On movies, the most recent of the Oscars contenders is The Father. It is wrenching, especially if you have known anyone with dementia. It is a fine piece of cinema, playing with the unreliable narrator to the max. I appreciated it, I'm glad I saw it, it affected me more than Minari, but less than some others (Promising Young Woman, Never Rarely Sometimes Always). So I think it is worth seeing, and a possible contender.
For books, are any of you into mystery series? I've got a new hot tip - and I was thrilled I was able to turn a librarian friend of mine onto it, indicating to me it's not that popular. But it deserves to be: the Bess Crawford series by Charles Todd. Our heroine, Bess, is truly a heroine - a nurse on the front lines of the First World War. But she pops home to England often (who knew they did that?) and much of her detecting takes place there. I've recently encountered in fiction several British works that bring home to me how very devastating, and society-changing, was that war for Britain. In my reading, we're now up to 1918, the Americans have entered the war, and the first wave of influenza has struck.The setting is unique (in my experience), and our heroine is extremely admirable, as are many of the recurring characters. (I have to like some of the folks or I won't bother.) But the books also revert back to Downton Abbey / Agatha Christie settings, so there is familiarity as well.
And my library has most of these as audio books - I've decided to go that route! I have both jigsaw puzzle apps and coloring books on the ipad, and listening to a book while puzzling (the app makes a satisfying "snick" when a piece is in the right place) or coloring, is a splendid way to finish out an evening.
Finally, (this is not by any means a comprehensive recap of what I've consumed recently, just what I'm talking about now), I watched Bridgerton, and enjoyed it well enough. Pretty people in pretty costumes in lovely settings being silly and (surprisingly) sexy. Actually, I multitasked through much of it - it didn't require the kind of focus Snowpiercer, for example, takes. But since I liked it, I got the book from the library, but stopped after a couple of hours of reading. Too different from the TV show, and not compelling enough to keep me paying attention. It might have worked if I read first, before watching.
Distractions can be a marvelous thing!
4 comments:
Glad to see benign reasons for not posting! And excited for your series, the nurse sounds wonderful. I mix up the books too - usually rounds of fun, good for you, friends rec, tho there can be overlap. Right now friends rec that started out not so hot, but growing on me. Work a bear. Seeing both boys for Easter!
Liz
Floyd trial plus AAPI hate creating big need for books.
ooh, the nurse ones does sound good... books have been tough for me lately. the History of Vikings was fun, but I got bogged down (it is a huge, long book). the cozy book was a quick, fun read. Then I started the living to 120 and the premise is delightful but the actual reading is a slog too. Guy's a Korean tao master and he pushes a lot of his theories and website and apps. meh. Not that I fundamentally disagree with any of it, but I've drifted. I've drifted into quickly perusing Martha Stewart Magazines....stacks and sacks to ultimately give away on the Buy Nothing site. And I am left bookless for he moment. May give your nurse series a try. I also bought our friend Chris' debut novel The Practical Navigator on kindle. let's see where that takes me.
Prob going to give The Father a go on my own next week. I think F will keep finding a reason not to watch it, so I might as well make this one of the ones I see without him.
Have to see The Father! Must, must.
Have to see The Father! Must, must.
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