Monday, December 30, 2019

Ms. Hen reviews Work







Work
Louisa May Alcott
Roberts Brothers
1873


Ms. Hen chose to read this novel because she happened to find herself at Louisa May Alcott’s house, The Orchard House, this past month, when she saw the Christmas presentation there. She bought this book in the gift shop because she had never read it. Christmas at The Orchard House is charming; actors guide the guests through the rooms while they explain how the family is preparing for the holiday. Louisa first greets the visitors, and explains that they are preparing a Christmas basket for their father, and we met other characters, and it ended with Santa Claus and some children singing songs and performing a skit from LITTLE WOMEN. No pictures or cell phones were allowed while this happened because we were whisked away to the nineteenth century, and we were not to confuse the people who lived during that era.

WORK is about a young woman who sets out to find work in the nineteenth century. This was not an easy task in those days, because the opportunities for women were not that plentiful. This novel is loosely based on Louisa’s life before she became a writer. Christie Devon becomes a servant, an actress, a companion, a seamstress, and eventually a nurse during the Civil War. She meets people who are interesting to her, and she makes friends. She suffers loneliness, and eventually finds happiness with a family that suits her.

When Ms. Hen read this novel, she thought parts of it dragged on a little too much. At first she though the writing was a little loquacious and precious, but she realized the writing suited the times in which it was written. Miss Alcott is good at describing human relationships and emotions, but the story got interesting when there was romance involved. Ms. Hen didn’t want it to be this way, but that is how she experienced it. She didn’t think that Louisa meant for it to get interesting when Christie found love, but it does.


The Orchard House at Christmas (the porch is having work done on it)


One aspect that Ms. Hen did not like about this novel is the prejudice that Christie Devon has towards the Irish. Several times she complains that she does not want to work with an Irish girl because they are shiftless and do not like to work. However, she did not have a problem befriending a former slave. Ms. Hen realizes that those were different times, and if Louisa were around today, she would be astounded at how the Irish people have assimilated into mainstream American culture, and are considered American now. Ms. Hen thinks that the reason some people today consider the Irish in America as racist is because they have been the victims of prejudice throughout history. Ms. Hen finds it difficult to forgive Louisa because she would like to imagine that Louisa would be her friend, even though Ms. Hen is an Irish hen, we live in the twenty-first century now, and it’s a different world.

Ms. Hen liked this novel. She found it fascinating to learn about the world of work for women in Louisa’s day. The character in the novel never became a writer, but that was one of the options available to women, though a difficult one. Ms. Hen learned at the Orchard House that Louisa supported her family through her writing, and they had been poor previous to that. Bronson Alcott was a brilliant man, but not successful, but he became a success after Louisa, due to her own prominence. Louisa May Alcott is still as famous today as she was in her lifetime, maybe more so. Ms. Hen thinks it’s because people want to read comforting stories about women struggling and eventually making it in the world, which is always difficult to accomplish.




Sunday, December 22, 2019

Ms. Hen reviews The Waves






The Waves
Virginia Woolf
Harcourt, Inc.
1931
  

Ms. Hen decided to read this because she wanted to read a book by Virginia Woolf that she had never read. She did research about THE WAVES beforehand, and thought it sounded like it would be interesting. She didn’t know how wrong she would be.


When Ms. Hen first started reading this novel, she thought it seemed like an avant-garde play where the characters stand on stage and talk about their lives in a way that’s poetic, as if they are pontificating. At first she thought it was charming, but then it began to grate on her soul.
 
She had an idea that this novel is similar to NAKED LUNCH by William S. Burrows, but she thought that notion ridiculous, but she looked it up, and she is not the only person to conceive this. Ms. Hen knows there is practically no such thing as an original idea, and this proves that is true.
 
Ms. Hen thinks this book is quite terrible, and she does not recommend it to anyone, except perhaps her worst enemy, and she does have a few, but the problem is that her worst enemies are not the type of person to pick up any type of book, because they are illiterate. Ms. Hen regrets the time she spend reading this novel, but it was temporary, as is everything in life.

 


Sunday, December 15, 2019

Ms. Hen reviews The Lesson

Ms. Hen in space



The Lesson
Cadwell Turnbull
Blackstone Publishing
2019

Ms. Hen decided to read this because she heard the author on a podcast talking about the book. When he talked about his inspiration to write this, he said that in the movies it always happens that aliens land in New York or LA, and not in a place that is unexpected. Mr. Turnbull is originally from the Virgin Islands, so he set the novel there.

THE LESSON is about people on St. Thomas who experience the Ynaa landing. Derrick is a young man fascinated by the Ynaa, and his friend/girlfriend Patrice is terrified of them, and leaves the island to go to college stateside. When the Ynaa land, they tell the people that they will help them with medicine and technology, but they do not tell them at first that the Ynaa are prone to violence and will tear apart humans that upset them in the least bit.

Derrick works as an assistant to Mera, the ambassador for the Ynaa. The other people on the island don’t like the fact that he works for her, and distance themselves from him. Jackson, Patrice’s father, was kicked out by his wife because she becomes involved with a woman, and he is attempting to write a book about the invasion. Some people think of the Ynaa as invaders and others occupiers.

This novel reminds Ms. Hen of other books she has read. The style with which it is written is reminiscent of THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD by Zora Neale Hurston, in the way that the characters speak in dialect most of the time, but the other writing is not in that voice.  THE LESSON also reminds Ms. Hen of science fiction that is not too heavy on science, but more focused on philosophy and psychology such as Ursula K. Le Guin and Octavia Butler.

Ms. Hen noticed a lot of food appears in THE LESSON. The characters are always eating, or preparing food, and it all sounds delicious. Some novels have no food in them at all, and some are bursting with meals and eating. Ms. Hen thinks that this has to do with the culture of the setting or the preference of the author. Everybody eats, and food either plays an important part in the characters’ lives or does not exist at all.

There are a lot of chickens, hens, and roosters in this novel, which Ms. Hen enjoyed. Also, lots of other animals appear in the narrative, which does not happens in every book Ms. Hen reads. She loves animals, being an animal herself. One significant mention of a rooster Ms. Hen noted is the section when Jammie’s rooster flies away, “The unkempt grass along the path had caught fire, and within minutes the chicken coop would be up in flames, too.” Ms. Hen was upset when the prize rooster, or cock, as he is referred to, flies away, but then is happy for him when she discovers his purpose is cockfighting, something which Ms. Hen does not approve.

Ms. Hen thinks THE LESSON is an important novel because it teaches us about power and strength, and the complicated situations that humans can get themselves into. It’s not only about occupation and invasion by aliens, but the history of the islands. Ms. Hen read a while ago that if we come into contact with aliens, we should pray that we find them first, because the history of exploration has not gone well for the people who live in the lands that get invaded. This novel is an example of how this could happen, and how frightening the idea can be, but Ms. Hen is a hen who does not fear the future.

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Ms. Hen reviews A Moveable Feast



Ms. Hen at the Penn Hemingway Awards, April 2019

A Moveable Feast
Ernest Hemingway
Scribner
1964

Ms. Hen decided to read this book because she wanted to research on Ernest Hemingway for a speech she is planning. She wanted to read something by him that she had never read, and figured this was a good choice. She often attends the Penn Hemingway Awards at the John F. Kennedy Museum in the spring because it’s an awards show for writers, like the literary Golden Globes, plus they have free food and drinks (alcohol), which Ms. Hen knows would please Mr. Hemingway.

A MOVEABLE FEAST is a memoir of Hemingway’s time in Paris when he was young, and when he was working at learning how to write. When Ms. Hen read the description of the book, she thought he might be trying to prove how cool he was, talking about all the famous people he knew when he was living in Paris. But no, Ms. Hen discovered that Hemingway was not a hipster. He talks about how poor he was, and how some people wandering around Paris were sketchy. They were living in dangerous times; life was good for some people, but not others.

Hemingway writes about his friends that he would visit: Gertrude Stein, an older woman he admired who held court with the younger writers; Ford Maddox Ford and the shadiness that surrounded him; Ezra Pound who was kind to everyone. He writes about his friendship with Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, and how they would both drink, and they couldn’t handle it because it was poisonous to them. They would go to parties and pass out. His wife Zelda was crazy, who said outlandish things to Hemingway before they knew she was insane.

Shakespeare and Company, Paris

Hemingway talks about being hungry and walking all around Paris and looking in the windows of restaurants and bakeries and not having enough money to pay. He went to a museum to look at a Cezanne still life with fruit to satisfy his hunger. He borrowed books from the bookstore Shakespeare and Company, since he didn't have money to buy them. He and his wife would take what little money they had and go to the racetrack and bet on horses and win and use the winnings to survive. He figured out a way to bet on the right horse. Before the time when the horses were tested for steroids, the horses would be jumpy and jittery before the race, and he knew they were the ones that would win. Hemingway felt guilty about going to the racetrack because it took time away from his work. He didn’t like not writing.


Hemingway had an interesting way of writing. He would write something, and then for the rest of the day, he would not think about his work until he was actually writing again. That way his mind was clear when he went to the page. He would spend time reading, and socializing, and doing other things, but when he was writing, he just wrote. He didn’t like to be interrupted when he wrote, and he writes about a time when he was working in a café, and someone interrupted him. Ms. Hen thinks he would have liked laptops and headphones and music to drown out the noise in the café, like we have now. His method of having a clear mind when he went to write is a good lesson in being productive, which Ms. Hen will learn from. She can’t write every day because she has a job, and it’s difficult, but she tries to write when she can.

Ms. Hen garnered from this book that Hemingway seemed like a nice person. He might not have been perfect, but nobody is perfect. He was a man of his time. He writes about the desire to write one true sentence. Ms. Hen admires this, and tries do the same. Hemingway was a force of nature, whom nobody can duplicate.

 
Cafe le Flores, Paris, where Hemingway drank



Sunday, December 1, 2019

Ms. Hen reviews The Awakening







The Awakening
Kate Chopin
Penguin Books
1899

Ms. Hen decided to read this because she had just read the story “The Yellow Wallpaper,” since she was inspired to read that when she read STONER, and THE AWAKENING is similar to the short story. Ms. Hen had read this book years ago, but when she started reading it this time, she did not remember anything about the book except the ending.

This novella is about a woman unsatisfied with her life, Edna Pontellier. She is married, and has two children. The novella opens at a resort on the Gulf of Mexico in the summer, where the family is on vacation, and there are a lot of other people there. Edna becomes friends with some of the women, and she has a flirtation with Robert; they take a boat ride together, and she become infatuated with him. She thinks he feels the same way, but immediately he tells everyone he is going to Mexico to work.

Edna and her family go back to New Orleans, and she can’t stop thinking about Robert. He does not write to her, but she discovers he writes to the musician, Mademoiselle Reisz, and he in the letters he mentions Edna. Edna’s husband goes on a trip to New York, and she does not want to go with him, so she stays home. The children go to stay in the countryside, and she is alone in the house. She decides to move out of the house to a smaller one. Robert comes back to New Orleans, but she does not fulfill her wishes.

When Ms. Hen read this book years ago, she was not the educated hen she is today. She thinks she read this before she had her bachelor’s degree. Now she has a Master’s degree, and is able to read in a deeper way than before. What a difference an education makes! She does not have a decent job, but who needs a job when there are books to read?

This book reminds Ms. Hen of both MADAME BOVARY and ANNA KARENINA in the way that is about a woman who falls in love with a man who is not her husband, and it devastates her, and she ultimately dies. In the two other novels, the characters have affairs, and are obsessed with the men. In THE AWAKENING, Edna does not have an affair with her paramour, but she is still crushed. These books show what little options these women had; they did not work, and they came from privileged backgrounds, and had a lot of time to muse on their problems. They were all uninterested mothers; some women are not meant to be mothers, because they don’t have the inclination.

The difference between MADAME BOVARY, ANNA KARENINA, and THE AWAKENING, is that THE AWAKENING is American, and is written by a woman. When THE AWAKENING was published, Kate Chopin was ostracized because people in the time and place thought how dare a woman write about a woman being unhappy in her life? It’s acceptable for men to write such things in Europe, but the horror of an American woman writer proposing that a woman does not like being a mother, and wants passionate love outside her marriage! We hope we live in different days now.

Ms. Hen had a different experience reading this novella as a more educated reader. She thinks it’s important to see things through awakened eyes as we grow older. Some people don’t like getting older, but Ms. Hen thinks that older people know more, and are able to handle problems with grace and style. She does not wish to be young again, which might surprise some, but Ms. Hen believes that everyone has a different path. She recommends this book to anyone who wants to read about a woman trying to find happiness and failing in the messed up world.