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Club de
lectura en inglés
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The
English book club is an initiative
of the library of Soutomaior for
those people who are interested in
reading in this language and sharing
their reading experiences with a
group of people who have read the
same book. Every month there is the
reading of a book and on alternate
Thursdays at quarter past seven pm
the members of the club meet on the
second floor of the municipal
library to talk about it. The club,
participants are members of the
library over 18 years old with an
intermediate level of English, is
co-ordinated by Catherine Margaret
O'Neill, an English teacher and an
experienced book club co-ordinator. |
UPCOMING READING
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JANUARY / FEBRUARY
THE GOD OF SMALL THINGS
The story of the tragic decline of an
Indian family whose members
suffer the terrible
consequences of forbidden
love, The God of Small
Things is set in the state
of Kerala, on the
southernmost tip of India.
Armed only with the
invincible innocence of
children, the twins Rahel
and Esthappen fashion a
childhood for themselves in
the shade of the wreck that
is their family -- their
lonely, lovely mother, Ammu
(who loves by night the man
her children love by day),
their blind grandmother,
Mammachi (who plays Handel
on her violin), their
beloved uncle Chacko (Rhodes
scholar, pickle baron,
radical Marxist,
bottom-pincher), their enemy,
Baby Kochamma (ex-nun and
incumbent grandaunt), and
the ghost of an imperial
entomologist's moth (with
unusually dense dorsal tufts).
When
their English cousin and her
mother arrive on a Christmas
visit, the twins learn that
Things Can Change in a Day.
That lives can twist into
new, ugly shapes, even cease
forever. The brilliantly
plotted story uncoils with
an agonizing sense of
foreboding and inevitability.
Yet nothing prepares you for
what lies at the heart of it.
Reading: January and
February 2012
Meetings:12 and 26
of January; 9 and 23 of
February
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MARCH
THE IMPORTANCE OF
BEING EARNEST
The Importance of Being Earnest is a
tour de force of comedy,
misidentifications, and
farce. Algernon and Jack are
friends, and each has
invented an imaginary person
as an excuse of getting out
of engagements. Jack's
person is Ernest, a brother
with a wild past. The two
conspire to woo the ladies
that they love, and through
a series of happenstances,
must gently deceive to get
want they want. The end
result is a play of
uncomperable quality, chock
full of witticisms that are
highly quotable out of
context. In fact, I dare
suggest the entire play is
quotable, such its
brilliance.
Wilde
pulled no punches when
writing Earnest. Often, when
a play is filled with
memorable quotes, it takes
away from the realism of the
scenes because the
characters then become
merely conduits for the
writer's intellect. Not so
in Earnest. Wilde manages to
make the characters say
exactly what they would say
in each situation, true to
their persona. That alone is
quite an accomplishment, one
not often seen.
Misidentities, witty banter,
love, all conspire to one of
English's most brilliant
comedies ever to have seen
the stage. We should be so
lucky the world had Oscar
Wilde in it, and even more
so, that he wrote at all.
Reading: March 2012
Meetings: 8 and 22
of March;
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APRIL/MAY
DRÁCULA
Published in 1897, Bram
Stoker’s Dracula soon became
known as a work of pure
genius. Even today, it is
much read across the world,
and regarded as THE all-time
classical horror story.
Stoker based his Vampiric
character on the fifteenth
century Wallacian warrior
prince, Vlad Dracule. He
researched his novel in
great detail, visiting the
region of Hungary and
Romania that Vlad ruled, and
reading ancient manuscripts
and stories. The actual
novel is written as a series
of diary extracts, and the
people involved submitted
their diaries after the
event in order to make sense
of it.
This perhaps resembles the
way that time fragments
history. Through time,
stories are changed and
manipulated – and this in
turn, makes them all the
more mysterious and
thrilling. There is a
possibility that Stoker was
trying to tell us that
perhaps the events were
exaggerated through
different people’s
perceptions of them. Even at
the end of the novel, we do
not know whether pieces of
the story were left out or
changed. This leaves us with
a sensation of emptiness. We
do not know whether to
believe it as a true story;
or a work of complete
fantasy; or if we have been
informed of all the gory
details or not.
In the story, we meet
Jonathan Harker, who leaves
his beloved fiancé, Mina, to
travel to the remote land of
Transylvania. He is there in
order to organise the
finances of a Count Dracula,
who is buying an estate in
England. Harker soon becomes
suspicious of Dracula’s
motives. He asks himself why
there are no mirrors in
Castle Dracula; why he is
forbidden to enter a
particular part of the
Castle; and where Count
Dracula disappears to during
the day. He realises that
not all is what it seems to
be in the remote Castle,
nestled amidst the
Carpathian Mountains.
Dracula’s intentions soon
become clear. He intends to
create a race of Vampires to
rule the world. Such an idea
would place the Human race
second in the food chain,
instead of being on top of
it. Such an idea is so
immense, and the
implications are terrible. A
race of Vampires would
reduce Human beings to the
role of animals. They would
be farmed as cattle, and
drained of their blood.
Together with Professor Van
Helsing, Harker and a few
others seek to hunt down the
Demon and destroy him. This
is revenge for their beloved
Lucy, who fell at the hands
of Dracula; for Mina, who
becomes a communication
portal for Dracula; and for
the sake of mankind.
This is a story about good
against evil. It depends
upon the late Victorian
ideal that good shall always
triumph. The almighty God
must win against Satan in
the end. Together with this,
Stoker seems to depict the
social classes of the era to
be corrupt. If the lower
classes are not repressed,
then they will turn into a
raving monster that consumes
and possesses all that
stands in it’s way.
I love this novel
dearly, and I hope that
others will too. Even if you
are a devout reader of
contemporary horror, this is
still a must. The story of
Dracula underpins most
horror stories that follow
it, as well as the whole
literary ‘Horror’ genre.
Reading: April and
May 2012
Meetings: 5th and
19th of April; 3rd, 17th and
31st of May
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JUNE
THE COLOR PURPLE
Winner
of the National Book Award
as well as the Pulitzer
Prize, "The Color Purple"
established Alice Walker as
a major voice in modern
fiction. Her unforgettable
portrait of Celie and her
friends, family, and lovers
is rich with passion, pain,
inspiration, and an
indomitable love of life.
Beautifully imagined and
deeply compassionate, "The
Color Purple" is a classic
of American literature.
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Reading: June 2012
Meetings: 7 and 21
of June
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READING 2011
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