Robyn's luxuriate book montage

The Book of Lost Things
Water for Elephants
A Game of Thrones
The Master and Margarita
David Golder, The Ball, Snow in Autumn, The Courilof Affair
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
1984
Born Free: A Lioness of Two Worlds
Ishmael
Coraline
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
The Historian
Amazing Grace: A Vocabulary of Faith
Edgar Allan Poe: Selected Works, Deluxe Edition
Animal Farm
Girl, Interrupted


Robyn's favorite books »

Sunday, December 20, 2009

A Fave - "David Golder"

Although reading the top 100 contemporary books in order from 100-1 is an exciting idea, I also want to share with you some of my personal favorites.  I recently re-read a collection of Irene Nemirovsky's short stories.  Nemirovsky was born in 1903 living in three wars, the Russian Revolution, World War I, and World War II, only to die in at the Nazi camp Auschwitz of typhus.  Her writings take us into the minds of those people living in these times - the good people, the bad people and those who are extremely confused in the middle.

My favorite of these tales is "David Golder," the story of a man who was born a poor Jew in Russia and became a wealthy stock broker in the early 1900's in the stock market.  He moves his family to France (similarly to how Nemirovsky's father moved her family to France in her childhood) and continues working extremely hard until the day he dies.  The story takes place during the last few years of his life: Golder has become a miserable, unloved, deceitful old man.  His family only asks him for money and "how's business" and his friends don't trust him except to follow his lead in the market.  The conflict taking place in Golder's mind becomes a character in the story: his health begins to fail him (in particular his heart) and when he is emotionally unstable, for example upset about a friend/business parter who committed suicide because Golder would not go into a deal with him, his body acts as a reminder that "good business" is not always "good".

The reader knows almost immediately there will not be a happy ending to this tale of David Golder.  There are a few surprises along the way that make the reader say "AH!" and wonder how they did not see the situation as inevitable.  The moral of the story is clear and speaks volumes: money does not make us happy, love makes us happy.  Having fortunes and "good business" may sound fantastic, but really, without a loving family and supporting friends, we are nothing.  We will die alone.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Tradition



It took me a long time to write this final blog.   I finished the book almost a month ago.  The end of the story was very moving and I did not feel like I could do it justice.  The story was made up of everything a great one should be: life-like suspense, a love story that is not overpowering, a story that is believable but bigger than life,  flawed characters who you love even though you can't stand them.  I highly recommend this story: I put it on my list of best books no one has ever heard of.

Well it happened.  George's father died.  He was a stressed, working man losing all of his money in his investments. At his funeral all George could think about was how modest his family's plot looked compared to the plots of those with "new" money.... how out of control those new citizens in their town were with their spending and how inappropriate they were because they built funeral plots larger than that of the Ambersons.

Then it happened again. George's mother died.  She was meek. She had recently began spending an extraordinary time with Mr. Morgan, Lucy's father.   George ruined the love she shared with this vibrant, life-loving man, because he felt that people were "talking" and that she was behaving inappropriately.   He took her to Paris and she barely made her way back home because he wouldn't "let her" go back to Mr. Morgan.

And it happened again.  Major Amberson, George's grandfather who began it all, died.  He was old and forgetful, and depressed.  As such, he forgot to deed his home to George leaving George desolate with his Aunt Fanny in his care.

Throughout the novel, Mr. Morgan is George's foil.  He is interested in modernizing the world: he invents an automobile and isn't interested in who is "talking" about his affair with George's mother. He is a man of the times.  The opposition of their personalities and beliefs is fully demonstrated in the final moments of George's demise: He is run over by a car while crossing the street in his now dirty, highly populated city.  The type of car built by his nemesis destroys him.  He has lost his family, his fortune and almost his life.

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Come on, let's read!