Posts Tagged With: book club

One Day

It is finally book review time and there seems to be no reading slump anywhere in my horizon. It helps that I spent a week with two people who love to read – Nancy is part of a book club and Anna reads A LOT. So, both had fantastic book suggestions and we were trading by the end of the trip. I also work with a hard-core bookie who is always reading something new, recommending her favorites, and expecting the rest of us to share in our reading adventures. It was through this co-worker that I decided to pick-up the book I’ll be reviewing today.

One Day, by David Nicholls, follows the lives of Emma and Dexter after a fling brings them together on graduation evening. It is on this day, July 15, that their stories are followed for 20 years, sometimes separately, and at others intertwined. We see their friendship grow into an impossibly strong bond and come to understand that they are at their best when they are together. However, we also see how their different paths in life can lead to huge fall-outs.

The concept of One Day was absolutely genius and I LOVED this book. It was witty, funny, heartfelt, and, at times, intensely sad. The idea that you are only seeing one day each year keeps the story moving in a truly unique way. It is almost like each chapter ends on its own cliff-hanger, because you bypass a year moving into the next segment. And then the next installment clears up the happenings of the past year either through internal dialogue or interaction between characters. I also loved that you are in both of their minds, watching them fall in love (with whom, I won’t say!), strengthening and ruining their relationship, and working their way through a complicated life they weren’t quite prepared for when they met at graduation.

Both Emma and Dexter are complex in their own ways, and you slowly learn that they are better together. In most ways, they are brutally honest with one another, but also very secretive in other aspects. I do have one word of warning – I found the story a little difficult to get into. However, it is worth sticking through, because these two characters are worth every page. I laughed, I cried (sitting at a cafe on the beach with Matt – embarrassing), and I became a cheerleader for their relationship. In fact, this book affected me enough that I was thinking about it days after. Certainly worth a read, I highly recommend this book to absolutely everyone!

*I am delighted to learn that this story has been adapted into a film, set to release in July! Anne Hathaway plays Emma, though I do not think she is exactly the right casting for this part – if you’ve read One Day leave me your opinion on this.

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Brooklyn

It feels like ages since I’ve done a book review. For those of you who check in for “book club” only, the absence of reviews isn’t for lack of reading. Luckily, I have just the thing to recommend today, and ironically, it was passed to me through a real, live book club get-together here in Dublin.  The girls and I met at my apartment at the end of January for our now monthly gathering to enjoy some food, wine, and intelligent (at least at the beginning of the night ;-) ) book discussions.

Brooklyn a novel

Brooklyn, by Colm Tóibín, was passed on to me during our evening of fun. I read most of it within the week that I received it and finished it on the plane to Milan. Set in the 1950s, the story follows a young woman from Ireland as she travels across the ocean to Brooklyn, where she starts a new life of her own. The main character, Eilis Lacey, has lived in a small Irish town her whole life, yet cannot find a job, despite her bookkeeping skills. Her sister, the more confidant and charismatic of the two, arranges a meeting with a priest named Father Flood. Father Flood sets Eilis up with a job on a department store floor, in an Irish neighborhood in Brooklyn. The story follows Eilis as she leaves her mother and sister behind, creates a home for herself in Brooklyn, and falls in love with a man named Tony. The twist? Devastating news from back home sends Eilis back to Ireland, where she begins to question her life in America.

I found Brooklyn to be an engaging and beautifully-written story, especially since I’ve moved the opposite way – America to Ireland. I also love the time period of the story. 50s bathing suits are discussed and in one specific scene an embarrassed Eilis tries American bathing suits on one by one. Oh to be a part of a period when modest one-pieces were the style! I also enjoyed the description of her trip over by boat. Imagine spending 7 days on a ship crossing an ocean – and Eilis’ first experience is during a storm. Her relationships with her house mates are entertaining and the days spent as she falls in love with Tony are some of the best pieces of writing.

Yet, the end of the book was not my cup of tea. I found myself angry with the choices Eilis was making, and then even angrier with her final decision. In fact, I had a hard time understanding how a woman who had the courage to travel to a foreign country, so far from her family and the life she finds so comfortable, could be so weak at times. Her vulnerability could have been an acceptable, possibly even endearing, quality; however, I found myself frustrated. She is constantly pushed around and told what to do, and the one time she makes a strong decision, it’s not for herself. For a novel that is clearly a character study, I was a bit confused. And that may have been Tóibín’s intention.

Nevertheless, Brooklyn was a lovely story, and even with its faults, I was immersed in the story the whole way through. I would definitely recommend this novel, especially if you are in the mood for a character study with beautiful imagery. Worth the book club exchange, I’ll be handing this worthy read to another at my next gathering.

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Food For Every Mood

When you’re facing a 15 hour travel time, magazines, books, and television shows downloaded on your computer are a must. I am notorious for being able to fall asleep anywhere, yet planes are an anomaly. Since I’m awake for the entirety of international travels, I need a hefty load of entertainment to pass the time. In the wake of my recent book review, Matt’s mom, Nancy, lent me a book that combined a great mix of fiction, and my newfound obsession with cooking for the flight.

Enter The Recipe Club, by Andrea Israel and Nancy Garfinkel, and you’ve got a book that can certainly pass a few hours. Told mainly as an epistolary novel, letters between two old friends detail the loyalty and betrayal that create the “ingredients” of their friendship. Valerie and Lilly have been best friends since childhood due to the unconventional relationships their families share. We get to know them through their correspondence, each letter ending with a recipe for their two person “Recipe Club.” Each recipe is titled appropriately to the mood of the letter – i.e. Lovelorn Lasagna, Diploma Dip with Veggies, Missing You Warmly Lentil Salad, etc.

I truly enjoyed this story, though the characters did make me crazy at times. Both Val and Lilly are such blunt personalities, that at times I wondered how long a true friendship like theirs would last in the real world, due to all of the mistakes they make and the frank nature of their relationship. However, the story so beautifully pulls and pushes these two in ways that test their relationship time and time again. I found myself siding with one, only to change sides pages later. And when they come together, their friendship is so raw and encouraging; when at their most connected, they bring out the best in each other. The food was the “icing on the cake” for this moving and inspirational story. Each recipe they shared conveyed messages of their own: apology, confusion, warmth, depression, etc.

I guess you could say I’m on a foodie kick right now, following my review of Barefoot Contessa at Home. I am indeed loving the power that a good combination of ingredients can create. The Recipe Club only reinforced my adoration for the craft of cooking through its beautiful meals, emotions, and friendships that stand the test of time.

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Food for Thought

It has taken 4 full days to decide which would be the best first post for the New Year. I could go on and on about my time with my family and friends in sunny Dallas, including my complete euphoria to be running outside again. I could add a Game Day post to the lineup with all of the college football going on, but I figure the start to a year shouldn’t dwell on the end of another. I could even tell you about a fantastic and magical book I read awhile ago, Water for Elephants, coming soon to theaters, but I figure I’ll save it for a nice movie comparison.

After much debate today, and a bit of writer’s block, I’ve decided to do a twist of a book review. The twist refers to the review of choice: a cookbook. A cookbook, you ask? If you really do follow my blog, you know that Matt and I have been doing a lot of cooking over in Dublin. We love to spend a chilly Friday night cooking a new and hearty meal. And, of course, there was Thanksgiving. I’ve become a bit fearless in the kitchen, because really the worst that could happen would be the creation of a poor tasting meal, in which I’d just throw it out and order in. Over the break I’ve been watching the Food Network and thumbing through my Mom’s seemingly endless supply of cookbooks looking for fun and interesting recipes.

I spent the day flipping through my new favorite, Ina Garten’s Barefoot Contessa at Home. I’ve always loved her show; she has such a calming voice and she’s a great teacher. Not to mention her home is to die for and her impressive garden supplies most of her vegetables and herbs. Her cookbook does not disappoint either. It is so clean, crisp, and easy to read; the photos are beautiful and represent the results fantastically; and the recipes appeal to both novices and professionals alike. It is more than a cookbook, too. At the beginning of each section, there is some sort of blurb on other note-worthy topics: how to create a grocery list, how to design a kitchen, planning your menu, etc.

I became more excited the further I read, because each and every recipe seems completely do-able for someone like me who is starting to expand their cooking repertoire. Also, Ina cooks with more herbs and less onion. In fact, she hardly even uses onion, which is perfect for my household. Matt completely despises onion, limiting my everyday menu. Another excitement factor: she makes baking seem less scary. For those of you who cook like me – you eye up your ingredients as you cook – her baking section actually makes me want to give it a shot. Peanut Butter and Jelly Bars? Now that is something I’ll try.

To give you more of an idea why this is such a great purchase, here’s a rundown of some of the recipes that intrigued me the most.

1. Caesar Club Sandwich – Imagine everything that is amazing about a caesar salad, add pancetta, sun dried tomatoes, and ciabatta bread, and I’m salivating. Did I mention you homemake the caesar dressing? Yum.

2. Chicken Salad Véronique – A very green chicken salad with green tarragon, green celery, and green grapes. And assembly is so simple!

3. Eli’s Asian Salmon – I wish Matt liked fish, because I am now dying to make this.

4. Zucchini Pancakes – She had me at pancakes! I just love a twist on vegetables, because face it, they’re not always what we reach for first.

5. Pear, Apple, & Cranberry Crisp – I already mentioned the Peanut Butter and Jelly Bars, but her fruit desserts peaked my interest just as much.

I could go on and on – there’s even a breakfast section including homemade Bloody Marys!  However, the only way for you to truly appreciate her masterpiece is to purchase it yourself. In fact, this copy belongs to my mother, who will not part with it, and understandably so. Not to worry. I plan on buying my very own copy!

My most recent masterpiece - a holiday meal for me and Matt! Pot roast, mashed potatoes, carrots, gravy and cream cheese biscuits. Everything made from scratch!

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