Archive for August, 2009

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Book Discussion: Dance Night

dancenight.jpgIt’s time again for the Slaves of Golconda to discuss another book and this time it’s Dance Night by Dawn Powell.

From the Publisher: It is sometime prior to WWI in Lamptown, Ohio, a working-class town filled with factory girls. Every Thursday night at the Casino Dance Hall women and a few men gather to escape their pedestrian lives in fantasy, and sometimes to live out these fantasies. Observing all are the novel’s two young protagonists, Morry, who dreams of becoming an architect and developer, and Jen, an unsentimental orphan of fourteen who, abandoned by her mother, dreams of escape.

Lamptown may have a lot of hubbub from the residents but most of the inhabitants are all waiting for their dreams to come true. Some dream of a job in the big city and others dream of finding a good man who’ll take them away from their meager existence. Until these dreams are realized though the community spends time at the casino, dancing, flirting and trying to make sense of the current relationships.

The novel is an intimate account of some of the residents who are suffering from loneliness and dreams unfulfilled. We have Elsinore Abbott who is tormented by her husband who accuses her of being unfaithful although he’s the one who travels and meets girls in other towns. My two favorite characters of course are Morry and Jen, two young people who hide their true feelings from each other and sometimes act out to lash out at one another, often with negative consequences to themselves, but they are still bound together by their dreams.

“Morry and Jen looked quickly at each other – this was the thing that always bound them – trains hunting out unknown cities, convincing proof of adventure far off, of destiny somewhere waiting, of things beyond Lamptown.”

What I liked a lot about the novel is how the characters would act or say things that from the way the author describes them, you know goes against what they really think or feel. It’s like we have another way of seeing the characters and gives us a broader characterization of each one.

Not to mention the wonderful descriptions of the dancing and the music. I don’t know anything really about music from that era but the book certainly made me wish I had some recordings to listen to while I read the book.

“Two floors above Bauer’s Chop House fifty pairs of feet went slip-a-slip a-slip to a drum’s beating. Sometimes a piano melody crept through the drum’s reverberation, sometimes the voice of Fischer emerged with a one-and-two and a one-and-two, and when this rhythm stopped suddenly there was a clap-clap-clap of hands, a silence and in this silence the clock sitting on the top of Bauer’s cash register marked off the hush into ones and twos and ones and twos and ones and twos.”

I’d never heard of Dawn Powell before but am so glad to have discovered this writer. Danielle just put up a great post with more info on the writer. I hope to read more of her books that’s for sure.

So hope the book sounds good to you and if you want to find out more feel free to drop in at the forum and discuss the book with us.

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Books Waiting For Me

While I wasn’t ready to come back from my trip (yes, I’m still being bratty and wish I was in Germany), I did have something to look forward to: Books!

I’ve lucked out and received quite a few ARCs while I was away. These sound quite good to me so let me tell you what I got.

  • See How Much I Love You by Luis Leante. Two teenagers meet and fall in love in 1970s Barcelona. Oh I love Barcelona so I’m already looking forward to a summer romance story set in that beautiful city.
  • To Siberia by Per Petterson. I loved his story Out Stealing Horses, actually was surprised how much I enjoyed it, so needless to say I’m very excited about this book.
  • Ferris Beach by Jill McCorkle. I recently mooched this book and here they are reissuing it. So maybe after I finish this story about “a place of excitement and magic” I’ll pass my extra copy to someone else. Stay tuned.
  • Home by Marilynne Robinson. “What does it mean to come home?” In one way or another, every character in Home is searching for that answer. This book won the 2009 Orange Prize.
  • The Puzzle King by Betsy Carter. On a gray morning in 1936, Flora Phelps stands in line at the American consulate in Stuttgart, Germany. She carries a gift for the consul, whom she will bribe in order to help her family get out of Hitler’s Germany. This sounds like it’s going to be a gripping story.
  • Girl Mary by Petru Popescu. “With his empire in crisis, Augustus orders a young Roman spy to find a sign of his divinely inspired power. Concealing his real name, Pontius Pilate enters the Judean desert seeking an unknown miracle. The moment he meets the striking adolescent Mary, he senses that he is in the presence of someone magical.”
  • City of God by Beverly Swerling. This is the fourth installment of a multigenerational saga of old New York. It sounds wonderful but I’m wondering if I should start with the first one.

Lots of variety here and don’t even know where to start but I’ll keep you posted on how the reading goes. Have you read any of these? Let me know if there’s one you think I should start with first.

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Life According to Literature

Dorothy W. just posted this wonderful meme and I couldn’t pass up on it. Check it out and I bet you’ll want to give it a go too.

Using only books you have read this year (2009), answer these questions. Try not to repeat a book title. It’s a lot harder than you think!

Describe yourself: The Last Queen (C.W. Gortner) heh.

How do you feel: When You Are Engulfed In Flames (David Sedaris). It’s hot here in Texas.

Describe where you currently live: Among the Mad (Jacqueline Winspear)

If you could go anywhere, where would you go? Villa Serena (Domenica De Rosa)

Your favorite form of transportation: Sleepwalking in Daylight (Elizabeth Flock)

Your best friend is: Somebody Else’s Daughter (Elizabeth Brundage)

You and your friends are: Independent People (Halldor Laxness)

What’s the weather like: In A Dry Season (Peter Robinson)

You fear: Sights Unseen (Kaye Gibbons)

What is the best advice you have to give: Hold Love Strong (Matthew Aaron Goodman)

Thought for the day: What It Is (Lynda Barry)

How I would like to die: Reading in Bed (Sue Gee)

My soul’s present condition: The Richest Season (Maryanne McFadden)

I hope everyone has a wonderful weekend!