Busy Brat-Packers

October 23, 2012

If the movies Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, St. Elmo’s Fire or Pretty in Pink resonate with you, you likely know of the Brat-Pack actors that starred within. Three of those actors, who arguably defined an era, have recently appeared on the bookshelves as writers.

Molly Ringwald explored writing in her 2010 Memoir/Lifestyle Guide called Getting the Pretty Back- Friendships, Family and Finding the Perfect Lipstick. She clearly has a sense of humour. Now she has written an ambitious “novel in stories”, When It Happens to You. Released in August, this collection has received many positive reviews:

Writing with a deep compassion for human imperfection, Ringwald follows a Los Angeles family and their friends and neighbors as they negotiate the hazardous terrain of everyday life — revealing the deceptions, heartbreak, and vulnerability familiar to us all.”

Rob Lowe’s memoir, Stories I Only Tell My Friends, was apparently considered by the publishers to be so well-written that he’s been extended a contract for a new memoir to continue the story.

“A wryly funny and surprisingly moving account of an extraordinary life lived almost entirely in the public eye. Never mean-spirited or salacious, Lowe delivers unexpected glimpses into his successes, disappointments, relationships, and one-of-a-kind encounters with people who shaped our world over the last twenty-five years. These stories are as entertaining as they are unforgettable.”

Andrew McCarthy, of the three, has most significantly reinvented himself as a writer, a multi award-winning travel writer in fact. He is presently an Editor-at-Large of National Geographic Traveler magazine. This one makes the cut for me; I’ve put it on my to-read list.

This is a perfectly balanced combination of travel diary and documented introspection. While he travels the world, visiting destinations from the Amazon to Mount Kilimanjaro, McCarthy is wondering what in him leads him to keep the people he loves at a distance. That’s the short version. Set against exotic backdrops most of us will never visit, this is a man trying to figure himself out, and having the courage to write it down; that the man is famous is of no consequence.

Beyond his book, I encourage you to visit McCarthy’s website and sample some of the articles he’s written. He is certainly a gifted writer. This excerpt is from “Courting Vienna”, an article in The National Geographic Traveler.

“Despite her sensible shoes, her granite-stern features reveal a constant, low-level strain. She is well past 50— perhaps well past 60. Her arms sag under the weight of her burden; each tray she carries threatens to be her last. But when she breaks into a rare smile, her face lights up with unguarded delight. Her name is Annelies, and she, not Mozart, nor Beethoven, nor even Empress Sissi, has come to embody Vienna for me.

Annelies works as a waitress at Café Sperl, on Gumpendorfer Strasse. The Sperl has become my base, Annelies my anchor.” 

And We’re Back!

October 14, 2012

It’s been a while … the last post was … hmmm let’s see here … August 29th?!!!  Time flies. You may think I’ve been tied up in the pages of Fifty Shades of Grey or I’ve “Gone Girl” but no, just enjoying a very busy back-to-school season and some incredibly good weather which enticed me to play outside. Now that I have more of a grip on the daily schedule (kinda-sorta) and the rains have started, I am back to thinking about cuddling up with a good book.

I discovered some wonderful books this summer, some from my Summer Reading List and some shared by friends. Have you enjoyed these ones?  I always struggle with “favourite book” status but these are certainly contenders.

     

There are lots of big literary stars coming to the theatre – Anna Karenina, The Hobbit, The Life of Pi, Wuthering Heights, Les Miserables, and On the Road among others. One bookish movie that was reviewed favourably this summer but strangely didn’t spend much time in our local cine, was The Words. It stars Bradley Cooper and its themes of plagiarism and misrepresented truths are timely and thought provoking. A good Book Club outing if you can still find it anywhere – otherwise, watch for it to be released to DVD.

I’ve alway been out with the jury when it comes to e-readers but was recently gifted an iPad (how’s that for a nice surprise!) so now have the potential to read electronically. (For the record, I will always remain a devotee of the touchable tome)  I will give it a whirl for sure though am a bit hog-tied as to what my first selection should be. Something big and fat that I won’t have to carry around? Something fresh off the presses which might be tricky to locate at the book store? Or something wonderfully trashy that no one will know I’m reading because they can’t see the cover?  (A contributing factor me-thinks to the recent rash of provocative titles reaching unprecedented readership) Have you crossed over to the electronic side? What was your first download?

So … that’s my latest. What’s yours? Any lovely literary surprises to share? The Autumn brings an onslaught of new titles every year … I’ve been taking note – we’re back to talking books.