lunabee34: (reading by misbegotton)
1. Everyone is posting about their antiques, so I lemming. We inherited Josh's maternal grandparents' bedroom suite, a Shaker-inspired set, and that is possibly antique although I'm not sure of the age. I've got lots of antique dishes (mostly tea cups, demitasse cups, little plates, and silverware). I've got an antique volume of one of Ouida's novels. And I've got some antique costume jewelry, mostly pins and clip-on earrings from various grandmothers and great-grandmothers with some necklaces thrown in. I have an enormous collection of pins that I started as a teen when my paternal grandmother gave me a bunch of my great-grandmother's jewelry that I've added to over the years with some purchases from antique shops along with newly made pins. I don't think any of these items are particularly valuable outside of their inherent functional worth as furniture or whatever (except obviously for the worth of the silver).

2. Today is more shopping for Emma to go to college, brassiere edition! And other stuff, too. LOL So as not to sully the glory of yesterday's post, I neglected to mention that she made a 2 on the AP Environmental Science test. She totally expected to do poorly on that one as her teacher was awful and taught them nothing; also, even if by some miracle she had done well enough on it to have it replace a class, it would have replaced the first biology class/lab, and since she is majoring in biology, we both agreed that probably was a bad idea and she would have taken the college class anyway. So nothing lost there.

3.

A Candle for St. JudeA Candle for St. Jude by Rumer Godden

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


I wish I could give this seven stars. I love Rumer Godden so much. She is such a good writer.

This book is about an aging ballerina who now runs a ballet school and takes place over the course of the couple of days before the performance of the new ballet of the season.

It's so funny in places; all the characters are sharply observed. So much meaty introspection about aging and art and the nature of creative talent.

Godden has this gift for making her novels seem as if they are genuinely a curtain drawn back on real people's lives and we are being given the opportunity to peek in. Which means that there are no easy morals to the story or life lessons to be learned, and characters don't always make the choices the reader roots for them to make. And I love that.

This is a quick and easy read; it's simply written, but that simplicity of pose should not be mistaken for simplicity of plot/theme. This book is quite complex, I think, in what it has to say about human nature. Highly recommended.



View all my reviews
lunabee34: (reading by thelastgoodname)
[personal profile] executrix sent me a package with the most amazing book inside (as per usual). I didn't expect to be so taken with this book, but I was riveted from cover to to cover. Apparently a TV movie was made in the 70s starring Diana Rigg and nominated for a Prime Time Emmy. I will have to check that out.

In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden is about a highly successful and powerful business woman who decides to enter the cloister. The story follows Philipa as she tries to integrate into this society of women, each of whom has her own story. This is not like the books my mom always tried to make me read growing up--Sunday School lessons disguised as romance novels or sermons wrapped in the trappings of mysteries. This book is about religion and spirituality, yes, but it is also about people, people who feel very real and vital and compelling to me even days after finishing the novel.

This is a quiet book in which all the adventures are small. In terms of plot, not a great deal happens. But in terms of internal conflict and character development, this is perhaps the loudest and most significant novel I've read in a very long time. Maintaining a sense of community and sisterhood among women who are so very different from each other and who, despite the veil, are just as human and petty and vulnerable and flawed as anyone on the other side of the cloister grille sometimes borders on the impossible.

The book also doesn't shy away from depicting queer relationships, which surprised me because of when the book is written.

I grew up Protestant and so never really thought about nuns and priests until I converted to Catholicism after my daughter was born. I have always had very mixed feelings about joining religious orders. It's very difficult for me to understand how a person could be happy with the kind of sacrifice that entails. (This is totally my failure to grok and not a censure of people who become priests and nuns.) When I contemplate the possibility of my daughter one day becoming a nun, I am first extremely sad because I want her to be able to fall in love with someone and have children if she wants to.

For the first time, I think I might begin to understand even just a little why a woman might take Holy Orders.

OMG, I want this for Yuletide like burning.

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