Review: Rooftop Soliloquy by Roman Payne

I just finished reading Roman Payne’s novel Rooftop Soliloquy and I have to say I had great expectations for this book. Payne was selected by Literature Monthly Magazine as one of the top five up and coming- out of the mainstream- authors and his new book RS sounded really interesting.

As some of you might have guessed, I have a flair for the eccentric so this sounded right up my alley and I looked forward to reading it. The opening sentence of the book  made me really want to read it as it sounded intriguing and tantalizing.

As I began the book I was transported back to various locations in Paris that I had the pleasure of visiting this summer. The story reads in a very poetic and lyrical manner, it’s like reading an epic poem like Beowulf or something by Homer. The ‘chapters’ are actually called a soliloquy in stead which I thought was a great little detail which really made the novel authentic. It’s about a writer/composer who is working on a hero’s tale while living in Paris and searching for his muse.

Linguistically and mechanically, the novel is flawless and beautiful- very pleasurable to read. However the story itself, characters, and over-all point of the novel left much to be desired. Continue reading “Review: Rooftop Soliloquy by Roman Payne”

2011 Victorian Literature Challenge

2011 Victorian Literature Challenge (Starts Jan 1, 2011)

Selected Level: Desperate Remedies: 15+ books.

Here is the list of books I’ll be reading over the next year as part of the 2011 Victorian Literature Challenge. I will try to blog and post about each one. Many of these I have read and many I have not but have wanted to and thought this would be the perfect excuse. All of these books were written during the specified Victorian timeline (1837-1901).

These books are in no special order and I will not be reading in this order but I will post what I am reading.

Challenge starts Jan 1 2011! Here’s the list!

  1. Wuthering Heights/ Emily Bronte
  2. Great Expectations/ Charles Dickens
  3. The Moonstone/ Wilkie Collins
  4. The Woman in White/ Wilkie Collins
  5. The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes/ Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
  6. The Picture of Dorian Gray/ Oscar Wilde
  7. Middlemarch/ George Elliot
  8. The Mill on the Floss/ George Eliot
  9. Silas Marner/ George Elliot
  10. Agnes Grey/ Anne Bronte
  11. Les Miserables/ Victor Hugo
  12. The Importance of Being Earnest/ Oscar Wilde
  13. Alice in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass/ Lewis Carroll (since they are both short)
  14. A Christmas Carol/ Charles Dickens
  15. Vanity Fair/ William Thackeray
  16. The Purloined Letter and other short stories/ Edgar Allan Poe
  17. Tale of Two Cities/ Charles Dickens
  18. The Turn of the Shrew or The Portrait of a Lady/ both by Henry James
  19. The Return of Sherlock Holmes/ Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
  20. His Last Bow (Sherlock Holmes)/ Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Review: Dracula by Bram Stoker

I finally finished reading the PadWorx interactive e-book (Bram Stoker’s Dracula) and can I just say, it was amazing. I have read Dracula before so I love the story but the interactive book added a whole new element.

Lately bloggers and the media have been talking about e-readers and e-books, some have suggested that e-books and readers will soon dominate the market. When I got my iPad I knew that I could download books for it but I never dreamed that I would have a hard time going back to a paperback book. Having books at my fingertips is wonderful, and when there are books like this one by PadWorx it’s hard to go back to a regular book.

When I first saw the App for Dracula I thought it was going to be a little cheesy and for $5.00 I thought it was on the ‘expensive’ side specially when I can download just the text version for free…..however the App quickly changed my mind.

For those of you who have read Dracula know that it is a long book though it reads quickly because it is an epistolary novel (a book written in letter or journal form). However, there are times that the novel itself drags a bit and sometimes it can be difficult to follow. When I first read Dracula I had a hard time figuring out what was going on until about 100 pages in, then it finally made sense. With the interactive version, it does help the reader follow a long better. Continue reading “Review: Dracula by Bram Stoker”

Review: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

Jane Eyre is one of my favorite books of all time. I read the novel when I was in high school and then again sometime in between high school and college.

The Bronte sisters were clearly more ‘wild’ and passionate in their love stories (one of my fav books is Wuthering Heights) than Jane Austen.

I admired Jane’s sprit, especially when she totally called her aunt on the carpet about being more or less an evil, cold-hearted bitch to her. Jane was witty, charming, and above all strong. She really is the ideal woman both modernly and historically speaking. She stands up for herself and perseveres through difficulties and ultimately succeeds in her goal- wining Rochester’s heart and hand.

Jane Eyre’s tale was like the original prototype for job place sexual harassment and how NOT to have an office affair. I mean really…..hooking up with you much older, married, boss…..ya never a good idea no matter what century you are in! Continue reading “Review: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte”

Review: Drood by Dan Simmons

I recently picked up this book (Drood by Dan Simmons) in anticipation for Halloween. I wanted to read something that was scary and suspenseful with a historic Victorian London flair. This book started as a generally promising suspense/horror story but ended up being a huge disappointment. I’ll admit when I first started it I was completely hooked and into it but sadly as the weeks went by I had to force myself to finish it.

The book is written from the famous English author Wilkie Collins (famous works include The Woman in White and The Moonstone) perspective. Collins often collaborated with the famous Charles Dickens in real life. The witty humor which the Collin’s character brings to the novel is great, I often found myself LOL-ing all over the place and I especially loved the ‘Other Wilkie’ interaction (or lack there of) throughout the novel.

Simmons definitely nailed the Victorian writing style which added a sense of authenticity to the story as his sentences were long, wordy, and with a flair for the eccentric. He also seemed to really ‘get’ Collins’ character and used lots of Gothic fiction elements (ghosts, psychological breakdown, impending doom, drug use etc).

Simmons does a fantastic job recreating a gritty, dirty, creepy, horrifying turn of the century London. When Dickens and Collins venture out into the city slums looking for Drood, the imagery and description is by far one of the best I have read. I really felt like I was there walking right a long side Collins. The suspense and psychological cluster (*(^ that follows though it a little hard to sort out. Continue reading “Review: Drood by Dan Simmons”