7/09/2007

Moleskin Notebooks

As both a writer and reader I am attracted not only to books, but also to cool notebooks, stationery, and pen and pencil sets. On a recent trip to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, Oregon I finally found the notebook I had been seeking for a long time: Moleskin Notebooks. Moleskins are without a doubt the best notebooks available.

Moleskin Notebooks have a heritage that includes being used by Ernest Hemingway, Henri Matisse, and Vincent Van Gogh. Moleskins have made cameo, uncredited appearances in movies such as "The Devil Wears Prada," "The Da Vinci Code," and "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade." Moleskins just fit the hand making it easy to take notes. That is unless the writer has a broken wrist. so one can take notes while holding the notebook in the other hand. Or at least they could until they broke their wrist. I still use mine even with a broken wrist but now like I do everything, just a little clumsier.


Moleskins are available in a variety of formats; plain, lined, and in squares. I have horrible handwriting so I prefer the squares. When I use my Moleskin I print and force one letter into each square. This makes my notes legible, at least for the most part. There are slightly less than 200 pages in each notebook with approximately one fourth of them perforated for easy removal. There are a couple of interesting features: in the back is an envelope pocket for keeping loose papers. Also included in the notebook is an elastic band that circles the entire notebook to keep pages from getting beaten up when in a pocket or purse. Moleskin also features a daily diary with many of the same features.


'Losing my passport was the least of my worries, losing a notebook was a catastrophe'.
-
Bruce Chatwin






When in doubt, sit down, be quiet, and read a book.
-tfedge

7/07/2007

Book Review: The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is the best book I have read in a long time. Amir, the first-person narrator of The Kite Runner tells of his life, first as a boy in Afghanistan then later as an adult émigré in California. At times I felt frustrated with the characters in the book and wished they would behave differently. I experienced frustration not because the book was badly written, but just the opposite. I found the book so well written I felt fully engaged with the characters and suffered with them just as I would with my own friends and family members.

In Afghanistan Amir lived with his father Baba, and their two servants Ali and Hassan. Baba and Ali had been raised together and continued as master and servant throughout most of their adult lives. Similarly Amir and Hassan were of similar age and Hassan devoted himself to serving his young master.

The Kite Runner if refreshing in that Amir is not the all-good main character that so often appear in first novels. Amir has character flaws and suffers because of them. Hosseini builds a world where the reader can identify with the flawed Amir and feel both encouraged and strengthened when Amir tries to overcome his weaknesses.

The Kite Runner provides a poignant fictional account of a life in a part of the world that has become a part of our daily life in recent years. When Amir returns to Afghanistan as an adult and revisits people and places he knew as a child his reaction to the changes resulting from the long Afghani-Soviet war and the later rule of the Taliban is particularly affecting.

I am pleased to give The Kite Runner an A or 98% and strongly encourage all of you to read it. I can't wait to read his newest book A Thousand Splendid Suns.

-tfedge



"Character cannot be developed in ease and quiet. Only through experience of trial and suffering can the soul be strengthened, vision cleared, ambition inspired, and success achieved."
- Helen Keller


7/03/2007

Book Review: Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse by Louise Erdrich

I really struggled with The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse: both reading it a writing about it. I kept waiting for there to be more. After all the book was a National Book Award Finalist and Erdrich is a highly regarded author. I love the premise. A woman lives most of her life pretending to be a Catholic priest among the Objiwe Indians. The book begins as "Father" Damien writes to the Pope to tell what she has done and to discuss the possible canonization of Sister Leopolda. Damien knows her to be a violent murderous but has been reluctant to expose her because she knows that he, Father Damien, is really she, Agnes Agnes DeWitt.

Possible outcomes from such a scenario abound. Unfortunately Erdrich hasn't seemed to be able to find any of them. Instead of the angst one hopes for from the story of an ersatz priests who has lived a lie, there is very little introspection. Instead there is a good deal of description of who happens, but the reader never learns why. The action and description, although at times well written, provides a poor substitute for the mental anguish one would expect of Damien/DeWitt.

Prior to The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse my only experience with Louise Erdrich is the short story "Red Convertible," the often anthologized short story read in high school and undergraduate lit classes. It too suffers from the syndrome of promise of much in the premise he did. Little Motivation. This book is one of several by Erdrich dealing with this imaginary Objiwe reservation. Perhaps taken together the effect is better. On its own I give this book a B- or 82%. The book is currently available both in trade paperback and as an audiobook.


-Tfedge