“I should never call myself a book lover any more than a people lover.
It all depends what’s inside them.” -Philip Larkin
Rules for Bibliophile Friday: Read a book. Write about it. Keep it clean & be honest.
You can write as little as two words (Thumbs up! Or, Thumbs down.). You can write a short review or go all out with a full summary and review. Add you blog link and thoughts in the comments.
Book suggestions/reviews are welcome for both kids’ and grown-ups’ books.
Bibliophile Friday is the 4th Friday of every month, so get reading!
**Somehow I scheduled this for the wrong date & it didn’t post last week. So sorry! Here are my thoughts on Mennonite in the Little Black Dress.
**Somehow I scheduled this for the wrong date & it didn’t post last week. So sorry! Here are my thoughts on Mennonite in the Little Black Dress.
Recommendation: So-so. Read it, but have reasonable expectations.
Summary: Rhoda Janzen’s memoir is shocking merely in terms of how many different experiences one woman has already encountered. She details her return to her family after her bipolar husband leaves her for a man. The book is essentially a series of vignettes that allow the reader to peek into this unusual life.
My thoughts: I absolutely love this title, and found myself laughing out loud several times while reading this book. She’s funny, if more than a bit crass. I want to be able to give this book a total thumbs up; here’s why I haven’t: She never really lets you in. Ms. Janzen does a great job of describing the things that have happened to her, the circumstances, her surroundings, and other people’s reactions. But she doesn’t open up her own feelings for us to share. It’s clear that having her husband leave for a man is devastating. She tells us that much. But she never really describes the depth of emotions she experienced. She doesn’t help us understand her feelings as she walked through that pain, and in leaving it out, she leaves out everything.
What’s more, her divorce isn’t her only struggle. Ms. Janzen has dealt with so many different issues. I kept waiting for her to help us relate. We struggle, too, right? Some on a bigger scale, some smaller, but we’ve all got our stuff. To go through the process of writing all of her “stuff” down, and not tie her experience to her readers, left me unsatisfied.
It wasn’t that I didn’t like her writing or appreciate her story. But when I finished reading, I felt that I knew about her, not necessarily that I knew–or understood–her any better.
And now it’s your turn. Have you read this one? Did you feel the same way? What else are you reading that you would recommend…or not?
What are you reading?
Good to know – I'd been interested in this book since I read a short excerpt.
I wrote about The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo last week.
I saw this front row and center at Borders, so I was curious about it. Not sure if it's at the top of my list since I have so many others to read. Thanks for your thoughts so I have a better idea of it now.
My post is up on my personal blog with lovely pictures of my puppy-chewed furniture. When my husband saw the post he said it looks like our house was infested with termites. He's right!
Lynne's Letters