![]() |
|||||||
![]() |
Monday, August 23, 2004
Summer months soothe literary hunger, nostalgiaAll Things Literaryby Ashley Lusk / staff writer
After two years at JMU, I was sad to see Zak Salih, creator of All Things
Literary, graduate last spring. An avid bookworm myself, I looked forward
to reading about Salihs adventures into novels that were more cultured
than those I normally read, "Dantes Inferno" and "Moby
Dick," for example. After all, my own tastes lean toward those of the slightly less
shall we say sophisticated nature. However, I couldnt bear to see Salihs deep passion for reading
and critiquing literature with others disappear, lost to the newest generation
of Breeze readers. And so, it is with great pleasure that I attempt to fill the very large
and expert shoes of Mr. Salih. My reading certainly wasnt "War & Peace." Instead,
I read my guilty pleasure John Grisham. I read his legal dramas
like a reality TV addict watches "Survivor." I cant help
it. I dont think Grisham is a particularly well-written author, but
his books are thoughtful suspense thrillers about the guy next door. All
his legal jargon makes me wonder why some of these words werent
incorporated into my list of "Vocabulary Every College Student Should
Know." But I love it, mostly because Grisham pushes me to want to
understand something I know nothing about. This summer also held a high number of what I like to refer to as "girl
dramas." These books fall into the "Bridget Jones Diary"
formula. Its the same story every time some city-dwelling 20-or-30-something
woman rants about her singleness, shops for clothes she cant afford,
falls for a bad boy, is generally a publicist of some kind (as if this
is the new "it girl" position to have) and, of course, has an
annoyingly overbearing mother. I read a good number of these hoping that for once the girl would stop
getting unattractively drunk and settle down with a nice boy who wasnt
perfect. Yes, our female protagonists may no longer wear corsets and cook for
their men, but they sure know how to order a cup of coffee from Starbucks
and look great in Prada. I did read one book this summer that I have not been able to stop thinking
about. "The Lovely Bones" by Alice Sebold was an oddly startling
novel about a girl who is murdered. The girl then watches for almost 10
years from heaven as her family tries to uncover her killer. This book
kept me in perpetual knots, simply because it made death so terrifyingly
close to home. From Grisham to Sebold, I had several summer flings of fictional fun.
No matter what I read, there is something oddly satisfying about the combination
of summer and reading books. However, while Salih no doubt is blazing a trail in the literary world, his absence from the pages of The Breeze still will leave my literary appetite wanting more. |
|
|||||
| |
|
||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|
||||||
| |
|||||||
|
|
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
| |
|||||||
|
|
|||||||
![]() |
|||||||
|
|