Sunday, April 30, 2017

Icelandic Dessert

Here's the link to the Icelandic dessert that I made for our meeting.  With so many desserts to choose from, I decided on an Icelandic dessert since I was picking an Icelandic book. Mondlukaka

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Charlotte Bronte Biography


I read an interesting article in the Wall Street Journal about Elizabeth Gaskell who wrote a biography of Charlotte Bronte published in 1857 named "The Life of Charlotte Bronte."

"Elizabeth Gaskell's astonishingly vivid biography of Charlotte Bronte is written with all the sweep, color and fullness of a great Victorian novelist, which is exactly what Gaskell was.  She was also a shrewd journalist.  Based on her own interviews with Charlotte Bronte and a cache of 400 letters from Charlotte's intimate childhood friend Ellen Nussey, the book opens up the strange family life of the (then) obscure Haworth Parsonage. We see the original of Charlotte's Jane Eyre magically emerging but also the haunting, enigmatic figure of Charlotte's sister Emily; the tender Anne Bronte; the opium wrecked brother Branwell; the deeply eccentric father, Rev. Patrick Bronte, who fired guns in his churchyard.  If you wish to get the flavor, just read the chapters that describe Charlotte's fraught relationship  with Emily and Emily's savage handling of her terrifying bull mastiff, Keeper. Charlotte's modern biographer, Claire Harman, says rightly that Gaskell's "Life of Charlotte Bronte" first made biography "an imaginative creation," with the force of myth.

Sunday, April 23, 2017

A different take on Jane Eyre

Because the Milwaukee Rep is going to be performing Jane Eyre, I thought this might be fun to take a look at a prequel to Charlotte Bronte's book.  It's called Wide Sargasso Sea, by Jean Rhys.  It was written in 1966.  There was also a 2006 movie.  Here's what a BBC commentator had to say about it in 2016, the 50th anniversary of its publication

"As any English literature student will tell you, Rhys’s iconic prequel to Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre is rich in motifs and devices both modernist and postmodernist. In giving a voice and an identity to Mr Rochester’s first wife, Antoinette – aka Bertha, the madwoman in the attic – the novel has become a gateway text to post-colonial and feminist theory."

Author of Medicine Walk dies

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/20/books/richard-wagamese-dead-native-canadian-writer.html

Monday, April 10, 2017

Little Free Library

When I was walking the other day I noticed that the Little Free Library along the riverwalk in Schultz Park has no books!  If you have a couple of books that you could donate, bring them to bookclub and I'll deliver them.  Thanks!  Jackie

Wednesday, April 5, 2017

A Favorie Detective Returns


You can go to Boswell's website for more info.  Thanks to Mary for this information!
The Friends of the UWM Golda Meir Library presents a special evening with the great Sara Paretsky at the Golda Meir fourth floor Conference Center on Thursday, May 11, 7 pm. This event is free, but registration is requested. She will be appearing in conjunction with Fallout, the 18th novel in the V.I. Warshawski series, or the 19th if you include a collection of Warshawski stories. 

Murder and Mayhem

Learned of an event in Milwaukee for mystery lovers that will occur later this year: Murder and Mayhem.  It will occur November 4, 2017.  This will be its 13th year.  Last November they had 26 authors.  Something for us to think about.  Here's a link to their site:
http://www.murdermayhemmilwaukee.com