There’s several things I could to do look
back at the old year on New Year’s Eve. I could go through the list of books
I read this year and pick the ones I enjoyed the most. Or I could go through
the TV series I’ve watched and tell you about my favorite episodes (the verdict
one my favorite Doctor Who episode is still out – I just can’t decide whether it’s
The Name of the Doctor, The Day of the Doctor, or The Time of the Doctor. Maybe I should
go and re-watch all of them. Again.) However, since another passion of mine is
cooking and baking – to my family’s delight – I’ve decided to give you an
overview over my favorite bakery recipes of 2013.
Dienstag, 31. Dezember 2013
Montag, 23. Dezember 2013
1789 – Les Amants de la Bastille
The hottest show in Paris is – without a
doubt – 1789 – Les Amants de la Bastille,
a musical extravaganza for eyes and ears.
Montag, 9. Dezember 2013
Hemingway’s Paris
As I’ve said before, the best way to
discover Paris is on foot. And one of my favorite walks is one based on
Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast.
Sonntag, 8. Dezember 2013
Nights at the Louvre I: Ancient Egypt
The Louvre is a place best visited in the
evening. That’s when it is least crowded. But dusk also gives it a special
atmosphere.
Freitag, 6. Dezember 2013
On my Bookshelf: The Dragon Keeper
The rational side of myself knows that I
shouldn’t start a new fantasy series just now. It’s no surprise the book nerd
side won.
Montag, 11. November 2013
Halloween in Paris
One of the best ways to explore Paris is on
foot. Aside from the major touristic attractions, there are so many little
alleys, and historic places that it is almost impossible to ever see all of
them. But one can at least try. And since both the Mayor’s Office, as well as
several other sites (for example Time Out Paris) offer walking tours to print
out, nothing is cheaper, or easier.
Samstag, 9. November 2013
Versailles
If one is looking for a good definition for
the overblown expenses of royal families in Europe during the 17th century,
Versailles might be the best place to start. After all, it didn’t become the model for every royal’s residence on
the continent by chance.
Montag, 28. Oktober 2013
Version Française
Usually, I do have a thing against dubbed movies and TV series. That’s mostly because I can tell that German dubs of American and English movies and series are just that: dubs. And why would I watch a dub, if I can watch the original? Since I have moved to Paris, however, I have rediscovered dubs. Or as the French call it: “version française”.
Samstag, 26. Oktober 2013
On my Bookshelf: Jubilee
“ … I’m gwine teach my childrens to hate nobody, don’t
care what they does. I ain’t gwine teach my childrens hate cause hate ain’t
nothing but rank poison.”
Jubilee, written by historian Margaret Walker and published in 1966 has
often been likened to Gone With the Wind.
The summary on my pocketbook version calls Vyry, the novel’s main character “a
Civil War heroine to rival Scarlett O’Hara”. And the comparison does seem
obvious. Both characters are female, both live through and survive the Civil
War, and both show incredible resilience and resourcefulness. But there’s also
a few crucial differences. In contrast to Scarlett, Vyry (as all other
characters in the book) is based on a real person – Margaret Walker’s
great-grandmother, while the characters in Gone
With the Wind are all fictional. Also, Margaret Walker is a historian who
first wrote Jubilee for her Ph.D.
And
then there is of course the crucial issue of race. Gone With the Wind focuses almost exclusively on white characters,
and the African American characters that do feature in the novel, are portrayed
in problematic ways, as I have noted before. Jubilee, on the other hand, focuses mostly on Vyry and how she
survives being a slave in the house of her own father, the Civil War, and Reconstruction
with all its hope and horrors (including the burning down of her house by the
Ku Klux Klan and the miscarriage this causes). Jubilee, however, also shows the enthusiasm for the War,
and its horrible effects, on Vyry’s owners.
Thus, Jubilee is a riveting, and more rounded, view than Gone With the Wind. Especially if the reader reminds himself time and again that what he is reading is not merely a novel, but the history of someone’s life even if it is presented as a novel. This is a book I would love to see brought to the big screen. And maybe, if 12 Years a Slave is an indication for a new interest in real person’s lives under slavery and after the Civil War, I may yet get to see it.
Thus, Jubilee is a riveting, and more rounded, view than Gone With the Wind. Especially if the reader reminds himself time and again that what he is reading is not merely a novel, but the history of someone’s life even if it is presented as a novel. This is a book I would love to see brought to the big screen. And maybe, if 12 Years a Slave is an indication for a new interest in real person’s lives under slavery and after the Civil War, I may yet get to see it.
Sonntag, 20. Oktober 2013
Grave Afternoons
Paris has been called many things, with ‘City
of Love’ and ‘City of Lights’ being the two most famous nicknames. Paris,
however, is also a city of the dead, and especially of the famous dead.
Donnerstag, 17. Oktober 2013
On my Bookshelf: Gone With the Wind
Gone
With the Wind is one of those books. One of those
books you know is a classic. One of those books you know you should read
because of that. One of those books that languish in ‘to-be-read’ piles for
ages. At least that’s what it was for me until last weekend, when I’d finally
finished the last of its almost 1,000 pages.
Samstag, 5. Oktober 2013
Living Literature: Festival des Écrivains du Monde
Paris is not only the City of Lights, it
also proves to be a City of Literature. Literature in all its shapes and form,
from poetry slams to Readings to literary festivals.
Labels:
Ahdaf Soueif,
Antonio Skármeta,
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie,
David Grossman,
Elif Shafak,
Festival des Ècrivains du Monde,
John Banville,
Joseph Anton,
Literature,
Ma Jian,
Paris,
Salman Rushdie
Donnerstag, 3. Oktober 2013
On my Bookshelf: The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood
“Farewells can be shattering, but returns are
surely worse.”
Sonntag, 29. September 2013
An Exercise in Patience
Germans are good at complaining. Especially
about bureaucracy and anything to do with administrative tasks. And I’m no
exception of that rule. Coming to France and being confronted with their way of
doing things is proving to be an exercise in patience.
Samstag, 21. September 2013
"The business of books..."
It is
safe to say that a quote that starts with the line „The business of books”
would attract the attention of anyone interested in literature, and even more
so of anyone studying literature.
Montag, 16. September 2013
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