A Journey to the Commonwealth of Letters

Aside from my cousin Dianne, another person who got me hooked on books is my friend Tintin. Back in college, way before my book-hoarding days, I was entranced by the rows and rows of books on her shelf in her room, and she always let me borrow great books (of course, even then, I returned them already covered in protective plastic).

with Tin at the Half Blood Prince launch in ’05

Last year, while I was trying in vain to recruit her to BookMooch, she told me she was dying to find a copy of this book called Silverlock by John Myers Myers. I was curious, and ended up adding it to my wishlist because it sounded so intriguing. I totally forgot about it until Triccie put up a copy in her inventory during a special promo for local moochers last February.

Tin wanted to borrow it the last time I saw her, so I decided to bump it up on my TBR so I could lend it to her.

I started the book around Black Saturday; I read about a third then I wasn’t able to read all last week because I was working on a book project. Then I read another third during Dianne’s graduation, and read the remaining hundred-plus pages for the 24-hour read-a-thon.

Silverlock (book #59 for 2009) , written in 1949, is an epic fantasy about A. Clarence Shandon, an American who goes off for a vacation but ends up getting shipwrecked, and finds himself in the Commonwealth of Letters, a land that challenges everything he has ever known, populated by literary characters.

Shandon is dubbed as Silverlock by his guide to the Commonwealth, Golias (who embodies Orpheus, and perhaps some other storytelling characters) due to a streak of white in his black hair.

Shandon (occasionally with Golias, but more because of his own pigheadedness) gets into a lot of adventures and misadventures in his journey throughout the Commonwealth: he is turned into a pig by Circe, gets chased down by a pack of cannibals, gets involved in a love triangle because of Puck’s tomfoolery, joins Robin Hood and his merry men, celebrates with Beowulf over his triumph with Grendel, has tea with the Mad Hatter and the March Hare; and steals Huck Finn’s raft; and runs into Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, Hester from The Scarlet Letter, and Rosalind and Orlando from As You Like It.

It’s hard to explain the plot exactly, because that would take the fun out of it. Just think of it as a richer, expanded version of Shrek with more obscure characters or a more outlandish Jasper Fforde novel — more fantasy than mystery. And with a lot of songs in between.

For the most part, it was a good read, but I ranked it my least favorite in the read-a-thon, because I was pressured to finish the book. I’m not a hardcore fantasy fan, and the story was a bit more fantastic for my taste, so it was more difficult for me to get through it. Unless books with made-up maps and strange names are normal fare for you, the book is best read at leisure, because you’ll need your concentration to keep track of the characters while attempting to identify them, or you’ll get as lost as Shandon is in this strange world.

I like the message the book leaves with the reader, about the transforming power of books and reading. Shandon Silverlock certainly doesn’t start out as hero material — cowardly, rude, chauvinistic, lecherous, and even downright annoying. But as he goes through his journey in the Commonwealth, he picks up values from the literary ideals that he meets, and in the end, he becomes a hero that deserves the title role in the story.

This is the sort of book, I think, that gets better with every reading, especially after you’ve read more literature that will allow you to identify other characters and references you weren’t able to identify before. I don’t think I even recognized a fourth of the characters discussed in the book, making succeeding readings a definite possibility. I think I’ll read this again in five years or so, to see where it takes me.

Meanwhile, I’m loaning it to Tintin later :)

***
My copy: 2005 Ace trade paperback, mooched from Triccie. I want the hardcover edition with the built-in companion.

My rating: 4/5 stars

I Survived the 24-hour Read-a-thon.

I’m still alive!

It’s the 24th hour and I’m far from finishing the last book I started so I thought I’d start blogging already.

I realized I didn’t include an introduction of my challenge in my mid-event post, so to explain, the 24-hour read-a-thon is an event mounted in memory of Dewey, a blogger and a reader who started the event in October 2007. Dewey passed away in November 2008, and the 24-hour read-a-thon is continued by those who’ve helped Dewey organize the past read-a-thons, and hundreds of book bloggers in the world.

I never met Dewey, although she was also active on BookMooch, but I am inspired by the number of lives she touched, and how she shared her love of reading to people all over the world. I decided to join this year because I salute her efforts, and I wanted to be part of this global celebration for a fellow book blogger.

So, as you’ve read in my mid-event post, I had a lot of catching up to do since I got stuck on Silverlock last night. Here’s the story, and the answers to some memes

I realized I didn’t answer the introductory meme so here goes:

3 facts about me …
– I live in Makati City, Philippines, where it’s the peak of summer and the temperature’s over 30 degrees!
– I collect international editions of Harry Potter.
– I am scared of flying cockroaches.

How many books do you have in your TBR pile for the next 24 hours?
I didn’t plan my reading list, other than Silverlock, which was I was in the middle of when the event started, so after that I just grabbed some books from my general TBR pile, which has nearly 300. Now they’re in disarray because I trawled through them like a madwoman, lol!

Do you have any goals for the read-a-thon (i.e. number of books, number of pages, number of hours, or number of comments on blogs)?
My goal was 8 books.

If you’re a veteran read-a-thoner, Any advice for people doing this for the first time?
It’s my first time, although I’ll definitely plan better for the next one, and I want to pull a hardcore all-nighter!

And finally, my end-of-event meme:

1. Which hour was most daunting for you?
Gosh, around hour 16, after I posted my mid-event entry.
It was sooooo hot, I was sweating like crazy so I took off for a walk to McDonald’s, which is around five blocks from our house. I finished one book, Para Kay B, and then I had to go home because I had to go to mass — it’s Sunday in the Philippines.

Downing a coke float, which didn’t have much of an effect towards the heat!

2. Could you list a few high-interest books that you think could keep a Reader engaged for next year? Hmm, high-interest books in general, not necessarily ones I’ve read for this event. I’m thinking short and interesting so here are some suggestions:
Perfume by Patrick Suskind
The Arrival by Shaun Tan — wordless!
The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales by Jon Scieszka, ill. by Lane Smith
Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
The Tattooed Map by Barbara Hodgson
Griffin and Sabine by Nick Bantock
The Little Prince by Antoine Saint Exupery

I’ve found that illustrated books work great because there’s a visual interest, and your eyes can rest from straight text.

3. Do you have any suggestions for how to improve the Read-a-thon next year?
My suggestion is same as my mid-event suggestion — a holiday read-a-thon, because people have more time off or can clear their schedule accordingly, regardless of time zone.

4. What do you think worked really well in this year’s Read-a-thon?
The Mr. Linky and the feed site — it’s a great way to find out what other readers are up to.

5. How many books did you read?
8 and a half

6. What were the names of the books you read?
The first four were in my mid-event post: Silverlock by John Myers Myers, D is for Dahl, and 2 Little Lit books (It was a Dark and Silly Night, and Fairy Tale Funnies).

Today’s reads included:
Para Kay B by Ricky Lee (photo above)

The Secret of the Pistoulet by Jana Kolpen and Mary Tiegreen
The Legend of Villa della Luna by Jana Kolpen and Mary Tiegreen

The Pixie Hollow Pop-up

and halfway through Miller’s Collecting Books by Catherine Porter
(and that’s my tottering TBR mountain– those that don’t fit my TBR shelves!)

7. Which book did you enjoy most?
I enjoyed the last book the most, Miller’s Collecting Books. It contains everything you need to know about collecting books and all sorts of book geekery, and I’m really loving it so I’m reading it slowly so I can savor it.

8. Which did you enjoy least?
Hmm, Silverlock was hardest for me to get through because I started it over the Easter holidays, stopped for a week when I had so much work to do and picked it up again for the read-a-thon. Hardcore fantasy (with maps and strange names) are really not my cup of tea, although the book references in Silverlock kept me going. Note to self: next time, no fantasy epics!

9. If you were a Cheerleader, do you have any advice for next year’s Cheerleaders?
I wasn’t a cheerleader, but to the cheerleaders — good job! See you again next year!

10. How likely are you to participate in the Read-a-thon again? What role would you be likely to take next time?
I’d still want to be a reader. I really want an all-nighter, and I’ve got to plan it out. An idea would be to read with another reader (or maybe more!), for a read-a-thon party.

Heehee, one last thing, I’d like to share a photo of my dog, Macky, helping me out in the read-a-thon:

Maybe he wants me to cook this recipe for him?
Cheers, and congratulations to all readers! Will post reviews of the read-a-thon books throughout this week.

Thank you Dewey for starting this tradition. You live in the memory of all read-a-thoners and read-a-thon cheerleaders!

Midway through the 24-Hour Read-a-thon

Ack! So sorry for the delayed post. I just parked myself in front of the computer because I slept over at my cousin’s after attending her graduation last night.

May I just introduce you to my cousin Dianne, who is every bit of a bookworm as I am. We’ve loved books since we were kids, and while growing up we had each others’ books going back and forth between us, and now we feed off each others’ book compulsions. Well, she just graduated from med school (starting internship in May), and I couldn’t miss it for the world.

Graduation day for Dianne!

Not to worry, I got some reading done for Dewey’s 24-hour Read-a-thon last night and this morning and here I am to turn in my mid-event report.

1. What are you reading right now?
I’m reading The Secrets of the Pistoulet by Jane Kolpen — I’m starting it after posting this blog

2. How many books have you read so far?
4- Silverlock by John Myers Myers, D is for Dahl , and two Little Lit books

Silverlock

D is for Dahl

Little Lit

3. What book are you most looking forward to for the second half of the Read-a-thon?
Hmm, this book on Antique Book Collection that I’ve been saving up for a good read.

4. Did you have to make any special arrangements to free up your whole day?
I only found out about my cousin’s graduation a few hours before, so that was an unexpected event that cut through the read-a-thon, but she’s a big part of my life, and it was an important event to celebrate.

5. Have you had many interruptions? How did you deal with those?
Fell asleep in the middle of Silverlock, have started making up for it this morning and will continue to do so for the next hours.

Eek!

6. What surprises you most about the Read-a-thon, so far?
That it’s not as easy as I thought it would be, especially in this infernal heat in our country — it’s over 30 degrees out here!

7. Do you have any suggestions for how to improve the Read-a-thon next year
Perhaps a holiday edition? So more people can read because they’re on vacation

8. What would you do differently, as a Reader or a Cheerleader, if you were to do this again next year?
Make sure my schedule is free!!! Next time I want to pull an all-nighter.

9. Are you getting tired yet?
Not really, am just getting warmed up! I hope I can get 4 more books in later

Marathon!

10. Do you have any tips for other Readers or Cheerleaders, something you think is working well for you that others may not have discovered?
Alternating genres, to cleanse the palate…

Up, Up, and Away

(blogging about another old favorite, as I’m still in the middle of reading Silverlock and am majorly swamped, hay…)

When I was in 4th grade, my dad usually picked me up after work so I had a few hours to kill while waiting. I usually read books if I didn’t have any homework to work on, or if I didn’t feel like doing it, which was more often the case.

Now in those days, we decorated the room with special corners for each subject — Christian Doctrine, Science, Math, Social Studies, etc. Of course, my favorite corner was the Reading Corner, where everyone brought a book or two to share with the class and we would have a mini-library to escape to in between classes or during DEAR (Drop Everything And Read) time, so we wouldn’t get listed down as “noisy girls”. Haha, magically by the end of the school year the books would have dwindled to a couple mo.tley ones; I lost a lot of books to the Reading Corner, although I gained some other kids’ books too, wink, wink.

One of the books I discovered in our 4th grade reading corner is the 1947 Newbery Award winner The Twenty-One Balloons by William Pene du Bois, which I first read while waiting to get picked up from school one rainy afternoon at Gate 1.

The Twenty-One Balloons one of the best escapist stories I have ever had the pleasure of reading, and I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve read it and how many copies I’ve worn out and lost (e.g. loaned and never returned to me! grr).

I really love the premise: Professor William Waterman Sherman decides to retire from teaching arithmetic to grubby kids, and decides to fly off on a grand vacation — drifting aimlessly on a hot-air balloon! I loved the detailed description of how The Globe (Prof. Sherman’s hot air balloon) was constructed — a small wicker house with an observation deck, and everything made from the lightest materials — even a small library of paper-bound books in tiny print!

Professor Sherman left San Francisco intending to fly across the Pacific Ocean, and three weeks later, he mysteriously turns up floating in the Atlantic Ocean, in a wooden wreckage with 21 balloons!

Where exactly has he been? On the island of Krakatoa (he flies over the Philippines!), which turns out to be an extremely wealthy island-nation of eccentric citizens!

The Diamond Mines

I love the idea of Krakatoa in The Twenty-One Balloons, and this book has made me daydream about living there, and given the choice, I’d drop everything and go. The island has an expansive diamond mine right under the volcano Krakatoa. According to Krakatoan history (as narrated by Mr. F), a sailor got shipwrecked on the island and discovered its treasures. As soon as he was able to return to America, he handpicked 20 families of diverse talents and interests. Each family was renamed with a letter of the alphabet, e.g. Mr. A, Mr. B, A-1, and A-2 and so on until the Ts, and the small nation lives a leisurely life financed by discreetly selling a small load of diamonds each year.

The Coat of Arms of Krakatoa: “Not New Things, but New Ways”

What’s most interesting about Krakatoa is its “Gourmet Government.” Each day of their 20-day calendar (A through T) is assigned to a specific family, who is tasked to serve meals at their house, which functions as a restaurant specializing in a particular cuisine — A for American, B for British, C for Chinese, D for Dutch, etc. It’s a lot of fun, as each house resembles the architecture of the country too — from an Egyptian pyramid to a Russian tea house to an Italian Bistro and a miniature Versailles! — and the families are very competitive in coming up with great dining experiences for one another, and they have theme months too, like “Month of Lamb,” depending on their surplus stock. I imagine every day to be a gastronomic adventure!

There are also a lot of imaginative Krakatoan inventions in the book, including a bed that automatically changes sheets, a collapsible dining room, living room bumpcars, sky beds, and flying merry-go-rounds. William Pene du Bois is not only a gifted writer, he illustrated the book as well, and the illustrations are great fuel for the imagination.

M-1 and M-2’s Sky beds

Of course, you will have to read the book to find out how Professor Sherman ends up in the wrong ocean with 21 balloons. It’s a great book for all ages; kids and adults alike will appreciate the rich experience that Pene du Bois lays out for the reader.

Interesting factoid: the story came out around the same time as F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “A Diamond as Big as the Ritz” in 1947, which has a similar plot although very different ideas. William Pene du Bois writes a horrified note as an introduction and quips,”The fact that F. Scott Fitzgerald and I apparently would spend our billions in like ways right down to being dumped from bed into a bathtub is altogether, quite frankly, beyond my explanation.”

***
My copy: trade paperback. Looking for a hardcover copy!

My rating: 5/5 stars

Blast from the Past: My Girl

When I was in high school, I went through a movie novelization phase because our library was well-stocked with movies turned into books. I remember reading Mrs. Doubtfire, Honey I Blew up the Kid, Soul Food, Waiting to Exhale, A Walk in the Clouds, Jumanji, Danielle Steel’s The Promise, and perhaps a dozen more books I can’t remember off the bat.

While I’ve long outgrown this phase — I now steer clear of movie covers for my book collection — there is one movie novelization left on my shelf: My Girl, adapted by Patricia Hermes (written by Laurice Elehwany).

I was a big fan of the movie, and I think I must’ve checked the book out of the library five times until I got my own copy from a bargain book store in college, and I’ve read it countless of times since.

Having lost my dad right before I turned 11, there was a time I was really engrossed in young adult novels that dealt with grief and loss, and My Girl was 1/3 of my figurative shrink’s couch, along with Sharon Creech’s Walk Two Moons and Judy Blume’s Tiger Eyes.

Vada Sultenfuss is a weird but lovable protagonist – a sad 11-year old girl in need of attention from her dad and senile grandmother; a hypochondriac obsessed with death, convinced she killed her own mother by being born; a tomboy constantly bullying her geeky best friend Thomas J; and a teenybopper head over heels in love with her English teacher Mr. Bixler.

It’s a summer that changes Vada’s life forever, as she befriends an offbeat makeup artist, Shelley, who eventually becomes her dad’s girlfriend (and wife). She steals money from Shelley’s cookie jar to attend Mr. Bixler’s adult writing classes at the community college, becomes blood brothers with Thomas J (hahaha I used to find it fascinating — one of them snags a finger on a fish hook and the other picks a scab!); and gets her first kiss, also from Thomas J.

Of course we all know what happens next (don’t read if you haven’t seen the movie) — Shelly and her dad start dating, she finds out Mr. Bixler is engaged to be married, and Thomas J gets stung by bees to retrieve Vada’s mood ring, and he dies from an allergy to bee stings.

My favorite part, both in the movie and the book, is Vada’s Weeping Willow poem, which she writes for Thomas J and recites in Mr. Bixler’s class. still manages to make me cry even though I’ve practically memorized it.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JP007VCD67A]

Weeping willow with your tears running down,
why do you always weep and frown?
Is it because he left you one day?
Is it because he could not stay?
On your branches he would swing,
Do you long for the happiness
that day would bring?
He found shelter in your shade,
he thought his laughter would never fade.
Weeping willow stop your tears,
for there is something to calm your fears.
You think death has ripped you forever apart,
but I know he’ll always be in your heart.

How I wish this book had a hardcover edition…

***
My copy: mass market paperback, creased after so many readings

My rating: 5/5 stars