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Showing posts with label Jeffrey Eugenides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeffrey Eugenides. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Top 5 of 2012!

All this month the staff of TPL will be posting their top 5 picks of 2012. These will be books and movies that they read/watched in 2012. Keep checking on the blog for more top picks and check out the display in the library.


Emma’s Top 5 Picks of 2012
 
1.      Let’s Pretend This Never Happened by Jenny LawsonDarkly hysterical, this memoir will provide plenty of belly-laughs, if your stomach is strong enough. 


2.    The Fifty Year Sword by Mark Z.  Danielewski – This novella started life as a live shadow play for Halloween. At the heart of this experimental text is a good old-fashioned ghost story.


3.      The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides – Another strong novel from Pulitzer-winner, Eugenides, about life after college for three students.


4.      Girl of Nightmares by Kendare Blake – The sequel to one of last year’s favorites, Anna Dressed in Blood. Cas decides that he wants to get his ghost of a girlfriend, Anna, back…from hell.


5.      Somewhere Beneath Those Waves by Sarah Monette – An unusual and haunting collection of short stories from fantasy writer, Monette.

Friday, February 10, 2012

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

Pulitzer Prize winner Eugenides once again delivers a novel that is rich, engrossing and filled with enough literary references to please even the most dedicated book-lover. The novel follows Madeline Hanna, Leonard Bankhead and Mitchell Grammaticus as they navigate through their final year of Brown and the year following their graduation. Madeline, an English-major whose thesis gives us the title of the novel, meets Leonard, a brilliant and enigmatic student,  in a Semiotics class and the two begin a relationship, one that is marred by Leonard’s diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Mitchell, a theology major, holds on to the hope that he is the one destined for Madeline. 
Eugenides has denied reports that the novel is based on real life events, but it’s hard not to see Eugenides in Grammaticus, while much has been said of Bankhead’s similarity to David Wallace Foster, who was in a relationship with Mary Karr, the memoirist, in the early nineties.  That said, I found these links enhanced my enjoyment of the novel.

The Marriage Plot has already garnered praise from many places including the New York Times, Publisher’s Weekly, Kirkus Review and Library Journal. Eugenides’ exploration of love and well-drawn characters make it the kind of book you find yourself thinking about long after you have read it. 

Emma