Silicon Valley - We are three shows into this new HBO comedy, and I love it! It's a charming show about some nerdy computer guys living and working together in another, slightly older nerdy guy's house. They also work at the giant Hooli company, but the idea is that someone will come up with the next big idea and get rich. It's all surprising and fast, yet slow, but things are happening, and the entire show is very sharp and very entertaining.
Country Girl by Edna O'Brien - Edna is a famous author who bucked her irish catholic family and tradition to ply her trade and live her life in the 1960s. Her memoir is interesting and warm and personal. I love that most writers are readers, as is Edna, and I love her harking back to her early childhood and her impressions of how her life was then. Her memories are both fond and awful as she grew older and made and stuck by her decisions. The beautiful thing is that she persevered, and she doesn't come across as hard as she looks on her cover. The truth is that she seems to be strong, not hard, and very loving and thoughtful. I really enjoyed this.
The Boys in the Boat - Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin
Olympics by Daniel James Brown - First of all it's a great story - but
has anyone noticed that many of the latest non-fiction books include lengthy add-on phrases as part of their titles which explain what the book is about? I'm not sure I appreciate the explanation.
Is the title as strong if it has to be supported by more words on the
cover? Just asking. Now back to the book, which is really good,
slightly overwritten, but complete. It's a study of the sport of rowing, and the tale of a group of incredible competitors from the "greatest generation". It's a little bit magical, and would be more so if you could read it without knowing the outcome. It's a good old fashioned Epic Quest, much different than the Epic Quests of modern day video games, because this Epic Quest was undertaken in real life by young underdogs whose only weapons and powers were their strong bodies, their intelligent minds, their resilient boat and their long oars. The Casual Vacancy by J. K. Rowling - In the parlance of quaint (or maybe not so quaint) British towns, a Casual Vacancy is when certain conditions occur resulting in an empty seat on the local government council. I was 150 pages into this story and still had no idea why I was reading it when I decided to a) read the book jacket summary, and b) just read a chapter or two every 50 pages until I'd finished. It worked and I liked the book a bit better for having done so. It's the laborious story of the people in a small town, their motivations and actions, and their interactions. Read it the regular way and you might be as bored as I was (unless you enjoy chatty long novels), read it the way I did, and it might be OK. Or skip it, and read the one J.K. wrote under a pseudonym, which is supposed to be better. And which I will duly read next week.
Her Heart On Her Sleeve: I live in a suburb north of Chicago, and I read, bead, make jewelry, sew, watch TV and movies, crochet, craft, decorate, go to house and garage sales, walk and go on beach walks, listen to music, take pictures, cook and bake, read, and write about all of it on herheartonhersleeve. I have a companion blog called Jewlery by Dianne Sophia at diannesophia.blogspot.com where I write exclusively about my jewelry.
Jewelry By Dianne Sophia: I have been collecting vintage jewelry since I was a girl growing up in Detroit, and have been designing and making jewelry for 15 years. I love to work with pearls and crystals, semi-precious stones, Sterling Silver and Gold, along with vintage beads and materials. I delight in combining shape, pattern and color in new ways. I'm inspired and influenced by my travels and experiences as a reader, writer, photographer and student of life. My blog herheartonhersleeve.blogspot.com chronicles my life in art and popular culture.