The Help by Kathryn Stockett is just as amazing a book as everyone said it is. I couldn't put it down. All of the characters are so much fun and enjoyable to read. This is the first time in a long time, though, when I am really rendered speechless over a book. I don't know what to write about. I'm not afraid of offending anyone by any comments I'd make; I just honestly don't know what to write about.
Skeeter is my favorite character, but mostly because she is just so awesome. It so cook to read about a girl who isn't the most attractive in the bunch, but yet overall, is the best and most likable character/person overall. Out of all Skeeter's friends, Skeeter is the only one I MIGHT have been friends with, but probably not until after she'd started to realize how awful her so-called friends really are. She was definitely part of the uppity crowd to begin with, but as her eyes began to open and she started to see them for who they really are, Skeeter started to become more likable herself. Personally, even though it's the very thing that drove Stuart away, I think it's also the very thing that drew Stuart to Skeeter--he just didn't know what it was until she told him.
I'm so very excited about seeing the movie. There are quite a few things that I think will translate really well onscreen and I'm looking forward to seeing how some of these situation are handled. I absolutely adored Celia. Even from the start, she treated Minny as a person, and by the time we get to the part where Celia....well, you know what happens with Celia, I love her. I don't care if she is "white trash." I see why her husband chose her over Hilly. Any real man would. It's just so sad that Celia had to go friendless when she was so obviously lonely and needed even one friend. I love that she found that friend in Minny.
The Help deserves all the hype that's been raised over it as a novel. I am sure the movie will be just as wonderful. I can't believe I don't have TONS more to say about it since I enjoyed it so very much.....!
Oh. I read a scathing review on the book recently. I think it's in Goodreads, so if you go look at the reviews there for The Help, I think you'll see the one I'm referring to. It talks about how Stockett obviously did not live during the time period and she so didn't know what she was writing about. Is Stockett wrong? I know she played a little with some details to make her story work in some places (she even admits that in her commentary at the end of the book), so why is that reviewer so negative? I don't get it......
I did attempt to answer some of the questions at the end of the book....it would be fun to get together with some folks who have read the book and talk about those questions.....exchange answers/ideas/etc.....
This blog is for readers. I read a lot. I always post a review in Goodreads. The same review will be posted here. I welcome your comments, thoughts, and reviews, as well!
Great Books

To read or not to read?....that is a silly question!
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Whether Wolf or Human.....F-A-M-I-L-Y
Jodi Picoult's Lone Wolf: Another winner. I love that this book is all about family and that no matter how bad it gets within a family, BEING a family is still more important than even the deepest of hurts. Picoult shows that it's ok to FEEL the hurt....to find ways to express it, but more importantly, to DEAL with it....most of all, T-O-G-E-T-H-E-R. Of course my sick curiosity made me want to hear Luke's side of the story as far as the affair was concerned. I am repulsed by myself for not only thinking that as I was reading the last 100 pages, but that I'm even admitting it "out loud" on the internet for others even to read.
Two negatives (and I want you to know that regardless of any negative comments, they do NOT take away from my enjoying of Picoult's work!):
1. As I've already mentioned in a previous posting, I'm getting tired of Picoult's books having a major court scene. Every book has one. Just ONCE I'd like to see Picoult resolve the conflict within the story without involving the court.
2. Picoult is getting a little sloppy as far as grammar is concerned. I noticed quite a few split infinitives in this one. Yes, Cara probably would have used them easily, but the highly educated and really great lawyers wouldn't.
(Jodi Picoult, if you ever read this, please know that I've done the same thing to every author, no matter how much I love his/her work. I've gone on record for blasting J.K. Rowling for her lack of subject/pronoun agreement when using indefinite pronouns. I've marked every single one in all 7 books!!!! So please know that it's not a sign that I don't like your books. It's just that I'm an English teacher and I honestly just can't help myself!!!)
Two negatives (and I want you to know that regardless of any negative comments, they do NOT take away from my enjoying of Picoult's work!):
1. As I've already mentioned in a previous posting, I'm getting tired of Picoult's books having a major court scene. Every book has one. Just ONCE I'd like to see Picoult resolve the conflict within the story without involving the court.
2. Picoult is getting a little sloppy as far as grammar is concerned. I noticed quite a few split infinitives in this one. Yes, Cara probably would have used them easily, but the highly educated and really great lawyers wouldn't.
(Jodi Picoult, if you ever read this, please know that I've done the same thing to every author, no matter how much I love his/her work. I've gone on record for blasting J.K. Rowling for her lack of subject/pronoun agreement when using indefinite pronouns. I've marked every single one in all 7 books!!!! So please know that it's not a sign that I don't like your books. It's just that I'm an English teacher and I honestly just can't help myself!!!)
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Jodi, Jodi, Jodi, Jodi....
I have been avid fan of Jodi Picoult ever since I read My Sister's Keeper and The Pact enough years ago that I can't remember how long ago it's been....although, if I'd take a look at my bookshelf, I could probably take a really good guess since I've been buying her books in hardback as soon as they're released ever since then. But anyway......
I am currently reading the most recently released Picoult book, Lone Wolf. As usual, it really is a great book--a great STORY. Picoult truly knows how to weave a tale that makes me want to keep reading to the next word, the next line, the next page. I have only been reading it for the past two days since I had to finish The Hunger Games trilogy before I could move on to anything else, yet I'm already over halfway through the book. I should finish it before the weekend.
But, Jodi Picoult, as much as I love your books and as much as I consider myself a HUGE fan, I have something I need to say. You're not going to like it, but it needs to be said: You, like Nicholas Sparks, are now too predictable.. In every book I've read of yours over the past seven or eight years (at least since The Tenth Circle), you ALWAYS have a situation that leads to a trial. And SOMEONE involved in the trial ALWAYS keeps SOMETHING secret throughout the WHOLE trial, even though each promises on the Bible to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth. One of the lawyers is seen as a lawyer out for him/herself politically.
I LOVE that this book revolves around family and the importance of mending family conflicts and BEING a family, not matter what. In spite of the secrets and awful things that tore this family apart, they are still, most importantly, a family. And weaving in the information about wolves and how they work together as a family unit is just incredible.
But predictability, Jodi Picoult. Predictability. I'm tired of (bored with) the courtroom drama. GET OUT OF THE COURTROOM, Jodi Picoult!!!! Just once, please, write a book that doesn't involve a courtroom or lawyers, unless the main character just happens to be one. Please???????!!!!??????
You are an incredible writer. But you've gotten yourself into a rut with these courtroom dramas. They're becoming overly melodramatic just to keep the story going. Focus on this family on their relationships. Just ONCE let the characters resolve their differences without involving the COURT!!!
UGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
I am currently reading the most recently released Picoult book, Lone Wolf. As usual, it really is a great book--a great STORY. Picoult truly knows how to weave a tale that makes me want to keep reading to the next word, the next line, the next page. I have only been reading it for the past two days since I had to finish The Hunger Games trilogy before I could move on to anything else, yet I'm already over halfway through the book. I should finish it before the weekend.
But, Jodi Picoult, as much as I love your books and as much as I consider myself a HUGE fan, I have something I need to say. You're not going to like it, but it needs to be said: You, like Nicholas Sparks, are now too predictable.. In every book I've read of yours over the past seven or eight years (at least since The Tenth Circle), you ALWAYS have a situation that leads to a trial. And SOMEONE involved in the trial ALWAYS keeps SOMETHING secret throughout the WHOLE trial, even though each promises on the Bible to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth. One of the lawyers is seen as a lawyer out for him/herself politically.
I LOVE that this book revolves around family and the importance of mending family conflicts and BEING a family, not matter what. In spite of the secrets and awful things that tore this family apart, they are still, most importantly, a family. And weaving in the information about wolves and how they work together as a family unit is just incredible.
But predictability, Jodi Picoult. Predictability. I'm tired of (bored with) the courtroom drama. GET OUT OF THE COURTROOM, Jodi Picoult!!!! Just once, please, write a book that doesn't involve a courtroom or lawyers, unless the main character just happens to be one. Please???????!!!!??????
You are an incredible writer. But you've gotten yourself into a rut with these courtroom dramas. They're becoming overly melodramatic just to keep the story going. Focus on this family on their relationships. Just ONCE let the characters resolve their differences without involving the COURT!!!
UGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Am I now a "Mockingjay"?
It's taken me approximately a week....I finished the first in The Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins. Wow. As much as I'm enjoying reading Gone with the Wind, I have had an equally difficult time putting down The Hunger Games. I finally couldn't stand it anymore today; I sat in my recliner/rocker and finished the book. It really is a great book.
What is hard for me is not only that this book is apparently geared towards the younger generation (12 to 18 year olds in particular, it seems), but also that these are CHILDREN (12 to 18 year olds) killing each other!!! There is never a question of IF Katniss (or her fellow tributes) will kill; it's simply a matter of WHEN Katniss and her fellow tributes will kill. (Don't worry. I'm not really giving away anything important that you don't learn within the first few pages of the book.) It's so very disturbing.
Just as Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" has always been disturbing.. It's always interesting to me that students who choose to read that story in my class are the very ones who come in the day we're working with the story talking about how much they hate the story--how "stupid" the story is because Tessie is killed in the end. They argue that the story is pointless and just plain "dumb." Yet, here's this little book by Suzanne Collins that is taking the country by storm.
I finally read both the Twilight series and the Harry Potter series because others told me how great both series are and that if I love to read as much as I do, I'll love both of them. So I read both series and, of course, have become a true "Potterite" and "Twi-Hard." I've read both series at least 4 times through--all the books in each series, and yes, that includes the online availability of the partial draft of Stephenie Meyer's Midnight Sun as well as The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner. The same thing essentially has happened with The Hunger Games. I've had a number of friends and students tell me that I HAVE to read the books; they know I'll enjoy them. So, I finally got myself my copy of the first book, let it sit on my shelf for a good week, and then started it.....and even put aside Gone with the Wind to finish it first!!!
This book really keeps the audience's attention.....no doubt about that. It's scary and creepy how well it keeps the audience's attention, though, considering the fact that it's a book about kids killing, yes murdering, each other in terrible and violent ways. We were actually talking about this unusual phenomena the other day (in my British Lit class)--about how we as an audience are drawn inexorably to the scary, gory, unusual, awful, bloody, etc., etc., etc. (The most interesting part of The Picture of Dorian Gray is when Dorian kills Basil and the way Basil's body is disposed of.)
Yet, here we all are, hungrily (yes, the pun is intended) reading this new series, even chomping (again, pun intended) at the bit for the next one to come out! Of course, the whole series has been released, but now that I've bought the first one in paperback, I can't buy the 3rd one until it's out in paperback, too!!!! I'm sure I'll read it before then, but still.
Anyway, how am I supposed to reconcile my horror at what is happening on the page with the fact that I am drawn to this story--to reading each and every word of this story--like a hungry lion is drawn to raw meat?! And, I can't wait for the movie to come out!!!! I keep watching the movie trailers, anxiously wondering if my favorite (how can I say I have any favorite???) scenes will be portrayed as I envision them in my own head!!!
The Hunger Games truly is a horrific story. I couldn't cry at all, which I found odd, but I knew what was coming. It's not that the story is overly predictable, which typically ruins a book/story for me. It's simply that when the reader knows that 24 kids go in to an area and they aren't allowed out until there's only one left standing, there can't be too many surprises. There are a few, but not so surprising that I found myself crying over them. I was, and am, horrified.....just not surprised.
Does that make any sense?
I'm hoping to get the next book in the series before the weekend is out and start reading it as soon as possible. There's no way I can continue waiting to read the next book. How did the original fans of the book wait for each subsequent book of the trilogy to be released?! It's just as bad as waiting for the next Harry Potter book or the next in the Twilight series!!!! Thankfully, I didn't jump on board with either of those series either until all the books were available!!!! I'd go absotively, posolutely NUTS if I had to wait any longer to read the next book in the series!!!!
Finally, now that I'm a Hunger Games fan, what is my new nickname? And how do I reconcile all three of my favorite series into one nickname rather than being called individually a "Twi-Hard," "Potterite," and...."Mockingjay" (????)? I don't know what fans of The Hunger Games are called, but I like the idea of being a "Mockingjay"-----I can live with that......
What is hard for me is not only that this book is apparently geared towards the younger generation (12 to 18 year olds in particular, it seems), but also that these are CHILDREN (12 to 18 year olds) killing each other!!! There is never a question of IF Katniss (or her fellow tributes) will kill; it's simply a matter of WHEN Katniss and her fellow tributes will kill. (Don't worry. I'm not really giving away anything important that you don't learn within the first few pages of the book.) It's so very disturbing.
Just as Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" has always been disturbing.. It's always interesting to me that students who choose to read that story in my class are the very ones who come in the day we're working with the story talking about how much they hate the story--how "stupid" the story is because Tessie is killed in the end. They argue that the story is pointless and just plain "dumb." Yet, here's this little book by Suzanne Collins that is taking the country by storm.
I finally read both the Twilight series and the Harry Potter series because others told me how great both series are and that if I love to read as much as I do, I'll love both of them. So I read both series and, of course, have become a true "Potterite" and "Twi-Hard." I've read both series at least 4 times through--all the books in each series, and yes, that includes the online availability of the partial draft of Stephenie Meyer's Midnight Sun as well as The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner. The same thing essentially has happened with The Hunger Games. I've had a number of friends and students tell me that I HAVE to read the books; they know I'll enjoy them. So, I finally got myself my copy of the first book, let it sit on my shelf for a good week, and then started it.....and even put aside Gone with the Wind to finish it first!!!
This book really keeps the audience's attention.....no doubt about that. It's scary and creepy how well it keeps the audience's attention, though, considering the fact that it's a book about kids killing, yes murdering, each other in terrible and violent ways. We were actually talking about this unusual phenomena the other day (in my British Lit class)--about how we as an audience are drawn inexorably to the scary, gory, unusual, awful, bloody, etc., etc., etc. (The most interesting part of The Picture of Dorian Gray is when Dorian kills Basil and the way Basil's body is disposed of.)
Yet, here we all are, hungrily (yes, the pun is intended) reading this new series, even chomping (again, pun intended) at the bit for the next one to come out! Of course, the whole series has been released, but now that I've bought the first one in paperback, I can't buy the 3rd one until it's out in paperback, too!!!! I'm sure I'll read it before then, but still.
Anyway, how am I supposed to reconcile my horror at what is happening on the page with the fact that I am drawn to this story--to reading each and every word of this story--like a hungry lion is drawn to raw meat?! And, I can't wait for the movie to come out!!!! I keep watching the movie trailers, anxiously wondering if my favorite (how can I say I have any favorite???) scenes will be portrayed as I envision them in my own head!!!
The Hunger Games truly is a horrific story. I couldn't cry at all, which I found odd, but I knew what was coming. It's not that the story is overly predictable, which typically ruins a book/story for me. It's simply that when the reader knows that 24 kids go in to an area and they aren't allowed out until there's only one left standing, there can't be too many surprises. There are a few, but not so surprising that I found myself crying over them. I was, and am, horrified.....just not surprised.
Does that make any sense?
I'm hoping to get the next book in the series before the weekend is out and start reading it as soon as possible. There's no way I can continue waiting to read the next book. How did the original fans of the book wait for each subsequent book of the trilogy to be released?! It's just as bad as waiting for the next Harry Potter book or the next in the Twilight series!!!! Thankfully, I didn't jump on board with either of those series either until all the books were available!!!! I'd go absotively, posolutely NUTS if I had to wait any longer to read the next book in the series!!!!
Finally, now that I'm a Hunger Games fan, what is my new nickname? And how do I reconcile all three of my favorite series into one nickname rather than being called individually a "Twi-Hard," "Potterite," and...."Mockingjay" (????)? I don't know what fans of The Hunger Games are called, but I like the idea of being a "Mockingjay"-----I can live with that......
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
This is getting nuts....
It is not news that I read more than one book at a time. This is the first time in a long time, though, where I don't know which book to read because I'm enjoying both of them so much! And to make matters even more difficult, the new Jodi Picoult book comes out next Tuesday and I want to read it right away! Plus, March 6, I think it is, Frank Peretti's first new book in over 7 years will be out! I can't wait! I signed up through Facebook to receive the book, so for every person who signs up, so many chapters become available for free!!!! I have 10 chapters already waiting for me in my email!!!!! Yeah!!!! I love those authors; I read EVERYTHING they write!
But anyway, currently, I am reading Gone with the Wind, The Hunger Games, and The Picture of Dorian Gray. All 3 are really great books that are each keeping my attention and making me want to read! It's really pretty excited to be reading so many books at once that are each awesome in its own way! The only one that is a new read for me is The Hunger Games, but I am still eating up the other two as if I've never read either one before! Considering the fact that it's been close to 30 years since I last read Gone with the Wind, it feels like a first read!!!!
I honestly don't understand how/why people don't read. It makes no sense to. Yes, I'm looking forward to seeing the movie version of The Hunger Games, but my imagination is doing a great job of seeing the story on its own. I can't wait to watch the movie version of Gone with the Wind--again. It truly is one of the few movies that does justice to the book and has characters, scenes, etc. that are worthy of the great novel. Vivian Leigh is absolutely incredible as Katie Scarlett and Clark Gable was (and still is) the ONLY choice for Rhett Butler!!! Oh, I love that man!!!!
As you know if you read my previous post, I saw Dorian Gray, the movie, over this past weekend. Boy was I ever disappointed. I GET that Dorian lived a life devoted solely to pleasure [of the senses] and that Dorian is as sex-crazed as he's presented in the movie, but that doesn't mean I need to SEE it. All of the boobs were totally unnecessary for the story as a whole. I understand several of the things the director and writer chose to do with the story, but if he wanted to make a porno movie, why didn't he just say and do so?!
I am honestly on pins and needles in anxiety about getting back to my books. I have one I read just when I go to the bathroom. One I read whenever I'm sitting in my "special" spot on my couch. And the other I read when Samuel does his reading for homework. And I am enjoying each book and can't wait to get to the next word, the next page, the next chapter of each one!!!! It seems a little odd to be reading so many books at once that I am actually enjoying! I usually read several books at once because I don't like at least one of the books I'm reading and reading something else helps take away the monotony of reading something I'm not enjoying!!!!
Now, I want to pick up each one and read each one---but all at the same time!!!!!!
But anyway, currently, I am reading Gone with the Wind, The Hunger Games, and The Picture of Dorian Gray. All 3 are really great books that are each keeping my attention and making me want to read! It's really pretty excited to be reading so many books at once that are each awesome in its own way! The only one that is a new read for me is The Hunger Games, but I am still eating up the other two as if I've never read either one before! Considering the fact that it's been close to 30 years since I last read Gone with the Wind, it feels like a first read!!!!
I honestly don't understand how/why people don't read. It makes no sense to. Yes, I'm looking forward to seeing the movie version of The Hunger Games, but my imagination is doing a great job of seeing the story on its own. I can't wait to watch the movie version of Gone with the Wind--again. It truly is one of the few movies that does justice to the book and has characters, scenes, etc. that are worthy of the great novel. Vivian Leigh is absolutely incredible as Katie Scarlett and Clark Gable was (and still is) the ONLY choice for Rhett Butler!!! Oh, I love that man!!!!
As you know if you read my previous post, I saw Dorian Gray, the movie, over this past weekend. Boy was I ever disappointed. I GET that Dorian lived a life devoted solely to pleasure [of the senses] and that Dorian is as sex-crazed as he's presented in the movie, but that doesn't mean I need to SEE it. All of the boobs were totally unnecessary for the story as a whole. I understand several of the things the director and writer chose to do with the story, but if he wanted to make a porno movie, why didn't he just say and do so?!
I am honestly on pins and needles in anxiety about getting back to my books. I have one I read just when I go to the bathroom. One I read whenever I'm sitting in my "special" spot on my couch. And the other I read when Samuel does his reading for homework. And I am enjoying each book and can't wait to get to the next word, the next page, the next chapter of each one!!!! It seems a little odd to be reading so many books at once that I am actually enjoying! I usually read several books at once because I don't like at least one of the books I'm reading and reading something else helps take away the monotony of reading something I'm not enjoying!!!!
Now, I want to pick up each one and read each one---but all at the same time!!!!!!
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Dorian vs. Dorian
I'm going to start this by saying that I LOVE Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray. It's one of my favorite books--among so many others there are too many to count. Anyway, I love the concept of the picture taking in EVERYTHING from Dorian's life, especially his sins/evil--he doesn't do any good, so there's no reason to mention it. That's a genius idea of dealing with the whole immortal plot concept. Who hasn't looked at a favorite picture and thought about the good times and wished they could have lasted....forever?!
So I was excited, yet a tad trepidatious, about watching the 2008 movie version called Dorian Gray. We're supposed to watch it in my British Lit class later this week and I felt the need to preview the movie first. If you've read the book, you understand my trepidation.
I did NOT like the movie one tiny iota. First of all, it's awful. I don't think the acting is good at all. They deliver Wilde's epigrams as epigrams rather than smooth lines of comfortable dialogue. Secondly, Colin Firth has straight black hair and dark brown eyes, almost black, even. Dorian is clearly described by Wilde as having curly blonde hair and blue eyes!!!! Why change that?! Even Matthew McConnehy (sp?) would have been a better choice just because of his looks! UGH! Third, the BEST scene in the whole book isn't even in the movie!!!! When Dorian breaks it off with Sibyl in the book, she has fallen on her face before him (yes, she's bowing before him), and she reaches her tiny, pitiful hand out to touch Dorian's boot as he tells her she has killed his love for her because of her bad acting [in front of his friends]. It's such an incredibly tragically, romantic moment in the book. I can see Sibyl's pitiful, tiny hand reaching out, yet pulling back because she isn't even worthy to touch his boots, as Dorian pulls his boot roughly away from her and storming out of the room--leaving Sibyl to her pain and despair......and eventually, to take the poison to kill herself.
The movie has Sibyl kill herself by jumping in the river. That IS more tragically romantic than taking poison, but it simply seems to me to be an unnecessary change to the story as a whole. Overall, it's the least significant change in the story, but I simply don't see the need to change something like that. Drugs are such an important part of the overall story, so having Sibyl die of some poison fits that part of the story more than her jumping off a bridge into the River.
I also can't believe that the movie has Dorian dispose of Basil's body himself. Dorian would not have done that. He's above such things. Besides, it's an incredibly powerful scene when he calls in his "friend" to dispose of the body. That scene where Dorian has to convince said friend to do this terrible deed is a superb representation of how powerful Dorian has become. While he hasn't grown "up" as far as appearances are concerned, Dorian has grown up and grown into his manhood. He has taken charge of his own life. He has realized the power of money, as well as his own youth and beauty. He understands the power he wields...now. He no longer needs Henry/Harry. He can make his own decisions. He has become even more of what Henry/Harry expects him to be---Evil incarnate.
And worst of all, it's really the director's excuse to create a porno movie. I personally think the director should have called the movie Dorian Makes a Porno. The graphic sex and drugs scenes are TOOOOOOOO..........I know that Wilde very clearly talks about the fact that Dorian, after Sibyl's death, proceeds to live a life of utter pleasure, doing anything and everything that pleases Dorian himself, including, but not exclusive to, sex with both men and women and drugs, opium in particular. But Wilde was able to create an amazing story with vivid images of Dorian's life of pleasure without specifically describing the events in detail. Which means that the extreme pleasure scenes this director takes with this movie version are completely over the top and unnecessary. I don't need to SEE "it" to know "it" is going on......Do you know what I mean? Besides, it's sexier to leave something to imagination.
I'm very disappointed in the movie version.....And I haven't even talked about the picture itself! I'm not even going to get started on THAT......good grief.....did they have to have the picture growl evilly?????? Seriously?! UGH!!!! And then to have Dorian fall in love with Harry's daughter and betray Harry by sleeping with her?! No words.......
For those in my British Lit class, if you want to see Dorian Gray, you'll have to watch it on your own time--with your parents' permission. I'm not going to show this one. I'm corrupting you enough just by agreeing to the class choice to read the book.......!!!!!
So I was excited, yet a tad trepidatious, about watching the 2008 movie version called Dorian Gray. We're supposed to watch it in my British Lit class later this week and I felt the need to preview the movie first. If you've read the book, you understand my trepidation.
I did NOT like the movie one tiny iota. First of all, it's awful. I don't think the acting is good at all. They deliver Wilde's epigrams as epigrams rather than smooth lines of comfortable dialogue. Secondly, Colin Firth has straight black hair and dark brown eyes, almost black, even. Dorian is clearly described by Wilde as having curly blonde hair and blue eyes!!!! Why change that?! Even Matthew McConnehy (sp?) would have been a better choice just because of his looks! UGH! Third, the BEST scene in the whole book isn't even in the movie!!!! When Dorian breaks it off with Sibyl in the book, she has fallen on her face before him (yes, she's bowing before him), and she reaches her tiny, pitiful hand out to touch Dorian's boot as he tells her she has killed his love for her because of her bad acting [in front of his friends]. It's such an incredibly tragically, romantic moment in the book. I can see Sibyl's pitiful, tiny hand reaching out, yet pulling back because she isn't even worthy to touch his boots, as Dorian pulls his boot roughly away from her and storming out of the room--leaving Sibyl to her pain and despair......and eventually, to take the poison to kill herself.
The movie has Sibyl kill herself by jumping in the river. That IS more tragically romantic than taking poison, but it simply seems to me to be an unnecessary change to the story as a whole. Overall, it's the least significant change in the story, but I simply don't see the need to change something like that. Drugs are such an important part of the overall story, so having Sibyl die of some poison fits that part of the story more than her jumping off a bridge into the River.
I also can't believe that the movie has Dorian dispose of Basil's body himself. Dorian would not have done that. He's above such things. Besides, it's an incredibly powerful scene when he calls in his "friend" to dispose of the body. That scene where Dorian has to convince said friend to do this terrible deed is a superb representation of how powerful Dorian has become. While he hasn't grown "up" as far as appearances are concerned, Dorian has grown up and grown into his manhood. He has taken charge of his own life. He has realized the power of money, as well as his own youth and beauty. He understands the power he wields...now. He no longer needs Henry/Harry. He can make his own decisions. He has become even more of what Henry/Harry expects him to be---Evil incarnate.
And worst of all, it's really the director's excuse to create a porno movie. I personally think the director should have called the movie Dorian Makes a Porno. The graphic sex and drugs scenes are TOOOOOOOO..........I know that Wilde very clearly talks about the fact that Dorian, after Sibyl's death, proceeds to live a life of utter pleasure, doing anything and everything that pleases Dorian himself, including, but not exclusive to, sex with both men and women and drugs, opium in particular. But Wilde was able to create an amazing story with vivid images of Dorian's life of pleasure without specifically describing the events in detail. Which means that the extreme pleasure scenes this director takes with this movie version are completely over the top and unnecessary. I don't need to SEE "it" to know "it" is going on......Do you know what I mean? Besides, it's sexier to leave something to imagination.
I'm very disappointed in the movie version.....And I haven't even talked about the picture itself! I'm not even going to get started on THAT......good grief.....did they have to have the picture growl evilly?????? Seriously?! UGH!!!! And then to have Dorian fall in love with Harry's daughter and betray Harry by sleeping with her?! No words.......
For those in my British Lit class, if you want to see Dorian Gray, you'll have to watch it on your own time--with your parents' permission. I'm not going to show this one. I'm corrupting you enough just by agreeing to the class choice to read the book.......!!!!!
Friday, February 17, 2012
Dorian Gray and Katie Scarlett O'Hara Hamilton Kennedy Butler
Ok. I realize that I probably never would have thought of this if I hadn't been reading both The Picture of Dorian Gray and Gone with the Wind at the same time, but the truth is, I am reading both books at the same time, so I DO see that Scarlett and Dorian have a lot in common!
1. Both choose to "think about [it] tomorrow"--which, in essence boils down to not thinking about "it" at all because usually when "tomorrow" comes, we have other things pressing that need to be thought about--or put off until....tomorrow!
2. Both are beautiful. And they're obsessive about their own youth and beauty--as well as of those around them, but mostly for themselves. Dorian has always been petted and treated like a little prince because he's handsome--I mean, come one, he has blond, curly hair, and striking blue eyes!!!! Matthew McConaughey would make a WONDERFUL Dorian!!! Yummy! And Scarlett is very concerned with the fact that she has the smallest waist in the County--16 inches!!!! And after having Wade, she forces herself into her stays, even though she can't breathe, so she can be back at her original waist-line! She's very upset that she's had a baby and ruined her tiny figure! (She's even upset after each child is born about her tiny waist, not just Wade.) Dorian, of course, sells his soul for his Youth and Beauty.
3. Which brings me to the fact that both Scarlett and Dorian sell their souls. Dorian does it in the second chapter while Scarlett does it after she's gone back home to Tara when the Yankees take Atlanta. Dorian sees the portrait Basil has painted of him (Dorian) and he's attracted by the youth and beauty of himself in the painting. To himself, he says that he'd sell his soul if the painting could take the pressures of life while he stays exactly as the painting (he is) at that time.
Scarlett sells her soul when she goes to the abandoned plantations to look for food for the starving mouths looking to her to lead them and feed them. She's disillusioned because she'd gone home to Tara believing that her mother would take the burdens from her and Scarlett could go back to being the belle of the county with nothing more to worry about than which beaux will flirt with her next. Rather than peace and tranquility, when she gets home to Tara (after being gone for more than 3 years), she finds that her mother died the day before she got there and her father quickly loses his mind as a result of Ellen's death. Thus, everyone at Tara is looking to Scarlett to take care of them. She becomes the master of the plantation--and she's only 19!
(Another point of comparison between Dorian and Scarlett is that they're both young--I'm not sure what age is considered "coming of age" in Victorian England, but Dorian hasn't "come of age" yet, so he's got to be in his late teens or early twenties.)
So Scarlett goes to the plantations around Tara to look for food. She finds a vegetable garden by the "darkies'" cabins and soon gobbles down a raddish. Her empty stomach can't handle the food and she begins to vomit profusely over and over. As Scarlett is walking home, she declares, "As God as my witness, I'll never go hungry again!" You all know the famous line from the movie. It's pretty powerful.
Many might argue that Scarlett sells her soul much sooner in the story. Maybe back when Ashley won't marry her and she marries Charles Hamilton to spite Ashley. Or when she actually convinces Ashley to kiss her, admitting that he DOES care for her. Or at some other earlier point in the story. But before Scarlett has the moment previously described, she tries very hard to be a good girl. She isn't really a praying woman, but she at least TRIES to pray. She tries so hard to be the young, virtuous woman her mother trained her to be. She feels the same way Rhett does about so many different issues, but she's afraid to say them aloud because of her upbringing--her training--and of what others will say/think of her.
But once she yells, "As God as my witness...," she completely changes. She soon kills a man (or had that JUST happened? I don't have my book in front of me to remember which came first). She quits praying or even pretending to pray. She becomes hard (there's a quote--again, I don't have my book to quote it...). When the war is over, she goes to ANY length to fulfill her declaration and to ensure that she and hers never go hungry again--but especially for herself. She even steals her sister's affianced, Frank Kennedy (whom Scarlett never could stand), because she knows that Frank has the ability to make money and to make it fast. (And that her sister would never share with the whole family and/or take care of Tara, while Scarlett will--and does.)
She's ruthless. Just as Dorian is ruthless. We don't get as much detail about what Dorian does, but we can understand that he's loved....a LOT....and left....a LOT. We can also assume that many of his relationships have not been with just women. He's become a drug addict, smoking opium in opium dens on a consistent basis. (Remember, Scarlett has her first real taste of strong liquor her first night home to Tara after the burning of Atlanta; she continues to enjoy a good, stiff drink every so often thereafter. She even uses perfume to try to mask the smell of alcohol on her breath!)
And, yes, eventually, Dorian kills a man--violently, just as Scarlett has. Dorian uses his cane (if I'm remembering the scene correctly) while Scarlett shoots the Yankee soldier's face off. Both cover up their murders swiftly, having the help of someone to clean up quickly so no evidence is left of the act or the body. And neither really feels any guilt or remorse over what he/she has done. Again, they both decide to "think about it tomorrow," but tomorrow, they have other cares to concern themselves with, so their murders are swept under the rug as if they never happened.
These are just a few ideas I have at the moment that I can think of.....more is there, but I really need to bring this a close right now.....
1. Both choose to "think about [it] tomorrow"--which, in essence boils down to not thinking about "it" at all because usually when "tomorrow" comes, we have other things pressing that need to be thought about--or put off until....tomorrow!
2. Both are beautiful. And they're obsessive about their own youth and beauty--as well as of those around them, but mostly for themselves. Dorian has always been petted and treated like a little prince because he's handsome--I mean, come one, he has blond, curly hair, and striking blue eyes!!!! Matthew McConaughey would make a WONDERFUL Dorian!!! Yummy! And Scarlett is very concerned with the fact that she has the smallest waist in the County--16 inches!!!! And after having Wade, she forces herself into her stays, even though she can't breathe, so she can be back at her original waist-line! She's very upset that she's had a baby and ruined her tiny figure! (She's even upset after each child is born about her tiny waist, not just Wade.) Dorian, of course, sells his soul for his Youth and Beauty.
3. Which brings me to the fact that both Scarlett and Dorian sell their souls. Dorian does it in the second chapter while Scarlett does it after she's gone back home to Tara when the Yankees take Atlanta. Dorian sees the portrait Basil has painted of him (Dorian) and he's attracted by the youth and beauty of himself in the painting. To himself, he says that he'd sell his soul if the painting could take the pressures of life while he stays exactly as the painting (he is) at that time.
Scarlett sells her soul when she goes to the abandoned plantations to look for food for the starving mouths looking to her to lead them and feed them. She's disillusioned because she'd gone home to Tara believing that her mother would take the burdens from her and Scarlett could go back to being the belle of the county with nothing more to worry about than which beaux will flirt with her next. Rather than peace and tranquility, when she gets home to Tara (after being gone for more than 3 years), she finds that her mother died the day before she got there and her father quickly loses his mind as a result of Ellen's death. Thus, everyone at Tara is looking to Scarlett to take care of them. She becomes the master of the plantation--and she's only 19!
(Another point of comparison between Dorian and Scarlett is that they're both young--I'm not sure what age is considered "coming of age" in Victorian England, but Dorian hasn't "come of age" yet, so he's got to be in his late teens or early twenties.)
So Scarlett goes to the plantations around Tara to look for food. She finds a vegetable garden by the "darkies'" cabins and soon gobbles down a raddish. Her empty stomach can't handle the food and she begins to vomit profusely over and over. As Scarlett is walking home, she declares, "As God as my witness, I'll never go hungry again!" You all know the famous line from the movie. It's pretty powerful.
Many might argue that Scarlett sells her soul much sooner in the story. Maybe back when Ashley won't marry her and she marries Charles Hamilton to spite Ashley. Or when she actually convinces Ashley to kiss her, admitting that he DOES care for her. Or at some other earlier point in the story. But before Scarlett has the moment previously described, she tries very hard to be a good girl. She isn't really a praying woman, but she at least TRIES to pray. She tries so hard to be the young, virtuous woman her mother trained her to be. She feels the same way Rhett does about so many different issues, but she's afraid to say them aloud because of her upbringing--her training--and of what others will say/think of her.
But once she yells, "As God as my witness...," she completely changes. She soon kills a man (or had that JUST happened? I don't have my book in front of me to remember which came first). She quits praying or even pretending to pray. She becomes hard (there's a quote--again, I don't have my book to quote it...). When the war is over, she goes to ANY length to fulfill her declaration and to ensure that she and hers never go hungry again--but especially for herself. She even steals her sister's affianced, Frank Kennedy (whom Scarlett never could stand), because she knows that Frank has the ability to make money and to make it fast. (And that her sister would never share with the whole family and/or take care of Tara, while Scarlett will--and does.)
She's ruthless. Just as Dorian is ruthless. We don't get as much detail about what Dorian does, but we can understand that he's loved....a LOT....and left....a LOT. We can also assume that many of his relationships have not been with just women. He's become a drug addict, smoking opium in opium dens on a consistent basis. (Remember, Scarlett has her first real taste of strong liquor her first night home to Tara after the burning of Atlanta; she continues to enjoy a good, stiff drink every so often thereafter. She even uses perfume to try to mask the smell of alcohol on her breath!)
And, yes, eventually, Dorian kills a man--violently, just as Scarlett has. Dorian uses his cane (if I'm remembering the scene correctly) while Scarlett shoots the Yankee soldier's face off. Both cover up their murders swiftly, having the help of someone to clean up quickly so no evidence is left of the act or the body. And neither really feels any guilt or remorse over what he/she has done. Again, they both decide to "think about it tomorrow," but tomorrow, they have other cares to concern themselves with, so their murders are swept under the rug as if they never happened.
These are just a few ideas I have at the moment that I can think of.....more is there, but I really need to bring this a close right now.....
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