decemberthirty: (full crane)
Well, I finished The Red Tent, and I really found it to be fascinating. Unfortunately, I enjoyed the first half of the book much more than the second. As I wrote last time, I loved the descriptions of daily life in the first half. That was really what was most appealing to me about the whole book. In the second half all kinds of drama started happening that I just felt like I could have done with out. I would have preferred to go on reading reading forever about the five women who were central to the story; their individual stories, their relationships with each other, their time in the red tent together, their various pregnancies and births... I really responded very deeply to the traditions of their lives. More than once while reading the book, I found myself thinking, "I wouldn't mind living that way..." I think that my problem with the second half of the book was not that I didn't want to read about the events, but rather that I didn't like the fact that those events were leading up to the eventual end of all those traditions I liked so much. But even if I didn't like the second half, it's still a very good book. I don't want to give the impression that it's an extremely feminist book, because it's not, but I still have to say that it's probably a book that every woman should read, just because it presents such a wonderful notion of women supporting each other, learning from each other, and valuing each other's wisdom. I wish that we still had something like the red tent nowadays...

Anyhow, I am now reading A Star Called Henry by Roddy Doyle. I've only just started it, but I like it already. Then again, I'm a huge fan of Roddy Doyle's, so that's not a big surprise.

Oh, and I haven't really cooked anything too exciting this week, although I'm planning on chicken with broccoli and carrots in onion gravy tonight. Should be pretty good...
decemberthirty: (crane face)
Since one of my problems with Amsterdam seemed to be its completely and utterly masculine perspective, I've decided to try a book that is the antithesis of that: Anita Diamant's The Red Tent. It's the story of Dinah and her mothers, the wives of Jacob in the Old Testament. The book's premise is basically that the lives of these women were all but ignored in the Bible, and so Diamant relates the biblical stories from their point of view. I'm only about a quarter of the way into it, but I really love it so far. I'm just totally engrossed by her descriptions of what daily life was like for women during those times. And it's interesting to see all that biblical grandeur as being connected to the every day stuff like baking bread and having babies. I have more thoughts about this book, but not much more time or energy, so hopefully I will remember them tomorrow...

Oh, and I also wanted to inaugurate a new feature of this journal! In addition to discussing the books I read, I'm going to experiment with recording the food that I cook. Since I enjoy cooking almost as much as I do reading, I thought this would be appropriate. Plus, it might be fun to have a good record of the different things I try. Anyhow, I made several different things this weekend, but by far the best of them was a Tuscan white bean soup with tomatoes and leeks. It had great flavor-deep and complex yet homey and rustic. Oh yeah, and if anybody who reads this wants the recipes for anything I mention, just ask...
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