Friday, July 31, 2009

Authors and Reader Gender Bias




Hi all, thought I would post some of my thoughts in my lunchbreak before the IT Gestapo catch on and shut me down, lol!!




I remember the time when I discovered that one of my favourite authors was not a female, but a male! I was gobsmacked. I have followed the female characters so closely through out the series, grown to love and identify with them (in fact Mma Precious Ramotswe is quite an icon in the world of readers) that for some reason I assumed the author to be female. OK so the author's name might have given me a clue, Alexander McCall Smith, but no! The character of Mma Ramotswe is just so lovely and essentially female that I believe (and I'm sure Freud would agree) that I transferred these qualities to the author. Nevertheless, I still love Alexander McCall Smith, even if he is a bloke. He has given us the beautiful Precious in his series "The No 1 Ladies' Detective Agency'. Precious is a warm, wise, 'traditionally built' female detective in Botswana. McCall Smith delights me with simple gentle fables of everyday life in Botswana centred around virtue and compassion (within a lighthearted mystery). This experience leads me to wonder if knowing the gender of the author can make a difference to how we relate to a story. Similarly, do we identify with elements of a story through our own gender bias (as I did)?
Hey, its Friday, have a great weekend everyone.



Monday, July 27, 2009

Write Faster Damn You!!


Does anyone else have this problem? My favourite authors are just not spitting out their novels fast enough, do they think they are on a picnic, what happened to the 8 hour work day, surely a book or two a year isn't too much to ask for!! Case in point, Robert Rankin. Robert, I love you, I have read everything you have published, I follow your radio show on BBC, I belong to your fanclub. OK so I haven't attended any of your events recently but Brentford, England is just a little off the beaten track for me! The last novel you wrote was Necrophenia in 2008, that was a year ago Robert!! May I be so bold as to make a suggestion - instead of writing in longhand in an exercise book, try a wordprocessor man!! you will never look back. But wait, imagine my delight when the Order of the Golden Sprout alterted me to new Rankin novel in the wings. Retromancer is to be published this year! but hurry we are over half way through. I will let you off with a warning Robert, a book a year is not too bad but you could do better. I'm happy to whizz over and be your typist.


Bookmates, you can check out the Order of the Golden Sprout at http://www.thegoldensprout.com/

Hi Bookmates

Would like to add another to our reading list. "We Need To Talk About Kevin" Lionel Shriver. I have not read it but my daughter read it for NCEA and it is the only book I have seen her read from start to finish. I think it would be a good book to discuss as it looks at the controversial topic of nature vs nuture as the primary influence in one's behaviour. This book takes the form of a series of letters from Eva to her estranged husband Franklin after their son has committed a school massace. It documents how the mother struggles to come to terms with what her son has done. It is supposedly being adapted for film.

PS I have discovered what teenagers do for NCEA English when they don't want to read a book and analyse it, they choose a book that has been made into a movie, then they watch the movie at least 3 times, read the synopsis and bluff their way through it!!

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Tosca's bookshelf


YES - I am egocentric and it's all about me! Kidding - thought I'd put up a post and list a few books/dvds I am currently reading/watching:

DVD: Who do you think you are? UK Series 4 - This series follows the journeys of well known UK personalities as they delve into their family history. This particular series features Natasha Kaplinsky, John Hurt, Griff Rhys Jones, Carol Vorderman, Alistair McGowan, Graham Norton and Sir Matthew Pinsent. If you're a fan of family history, or even just vaguely interested in genealogy, I recommend that you watch this series. Or at least start with season one and give it a go.

Book: Butterscotch by Lyn Loates - Recommended to me by Sandy. I'm not usually much of a fan of NZ authors but reading Mr. Pip with the group has made me judge less harshly. Although, I do have to admit that when I read Mr. Pip when it first came out I struggled with reading it. The group reading made it a bit easier. Butterscotch is about Helen Mainyard who, when she turns 21, discovers the real reason for her family's having abruptly left Christchurch 13 yrs ago. Is an interesting read and, although I haven't quite finished it, I won't be simply chucking it aside either. If any of the group are able to recommend another NZ author I might enjoy feel free to post a response. In fact, I look forward to it :)

Book: Pride and prejudice and zombies by Seth Grahame-Smith - Argh! The original Austen novel has to be one of my most favourite reads (right behind Gerald Durrell, my all time hero) and I had to admit that I read it for two reasons: Austen and zombies. I wanted to know how on earth they could fit together in the one book. But it works! Seriously crazy but I enjoyed it. It was funny, very grisly and irreverent. I laughed out loud (seriously, I laughed out loud on the bus, at my desk and walking through the shopping mall (yes, I read while I walk). I read somewhere that Grahame-Smith retained about 80% of the original book...he simply added a sword-toting hero/heroine. I love Love LOVE that Elizabeth retained her feistiness! If zombies and verbal play interest you then make this your next read.

Book: Branded by fire by Nalini Singh -I edit Manukau Libraries' Romance e-newsletter so it shouldn't be a big surprise that I'm reading romance :D Nalini Singh is a New Zealand author who lives in Auckland, and is also a New York Times Bestselling author. And (I just have to add this bit) she's agreed to an e-interview that we will roll out over our next 4 Romance issues. Nice little coup. Branded by Fire is part of her ever popular PsyChangeling series and, much like the others, is steamy, sensual and fun. If you're into paranormal romance - and everyday I'm more amazed by the huge readership attached to this subgenre, it grows by leaps and bounds every day - then you'll enjoy this story.

That's it from me for this week - keep your eyes peeled for another post in a few days. I'm an indiscriminate reader! I love books for the sake of it and anything and everything catches my attention. As you'll discover over the next few months. Feel free to post a response to any of the above, or even let us know what's on your current bookshelf :)





Saturday, July 25, 2009

Book discussion - Don't tell mum I work on the rigs: she thinks I'm a piano player in a whorehouse

Greetings & salutations! It was a fantastic bookclub meeting today with some very animated discussion based around our July read: 'Don't tell mum I'm I work on the rigs: she thinks I'm a piano player in a whorehouse' by Paul Carter.

We're switching things up a bit for this post and adding in parts of the discussion generated by Carter's book. No names have been added (wouldn't it be a hoot if I had done that, though), and what I've done is enter the question/point and then people's comments. Feel free to let me know if you'd like to see this again, or if we should consign it to the devil!

Title: catchy; attention-grabbing; name taken from Discovery Channel programme about odd jobs; was waiting for him to work in a whorehouse; mum knew exactly what he did, probably knew a lot more than he thought she should.

Cover: if I’d seen it in the library I wouldn’t have picked it up; not even in the 920 biography section – 622s – machinery/technology section instead; cover makes it a 'blokey book', font is unusual and eye catching; my son never reads books – he read this – don’t think I've seen him with a book ever.

Would you rather your son worked on a rig or a piano player in a whorehouse: As long as he’s only playing a piano!

Comment: Worked in London briefly and had the opportunity to work on an oil rig, turned it down, after reading this book am now glad.

Comment: My brother worked on a rig on his OE and he loved the lifestyle.

Comment: Got the idea that safety was secondary; so many 'boy' bits in there; workplace and employee safety important in some countries more than others; safe as they can do it but it’s still got to be done - although it's still extremely dangerous; scene where guys went on training badly hungover – something we couldn’t realistically do here in our own jobs; workplaces are more paranoid now; rig men don’t do drugs but do play hard; good to know that when they were on site they were on site and sober.

NZ connection – Maori men – an interesting link (towards beginning); bit of a violent scene; liked some of the Australian bits.

Comment: it might be a tiny bit cynical – if he’s working for an ad company he probably embellished the story a bit; commentary on how people will hear a story and then retell it slightly different to someone else – make it funnier etc.

Comment: made me laugh out loud; sad about the monkey – and he said at the end that the monkey had more brains than them all; didn’t lock him up very well; he was a monkey so he was smarter than them; he had free range; used to smoke their cigarettes - suppose monkeys would get addicted to cigarettes, in the 1950s theyd have tea parties for monkeys and give them cigarettes at the zoo; can’t really treat animals like they belong only in cage because they’re more than that but neither can we treat them like people.

What is your favourite story in the whole book: Ah Meng the young orphaned orangutan – they had to leave and gave it to the zoo; Joe flying around the fan; the comment that the '...guy might’ve been an alcoholic but any double amputee who can fly through a train is good in my book...' and back he came to make sure his trolley still had wheels on it; was like listening to a really good storyteller; monkey story except for the sad ending; what the divers did when they changed the tapes.

Comment: made me think - when he was in Nigeria it was just so frightening; talked to my son who had been in Nigeria and he said it was really like that, a scary place to be; places oil is found in often end up becoming scary places; there is a serious side to oil; look at the places where it’s found – some have fairly unstable governments.

Comment: read book recently written by Australian woman – teacher – who spent four years in Saudi Arabia and found it really hard to live the way women do there – not the same type of freedom, bus services being discontinued because women were giggling and so curtains had to be installed before being reinstated.

Mixing occupation and family life: very difficult; had a good relationship with his mother and stepfather; hard on relationships because the person who stays behind lives a ‘normal’ life when you’re away; he could be told tomorrow that that day was it, so one day you’re doing shopping and the next you're gone.

How do you think he managed to get an advertising job: spontaneous, freelance kinda guy; looked up his website and he’s writing another book, he’s still working on the rigs although not quite as much, bit of a gap between this book and the new one; sometimes took short term contracts so may have been able to fit advertising stuff in between.

Motivating factor for working on the rigs: money; adventure; where was all his money?; possibly investments; travel; couldn’t be a 9-5 person; thrill – living on the edge; it would be very hard to settle; wouldn’t have to be a person dependent on mod cons.

Weather extremes: funny story where they’d throw their cup of tea up in the air and it would freeze before it hit the ground.

Surprised the book was set in chapters: anyone try and read it out of sequence? Mostly no; a couple chose to look at a few different bits before going back and reading; most biographies are set in parts of life rather than chapters, e.g. childhood, adolescence, career etc.

Style: suited the story; long, well constructed sentences wouldn’t have done at all; prostate story of the doctor with a torch was funny; stomach bug – vile story; this book is for men to read not women – is a boy’s book; tooth abcess – you could actually feel his pain, the way he wrote it; if he couldn’t handle it then how could I? How could any mere mortal? You have to trust in the medical help in whichever country you’re in – not always a safe thing to do so much as the only thing to do.

Rating - scale of 1-5:
Two
Two - the monkey murder was a bit of a downer
Two and a half - too many gross bits
Two and a half - would recommend it to my nehpew, very funny but I wouldn't remember it again this time next year
Three
Three - funny and irreverent
Three - he was a monkey murderer
Three and a half
Four
Four
Four

If anyone has any books that they’re reading and enjoying, email it through to Natalie and write why so it can be posted to the blog.

Next book is: Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold for August 2009

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Book discussion questions for Don't tell Mum

Kia ora folks,
Since I have had the hard word and was a little slow in getting this month's newsletter out I have succumbed to the pressure and am posting some questions which we may or may not discuss this Saturday for
Don't tell Mum I work on the rigs : she thinks I'm a piano player in a whorehouse by Paul Carter
So without further ado...

What did you think of the title and how does it relate to the book?
What was your impression of Carter’s style of writing?
Carter’s descriptions of his fellow colleagues were memorable, the way they worked hard and partied hard and the danger they faced both physical and mental. Were you surprised by what you read?
Which story stood out for you?
What did you make of the New Zealand connection’s in the book, the four Maori in Leinster and Maurice?
How conducive do you think the occupation of an itinerant oil rigger would be to have a family life, compared to say a person serving in the army, working in advertising or in a graveyard shift such as nursing?
What would be the motivation to have a lifestyle, such as Carter’s?
Carter mentioned that he was invited to more parties in the advertising world than when he was working on oil riggers, and more drugs were taken in the advertising world did this surprise you?
Would you recommend the book, and if you did who would it be to?
Out of scale of 1-5 how do you rate the book?

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

July Book Club Meeting this Saturday (25th) at 11am

Just a quick reminder that this Saturday we will be discussing Paul Carter's book Don't tell Mum I work on the rigs : she thinks I'm a piano player in a whorehouse. Certainly an interesting book (and life, I feel very boring in comparison) but I have to admit I am curious with how our discussion will go, and I am wondering what your opinion of the book is. Looking forward to hearing from you all this Saturday. cheers, Natalie

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

40th Lunar Exploration Celebration

Greetings Earthlings, Yes I am a little fascinated with all hype surrounding the 40th anniversary of the moon walk. It seems that the trekkie in me loves the thought of going where no one has gone before, with the handball season on hiatus I have found myself spending a lot of time looking at the online footage of the landing and browsing the NASA website. I do find it a little unbelievable that NASA deleted the original tapes of Armstrong & co walking on the moon, and had to enlist the aid of newsrooms to collect footage in order to have tape ready for the 40th anniversary celebrations - forget about history when you need to save money! And I am also mightily intrigued by the list of artifacts that the Lunar Legacy project wish to collect and preserve if they get the chance. I wonder if any of this will end up on E-bay? Coming back down to earth, many thanks to our obsessive reader for giving us a list of her recommended books, these will be appearing shortly on the blog, once I figure a way to link them to the blog.
Beam me up Scotty

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Shameless Plugs for Manukau Libraries No.2

Kia ora folks,

Seems like an age since I last pointed out how wonderful we are at Manukau Libraries, so I thought why not it must be time for another quick infomercial...

Did you know that...
  1. Audiobooks are free, yes free! This is fantastic as I love being able to load them on to my ipod and playing them when walking little Millie.
  2. DVD rentals cost $2 for a week - isn't that great news for the holidays?


Friday, July 10, 2009

Recap of the Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time

What a wonderful and lively discussion we had about Mark Haddon's book.
It was very interesting to see how different our reactions and opinions were towards the book. The way some of us were more sympathetic towards the Mother and how others of us felt more empathy towards the Father (I was definitely in the latter group despite his violence towards poor old Wellington - although if Wellington had been a corgi I may have ended up like Christopher and viewed Father as a murderer)
The differing views regarding Haddon's use of equations and diagrams to illustrate Christopher's thinking. My favourite digression was the explanation of the Monty Hall problem.
Overall I think it was a very readable book despite it's unusual style and it certainly did make me think about the way we are all different and how our perspectives of every day things can be astonishing, for example the way Christopher copes with the catching the train - signs have become such a form of visual noise for me - I have got to the stage I just ignore signs, so I find it amazing that someone would need to read every sign as a coping mechanism, amazing but understandable.

cheers Natalie

P.S. Quick fact today a genius was born a few lunar cycles ago, (okay if you want to be pedantic, last century, but what is a century between friends) kudos goes to who gives me the first correct answer.