The Insights of Father Time

Time KeeperI was very much intrigued when I heard about Mitch Albom’s new book, The Time Keeper.  Like his other books, it’s a slim volume with a fable-like quality, as much philosophy as fiction, presenting characters who are learning something about their lives.

The Time Keeper is the intertwined story of Dor, Victor and Sarah.  Dor lived long, long ago, and was the first person to ever think of measuring the passing of days–the first one to grasp the concept of time.  He becomes Father Time, sitting for millenium in a cave, listening to the voices of all the people oppressed by the desire for more or less time, while remembering his own beloved, lost wife.  In the present day, Victor is consumed by business, and it’s made him the 14th richest man in the world.  That still can’t buy him a cure for his cancer and kidney failure.  He decides to seize another lifetime and, without telling his wife, makes plans to be cryogenically frozen.  Sarah is an unpopular teenager who thinks she’s finally met the boy of her dreams–only to be devastated when things turn out badly.

Victor wants more time and Sarah wants to throw her time away.  Father Time enters into the modern world to help them both, and to change his own fate in the process.

In the end, I’m not sure how I feel about this.  It’s an easy, fast read (not that I’m in a hurry or anything…) that’s deceptively simple.  There are some wonderful philosophical notes, most especially about the hazard of counting time instead of experiencing it.  The irony did occur to me when I settled down to start reading this, first moving my clock so I could be aware of the time while I read!  I like a lot of what Dor learns, about the dangers of being consumed by counting time and never stopping to just feel life.  There’s a certain element of It’s a Wonderful Life to the story for all three characters, of never seeing the people and the good things in your own life.

On the other hand, my practical side points out that we do actually need to count time and have clocks–that it does actually make sense to read for half an hour so that I can go to bed and get enough sleep and not be tired in the morning because I have to get up for something that starts at a certain time…  I’m reminded of a quote from Henry David Thoreau: “Little is to be expected of that day…to which we are not awakened by our Genius, but by the mechanical nudgings of some servitor.”  In other words, it’s much better to wake up on our own than with an alarm clock.  While he’s not exactly wrong, I also must say it’s easy for Thoreau to say that when he lived out at Walden Pond and had no job to get to.  And I would bet that if he wanted a hot meal from Mrs. Emerson, she expected him to come to dinner on time!

Still, on the whole, I think Albom has some good points in here about time, and I do like how Dor’s story develops.  I’m more mixed about Sarah’s and Victor’s stories.  They both come to valuable revelations about their lives and their relationships, and there’s a heartwarming ending and a perfectly good message about valuing people.  But I’m not sure either of them really learned that much about time.  Victor perhaps, as he was focusing his time on the wrong things.  Sarah’s problems only very distantly relate to time at all.  Which leaves me saying that it was a very nice story that was not quite what it was presented as.

Conclusion: this is a lovely modern fable, well-written and engaging.  But only one out of three plotlines really focuses on the philosophy of time.  If what you really want is complex insight about dealing with a far too busy world, look elsewhere.  But if you enjoy Albom’s writing and if a slightly Frank Capra-like modern fable appeals to you, it’s a good read.

And evidently the 146 people behind me in line at the library hold list feel the idea appeals to them!  As you may imagine, I returned this one very quickly…

Author’s Site: http://mitchalbom.com/

Other reviews:
Dauntless
Confessions of a Book Addict
Wander Woman
Hardly Harley
And of course, lots of others.  Tell me about yours!

Sailing For the Stars in 2013

Merry Christmas!  I hope you are all having a wonderful holiday!

13sfexpI’m also looking ahead to January–time for the Sci Fi Experience at Stainless Steel Droppings!  This will be my second year participating, and after the great time I had last year, I’ve been very much looking forward to it.  My plan in 2012 was to read old Star Wars books, new Star Trek books, and Orson Scott Card.

That’s pretty much my plan this year too.  🙂  Plus Edgar Rice Burroughs.

I went through a Star Wars period in middle school, read a lot of books, and then stopped when I got tired of mopping up the last traces of the Empire again.  I remember some books fondly though, and I’ve revisited some of them in 2012.  For the Sci Fi Experience, I specifically want to reread the Callista Trilogy, about a Jedi from the past who gets involved with Luke.

P1020254I have three unread Star Trek books on my shelf that I picked up at a library book sale several months ago, and this looks like the perfect opportunity to read them.  I also want to reread Federation, because it’s been a long time for that one.

I also have the first three books of the Pellucidar series by Edgar Rice Burroughs sitting on my shelf.  It’s the last one of his series that I haven’t read, so I’ll definitely be diving into those–pun intended, since they center around a world at the Earth’s core!

And as to Orson Scott Card, last year I read Ender’s Game and this year I plan to read its sequel, Speaker for the Dead, and then decide if I want to pursue the rest of the series.  Ender’s War (pictured) has both of the first two books, if you’re wondering.

I’m also very excited to join in with the Dragonflight group-read.  It’s a wonderful book I’ve been meaning to reread for a long time.

vintage-sf-badgeThanks to the addition of Burroughs to my plans, I’ve decided to also jump in on the Vintage Science Fiction Month hosted by Andrea at Little Red Reviewer.  The plan there is to read science fiction from pre-1979, and since I’ve got Edgar Rice Burroughs and “Star Trek Lives”-era novels, I seem to be right on track for that one too…

So.  I think that should be enough to be getting started with! 🙂

The Private–and Public–Life of Elizabeth I

LegacyI think you know that I love Susan Kay’s Phantom.  But I won’t gush on about it (for the third time); I mention it only as context for why I decided to read Susan Kay’s Legacy.  And to acknowledge that I set the bar unattainably high for this book.  I didn’t really expect it to be another Phantom–but can you blame me for hoping?  Well, it wasn’t another Phantom (but nothing is) and while it was good, in the end I feel a bit…mixed.

There are actually some resemblances between the two books.  Just as Phantom explores the life of the Phantom of the Opera, from pre-birth to post-death, Legacy explores the life of Queen Elizabeth I, from Anne Boleyn’s first flirtation with King Henry VIII, all the way up to Elizabeth’s death.  We follow Elizabeth from a precocious child to an adrift young girl, to a clever woman in mortal peril from shifting politics, to a masterful queen, to a legend (or even a goddess) in her own time.  And we see the various men who orbited around the Virgin Queen.

While the focus is on Elizabeth, just as it was always on Erik, Legacy has a wider-angle lens.  Phantom has a scope across decades and continents, but Legacy plays with the intrigues of courts and the ups-and-downs of European history for nearly a century.  Kay spent 15 years writing Legacy and it shows, in good ways and bad.  It’s obviously meticulously researched, and while I appreciate and am impressed by the historical details…it also means that it’s a book about history as much as it is about Elizabeth.  So if you like British history (and I do), this is masterfully presented–but it also removes us from the characters to some extent.

The characters are also difficult.  You may tell me that the Phantom of the Opera should not be relatable–but Kay’s version is.  Legacy is populated by the royal court of England, and almost without exception they are self-serving, conniving, power-driven individuals with very little loyalty and few qualms about selling one another out for political advantage–even if the one they’re sacrificing is a sibling or a wife.  I fully believe this is based in real history so I’m not claiming it’s not plausible–but it doesn’t make for a group of characters that I’m going to get attached to.

The book is interesting all the way through, but it was a good 300 pages (or about halfway) before I much started caring about anyone.  I did eventually care about Elizabeth, and about the two most constant men in her life–childhood friend and quasi-husband Robin Dudley, and chief advisor Lord Burghley.  They’re the two people Elizabeth comes closest to having genuine relationships with, and I think that fact goes a long way towards my caring about all three.  The third man in Elizabeth’s life is the Earl of Essex, but you’ll have to wait quite a while for him to arrive!

Part of the difficulty getting engaged with the characters may have been the point of view.  Phantom alternates first-person narration, so you always know exactly who’s talking to you.  Legacy is omniscient, or a frequently-changing third-person limited (I have trouble telling those two apart) so we’re not as grounded in any one character.  The center is Elizabeth, but we get her story from constantly shifting eyes.

And there’s a lot of narration telling us the history.  The book isn’t dull history, or entirely history–there are romantic moments and moments of high drama and emotional tension.  But there’s also a lot of history.  Often very interesting history…but somewhat heavy history too.

The end of the book is ultimately quite sad, and if you know the course of Elizabeth’s life, that’s inevitable.  Because it’s history, I don’t think it’s giving much away to say she starts to lose her grip by the end.  Kay tells it well and it’s moving–although I realized that the end of Phantom is heart-breaking, tragic and beautiful, while the end of Legacy is just sad.

So the final verdict?  It’s a masterful piece of historical fiction–but be prepared that you have to be just as interested in the historical as in the fiction if you pick up this book.

Other reviews:
QG’s Book Reviews
The Misadventures of Moppet
A Girl Walks into a Bookstore
Rosebush Maze (also offering Phantom comparisons)
Confessions of an Avid Reader (who felt there was not enough history…so opinions may vary!)
Whew, popular book!  Anyone else?

What Are You Reading, End of the Year Edition

itsmondayIt’s coming down to the end of the year, and a great time to look at final reading plans!  I have been fiercely concentrating for the last month on all those books I really, really wanted to read this year–and have knocked most of them out!  Right now I have my final stack lined up for the last part of December.

First, to look back at last post‘s book list…  I finished Lady Friday by Garth Nix, and I think the books are getting better as I near the end of the series.  Always nice to see!  Child of the Prophecy by Juliet Marillier was truly excellent, and it shouldn’t have taken me this far into 2012 to get to it.  I hope to finish that series in 2013.  The Time Keeper by Mitch Albom came in while I was reading Marillier.  It was an interesting fable, and I already have a review scheduled for later in the month, so I’ll save further thoughts for now.

The Paradox of Choice by Barry Schwartz garnered the most attention in comments.  It was definitely an interesting read, not too full of psychology jargon.  He discussed many different aspects of how our brains work and theories of happiness.  If you want actionable tips on living a happier life, you may be better off with The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin, but if you want to understand your own synapses, Barry Schwartz is good.  And apparently the solution to my Netflix problem is to be a satisficer, not a maximizer.

After the discussion of how the mind works, I went on to Villette by Charlotte Bronte.  It was flawed in all sorts of important ways, and yet I loved it.  There’s just something about how Bronte puts sentences together.  I do prefer Jane Eyre, but I still want to go find Bronte’s other books.

Now on to future plans…

WAYR1I just began Superior Saturday, continuing through that series, but I might set it aside briefly to read Son by Lois Lowry.  I’ve been eagerly awaiting the conclusion to the quartet, and the library delivered it this weekend.  After both of those books, if I have time before Christmas I’ll read Reflections by Diana Wynne Jones, because…essays about writing by a favorite author?  Definitely not one to put off!

Over Christmas, though, I want to reread The Mischief of the Mistletoe by Lauren Willig.  I read this in February, 2011 (review here), and it was one of my favorite books of the year.  I’ve been looking forward to revisiting it in the proper season, especially now that I’ve read the earlier books in the series and understand who all the characters are!

After that, I plan to finish out the year with Lord Sunday to get one last series done.

Wow, that looks like a lot written out.  But most of these will be fast reads, and I have some long weekends coming up…

And then comes January and the Sci Fi Experience and a whole new stack of books to contemplate!

Are you fitting in a few last books before the calendar page turns?  Let me know about them–and visit Book Journey for more What Are You Reading posts.

2013 Reading Challenges!

We’re coming in towards the end of the year, and I’ll be posting in a couple weeks about challenge results for 2012 (must finish those last Garth Nix books…!)  Today, I’m already looking ahead to 2013–which may account for my frantic efforts to finish up 2012 goals, to clear the field for next year.

I’m trying (really!) to rein in my challenge commitments for 2013, and that’s mostly down to Challenge #1…

The Chunkster Challenge

I have a fear of long books.  Well, not a fear exactly, but there are definitely books I want to read but have put off picking up because of their size.  The logic goes something like this…if it takes me three times as long to read this book as an average book, then that’s two less books I’m reading.  And there are so MANY books to read!  So, I’m trying to reduce challenges to help me fight that issue.  And I’m joining the Chunkster Challenge…which is an annual challenge that hasn’t been posted for 2013 yet, but should be soon.

If the levels are the same again this year, I plan to officially commit to Level 2, reading 6 Chunksters, mostly because the other reading levels get more complicated in terms of length-requirements.  Privately, I’m hoping to read, or at least try, a Chunkster each month, to finally tackle some long and long-waiting books.  My rule is that if I read 100 pages and hate it, I can drop it guilt-free.  And let’s be honest…I have that rule because I plan to tackle Lord of the Rings and I’m not sure how that will go!  But I think the first book on my Chunkster list will probably be Les Miserables.  After that…we’ll see.

FTSRC

Finishing the Series

I’m joining in with the Finishing the Series challenge at Socrates’ Book Reviews for another year.  This past year, I’ve finished…well, stay tuned for my 2012 Challenge update (but it’s over ten series!)  I still have a few lingering series that I want to continue to finish up, but the scope will be much reduced (see “Chunkster Challenge” above).  I’m setting the goal at three series to finish (or catch up with, if they’re still being written), and I define a series as three or more books.

Books to Reread

Revisiting Old Friends

I have far too many beloved books on my shelves that I haven’t opened in years.  I feel like I’ve been failing to stay in touch with dear friends.  So, one of my goals for the year is to reread.  I haven’t been able to find a challenge with this focus for 2013 (if you know of one, let me know!) but I thought I’d state it as a goal here anyway.  The picture shows some of the books I hope to reread…

Stainless Steel Droppings: Carl’s “Experiences”

Some of my favorite blogging experiences have involved the reading Experiences Carl hosts throughout the year.  There’s the Science Fiction Experience in January and February, the Once Upon a Time Challenge in the spring, and Readers Imbibing Peril in the fall.  I will definitely be participating again.  Keep an eye out for a more detailed Sci Fi Experience post soon.

I think that covers my plans as of now…I’m super excited to dive in!  I’ll have an update for you on 2012 Challenges before the end of the year, and of course I hope you’ll come by throughout 2013 for updates on my new challenges!