Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Book Review - Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

Title - Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Author: Mark Twain
My Rating: 👍👍👍👍
👍
My Review: This is my second time reading this book. The first time was ages ago and I almost forgot how much I enjoy Mark Twain. Listening to this book on Audible narrated by Elijah Wood was a pleasure and I totally recommend it. The fact that this book is on some banned book lists in America prompted me to read it again to see what could possibly make it a banned book. The only thing I could see is it's liberal use of the N word and description of slavery prior to the Civil War.
I love this book and think it should be required reading for all Americans. However, I think there should probably be some supervision for younger people due to its liberal use of racial epithets.

Description (Audible): Ernest Hemingway said, “All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn". One hundred years after its author’s death, this classic remains remarkably modern and poignantly relevant. In this new edition, Elijah Wood reads Huck in a youthful voice that may be the closest interpretation to Twain’s original intent. His performance captures the excitement and confusion of adolescence and adventure. Best of all, the immediacy of Wood’s energetic reading sweeps listeners up and makes them feel as though they’re along for the ride, as Huck and Jim push their raft toward freedom.

Description (ChatGPT): Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is Mark Twain’s timeless romp down the Mississippi River, where a boy, a runaway slave, and a raft make the perfect recipe for mischief and mayhem. It’s part coming-of-age tale, part social commentary, and all charm. Huck’s sense of morality might be as muddy as the river he’s floating on, but his wit and wisdom are sharper than a Southern summer. Twain’s mix of humor and sharp critique of society is as fresh today as it was in 1884—proving that even the wildest adventures can make you think. Just don’t forget your paddle... or your conscience.

Book Review - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

Title - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
Author: Mark Twain
My Rating: 👍👍👍👍👍
My Review: Mark Twain is one of my favorite authors and listening to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer narrated by Nick Offerman is about as good as it gets. I first read this book ages ago and hardly remembered the story. So it was almost like reading it for the first time. Mark Twain knows how to tell a story like no one else. Like Mark Twains' other book, Adventures of HuckIeberry Finn, Adventures of Tom Sawyer has received alot of critism for its use of offensive racial epithets (N word 219 times) and depection of racism. As a result, both are on some banned book lists. I love this book and think it should be required reading for all Americans. However, I think there should probably be some supervision for kids due to 
its liberal use of racial epithets. 

Description (Audible): With The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, not even Twain could have known that when he introduced readers to the inhabitants of the fictional town of St. Petersburg, Missouri, he would also be introducing two characters - one a clever and mischievous scamp, and the other a carefree, innocent ragamuffin - whose stories would ultimately shape the course of American literature. But whereas its sequel and companion piece, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, would harken an end to childhood, the story of Tom Sawyer is one that depicts the excitement and adventure of boyhood along the Mississippi. Revisit this enduring classic and you will be struck not only by Twain's skill at capturing a time and place so vividly but also by his uncanny ability to crystallize those oftentimes tumultuous and conflicting emotions that a child experiences at the precipice of adulthood: a longing to be free from the rules and obligations of adults while enjoying the laxity inherent in childhood; a love of all things macabre, like blood oaths, cemetery cures, and haunted houses, that reveal a true innocence - an unawareness of real-life consequences and one's own mortality; and the pangs of guilt when knowing the right thing to do and doing the right thing appear to be at odds.

Description (ChatGPT): The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is Mark Twain’s delightful tribute to childhood mischief, where whitewashing fences, treasure hunts, and river escapades make for the perfect recipe for trouble. Tom’s knack for getting into—and out of—scrapes will have you laughing, while his adventures with Huck Finn remind you that growing up is overrated. Twain’s witty commentary on human nature is as sharp as ever, making Tom’s antics not just a childhood romp, but a clever critique of society. So, grab your slingshot, your friends, and dive into a world where imagination always wins over responsibility.

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Book Review - Oregon

Title - Oregon
Author: Don Winslow
My Rating: 👍👍👍👍
My Review: This was a short book that popped up as a freebie on my Audible subscription. I've lived in the Pacific Northwest for the last forty-two years so the title caught my attention. Ed Harris is an excellent narrator and the story brought back many memories of growing up in the 1970's and the Vietnam war. I enjoyed this book and look forward to reading more books by Don Winslow

Description (Audible): It was 1970 in a defeated Rhode Island fishing town. Vietnam and Nixon dominated the national news. Both the near and distant future looked bleak. But they were five inseparable high school friends with something incredible in common: an unwavering resolve to look after each other no matter what hell life threw at them. And they were on a mission. The plan was simple: Go off the grid before they turned 18 to avoid the draft. They’d sell some grass, stack some cash, then head west and start a commune. What could possibly go wrong?

Descriptioin (ChatGPT): Oregon by Don Winslow is a brutal, fast-paced descent into the morally murky depths of the American West. With his signature mix of gritty realism and sharp, noir-inspired dialogue, Winslow crafts a tale of criminals, betrayals, and high-stakes heists that’s as rugged as the land it’s set in. It’s part Western, part crime thriller, and all heartless, proving once again that Winslow knows how to make you question what’s more dangerous: the law or the people who break it. Buckle up—Oregon isn’t a place for the faint of heart.

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Book Review - James: A Novel

James: A Novel
Title: James: A Novel 
Author: Percival Evertt
My Rating: 👍👍👍👍👍
My Review:  
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is one my favorite books by one of my favorite authors, Mark Twain. When I recently found out that there's a version of Adventures Hucklebery Finn written from the point of view of Hucks' enslaved friend Jim, I had to read it.The book is full of surprises and kept me riveted to the very end. I loved this book and highly recommend it. 

Description (Audible): A brilliant, action-packed reimagining of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, both harrowing and darkly humorous, told from the enslaved Jim's point of view.

Description (ChatGPT): James: A Novel by Ian McGuire is a gripping, no-holds-barred dive into the murky waters of guilt, obsession, and self-destruction. The story of James, a man on the edge of madness, reads like a slow-motion train wreck—painfully fascinating, impossible to look away from. McGuire’s prose is as sharp as a surgeon’s scalpel, cutting deep into the psyche while leaving just enough flesh to make you squirm. It’s a novel that doesn’t let its protagonist off easy, and neither does it let the reader rest, dragging you through the dark recesses of a tortured soul with a relentless, almost gleeful force. If you like your literature a little raw and unapologetic, this is a perfect plunge into the depths of human complexity. Buckle up—it’s going to be a bumpy, but strangely captivating, ride.