'm only about 50 pages in... but this book looks very promising =)