Posts Tagged ‘Family’

Best. Weekend. Ever.

Today’s post is courtesy of Kricket.  To catch up on what you have missed in The Week of Kricket  you can go here, here  aaaaand here.
  
I have just experienced one of the best weekends of my life. At several points during the “awesomeness” I knew that one day on my death bed, hopefully in the very distant future, this would still be one of my favourite memories. 
 
On Friday I was invited by an old friend Jodi to join her “Super Charged Bookclub”. It was so nice to be able to reconnect with such a great person, I haven’t seen her in a number of years, thanks to the magic of Facebook, we have reconnected. Over coffee beforehand, we talked about Synchronicity  and how people can be connected in the strangest of ways. An example of this would be if my childhood best friend was named Jane, and yours was also named Jane. Strange, little, kismety things. We headed over to her friend Sumba’s house, and instantly I decided that I wanted her to adopt me. Her house was warm and friendly, with three MASSIVE bookcases overflowing with every book known to mankind…all organized by author. This immediately came to mind…

 
 
I met some amazing, brilliant, funny new friends that night after we had a heated discussion regarding the chosen book, “The Slap” by Christos Tsiolkas

“The reverberations from the slap are far-reaching, affecting the marriages and friendships of all those who witness it. What unfolds is a powerful, haunting novel about love, sex, marriage, and the fury and intensity that family can arouse. In this remarkable novel, Christos Tsiolkas brilliantly weaves together a maze of complex relationships. Told through the eyes of eight different characters, the slap and the ensuing emotional maelstrom become catalysts for an unflinching and all-seeing journey into the modern family and domestic life. Children come of age, marriages teeter on the brink and midlife crises erupt against a backdrop of lust, jealousy, deception and inadequacy.

In its penetrating and incisive examination of the evergrowing middle class and its fears and aspirations, The Slap is a fiercely intelligent and provocative story about the nature of loyalty and happiness, compromise and truth.”

 Many of us were not impressed with this book, myself included. Parts of it were enjoyable, but it jumped around too much and was brash and gritty in the wrong way…bordering on being lewd. It was an interesting premise; at a neighbourhood barbecue, a man slaps a child that is not his own. This opened up a number of interesting topics ranging from, “should a teacher be able to hug a student?” to the extramarital affairs of celebrities…do they believe that sex does not equal love?

Saturday night I went to hear our friend Shaan DJ for his very first time. He did a fantastic job, I felt so proud…like a momma bear. He played a great mix that got our dancy group of people even dancier than normal. At one point we were in a huge circle, dancing around like crazed monkeys, and I thought, so many people I love are here right now. It was so great to be reunited with my friends, as we all age it can get increasingly difficult to see each other as we once did. 

 Today my aunt and cousin came to visit, which was lovely and not as long as I would have liked. We giggled and chatted and showed the “old ladies” (my mom and aunt) some popular YouTube videos. 

 I look forward to topping this weekend, but it will definitely be a tough to do. 

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The Girl’s Guide to Sloppy Firsts. (Wait, That’s Not Right!)

Welcome to the second installement of our discussion and the third day of A Week of Kricket!  Go here  to see the first part.
 
This book (Girl’s Guide) doesn’t focus solely on Jane.  Why do you think the author included that section “The Best Possible Light” about her brother’s ex-girlfriend’s, ex-husband and the family who lives in the same building as Jane’s aunt?
 
I have wondered about that, I liked that story…but I felt that it was kind of out of place. As it was one of the earlier stories I assumed that each story would have a different protagonist, until it flipped back to Jane. 
 
Jane struggles to be authentic in her dating life and ultimately takes some not-so-great advice from a self-help book.  I hate playing games.  I never know that I’m playing until it’s too late.  Then it’s not really fun.  There is no sportsmanship in that!  Why is it so hard to catch a mate when you’re being “authentic”?
 
I totally agree with you with the game playing. There has to be a fine balance before you unleash your authentic self on a potential beau. You want to be yourself, but you also don’t want him/her to know that you spend Saturday mornings in threadbare sweatpants scouring the internet for Ryan Gosling gossip until 2pm, then eating a disgustingly large peanut butter and jam sandwich…dropping much of it on grungy t-shirt…and not getting up to wipe it off right away. You also don’t want this person to know that…in the winter you don’t shave your legs every two/three days. Worry about your cats like they were your children. Still hold out hope or fantasize  of getting together with your ex/your highschool history teacher/Ferris Bueller. (As SITC put it, your “super secret single behaviour”)  I really wonder where, when, and how romantic game playing begin. Did cavemen wait a few days before returning to the cave? But then I remember how our life span has increased and think that a caveman or woman most likely conked their intended over the head with a mallett and dragged them off into the sunset. Ah, the good ole days. 
 
What’s the worst dating advice you’ve ever received?

I’ve actually received some pretty great dating advice, sadly I don’t follow it. The first dates into a relationship I can ace. Then I get bored, or find some insane excuse not to be with the person any longer. Sometimes the excuses are warning bells blaring that have solid proof for pushing the escape button. I have also sabotaged myself in relationships, as I have had several situations of me falling for the unrequited fellow, and that cancelling out real feelings I could have for someone who actually likes me the way I should be liked/loved. I think that was a lot like how Jane operated.  She was with someone who was older, had an addiction problem and changed a lot when he was with her.  Self-sabatoging behaviour.  I think we’re all guilty of it at some point.
 
 
Jessica had the opposite problem in Sloppy Firsts.  She was trying to hard to be like everyone else, but when she showed her true-self, she became more interesting (and interested) in Marcus.  He actually gets her to break the rules in a big way.  Have you ever broken the rules for a guy?

I sure have, and it ended up biting me in the arse. Hard, like a crocodile. He was a close friend many moons ago. So many rules broken with that one. I used to be such a ballsy kid, when I was ten I uttered the phrase “shut up and kiss me” to my intended at the time. I have drunkenly uttered the phrase “we would have such interesting looking children” and decided many a pub night that is a “great” idea to call my crush, or go and knock on his dorm room door for a 3am chat. Thankfully, my rule breaking lately has consisted of being quiet and awkward when I’m around someone that I am interested in. I am not being honest with myself when I’m like that. 
 
 
Jessica struggles between two things she is good at; running and school.  She is good at running, but her Dad keeps pushing her to be better.  He even put together a film of all the screw-ups she had in races and made her watch it.  I think everyone can relate to that in some way.  Although it may seem exaggerated in the book, I think that everyone has had issues with their parents where they pushed you to do something you didn’t want to do. 

Definitely, I found the Darling parents very realistic. Parents are human and they have their own issues, in some cases so many that it equals an entire subscription. They natter, and push, and want you to be the very best version of you. In some cases they do so because it’s an outward expression of themselves, but mainly and ultimately…it is out of love. 
 
 
I see why you chose both of these books for me to read.  They are definitely well-written and, most importantly, the characters are easy to realte to.  Do you think that guys can get the same thing from them?

I really hope so. The stigma of a man reading a “chick lit” book is a hard one to crack. If a man has read either of these books, please point me in his direction so that I can club him and drag him back to my cave. Ha ha…will do!  I don’t know if they could get the same thing from them really because men are engineered by society and our culture to be a certain way, just as we are. I would think a man could definitely appreciate each of these characters, and their insight, but I don’t think they would get the “aha” moment like a woman could. 
 
 
Well thank you for joining me this week!

THANK YOU! It is a huge honor. 

 

Tomorrow is the last day of The Week of Kricket.  She guest posts on my blog!  See you then.

Yeah, That Just Happened!
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Hoppy to See You!

 

Welcome to Book Blogger Hop hosted by Crazy For Books!  Woot!  This is my first time participating, so let me tell you what my blog is about.  My blog is eclectic.  I talk about all the silly stuff that happens, my family, and post book reviews.  Sometimes I will have a week or two of all reviews and sometimes it’s all other stuff, but it’s honest and true.  I also like giving credit where credit is due, so if I found a book recommendation on your blog and I review it here, I always link back to it.

This week Crazy For Books  asked: When you write reviews, do you write them as you are reading or wait until you have read the entire book?

Well, I’m glad you asked.  I always wait until I am finished because often my opinion changes as I read and I like having all the facts first.  I also read a lot of books and if I were to write my impressions as I go, I would be posting multiple times a day.  So, it’s just once and at the end.  How about you?

Also, next week is an exciting week because I collaborate with another blogger and we talk about two books, The Girl’s Guide to Hunting and Fishing  and Sloppy Firsts  and she does a guest post!  You can check her out in the meantime @ Things I Don’t Want My Grandma To Know.  I am deeming next week A Week of  Kricket.

Yeah, That Just Happened!

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