April, 2004                                                                                      Library's e-Newsletter

 


1. Literature

Ian Johnson.

Wild Grass: Three Stories of Change in Modern China.

These books are cause for hope for China's future, demonstrating just how well individual Chinese can find in terrible developments opportunities for positive reflection and heroic action. Wang, who fled China after the Tiananmen crackdown, has compiled an impressive collection of essays by Chinese intellectuals, mostly professors in Chinese universities, in an effort to show that there is a Chinese intellectual realm that is just as astonishing as the Chinese economy. The authors engage in lively debate among themselves and are in complete command of Western thought and philosophy. Together, they show that, whatever the troubles of their nation, individual Chinese can, with great skill and few reservations, take up the most sophisticated features of modern culture.

Johnson, a correspondent for "The Wall Street Journal," draws on three stories of individuals who have turned to the legal system to fight injustice to demonstrate his belief that the Chinese political system is under great stress -- and that major change is imminent. In vivid detail, he recounts a farmer's struggles against local officials; a Beijing resident's efforts to save his beloved old city neighborhood with the help of a lawyer; and an elderly woman's fight with the state over her practice of Falun Gong. Although these cases do not prove that the rule of law prevails, they show that individual Chinese at last have hope that the legal system can help.

Reviewed by Lucian W. Pye, Foreign Affairs.


One Hundred Years of Solitude

Published in 1967 as Cien años de soledad, this novel is considered García Márquez’s masterpiece, the breakthrough work that put him on the literary map. It was written in eighteen months of solitude, where García Márquez locked himself into his room with paper and cigarettes, writing day and night while his wife took care of family affairs. Translated into thirty some languages, winner of four international prizes, One Hundred Years of Solitude is certainly one of the most remarkable books ever written, a tale that spans generations, told against a backdrop where the absurd can seem logical and the sensible ludicrous.

Although a summary is close to impossible, I will nevertheless try. In essence, the novel paints the picture of an enduring family living in a South American town called Macondo, a mysterious place where every day brings its inhabitants a share of wonder, magic, grief, sorrow, and almost magical opportunities for transformation. The book picks up the Buendía family from its establishment by a eccentric patriarch and a tenacious matriarch, and tracks their descendants through the family’s rise, fall, and decay. The book is woven from a rich tapestry of unique characters, each brimming with a life that makes their passions and quirks seem like reflections of us all – it is an emotional swirl that is sensuous and filled with sentiment, but never sensational or sentimental. As we follow the Buendía family through growth and decay, war and peace, hardship and joy, we realize that we a witnessing nothing less than the slow process of life itself – like watching rust form beautiful patterns in the timeless eye of God.

Allen B. Ruch - 17 November 2003

2. Book of the Month

Feiler, Bruce.

Abraham: A Journey to the Heart of Three Faiths.

The first monotheist (and, Feiler argues, the first martyr), Abraham serves as a patriarch for three very different faiths—Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Feiler begins with Abraham as we meet him in Genesis: old, married to Sarah, fatherless, and childless. But the old man fathers Ishmael through Sarah’s servant Hagar, and then Sarah becomes miraculously pregnant with Isaac. This is the symbolic beginning of the rift between Jews and Muslims (Jews trace their lineage through Isaac, Muslims through Ishmael), and much of the book explores how Jewish, Christian, and Islamic understandings of Abraham have expressed historic and contemporary interfaith disagreements. Feiler discusses dozens of “Abrahams,” from the Abraham used to justify pacifism to the one seen as a model of sacrifice, the patriarch of martyrs. Along the way, Feiler poses some fascinating theological questions, but this isn’t dry reading at all. Like his hugely popular Walking the Bible (2000), Feiler keeps our interest by mixing theological meditation with adventurous travelogue and sly wit. And this quietly brilliant examination of Abraham, which begins as part lit-crit thesis and part theological treatise, becomes, in the end, a passionate and prayerful argument for peace between faiths. —John Green

(Booklist/August, 2002)





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Bookworms


The book for April is :

Alice in Wonderland

Lewis Carroll

Level 2 (600 words)

Author's Biography

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Suggested Reading

How To Use Web Search Engines
 Tips on using internet search sites  like Google, alltheweb, and Yahoo

 

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