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Category Archives: Joint reading

What I’m reading – mid-August

17 Monday Aug 2015

Posted by Isi in Blog, Books, Family, Isi, Joint reading

≈ 3 Comments

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Arturo Pérez-Reverte, Cary Elwes, Sarah Sundin

I hate summers, but this one is being remarkable tough in so many ways. The main issue has been my father, who had a scheduled – but serious – heart surgery last Wednesday. My family and I have spent long hours there in hospital with him, and I don’t know what’s wrong about the place, but it leaves you exhausted. Luckily, he is the best of patients, and has been following all the prescriptions and doing all the exercises the nurses and doctors command, and he is at home now, with a long way ahead to make a full recovery, though.

reading mid augustI have begun a couple of books these days, which is not a reading habit that I have, but I suddenly found myself in the hospital, the day of my father’s surgery, with nothing to read and long hours ahead in the waiting room, so I started the last novel of Arturo Pérez-Reverte (Hombres Buenos, still not available in English), which my father had just finished the night before, already hospitalized. It starts well and it’s set in the nineteenth century, a time that I know quite well due to the Law text books that I have to study, and also thanks to some historical fiction novels that I have enjoyed in the past.

Besides, I started a book that I purchased at the beginning of the year: As you wish: Inconceivable Tales from the Making of The Princess Bride, by the actor Cary Elwes, which is a delight. If you love The princess bride (the film and the book), not reading it would be inconceivable 😉 My father is also a fan of the film, so these last days I’ve been telling him anecdotes that I’ve read on the book and we had had a lot of fun.

With all the drives up and down the hospital, I have been disconnected from the blogging world and I forgot that I had organized a joint reading with my Spanish fellows! You know that I run a reading challenge for people to read in English, and I organize activities from time to time. We are reading With every letter, by Sarah Sundin, and it is still free on Amazon, if you want to join us. We are commenting the book on twitter with the hastag #WithEveryLetter.

And that’s all for now. I took this afternoon off, and hopefully I will come back to my daily routines tomorrow.

Hope you have a nice week!

Summer days and bookish activities that are coming

15 Thursday Aug 2013

Posted by Isi in classics spin, Isi, Joint reading, The classics club

≈ 20 Comments

Change of scenery

You must be wondering where I have been hidding for the last days, and it’s not that I have been far away from home, but certainly very far from my computer. Here is a short summary.

I have spent two days at the beach with my parents and my grandmother at the beginning of August.

We walked a lot, ate my mother’s tasty meals, swam a little in the sea and even we watched a horse jumping competition!

august 1august 2Then I went to my village, which is actually a small group of houses in a valley surrounded by beautiful mountains.

august 3There I had a lot of reading…

august 4… sunbathing…

august 5… and relaxing while I watched the beautiful scenery and breathed fresh air.

august 6After all this peace I’m ready for whatever comes next.

September book club

Allison and Rebecca have chosen Lead in, by Sheryl Sandberg, to read together in September. I didn’t know the book, but when I read the synopsis, I knew I had to read it:

Thirty years after women became 50 percent of the college graduates in the United States, men still hold the vast majority of leadership positions in government and industry. This means that women’s voices are still not heard equally in the decisions that most affect our lives. In Lean In, Sheryl Sandberg examines why women’s progress in achieving leadership roles has stalled, explains the root causes, and offers compelling, commonsense solutions that can empower women to achieve their full potential.

I think this book will bring up a lot of discussion, so don’t be shy and join the book club here.

The classics spin – 3

The classics club has organized a new classics spin. It can’t be worse than my first classics spin, so I’m participating again 😉

You have to choose 20 titles from your classics list (here is mine) and make a list with them. Next Monday a number will be chosen randomly and you have to read and review that especific book before October 1st (there will be a check point by this date).

Here is my list:

  1. Agatha Christie: The murder of Roger Ackroyd
  2. Charlotte Brontë: Jane Eyre
  3. Benito Pérez Galdós: El 19 de marzo y el 2 de mayo
  4. Dominique Lapierre: City of joy
  5. Edith Wharton: The house of mirth
  6. Emilia Pardo Bazán: Cuentos de amor
  7. George Orwell: Burmese days *
  8. Sinclair Lewis: Babbitt
  9. Kurt Vonnegut: Slaughterhouse 5 *
  10. Umberto Eco: The name of the rose
  11. Lajos Zilahy: Century in scarlet
  12. Robert Louis Stevenson: Doctor Jeckyll and Mr Hide
  13. Stefan Zweig: World of yesterday
  14. Virginia Woolf: To the lighthouse
  15. Isaac Asimov: A short history of chemistry
  16. Margaret Mitchell: Gone with the wind
  17. Pearl S. Buck: East wind, west wind
  18. Stefan Zweig: Three Masters: Balzac, Dickens, Dostoeffsky
  19. Edith Wharton: Xingu
  20. Oscar Wilde: The picture of Dorian Gray

* I have an English copy of these books. The rest are in Spanish.

Wish me luck!

***************

Hope you are also enyoing the summer (or the winter)!

“The ruby brooch” joint reading

01 Saturday Jun 2013

Posted by Isi in Joint reading

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Katherine Logan

A few days ago I was “invited” to an event on goodreads: a group of indie authors has decided to organize giveaways in order to promote their books, and some of them are offering their novels for free in amazon for a few days.

the ruby brooch

One of these novels is The ruby brooch, by Katherine Logan, a book I was looking forward to reading, which has a lot of positive reviews on amazon and goodreads. It is a fantasy and romance novel with family mysteries and time travelling.

It is free for this weekend, so I have thought we can purchase it now and read it together in July, what do you say?

We will share our thoughts about the book while reading it on a group I’ve just created on facebook: The ruby brooch joint reading. Spanish bloggers are also participating!

Then, we will review the book between the last week of July and the first week of August – you can choose the date you prefer.

  • Purchase the book on amazon.com
  • Purchase the book on amazon.co.uk
  • The ruby brooch on Goodreads

If you want to participate, just leave a comment saying so, purchase the book (this is an important point) and join the group on goodreads if you want to!

Captain Alatriste, by Arturo Pérez-Reverte

22 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Isi in Adventure, Books, Historical fiction, Joint reading

≈ 17 Comments

Tags

Arturo Pérez-Reverte

alatriste copia

Some time ago, my father bought me a collection of books by Pérez-Reverte (here you can take a look); the kind of collection you have to purchase with a certain newspaper, all of them at the same price: €8. I was delighted with my collection: all the author’s books until that moment, edited in a big format, with good paper and hard-covers, but I have to say I have only read two of them, even though I loved them, so that’s why I joined in the challenge about reading the Alatriste series. I had read Captain Alatriste years ago, but I only remembered the main details of the plot, and this second time I really enjoyed the reading much more than the first since I have commented on it with Leander and Timothy, who have also been reading it last week, and we have researched for the famous pictures of that time and the historical events that are described in the book in order to learn more and share our points of view.

Alatriste is a former soldier who had to leave the army because of a bad wound and now, without money or influences, he has to carry out some dishonest deeds to earn a living. We really could think he is an assassin, but Alatriste has his own code of honor: he always gives his adversaries a chance to defend themselves and he never kills old or young unarmed people. The story is set in the seventeenth century, just in the middle of the Spanish Golden Age, golden only for the aristocracy, but not for people like Alatriste and his friends.

This time he has to do a strange job: in a meeting with two masked men he and another man, Gualterio Malatesta, are asked to scare two English men that are travelling to Madrid at that moment, “with a little bit of blood, but no more”. Immediately afterwards one of the men leaves the room and another appears and tells Alatriste and Malatesta that the two heretic English men must die. This man is the inquisitor Emilio Bocanegra, and he says he doesn’t need a mask since his words are God’s will. Alatriste suspects there is nothing good behind this request, but anyway, a job is a job and this one is overly well paid to ask questions, so Alatriste accepts. But the night he and Malatesta have to kill the Englishmen, he realizes that they are not ordinary heretic English men, so he prevents Malatesta from killing his adversary and he stops fighting against his own when the poor man asks for mercy for his friend. And who is his friend? Charles Stuart, Prince of Wales, who has come to Spain to try to marry king Felipe the Fourth’s sister, Princess María Ana. Now Alatriste is really in trouble: he is involved in a conspiracy perpetrated by the Catholic Church, which doesn’t want to allow a Catholic princess to marry a heretic Englishman.

The narrator of this story is Íñigo Balboa, Alatriste’s little page. He is only thirteen, but he has learnt a lot from Alatriste and he does some really brave acts in the story, even to the point of saving the captain from a certain death. The fact that he sometimes tells us things that he hasn’t witnessed is a little bit implausible, but the way he narrates the story is one of the best things of the book. Pérez-Reverte uses an old style, trying to simulate the old Spanish language, and it makes the story absolutely gripping, so in addition to the wonderful descriptions of the characters and the fights, he makes the reader feel absolutely involved in the story. He also offers further information about characters’, armies’ and countries’ fates while he narrates their issues, so we have a global setting of what has happened and what is going to happen to Spain at that time.

Alatriste is supposed to be "behind the horse"

Alatriste is supposed to be “behind the horse”

Not only does the story have fictional characters; there are also a lot of real ones, which makes it really exciting. My favourite is Francisco de Quevedo, a classical Spanish writer and good friend of Alatriste that stars in very funny moments in the plot: “we have no choice but to fight,” says Quevedo to two men that have just congratulated him for some verses that were actually written by Luis de Góngora, Quevedo’s worst enemy. The entire story has also references to Velázquez paintings, and Velázquez himself appears briefly in a scene. But be careful, because not all the characters are real, even the ones who have aristocratic names, and neither did the real ones do or say what Pérez-Reverte is telling us.

I am delighted by the satirical point of view about Spanish and English people (“he could only be dim or English”). The conspiracy to kill Prince Charles is also intriguing since people from the Spanish king’s environment were involved, and the power the Catholic Church had at that time is really disturbing – they were able to prevent a royal wedding (or to burn somebody in a bonfire) arguing that it is God’s will.

Summarizing, I loved the book, from the characters and the plot to the way it is written, and I’m looking forward to reading the rest of the series.

Here you can read other reviews:

  • Leander’s review
  • Tim’s review
  • My review in Spanish

rakin4

Literary Exploration challenge: Adventure
Alatriste Challenge: 1/7
25 authors whose mother language is Spanish: 6/25

Captain Alatriste joint reading

06 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by Isi in Joint reading

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Arturo Pérez-Reverte

Today I’m delighted to announce that Leander and I are reading together one of the most exciting epic sagas: Captain Alatriste series, by Arturo Pérez-Reverte.

Libros Alatriste

We are going to read the first book, Captain Alatriste, next week and comment it together by email or facebook, and then we will review it more or less at the same time in our blogs.

Do you want to join us?

Captain Alatriste has adventures, humor, sword fights and romance, and the captain is also from the place I live, León, so it makes the book even more interesting 😉 . You must also know that there is a Spanish film with Viggo Mortensen as Alatriste. Can anybody have a better plan than reading a book in which the main character is Viggo?

cartel alatriste

So, if you want to know more, here is the synopsis of the book:

Captain Alatriste is a swordsman for hire in Spain in the 1620s – a time when Court intrigue is high and the decadent young king has dragged the country into a series of disastrous wars. As a hired ‘blade’, Alatriste becomes involved in many political plots and must live by his wits. He comes face to face with hired assassins, court players, political moles, smugglers, pirates and of course, the infamous Spanish Inquisition…

All the stories are told by Íñigo Balboa, Alatriste’s young page. The cast of characters also includes Quevedo, an irrepressible subversive poet who likes to start fights in the local tavern, the kind-hearted innkeeper and ex-prostitute who shares Alatriste’s bed, the elegant Count of Guadalmedina, the beautiful but deadly Angelica de Alquezar, and a whole host of underworld figures.

I promise you will enjoy the reading since Pérez-Reverte is one of the best Spanish writers: his novels are full of action and humor and he knows how to describe Spanish people, you will see (sometimes you have to laugh at yourself).

So, if anybody wants to read Captain Alatriste with Leander and me, just tell us in a comment. I will read in Spanish because I have all Perez-Reverte’s books, but I will probably read some passages in English because also I want to know how Alatriste says some of his famous epic phrases in both languages.

Are you ready to know captain Alatriste?

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