What I'm Reading Now:

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Beatles: The Biography

Title: The Beatles: The Biography

Author: Bob Spitz

Pages: 983

Genre: Biography

Grade: A

Synopsis:  This is the decisive biography for the Beatles.  Published in 2005, it includes over 100 pages of notes for a book that was obviously painstakingly researched and carefully written.  The book covers each of the Beatles from birth (including a history of their parents) and then follows the Beatles up through their tumultuous breakup in 1970.  Nothing from the Beatles past is off-limits in the book.  The book details Beatlemania and their encounters and addictions to drugs, sex, music and more.

My Review:  I've never been a huge fan of the Beatles, but I liked them and enjoyed most of their songs.  This book, however, may have changed much of that.  Reading this book was more of an experience than reading a normal book because I would tune youtube to the songs and albums that were being described in the book.  Every song and every album has a story behind it and I am better able to appreciate how the Beatles progressed and grew as they tried new ground-breaking techniques with nearly every new song.  John Lennon was an amazing musician that allowed drug-use to destroy him (he's the only Beatle to really get into heroin use).  He was always a jerk, but once he got involved with Yoko Ono (who was even nuttier than he), then he somehow became an even bigger jerk. Paul McCartney was another amazing musician that was less dependent on drugs than the others, but was always Mr. Bossypants in the studio. George Harrison and Ringo Starr were more low-key and likeable throughout most of the Beatles years, although they both were pretty fed up with John and Paul by 1970.  It's hard not to feel sorry for Pete Best (who Ringo Starr replaced) as he was in prime position to be a star, if only his drumming had been up to par.  Brian Epstein (the Beatles manager), loved to have guys over to his apartment to beat him up and treat him super rough.  When the Beatles recorded their first hit song, Love Me Do, each of them already had gonorrhea. 

Disclaimer: Nothing is off limits in this book.  There is lots of language, drug use and sex, but the sexual escapades are thankfully not detailed.

From the Book: "(p. 510) Later, when the other Beatles arrived, the crowd in the street had swelled to an estimated twenty-thousand, some of whom were whipped up in a terrific heat. Others, many of them young girls who had been waiting since dawn, suffered from hunger and exhaustion. The police force, which had been monitoring the situation nervously, called in the army and navy to help maintain order, but it was short-lived. By late afternoon, with chants of "We want the Beatles!" ringing through the square, the shaken troops, now four-hundred strong, felt control slipping from their grasp. They didn't know where to look first: at the barricades being crushed, the girls fainting out of sight, the hooligans stomping on the roofs of cars or pushing through their lines. A fourteen-year-old "screamed so hard she burst a blood-vessel in her throat." It was "frightening, chaotic, and rather inhuman," according to a trooper on horseback. There most pressing concern was the hotels plate-glass windows bowing perilously against the violent crush of bodies. They threatened to explode in a cluster of razor-sharp shards at any moment. Ambulances screamed in the distance, preparing for the worst; a detachment of mounted infantry swung into position."

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Girl with a Pearl Earring

Title: Girl with a Pearl Earring

Author: Tracy Chevalier

Pages: 7 discs

Genre: Historical Fiction

Grade: B+

Synopsis: Griet is hired as a servant in the household of the Dutch painter Vermeer when she is just 16 years old.  She quickly earns her master's trust and he begins to secretly enlist her help with preparing his paints and ultimately as a model for one of his commissioned paintings.  This is all done in complete secrecy as the eternally pregnant wife of Vermeer was also extremely jealous as she was not allowed into Vermeer's studio.

My Review: I've read a handful of books about artists and painters, and this is the best one yet.  The story is thoroughly researched and very well told.  Very little is known about Vermeer, except that he is one of the finest painters to use light and texture in his paintings (from the mid-17th century).  The story is very believable and transports the reader back hundreds of years into the town of Delft.

From the Book:"I came to love grinding the things he brought from the apothecary--bones, white lead, madder, massicot--to see how bright and pure I could get the colors. I learned that the finer the materials were ground, the deeper the color. From rough, dull grains madder became a fine bright red powder and, mixed with linseed oil, a sparkling paint. Making it and the other colors was magical."

Monday, August 27, 2012

The Pursuit of Happyness

Title: The Pursuit of Happyness

Author: Chris Gardner

Pages: 5 discs

Genre: Autobiography

Grade: B

Synopsis: Chris Gardner is an African-American from Milwaukee trying to break out of the shell that he was born into.  His mother was an ex-convict and his father had violent tendencies. Gardner enlists in the Navy to get away from home, but before too many years pass, he finds himself homeless in San Francisco with a young child to care for.

My Review:  The book is inspiring when Chris details the struggles that he went through to reach his lofty goals and break-through the racial barriers.  He had complete confidence in his ability to reach his dreams if he worked hard and continually proved that he was ready and able to work. 

Disclaimer: There is quite a bit of street-language and street situations that would not be suitable for children.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

The Third Life of Grange Copeland

Title: The Third Life of Grange Copeland

Author: Alice Walker

Pages: 328

Genre: Historical Fiction

Grade: B-

Synopsis: This book tells the story of Grange Copeland, his wife, his son Brownfield and his granddaughter Ruth.  Set in Baker County, Georgia in the early 20th century, the black people that work in the fields are virtual slaves as they are encumbered with debts to the white landowners that they'll never be able to repay.  Grange heads north looking for a better life and while he's gone Brownfield ends up marrying and killing his wife, landing in prison.  Grange returns and tries to turn his life around.

My Review:  This book had an interesting story that was terribly depressing at times.  The poor black folk of Baker County, Georgia have very few chances or opportunities to lift themselves out of the poverty that they are born into.

Disclaimer:  There is quite a bit of language to be aware of.