2012

Museums Matter

Museums Matter, written by James Cuno (former president and director of the Art Institute of Chicago) is pretty much what you’d expect it to be – a response to those who believe museums have outlived their usefulness.  A wee bit of a stuffy response, as is to be expected.

But, lurking in between the somewhat dry paragraphs, were some thought provoking ideas and questions.

It took me about four hours longer than it should have, to read this book, because I kept putting it down to think about museums I’ve visited and I kept putting it down to ask TW questions about her own museum visits.

How much do you think about the hows and whys of museum displays and organization? Do you ever stop to wonder whether you’re seeing the displays as the curator hopes you are? Do you ever feel like the curator is forcing his (or her) ideas on you, by choosing a particular layout or design? Do you ever feel like you’re being fed propaganda rather than being left to sort ideas and discoveries out for yourself?

If you were going to design a room in a museum, would you select pieces and place them in ways that allowed them to work together to tell a larger story – or would you display them in some other way? When you visit a museum are conscious of the greater story being told through the display choices? Does it really matter to you at all?

And of course, now I’m craving a museum visit (or two.)

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Girlchild

I love the cover of Girlchild. I love the title, too. I also really liked the Girl Scout theme that runs through the book. I liked everything about this book – except the completely depressing fact that it’s about poor women (and children) – which of course means it’s a story about abuse and neglect and alcohol and poverty. Set in Reno.

Depressing, sad, frustrating – but well written and interesting. I loved Rory and her mom and her grandmother.

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11/23/63

It felt like it took weeks to read Stephen King’s 11/23/63 but it really just took three days – which seems pretty good for an 800+ page book, when sometimes it takes me three days to read a 300 page book. Heh. That’s what happens with Stephen King, I pretty much can’t put it down.

If you could step back in time and stop the assassination of JFK, would you do it? And if you did it and discovered that the world was in even worse shape after you did it – would you go back and undo it? And would you undo it and leave everything the way it was, even if people you cared about were hurt – and you could never be with them again?

And, do you think Oswald acted alone?

Good book. Creepy story, in a lot of ways – but not as creepy as King can be.  I liked it – a lot.

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Fang Chronicles: Amy’s Story

I tried to read Fang Chronicles: Amy’s Story while I was in Hawaii but I couldn’t because I had loaned it to RJ and it hadn’t been returned to my Amazon shelf yet. After I got home, it was returned so I could start reading it. Darn if I’ll ever do that again – the story was terrific, not the normal vampire romance.

One of the unusual things that I didn’t mention in that post over on BlogHer was that the story did not end where/when I thought it would.

I don’t know if it’s a symptom of reading on my iPhone via the Kindle App but I was very surprised.

You know how you’re reading a book, in a genre you’ve often read, and you begin to guess at what’s going to happen – and you expect the story to end shortly after X happens? If you’re reading a print book, you get that feeling even more if you’re close to the end – with the Kindle, I never really know where I am in the book so I was very surprised when X happened, to Amy, and the book did not end.

And then I figured ok, the book will end when X happens to Victoria but guess what – the story did not end there, either.

I guess if I’d been reading a print version, I might have been a little less surprised. Maybe? Even so – those were two key things that could have triggered the end of the book but neither did.

THAT was cool. Totally unexpected ending.

I’m looking forward to reading Emily’s Story next.

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If I Stay and Where She Went

I decided to read If I Stay and Where She Went because I didn’t really have anything else burning a hole in my TBR pile and since Where She Went is a BlogHer Book Club book I figured what the hell.

And I am an idiot.

I took a vacation and did not pay one iota of attention to what Where She Went was about, I just knew that If I Stay was the book that came before it – so I started there.

Totally not the book I really wanted to read on the day of Skeeter’s memorial service. But, since I’m a glutton for punishment, I said what the hell again and kept reading. And read the book straight through and yes I shed a tear or two. While I did not hate the end, I understood immediately why Gayle Forman had to write a sequel, even if she hadn’t been planning on writing a sequel

And I really liked Where She Went  – though I did not expect to. I really wasn’t sure as I was reading, because Adam was so very much not the same person he had been in the first book. I understood why he wasn’t but it was tough going there for a bit. And I do believe he’d have been OK – even without the happy ending. I liked that. I liked that the resolution and the closure came before everything fell prettily into place.

Nicely done. Both books, nicely done.

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Stupid Fast

Here’s another book from the Cybils Shortlist that I didn’t think I would like. Stupid Fast – there’s a guy in a football uniform on the cover. Total turn off for me – but, it was good. Really heartbreaking but good.

I really liked the descriptions of Fenton’s growth spurt – I’m guessing there are a lot of teenage guys who can relate to this. And a lot of parents who might gain insight into how a kid feels when everything changes that way.

Moral of the story, for adults – DO NOT LIE TO YOUR CHILDREN.

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Everybody Sees the Ants

I didn’t think I was going to like Everybody Sees the Ants. The whole Vietnam – POW/MIA – escapes to the Laos jungle thing just seemed… not my thing.

And at first, it wasn’t. The dreams were weird, through the whole book – but particularly at the beginning. Luckily, Lucky is a great character and the supporting cast – particularly the characters in Arizona, are excellent. (The Vagina Monologues pieces, hah. Totally amused. Not sure Lucky would really have reacted that way – but hey, it’s fiction. We can dream…)

A book I thought would take me a few days to read because I didn’t really love it – ended up causing me to stay up til midnight to finish it all one one sitting.

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Bunheads

I’m finally getting back into the swing of reading from my TBR list and my Challenge lists. Bunheads, a Cybils shortlister, was the last of the URGENT MUST READ NOW books that was due back to the library this week. Thankfully it was a short, easy, fun read. A very fun read actually. Except I probably will never be able to watch The Nutcracker again. TW thinks this is perfectly fine since she does not like The Nutcracker. I, however, don’t mind going to the ballet every 10 Christmases or so. In fact I had just been thinking it was time to see The Nutcracker again. Darn.

I also think Bunheads will make a really fun TV series.  

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Girl Hunter

I added Girl Hunter to my TBR list when Sassymonkey showed me the book trailer for it. It was one of the first book trailers that I did not hate. That seemed like a good sign. But months went by and I never reserved the book. It just happened to be sitting on the shelf a few months ago so I grabbed it. TW read it quickly and didn’t have a lot to say about it. I picked it up day before yesterday because it was short and I’ve got a ton of books due back that can’t be renewed – I’m reading as many as possible, so short or quick reads are a must right now. Girl Hunter seemed like both.

And it was.

It was also very well written.

What it wasn’t was… passionate.

It was interesting. Kind of. In a hunting sort of way. The men she hunted with were very interesting. Even the asshole in North Dakota or Montana or wherever it was that she tried to go Elk Hunting.

What was missing was Georgia Pellegrinni’s passion and emotion. Even when they were chasing hogs through Arkansas on 4 wheelers, tracking dogs with gps collars, the emotion died down fast. The adrenaline was just not there – and while I’ve never been hunting, I can’t imagine that there isn’t any when you’re hunting HUGE hogs and stabbing them with knives and stuff.

Cold. Interesting, but cold. That’s what Girl Hunter was.

I didn’t hate it. I’m not sorry I read it. I’m just kind of let down by it.

Oh well. You can’t win ‘em all.

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Spy Glass

Weird. Spy Glass was the shortest book in the trilogy but it seems like more happened in this one than the others – yet it didn’t feel rushed. Nicely done. I’m not sure I really LOVE the ending – and it was just a tiny, tiny bit predictable where I didn’t find the others to be predictable but that’s not always a bad thing for the last book in a trilogy. Loose ends all nice and need. I hope there’s a series with the kids next…

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