Thursday, July 28, 2011

Swept Up By The Words


 Gone with the Wind


Author:
Margaret Mitchell
Publisher:
Macmillan Publishers (1936)
Number of Pages:
1037
Review:
"Hunger gnawed at her empty stomach again and she said aloud: 'As God is my witness, and God is my witness, the Yankees aren't going to lick me. I'm going to live through this, and when it's over, I'm never going to be hungry again. No, nor any of my folks. If I have to steal or kill - as God is my witness, I'm never going to be hungry again.” In honour of my vacation to the beautiful states of Georgia and South Carolina I decided to review one of my all time favourite novels: Gone with the Wind. There is nothing I love more than a love story, but this love story is so complex and full of tough emotional situations, tragedy galore and *spoiler alert* a not so happy ending that when I first heard about it I wasn’t sure I’d like it at all. Mind you I’ve never seen the movie *insert gasp here* and what I’ve heard of the novel/movie was always second hand information that wasn’t always accurate so you can kind of see why I was hesitant to start this 1000+ page novel. However I did pick up a copy and I promise you I am not exaggerating but I finished the novel in 2 days! I loved it even more than my love for my cell phone *insert second gasp here*! I just hope this review can do this novel justice.

Scarlett O’Hara has never known hardship in her 18 years of life. Her father, an Irish immigrant who came to America and set up a well running and wealthy plantation named Tara, has never let his girls lift a finger or known the hardships of life, thus leaving Scarlett to grow up very prim, spoiled and selfish and indulged by both her mother and head slave Mammy. She soon finds herself developing strong feelings for Ashley Wilkes and when she confesses her feelings to him he admits that despite his attraction for her he doesn’t see how their personalities could ever fit together; he then admits to her that he is engaged to Melanie Hamilton. Heartbroken, she is teased relentlessly by the charming and dashing Rhett Butler who having heard her confession of love praised her for her gumption. She often makes crude remarks to Rhett unbeknownst to her that Rhett is in fact developing very strong feelings for her. In a fit of rage and jealousy Scarlett marries Charles Hamilton in the hopes that it would make Ashley jealous. It doesn’t, but it does amuse Rhett tremendously. In the union with Charles she unwilling befriends her new sister-in-law and rival Melanie, who is as sweet as icing sugar. However her life changes drastically when the American Civil War hits her state of Georgia. Her husband is killed in action; her mother becomes ill; her father dies and her beloved Tara becomes run down and neglected. Hungry and desperate she finds a stray cow that she uses to rejuvenate her land and vows never to go hungry again. Despite her hatred for her sister-in-law she accepts Melanie and Ashley into her home in hopes of luring Ashley into loving her, and also for the extra hands on the farm. It is while on a trip to Atlanta that she befriends and seduces Frank Kennedy a wealthy business man. Honing her skills as a negotiator and ruthless business woman she manages to make a fortune in Atlanta and, leaving Tara behind for Ashley to look after, she takes over Kennedy’s business. Eventually Frank dies and in steps Rhett who after seeing her grow into the woman she’s become he offers her a proposal of marriage. She accepts. A lot happens after her marriage to Rhett but I'll leave you to figure that all out yourself.

What I love most about this novel is Scarlett herself. She is one of the strongest and fully developed female characters about which I have ever had the pleasure of reading. She’s also a woman living in a very male dominant society. It’s unheard of for a woman to be strong and callous as she in her time, after all "a woman [who] could handle business matters as well or better than a man, [was] revolutionary [for a time when women were reared] in the tradition that men were omniscient and women none too bright." Where Melanie was emotional and ever trusting Scarlett was cold-hearted and determined to succeed. 

She starts off a young idealistic child and grows into a hard brutal woman which given her circumstances one can only understand why she is the way she is because after all Land is the only thing in the world that amounts to anything.” But she is also deeply flawed. Her schoolgirl crush is often confused with love, and having never experienced real love before, when she realizes what it really is to love and be loved it was already too late. Rhett once said: I loved you but I couldn't let you know it. You're so brutal to those who love you, Scarlett." And she really was. Perhaps it was a survival mechanism, I just think she never had a chance to realize and accept real love because she doesn’t even know what love really is. I mean who does? Sometimes we all make foolish mistakes but it’s her mistakes and her accomplishments that make Scarlett so relatable and I can see a lot of myself in her. That drive for success, the ruthless personality that can only come from poverty, that desire for love, anyone in her situation could have and quite possibly do end up exactly like Scarlett.

Even though this novel takes place in a time well before our own I truly believe that it’s a story that can be put into any time frame. It really is a universal story that could happen within our very own backyards. And despite the length of the novel it is a quick read because it captures your whole attention from the very first paragraph.

Mitchell has a way with words that’s timeless. Her characters are rich in depth and emotion; even the minor characters are present as whole beings in this novel, a very rare thing to find in fiction these days.  Her prose is one of the best writing I’ve read in a long time and despite this novel being an early modern classic it's written in a way that any Joe from the block can read it; it’s not like a Tolstoy novel where you need a dictionary on hand at all times, this novel is very readable.  I think this is why it stands the test of time and is constantly on the readers’ favourites lists at local libraries; it just has this way of being relevant to any generation. It is a remarkable read and I encourage every reader young and old to pick up this novel and read it. You will not be disappointed. Don’t be like Scarlett and think to yourself: “I won't think of it now. I can't stand it now. I'll think of it later.” Instead pick it up as soon as you can and devour it, you brain as well as your heart will thank you. 

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Top Twenty Favorite Words (Not in the Dictionary)

I am in search of a new Dictionary. Now I know you all might be thinking, why even bother buying a dictionary when all the words and their definitions are pretty much available on practically a billion websites? Well, I find that a paperback dictionary is a lot more practical for me to use because I am not always beside a computer (or a phone for that matter) while I read and my old dictionary is always available at hand for my use while I'm in my room which is where I do most of my reading anyway, plus computer screens hurt my eyes a lot, and I tend to get distracted. I might tell myself I'm going to search up this new word I had no idea existed but 2 hours later I'll find myself on ebay bidding on a candy wrapper from 1922 and I still wouldn't have any idea what  schadenfreude means. (Schadenfreude: pleasure derived from another's misfortune.)

Well in my quest for a new dictionary I've been thinking about words that are not listed in the dictionary (yet) but that are often used incessantly like derp or cinephile and thus led me to a list of my 20 favourite non-dictionous words that I decided to share with you all.
  1. fugly: something that is f**king ugly
  2. ginormous: bigger than gigantic and bigger than enormous
  3. aight: a lethargic way of saying alright
  4. confuzzled: confused and puzzled at the same time
  5. woot: an exclamation of joy or excitement
  6. swagger: used to describe a person possessing a sense of style, sophistication and confidence about how they present themselves to the world
  7. chillax: chill out/relax, hang out with friends
  8. cognitive displaysia: the feeling you have before you even leave the house that you are going to forget something and not remember it until you're on the highway
  9. gription: the purchase gained by friction
  10. moobs: man boobs
  11. urkin: when various sports programs decide to play commercial breaks at the same time as the other networks thus leaving viewers unable to switch games during commercial
  12. phat: pretty hot and tempting
  13. phonecrastinate: to put off answering the phone until caller ID displays the incoming name and number
  14. bogo: buy one get one...
  15. slickery: having a surface that is wet and icy
  16. guido: a sad excuse of a man
  17. quisling: to convince yourself that you are a zombie (one of the walking dead)
  18. knackered: to be exhausted
  19. snirt: snow that is dirty, often seen by the side of roads and parking lots that have been plowed
  20. lingweenie: a person incapable of producing neologisms
How cool is this list people? Let us hope that a few of them will end up in the dictionary soon.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Netflix for Novels?

I've recently moved into a very crowded and *cough*messy*cough* little apartment and as sad as it may seem I simply have no room (or money) to support my very expensive reading addiction. I love going to my local library to browse new titles, check out new books and find those few obscure titles I never would have read had I not visited the library that day, however lets face it, I like to take out a lot of books at once, I'm not good with deadlines, and my library can be a bit inconvenient, you never get the bestsellers or blockbusters when you want them because they're almost always checked out and the waiting lists are huge. The closest library to me is a good 20 minutes drive away. Now with limited means (as well as limited gas) I cannot afford to drive back and forth from the library to home when I need to preserve my gas for work. I really can't buy any books because, right now I have no where to store them. I also can't bring back my books on time because I honestly don't know how I can get them all read in time for me to return them (nor can I remember to return them. Sometimes I think I have the worst possible memory in the world). The last thing I want is to rack up a huge debt in library fees and believe me it's happened before *sneeze*$100*sneeze*. So you all can probably assume I'm the worst library borrower in the history of borrowers. So what's a girl to do?

Well, I happened to stumble upon this very cool renting program. It's called Book Swim and it's basically a program where you can rent books for as long as you want and then return them when you're finished with them. Much like the same concept as Netflix, but what Netflix did for films, Book Swim is doing the same thing for books. The fees are reasonably priced: for less than $1 a day you can take out 7 books at a time and keep them for as long as you like, and yes this includes the bestsellers that you'd probably have to wait months to get your hands on. They're mailed right to your doorstep so there's no need for you to even leave your house. You just choose which books you want to rent online and have them send it out to your home. Once you've finished with your novels simply place them back into the pre-paid envelope and choose your next set of novels. 

While some of you have the patience to wait for the novel you want to read either through saving up to buy the novel, or waiting for it on a waiting list, I find I am not that patient. When I want to read something, I want to read it now! And I especially cannot wait at all to get my hands on a new book of a series I am reading. So while this option maybe costly to a few, to others, especially those living in small towns where their books may be limited, it is a god sent.

If course, you can always buy an e-reader, but lets face it, it's not the same as reading a real book now is it, no matter how anti-glare the screen may be.

Anyway I just thought I'd share this with you in case you were looking for an option on renting books. By the way, they rent college textbooks too, and if you've ever bought textbooks you know how expensive they can be. I love this idea and fully support it. You don't have to agree with me of course but I bet in your mind you're thinking the same thing as me: Why oh why didn't I think of this first?

Happy Reading!!!