Wednesday, March 19, 2014

February Family Activity: 42

We watched this movie on a Friday night after Dakota got home from work. Alaric did not feel well and fell asleep halfway through the movie. Everyone else was completely engaged. I am always worried that since the movie is about sports that the kids will tune out, but they soon realized that the movie was about more than baseball.

Watching anything about our country's racist past is difficult. Savana, Dakota and Alexsei always get so worked up over it. Alexsei and Dakota are currently taking an American History course and they both get so mad at white people. We can only hope we continue to learn from our history.

Cast

Chadwick Boseman...
Harrison Ford...
Nicole Beharie...
Christopher Meloni...
Ryan Merriman...
Lucas Black...

It was odd seeing Harrison Ford playing an old man. I am now interested in the real Branch Rickey. I would like to know how true to his character he was portrayed in this movie. Chadwick Boseman was successful as Jackie Robinson. We all loved Nicole Beharie who portrayed Jackie's wife, Rachel Robinson.

Other than Alaric, everyone liked the movie even though it was a sports-themed movie. The uplifting end helped erase the difficulty of watching the overt racism. Overall, the family was happy with my movie pick.


February Book: Louisa's Secret

I came across this book in a unique way. I play Words with Friends and someone randomly picked up a game with me. We chatted a bit, and he revealed that he is a travel writer and just had his first novel published. He said it was historical faction (fiction/fact mixed) which is one of my favorite genres. He is from the UK so I was intrigued. I bought the book for my Kindle reader for $2.99. I finally had a chance to read it.

The book was engaging and very easy to read. Short chapters. Not too many characters. The story is heartbreaking. You can't imagine a family going through all the hardships that they did. It starts in the early 1860s. At least there was a somewhat happy ending.

I liked to book better after I read the epilogue and realized that Chris Gough wrote this book based upon the history of his own family. The events are factual. He just padded the story and added some characters. The devastation of poverty was unthinkable back then.


February Plated Meal

For the February meal, I made a creamy mushroom pasta with caramelized onions, mushrooms and spinach. I also had cracker coated chicken breast and roasted asparagus. The chicken was seared and finished in the oven. I should have let the asparagus go just a bit longer. I have never failed on the roasted asparagus before. The chicken also needed a sauce. I should have made a creamy mushroom sauce to go with it. Live and learn. It was too dry otherwise.

I am trying to keep the meals simple with not an enormous amount of time invested. This meal was still made by me. I am working on getting Dakota to make us a meal. I have him pegged for March.


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Everyone loved the pasta except for Alaric. Savana has requested that I make it again.

Reviews:
Glen: Liked the pasta. Always likes the asparagus. Agreed that the chicken needed a sauce.
Me: I liked it all, but also wanted a sauce for the chicken.
Dakota: Ate the chicken and the pasta. Both were fine. Never eats asparagus.
Alexsei: Loved the pasta. The asparagus wasn't done enough for her. She wanted a sauce for the chicken.
Savana: Passed on the chicken. Loved the pasta and asparagus.
Alaric: I think he tried the chicken. I left some plain pasta for him. We keep trying.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

January Book: The Gold Finch by Donna Tartt

First, I really, really wanted to love this book because so many people I know absolutely loved it. Unfortunately, I did not. I loved parts of it. Some of the writing was exceptional, but I don't think the writing and the story went together. There were 2 different things going on in this long, long novel.

This book felt like Great Expectations" the modern, New York version. Hobie reminded me of Hagrid in the Harry Potter books. These were two of the problems for me.

I was debating on 2 or 3 stars for the book. I only gave it 3 because Donna Tartt writes really well.

Maybe it is because I don't have as much time to read any more, that I am more critical of books. But if I invest the amount of time that I did in this book, I expect to at least enjoy that time. Not to take anything away from Donna Tartt. She is a good author and wrote some amazing prose. The problem was, there was way too much of it in this long, long novel. This should have been edited down to 400 pages. I can't believe this book was released as is.

I was vested in the character of Theo immediately. Some of the best writing in this book were the isolation and sadness Theo felt after he lost his mother. Theo grew up a very flawed adult and yet, he was still sympathetic even with his drug addiction and shady dealings. I wanted him to have a happy ending.

One of the main problems of this book for me were all the unnecessary characters thrown in. I didn't care about their back stories, and I had to try and remember who they were. When Boris and and Theo went to Amsterdam, I was very frustrated by all the new named characters and their back stories. I really didn't care. It felt very forced.

The whole episode with Horst and the cast of characters seemed forced just so Tartt could discuss art and her impressions of famous works of art. It all felt forced and unreal.

The continual description of drug abuse and its after effects got tedious to read about.

Then the contrived, neatly wrapped up package after the debacle in Amsterdam did me in. I was waiting for an end to the book and got a 100 more pages of philosophy. Good and bad; fate and destiny, God and death, right and wrong, art and beauty, and the most convoluted: what is the meaning of life!, ugh! I was screaming in my head, "Just stop writing!" None of that had anything to do with the story. It was way over the top.

I would not recommend this book unless you enjoy plodding through prose.

The only plot line I enjoyed was Popper the Maltese. I wonder if Donna Tartt has a Maltese because she wrote his character so well.
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