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Showing posts with label world lit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world lit. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Tasting the Sky by Ibitsam Barakat

(This post contains affiliate links.)

Today, I'm reviewing Tasting the Sky by Ibtisam Barakat. I read it for our World Lit group as our February book. We had our discussion a few weeks ago, and I really wish someone recorded it. It would be way more interesting to read here then whatever I'll end up writing! We had the weirdest, most random discussion (many tangents were gone on, including cat collars at one point near the end), but over two hours, a lot of really good points came up. It got a lot "deeper" than most of our book discussions in that we spent probably half an hour talking about memory, emotions, the effect of major world events on our lives, and more.

Summary from Amazon.com


Winner, Arab American National Museum Book Award for Children's/YA Literature, among other awards and honors.
“When a war ends it does not go away,” my mother says.“It hides inside us . . . Just forget!”
            But I do not want to do what Mother says . . . I want to remember.

In this groundbreaking memoir set in Ramallah during the aftermath of the 1967 Six-Day War, Ibtisam Barakat captures what it is like to be a child whose world is shattered by war. With candor and courage, she stitches together memories of her childhood: fear and confusion as bombs explode near her home and she is separated from her family; the harshness of
life as a Palestinian refugee; her unexpected joy when she discovers Alef, the first letter of the Arabic alphabet. This is the beginning of her passionate connection to words, and as language becomes her refuge, allowing her to piece together the fragments of her world, it becomes her true home.

Transcending the particulars of politics, this illuminating and timely book provides a telling glimpse into a little-known culture that has become an increasingly important part of the puzzle of world peace.


My Review

Considering that this is a memoir, it doesn't really seem fair to judge the characters and plot of this book in the same way I normally would. The characters in this book are real people, and so it doesn't feel fair to judge their actions and personalities. What I can say is that I was impressed with the way she wrote about them. She managed to portray her family in the light that she saw them, as a young child, but also in a way that allowed the reader to see all the motivations and emotions that she was too young to understand.

Again, I can't judge the plot, as it is her life. I can talk about what parts she chose to focus on, though. I expected the focus to be on the war and the soldiers, and while it sort of was, it was much more on her. It was about her personal struggles, and the struggles she saw her parents and siblings going through. It became a very personal book, which by the end was focusing on her relationship with the written word, and the way those outside influences, like the soldiers, affected her as a person.

The book was well written to a point. It is a children's book, and so the reading level is lower than most books I read now. The vocabulary was relatively simple, and so were the ideas presented, but I was at times impressed by how she managed to impart a complex idea or feeling in a simple way.


Who Should Read This Book? 
I would recommend this book to young teens and preteens looking for a window into life in the middle east. It's also a great discussion book for a book club, and there are many events and ideas that are jumping off points for casual discussion as well.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

A Doll's House by Henrik Ibsen

Today, I am reviewing A Doll's House, a play written in 1879 by Henrik Ibsen. It was the December book in my World Lit high school book group. Since it is a play, and not too long of one, we thought it would be fun to read it aloud together. It took us a little longer than we had anticipated, a little over three hours all told. I read the part of Mrs. Linde for the majority of the play. This post contains spoilers, so don't read if you care about that.

I'm going to write this post in a much more relaxed manner than usual, mainly because I didn't read it like a normal book. It was a different reading experience that normal, and I think it deserves a more chatty type of review.

I found this play an interested read considering the time in which it was written. The play focuses on a woman named Nora Helmer, who was, at some point in the past, forced to borrow money to pay for the treatment of her husband's illness. He does not know about the loan, and would be furious if he knew. As the play begins, her loan situation is falling apart, along with her marriage.

Nora is an interesting character in that she manages to be at once both a "doll" and a relatively independent woman. By the end, she seems to know what she wants, or at least needs, and she is willing to to what it takes to get there. In her husband's eyes, however, she is an airheaded homemaker.

This play breaks away from several social norms of the time, especially in the end, when Norma leaves her husband. The ending, in which Norma leaves Torvald and their children because she needs to grow as a person, and she finds her life with him too stifling. What I find particularly interesting about the ending is not so much the events themselves, but more the light in which they were presented.

The tone of the writing suggests that Norma is in the right, and that her husband is wrong to try to make her stay, which, for the late 1800's, is quite a statement. Not just that, but Torvald is represented as being hypocritical and the true "Doll" in the house. This is not at all what I would expect from a play from that time, and I found it quite interesting.

For a play, I think it read quite easily. It did a good job of showing character and plot development through dialogue, which is certainly important for a play. Each of the main characters, Norma, Torvald, Mrs. Linde, Krogstad, and even Dr. Rank all were quite human and well written.

I recommend this play to those who enjoy a well written play, and are interested in the history of play writing or woman's rights. It provides a unique perspective on this topic.

Have you read this book? If you have, I would love to hear what you thought about it!

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Busy, Busy, Busy {Life Update}

Today, I don't actually have time to write up a fancy post, so this is all that is going up. Life has been insane lately, and it's not slowing down. On Friday, we had our first choir performance, which went fine. On Saturday, I also danced with the Scottish Highland Dancers at the holiday festival at the port, and I took part in an Irish dance as part of that.

The Irish dance we did was one that a friend and I put together ourselves, the night before. It went really well, considering, but I do wish we could have practiced it a few more times. Today, I have another choir performance, and then a Christmas party, which should be a lot of fun, and, hopefully, somewhat relaxing.

Last Tuesday, our World Lit group got together to read the play, A Doll's House outloud together. It was a lot of fun. We each took a character to play. It took us over three hours, but we made it. I'll post a book review (and more about our reading) soon. My upcoming week is just as busy, with something (or multiple things) happening every day. According to Google Calender, the first free day I have is Dec. 17th. That's one of just three empty days between now and Christmas, though I'm sure they'll fill up quickly.

Anyways,  I don't need to just tell you how busy I am. This is just an update on what I'm up to, and now you at least know a little bit of it. School has been a little hard to fit in lately, but I'm planning on doing a comprehensive Homeschool Friday post this coming Friday. I'll talk a little about what's been going on and how things are going.

I've had a lot to do and think about lately, so this is all I have time to write at the moment. I'll be back tomorrow!


Monday, October 14, 2013

A Life Update

I haven't done one of these in a while! I've been pretty busy lately, and I haven't had time to sit down an write up one of these in several months.

School is going pretty well, though you already know that, since school is the one part of life I manage to consistently blog about. :) Here are some other random things I have been doing and thinking about lately.

1. Our little homeschool choir just started up again, and I am really excited. This Sunday, we started working on our first song, The First Nowell, and I thought it went amazingly well. I moved from the Altos to the Tenors this time around, and I am really happy with the switch. While I can sing both parts, singing alto was often a strain for me.

2. Emma Approved just started!!! I loved, loved, loved The Lizzie Bennett Diaries last year, and I'm thrilled that they are keeping going with the idea. Unlike with Pride and Prejudice, I am not familiar with the story of Emma, which is a bit exciting. I actually don't know what is going to happen this time around!

3.  November is coming very quickly, and I am trying to get prepared. Mainly, I am writing 750 words every day (750words.com is what I use. It is no longer free after the first month, though I was grandfathered with a life time free account in since I was using it before it went to pay only)to get myself back into the habit of writing.

4. Halloween is coming just as quickly, and I am trying to get the last of my Sam (LOTR) costume together. I still need pants, a backpack/sack, and to decide what to do about the feet. Since there is a group of us being the Fellowship, us four hobbits kind of need to be in agreement about how to handle the feet. Some people are saying just go barefoot, but since we will probably walking around outside quite a bit, I'm not fond of that idea.

5. I'm about half way through the Joy Luck Club, which is this month's World Lit book. So far, I am really liking it.

That's about it for now. I don't have time to do a longer post today, so this is it. I'll try to come back tomorrow with a sponsored book review!

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Homeschool Friday: Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2013 {Week 5}

I'm sorry this is a day late! My poor cat got cut claw cut a little too short yesterday morning, and I spent most of the rest of the morning trying to get her to sit in one place long enough to make sure the bleeding had totally stopped. Luckily, she is fine, though I lost several hours of my day cat wrestling, and later, cleaning many tiny drops of blood out of the tan carpet. I think they all came out, which is kind of amazing. Then my sister spent the evening watching a movie with our Dad at his place, so my mom and I watched Lost.

Anyway, all of that was to say, yesterday was kind of crazy, and I didn't get a chance to get this written until this morning.

History
In History this week, I did a lot of textbook reading about Islam and the Middle East in the 800-1100's. I also did a map about the spread of Islam through Europe and Asia during that same time period, I did mini bios on several of the people I had read about, and added a bunch of dates to my timeline. I was supposed to do more bios and add more timeline dates yesterday, but I did not get that done.

Science
For earth science this week, I was studying rocks. I did one day on an overview of rocks, and then on on igneous rocks. I did not get the last on of the week done, which I think was on metamorphic rocks.

Math and Spanish
With both of these subjects, I have just been continuing on without anything particularly new this week. The math lessons I did were on radicals and roots, while the Spanish was on learning the numbers 13 and up.

Rhetoric, English, and Vocabulary
For Rhetoric, I finally finished the chapter on definitions I have been working on for weeks. In English, I did more stuff on verbs, and I did a chapter in Vocab.

Other Stuff
This week also marks the beginning of a few discussion groups I have joined. Both are made up of local homeschool families, and one is being led by a homeschool dad. That one is a Current Events group that will meet twice a month, with the first day being next Monday. The topic this time is the government shutdown, and so I read some articles he suggested about it. Our new World Lit groups will also be meeting once a month, and October's book, which I started this week, is the The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan.

*This post contains affiliate links.