#Scarathlon Photo Challenge Day 26 prompt: Cat
#HHC
@bookmarktavern @dabbe @liatrek @jessclark78 @chrissyreadit @thedaysgoby @vonnie862 @ladyCait84 @sresendez12 @kelli7990 @jessiekb
#Scarathlon Photo Challenge Day 26 prompt: Cat
#HHC
@bookmarktavern @dabbe @liatrek @jessclark78 @chrissyreadit @thedaysgoby @vonnie862 @ladyCait84 @sresendez12 @kelli7990 @jessiekb
Brilliant writing with beautiful prose that compelled me to read certain lines over and over. An achingly realistic and personal story unfolds through the frame narrative of a flawed, immensely relatable woman looking back on her formative years and how much those years, relationships, and experiences shaped her work.
Time, memory and childhood trauma are themes in this disturbing, masterfully written novel. The narrator is now a middle aged successful painter remembering amongst other things the ways her cruel childhood friend and bully tormented her. I don‘t know why, maybe it‘s the distant cool tone, but I found it hard to relate to the narrator and care about her. The writing drew me in, yet the long descriptions were quite boring. Barely a pick for me.
It's the birthday of Canadian writer Margaret Atwood, born on this day in 1939.
"[My mother] says she doesn't give a hoot. The word hoot pleases me. It makes my mother into a non mother, a sort of mutant owl…Not giving a hoot would be a luxury. It describes the fine, irreverent carelessness I myself would like to cultivate, in these and other matters."
--Cat's Eye (1988)
Elaine Ridley returns to Toronto for a gallery showing of her art. As opening night approaches, she remembers her childhood & the imprints people left in her life.
Atwood is thoughtful & complex. I just saw too much of myself in young Elaine. There‘s a specific trauma of being a girl with a friend group of girls that don‘t actually like you. And this book kind of forced me to confront the parts of my life now where that still hurts. 🌕🌕🌕🌗🌑
“What we share may be a lot like a #traffic accident but we get one another. We are survivors of each other. We have been #shark to one another, but also lifeboat. That counts for something.” It‘s not often I manage to find a quote that fits two prompts! #QuotsyAug20
I ground through this. Took me ages because, like with all Atwood's novels, I found this hard to read. There's something about her style that's almost science fiction-y. Short sentences, lots of descriptive digressions. They feel oddly unemotional. I know I could pick any paragraph from any of her books and write an essay about it. And I'm genuinely awed at how beautiful and insightful some of her writing is, but I just don't enjoy her stories.
The first page really drew me in!
January was a good reading month for me!
20 books total (8 print, 12 audio)
9 books from Mt TBR
3 #1001books
2 classics
2 nonfiction
2 BOTM backlist books
8 challenge books:
3 #ReadingEurope2020
3 #ReadingWomenChallenge
2 #Booked2020
ReadAroundTheWorld: Taiwan ✔️
Three 5-star books:
Cat‘s Eye
The House of Special Purpose
The Winter Sea
Margaret Atwood is incredible.
This book is so well-written and powerful. A deep dive study of childhood and its impact on adult life. Beautifully detailed narrative of middle aged woman visiting her childhood hometown. Her memories unfold slowly, but I was never bored and often taken aback. I saw pieces of myself as a kid, a teenager, a wife, a mom, and as a woman in general. So disturbing, but so incredibly good.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
#1001books
I love Atwood's writing and this story was no exception. Elaine is an artist who has returned to Toronto, where she grew up, for a showing of her art work. The story moves between the past and the present. We learn so much about Elaine's life; her relationship with her brother, her parents and the “friends” she makes in elementary school. Each chapter revealed something new about Elaine, I was thoroughly swept up in the story. #1001books
I found this copy of Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood in the horror section at our big library book sale today. I can't decide if this was a mistake or someone's idea of a joke. It's funny either way.
This book reminded me so much of my childhood and what Elaine went through as a kid. My heart broke for Elaine and how she was bullied. I understood. It was like I was almost reading my diary from that time.
But I still loved it!! ☹️💔
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
“Another belief of mine: that everyone else my age is an adult, whereas I am merely in disguise.” -Margaret Atwood, Cat‘s Eye
This is my mostly Fantasy, Sci-fi, and Dystopian shelf. With oversized books at the bottom. #shelves #30JuneBooks @howjessreads
See any of your favorites here?
I have two copies of Cat's Eye, a hardcover and a paperback. It's a mass market paperback, the first printing in that format, so it's got some mileage on it. My copy is pretty janky: small type, the cover hanging on for dear life, the pages yellowed. I picked it up in a used bookstore some years back. I was about to put it in a stack to give away, no room for duplicates in an already overcrowded bookshelf... But I just realized it's signed! 😯
#SpringIntoSpring @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @vkois88
#Cliques
This is the first book that came to mind. The relationship between the four girls was toxic. Fantastic look at bullying among young girls.
How have I only just found this book!?! Atwood at her best yet again, the story telling is so powerful! Details perfectly how events from childhood can shape the rest of your life. Even if you never realised it. Love love love!! #maragretatwood #catseye
“The past isn‘t quaint while you‘re in it. Only at a safe distance, later, when you can see it as decor, not in the shape your life‘s been squeezed into.”
First page already sucking me in...
Some books demand to be savoured, and this was one such book. It's very well done. It's about how one person can fuck up your entire existence, at least that's my interpretation. At the end, she seems to be able to let go.
This is my first book of the year. How's your weekend so far?
462 pages, normally paced. #MargaretAtwood
8 hour road trip started! Going to try and do some reading while I'm in the passenger seat. Maybe my library book Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood. #roadtrip #bookdragon
The second Atwood novel I read after The Handmaid‘s Tale blew me away. At times difficult to read because Atwood really gets how children can be cruel. This is the story of an unequal friendship and the toll childhood can take on one‘s later life. The cover made me think of today‘s prompt #walkingintheair
#WinterWonderland
Atwood writes so brilliantly about the #IllMakeYouSorry element in friendships between girls, especially when the hate is underscored by love 💔 #NoFemmeber
@Billypar @Cinfhen
For #FeministFriday, my Atwood shelf. (Handmaid‘s Tale is on loan to a friend.) #readingresolutions @Jess7
A favorite set in #Canada by a favorite Canadian author. #augustisatrip @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @vkois88
My next read! I‘ve heard good things about Margaret Atwood‘s work, but this will be the first thing of hers that I‘ve read.
#ManicMonday C is for Cookie @JoScho
Book - Cat's Eye, Circe, A Christmas Carol
Author - Celeste Ng, Peter Carey
Movie/TV - Clueless, Casablanca
Food - Cheese, Carbonara, Cheesecake
I absolutely adored this book. It is very much unlike Handmaid‘s Tale or Alias Grace in tone and feel, but it was wonderful!!! I don‘t know what I was expecting before I started. I knew nothing about this book, just that I liked Margaret Atwood‘s writing and this was available from the library right now. I‘m glad I took this little adventure. So much of this felt real and genuine to me. So much of this could be me, if I were a painter and older.
I used to date a guy who repeatedly said, “All women are crazy and all men are stupid.” When I was angry because of his misogynistic, “I‘m a man and I can do what I want” despite what anyone else may need or want attitude, it was because I was crazy, because I was a woman. For him, it certainly had nothing to do with him. He reminds me of John a little bit. He was sweet before the relationship was defined as such, then he became an ass hole.