Thursday, June 30, 2011

The Normal Heart

I know this is a reading club but I thought I'd share about my trip to the theatre (read: "thee-ah-tuh"):
 
I saw The Normal Heart last night with Nathan and am emotionally drained. It's written by the man who started AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) and the Gay Men's Health Crisis. It's basically a fictionalized account of his founding of ACT UP. It was first produced in 1985 and was/still is a really rage-filled indictment of the apathy of the government, the NY Times, the mayor of NYC, the public, the attitude of gay men towards sex/"liberation," etc. The protagonist is this really angry, "out" writer who can't get enough of his closeted friends to do their part or subscribe to his "radical" methods. So he ends up being kicked off the board of the organization he himsef started. Meanwhile, of course, 40 of his friends have died and his lover is sick and undergoing the experimental-hopeless-chemotherapy-attempts-at-treatment that the only empathetic doctor in city is offering.
 
The walls of the stage were pretty plain white, except that they had quotes, statistics, and news headlines outlined on them faintly. And between scenes, when the lights went down, projectors would shine the names of all of the people who had been diagnosed with and killed by AIDS up to that point in the play's time setting onto the walls. By the end (about 1984) the list covered the whole stage, and then after about ten seconds four more columns appeared on the walls on either side of the ground seating. I've always thought that this was a major blind spot for me and I'm going try to start learning about the history of HIV/AIDS and about organizations in NYC. There was a time that I thought about volunteering at Housing Works Bookstore, which maybe I could do this summer on some evenings and/or weekends.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Proposal

Because I really enjoyed being able to read Bryan's comments after his "Reluctant Fundamentalist" reading experience, I thought it'd be a cool idea for each one of us to pick a book from our list that the others have to read. Since Devika and Bryan have both already read Hamid from me, that can be my book that I selected. That way, we get to have kind of a book club thing going on where we get some real discussion circulating about our readings.

SO GUYS.
If you want to do this, let us know your pick for the one book (or more! up to you guys) from your list that everyone else should read!

<3's,
Kim

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Bryan on Mohsin Hamid's "The Reluctant Fundamentalist"

While there were some real gems in this book, and for its length it does deliver in terms of the growth of the narrator and content, there is something about the book that didn't "do it" for me. I'm trying to deconstruct that feeling - my mother read it and enjoyed it much more than I did, and I think the fact that I'm a white American non-immigrant might be an element of it. The writing style, also, was not something I'm used to. I understand that this is the author's voice, and that he's a Princeton-educated and clearly a genius, and in the sense of the writing style communicating a lot about his personality it was excellent. The problem I had with it was that it kind of made me think of his personality as being very mechanical, like an encyclopedia, and even the very emotional, vulnerable, or tender passages about his relationship, or about home, seemed to me too clinical and scientific.

I don't think I need to go too deeply into how much I appreciated other elements of the story, such as the political nature and the criticism of violence it makes. Maybe the book simply wasn't what I was in the mood for at the time. I would really like to hear Kim and Devika's thoughts on it (or anyone who reads it) because I'm sure there are things I'm missing or perspectives I'm neglecting.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Hello friends!
So I wrote a draft of what I was going to be reading a couple weeks ago, but my focus has shifted since then. Here, I present to you, Kim's Summer 2011 Literary Adventure (as of June 6, 2011):

1) White Tiger by Aravind Adiga
2) One Day by David Nicholls
3) Henry and June by Anais Nin
4) How to Read the Air by Dinaw Mengestu
5) Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
6) Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs by Chuck Klosterman

... that's all I have for now. I'll keep posting because I tend to find new books I want to read as I progress, rather than make a planning list. When I list, it sucks the fun out and I worry about finishing a book rather than really savoring it. (BUT I still love the idea of this blog, which is sharing with each other our reading experiences.)

In that vein, I'll share that I just finished reading Bossypants by Tina Fey, and it was so great. I love her, and even though the book doesn't really have a coherent goal and is moreso a collection of miscellaneous ramblings, it's still so funny and wonderful. A choice quote:

"I feel about Photoshop the way some people feel about abortion. It is appalling and a tragic reflection on the moral decay of our society…unless I need it, in which case, everybody be cool."

I'm going to re-read The Great Gatsby this summer as well, because I don't think I appreciated it nearly enough in high school. And I will be picking up "Letters to a Young Poet" asap, after seeing Bryan's post. With that in mind, if anyone wants to read beautiful and emotionally sophisticated yet incredibly simplistic poetry in like a day, pick up Mary Barnard's Sappho translation. So I read it for CFI freshman year. Whatever. It's still great. Like this:

It's no use
Mother dear, I
can't finish my
weaving
You may
blame Aphrodite

soft as she is

she has almost
killed me with
love for that boy


If you can't find it, just borrow it from me in the fall. It is so short and simple to read, but ever so lovely.

Hmmm, what else? Oh yes. Movies, music, etc.

Bridesmaids was hysterical, saw it twice and laughed even harder the second time around. Last Night is a new favorite and Rabbit Hole, of course. I just watched Food, Inc. as well. Ooh boy. Has me doubting everything I put in my body. I would be glad to take any recommendations!

As for music, I am basically in a state of suspension, waiting for the release of Bon Iver's new album (TWO WEEKS!). Can't stop listening to "Calgary." I'm pleased with Death Cab's new album, "Codes and Keys" and the new Coldplay single, "Every Teardrop is a Waterfall."

So I also just downloaded Taylor Swift's "Today Was a Fairytale"? Whatever, today was a fairytale.

And you should listen to this, on repeat, forever, on long car drives at sunset, windows down, mmmmmmm:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKqLQcIfgvI

Thinking of you all!
Lots of love,
Kim