Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Their Eyes Were Watching God

Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God is considered to be the first Afro-American feminist novel. I can definitely see why this is so. The heroine, Janie, is strong, intelligent, articulate and self-confident. She is one of the first black heroines to be like this, to have a mind of her own and to have her rich internal dialogue shown in literature.

Janie is a great character. She has so much common sense and I loved the way she behaved, not caring about social standards. She is also soft and feminine and romantic, so basically she's real. Her story is both sad and happy. A large portion of her life is very hard, but eventually she finds true love and her life is finally like she imagined and hoped it would be when she was a little girl.

One thing that I didn't like at the beginning but understood better after reading the introduction to this book is the dialogue between men. It annoyed me and I thought it was because it never actually brought the story forward, it didn't really contribute anything. I read afterwards that the author did this on purpose to signify a lack of growth. That made me see the novel in a completely different context.

I had some trouble 'reading the accent'... it was slow going at times and I really preferred the third person narrative just because it was easier to read.

And with writing like this, I didn't want to miss anything. Zora Neale Hurston's prose has been described as poetry and at times it really is. Here are two sentences that spoke to me:

It was like a flute song forgotten in another existence and remembered again.

Isn't that beautiful? Or:

There are years that ask questions and years that answer.

That is so true. And beautiful. And, to me at least, so powerful that the words are alive.

It makes me happy that a book like this is now a classic, considering that it didn't get very good reviews at the beginning. Not surprising though, since most reviewers were men!

Challenges: Decades Challenge, Genre Challenge

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Blog changes...

As you can see, I'm making some changes to my blog. Including the name... the url will stay the same though. When I set this up originally it was only temporary, I didn't expect to love blogging so much. I now feel like I want to come up with a look that is more 'me', since I decided to continue blogging. Thus the title change... other changes will come so bear with me please! :-)

Monday, December 1, 2008

Christmas traditions


The 1st of December has arrived and with it the first day of our blogging community's Advent Calendar, Kailana and Marg's idea. I'm very happy to be one of the first bloggers to start this cool event. I can't wait to read everybody's entries over this month!

Firstly, I LOVE December. I love Christmas too - I'm not actually Christian so I'm talking about the secular holiday that Christmas has become to many. I love the carols, the decorations, the lights, the fake santas. The cheesier the better. December also happens to be my birthday month and I'm like a kid with birthdays too, so you can imagine...

As some of you know, I live in Belgium and am Polish. I always spend Christmas with my family in Poland. My Mom is as Christmas-crazy as me - in fact, her fake santas are already up! My family, especially my Mom, tends to go overboard with buying presents too. I get that from her. That and the shopping bug, which fits in nicely with the present-buying.

We celebrate Christmas on the 24th of December, Christmas Eve. We sit down to dinner at around 4 or 5 - as soon as it gets dark, pretty much. The traditional Polish Christmas table has 12 dishes, but we're not a big family so we don't really stick to that. We definitely always have barszcz (which is a soup made of red beets), pierogi (dumplings with mushrooms and cabbage) and lots of fish.

We open our presents in stages - some during dinner, some after, some later in the evening when all the guests have gone home. Lately, since my boyfriend Joe is Irish, we also save some for Christmas Day.

Joe and I are pagan and we also pay special attention to Yule. We always do something to mark the day, but it can't possibly be as elaborate as Christmas. :-)

I'm so glad I got to write this today - I haven't been feeling Christmassy this year and now I do. It's my favorite time of the year - family, warmth, hope. I love spending time with my Mom and Dad and the rest of my family and I love adding new traditions each year. I hope that in the future I will be able to keep up some of the older ones too.

Have a great first day of December everyone!