Showing posts with label goodreads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label goodreads. Show all posts

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Wonderland - Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast



To say this review is mocking me is an understatement. I feel like these words that have jumped out at me from this little fairy tale is a bully on a playground back at my old Elementary school. Alice and her menagerie of characters are taunting me with words that I'm not sure I understand and smiling at me in such a way that makes me think that they might very well hold the secret to happiness.

Upon finishing my copy of Alice's adventures, I was left kind of befuddled. I've never even used the word befuddled before but somehow it seems like the only appropriate expression to describe my feelings. Vowing to sleep on it for a night, I put it aside and the next morning I began reading what I could about the lore surrounding this beloved tale.

I really wish I hadn't.

My initial reaction to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass was this.




I had never read it before and my only experience with the fairy tale itself is a vague memory of the Disney movie, a made for TV movie that I don't remember liking very much, and Jefferson Airplane creating a beautifully haunting song about this tale that most likely supports the drug idea.
                                    Sidebar: If you have no idea what I'm talking about then here.   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_raXzIRgsA
                                 Also, learn your hippy culture. It's kind of disgraceful at this point if you don't know this song.

I knew going in that most claim this is a tale about drugs and with only a few chapters behind me, I felt like looking at these people and asking them if they thought it was about drugs because they were on drugs themselves? I'm not judging or anything. Just curious because these so called “obvious” drug references weren't making themselves known to me. What's that you say? There was a Caterpillar smoking hooka? Right. My apologies. That obviously denotes a full on acid trip the author was having about a little girl. Oh, but wait. The girl was eating and drinking things that ended up altering her perception of herself? My morning cup of coffee does the same thing. I know, I know. Why didn't I see it before? In fact, these little nuances of the story explains so much about my own writing. Thank you, you drug reference seekers. Please review Peter Pan next and tell me about the pixie dust. (sarcasm mostly done. Promise.)



From what I could gather, Alice is a little girl wandering through the creative mind that she has managed to mold around her. Whether she is walking through a dream or she is playing pretend in her living room, is up for debate. As she makes her way through Wonderland, she meets a cast of characters who all offer tales and wisdom which are described in such ways that the young and the yet to be educated seem to have a knack for. If you don't know what I'm talking about, go listen to a child ramble about their day for a bit. The way they understand the world and the words we use in them is vastly different than our our. Carroll loves to play with this, taking words that we automatically see one way and twisting them into something entirely different. Alice's journey is a mish mash of word play, imagination and nonsensical moments that we all have while dreaming, and some of us even have while pondering life during the quite moments of our day. (And while on drugs. See guys? I'm not forgetting about you!)

When looking further into this tale, I ran across a lot of different things that always make me a bit sad to be a literature major. People have of course dived into this story, picking it apart until there is nothing left and then treating it as an atom and dividing it some more. Suddenly Alice is a metaphor for the struggles of puberty (she doesn't like this being little and big scenario all that much and comments about how terribly confusing it all is). The caterpillar is seen as a sexual predator, obviously after the small girl. The Garden Alice is so desperately trying to get into is of course the Garden of Eden (because all gardens in literature are for some reason) and the tale itself is about a child trying to come terms with the fact that death is very real. We can also take a more mathematical approach to it and view the mushroom as Alice's way of understanding the properties she needs to manipulate in order to regain her proper size. There are theories and there are passionate essays out there that go in to much more detail that I will here and if you are a person who wishes to read more of those, I highly suggest this site (http://www.alice-in-wonderland.net/ ). It has everything Alice related you could want to know. Here's the thing about all those theories though and it is a problem we face in school and in what is meant to be scholarly critics of a work of a literature. Sometimes, authors just write in order to create a story. That's it. That's the big secret. They don't always sit down and try to figure out what Alice is going to mean to the rest of the world. They don't always take into consideration that people out there are going to be analyzing their characters every action and looking for the deeper meaning in this piece of text simply because they can't find the deeper meaning in life. Sometimes, authors write what they think is good and funny and enjoyable and then they sit down at night and move on. Motifs and symbolism often times go too far in literature and I think Alice is a victim of that more than anything else.


"I'm very much afraid I didn't mean anything but nonsense. Still, you know, words mean more than we mean to express when we use them; so a whole book ought to mean a great deal more than the writer means. So, whatever good meanings are in the book, I'm glad to accept as the meaning of the book."(source: Collingwood, "The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll")

In the authors words, it was never intended as anything more than a fairy tale. Of course, we shouldn't discredit how people view literature because often times it tells us more about the people reading the tale, than the tale itself. But, in the case of Alice, I think its also important to remember that nonsense is fun and the wild imaginings that have been produced from this tale are timeless and obviously hold a sense of power over us.



Now that I'm done with that rant, I would like to ask one thing. Did Alice annoy anyone else? Seriously, kid. Shut up. Stop interrupting the tale of the Jabberwocky and just sit and listen for a minute.

If you are looking for other Wonderland-esque stories, I suggest Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere. Before even reading Wonderland, I thought that Gaiman made some beautiful references to the text.



Also, if you are interested in seeing what else I will be reading this month, view my previous post, June Reads, here: http://papertales4u.blogspot.com/2013/06/june-book-reads.html

Disagree with me about Alice? Please let me know. Comment below or mail me through my authors profile on the side. Also, go like my facebook page in the sidebar in order to keep up to date on when I post.


And, as always...



Sunday, June 2, 2013

June Book Reads

It's sickening sometimes to realize just how much I read and then I am disheartened other nights when I realize that I don't read nearly enough. This is the crux of my brain half the time. Apply the “I do too much” vs the “I don't do enough” syndrome to any subject and you have my opinion on my life down pretty pat (Is pretty pat even a saying...? Now it is.).

I do honestly try to read as much as I can and I do enjoy mixing up my books a bit to include classics and works of fiction that indulge in my sometimes overactive fantasy geared brain. I like the idea of reaching goals and I love the feeling that I get when I finish a novel. I also hate the feeling I get when I finished a really good novel and can't move on after that.

(Credited to: http://www.epicreads.com/blog/15-undeniable-truths-about-book-nerds/)

Seriously. This is a problem.

So far, for June, I have a few little books picked out to try and swim through with the hopes of discovering something noteworthy. So far, these are the ones that I know I will read just because once I finish them, it'll give me an excuse to buy more.

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass
By Lewis Carroll (as if you needed clarification)


I don't know how I haven't read this yet. I love my fairy tales. I love them to unhealthy extents. But, somehow Alice has eluded me. I never really watched the Disney movie growing up and I have yet to see the Tim Burton adaptation (is it any good? People are having some strange opinions on it I'm noticing). I didn't even know there were two versions of this book. Thankfully, I own a copy that has both. It also came to my attention the other night that there is an Alice debate out there where some people believe that there is a pure form of this classic and adaptations should stick to it and others are holding up a silent middle finger to said purists. I don't land on either side, but I'm curious to see what all that is about. Either way, I'm about fifty pages in to this tale and am enjoying it. Though, I mock all you people that say this was drug induced... More on that when I finish.

Review Now Uphttp://papertales4u.blogspot.com/2013/06/wonderland-six-impossible-things-before.html

The Map of Time
By Felix J. Palma


I picked this book up at Powell's on a whim. I knew next to nothing about it other than the fact that it's been popping up on my goodreads account (http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/7341304-dana) like crazy. Being someone who does not read summaries (I tend to skim) I have to say that I was thrown off guard when I started reading it. As of right now, the narrator breaks the fourth wall relentlessly, jumps through time lines like a little jumping bean (I probably could find a better analogy but that one makes me laugh) and the characters have decided to go to H.G Well's in hopes that he can send them back in time to stop Jack the Ripper.

Let that sink in.

I'll let you know how I feel about the book when I'm finished but so far it has left me standing on uncertain ground.

Review Now Uphttp://papertales4u.blogspot.com/2013/06/book-review-map-of-time.html

The Annotated Peter Pan
By J.M Barrie


I'm giving you a fair warning now. I love Peter Pan to a sometimes terrifying extent. I won't go too much into that now because I know there will eventually be a blog about my adoration for this twisted little tale but know that you will see references to Pan and the Lost Boy's numerous times.

The Annotated Peter Pan is another one of my buys at Powell's. Not only does it have the story but has the history of the play itself and a biography on the author. It goes in depth on the behind the scenes of this beloved book and attempts to explain the phenomenon surrounding it. If you like biographies, I would suggest it. Again, I'm not done with it, but so far, so good.

Imaginary Companions and the Children Who Create Them
By Marjorie Taylor

Imaginary friends is a topic that I am fascinated with. The idea that all these children all around the world can create something so similar is mind blowing. These little creations are a sign of creativity and a sign of learning. Up until recently, however, we considered the idea of a child having one, to be some what worrisome.

Marjorie Taylor is a professor who specializes in children and their imaginary friends. She conducted studies on whether or not it was dangerous for a child to create such a thing and dives into the reasons as to why some children have these invisible friends, and some do not. I'm keen on reading what she has to say not just because this is a topic that I have a particular interest in but because I was blessed to be one of her students at The University of Oregon when I was freshman and really enjoyed her class.
The Torchwood Archives
By Gary Russell

Don't even start with me. I'm a nerd and need to work through some Torchwood grief.

Review now uphttp://papertales4u.blogspot.com/2013/06/torchwood-top-secret.html

The Screwtape Letters
By C.S Lewis

Um... didn't Lewis write magical children's tales about going through a wardrobe? Here I was naively thinking that that was it but apparently, he also wrote about demons. The Screwtape Letters is a series of letters passed back and forth between a demon and his nephew. I know nothing else about the book but this and somehow, that is enough to go out and buy it immediately.

Review Now Up: http://papertales4u.blogspot.com/2013/07/screwtape-letters-by-cs-lewis.html

I'm sure that the June reading list will grow as I either finish books too quickly, or have the urge to “browse” the local bookstore. As always, I'm looking for new books and would love to hear your suggestions.