I'm not even sure if I finished Joy Williams' State of Grace in early May or late April. I have to say I didn't care for it all that much. I am sure this is mostly because I was icked out over the relationship between the daughter and her father, a somewhat itinerant (and over-bearing) preacher. I did find the scene where the mother crashes a car and kills her other daughter and then says to the narrator that she wishes it had been her (the narrator) that died instead to be grim and a bit gripping, but generally the book didn't move me, even with yet another car crash (this time caused by her fiancé). I thought the periodic interjections by the Answer Man on the radio were interesting but worked better in the short story "The Lover" from Taking Care. (Taking Care was definitely a more rewarding book for me with my favourite story being "Train.")
I am almost certain that I finished Dorothy Edwards' Winter Sonata in April. This is one where just not enough happened to satisfy me at all. In fact, if you read the blurbs on the back of the book, it makes it seem as if the tentative love affair started by the visiting cellist dies out as the seasons change, when in fact it doesn't seem as if the cellist even contemplated making any kind of move on his neighbour, not least because he spends over half the book sick in bed! And then it turns out he is thinking of moving to the village permanently, so he may well have more opportunities to follow through. Talk about false advertising. I'm going to see if I can manage to donate this to a UT library, though a friend of mine may want to read it first.
Winter Sonata did, however, lead me back to the far superior A Month in the Country, and I reread this in just a few days. I learned fairly recently that this was made into a movie, and I guess I will suggest it to the curator of Contours over at Paradise.
I think it was last week that I saw The Woman in the Dunes at the Fox. (Somehow I left my spare biking gloves behind. I tried to go right back inside, but the doors were locked. I emailed them, but they haven't turned up so far. Drat!) This was quite useful, as there were a few points in the novel that I somehow overlooked (the fact that the villages wanted a sex show in exchange for letting the man out to see the sea and that he explicitly waited around to show the other villagers his water gathering mechanism instead of trying to escape). I think I was kind of weary of the novel by this point and ready to return it. So the movie brought out some elements of the novel that I had skated over, much like I did with Under the Volcano a few years back. I will say that when I realized he decided not to escape for quite inexplicable reasons I really turned against the book and the movie to a lesser extent. (I am glad that I didn't go to the book club talk on the book, as there was just a taste of this at the end of the movie, and one of the Torontonians kept going on and on, as he was so in love with his own voice.)
In terms of the book club at work, they are reading Murakami's What I Talk About What I Talk About Running. I won't be in town, but just reading a few pages in, I found myself so alienated from Murakami. He's like I just stumbled into running a successful jazz bar and then I decided on a lark to write a novel (after watching a baseball game), and then I submitted it and won this prize, and then I decided to sell the bar to focus on writing. It may all be true, but it is completely insufferable, and I couldn't bear to read any more of his humble-bragging. I didn't like the other possible book: Nigel Barley's Adventures in a Mud Hut, which is a somewhat snarky anthropological text.
It turns out it is next to impossible to borrow the Mud Hut book, so the club dropped it, and is going with Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go instead. Interestingly, this is in very high demand at the library for some unclear reason. I think tomorrow I am going to return the two books I didn't like to Robarts and then see if University College still has a copy I can borrow. I also will check out the Hart House Art Museum, since it is open late on Wednesdays.
I just finished Dawn Powell's collection of short stories, Sunday, Monday and Always. Sadly, I didn't like this much at all. Most of the characters are quite unpleasant and not nearly as amusing as they can be in her novels. I'm not quite sure why that is, but these stories just didn't work for me, with the single exception of "The Glads." Interestingly, she was never able to sell "The Glads" to any magazine, probably because the ending is exceptionally dark. I'm going to see if I can sell this and State of Grace to BMW or Seeker's Books.
In terms of what I am currently reading, I have just started The Book of Lamentations by Rosario Castellanos. Fortunately, it isn't as long as I feared (a bit under 400 pages). It is basically about a real-life uprising of the descendants of Mayan Indians against the Mexican elites, but it is set in the 1930s (decades after the actual uprising).
I'm not sure if I actually will read Huxley's The Devils of Loudun, though it seems like it would pair reasonably well with The Book of Lamentations. As I said, I will likely be reading Never Let Me Go, and then on my trips to Ottawa and L.A., I think I'll bring along Dicken's Dombey and Son. If I manage to get through all this, and there is any reading time left for June, I think I will turn to Lampedusa's The Leopard, Mavis Gallant's The Cost of Living and then Maxwell's So Long, See You Tomorrow. And perhaps Didion's Slouching Towards Bethlehem and Lord Vishnu's Love Handles. After that, I'll just pick more from the top part of this list.
Edit (5/21): I was able to visit the Hart House Art Museum this evening. The exhibits were basically UT art students' final projects. I will say it has been quite a while since I've seen exhibits there that really wow me, but I do try to go two or three times each year to catch each new show. I'm usually around campus for other reasons. I was frustrated to find out that University College Library closed up on May 1 and won't reopen until the fall. Had I known, I would have requested the book be sent to Robarts. I'll go ahead and do that, but not until the middle of next week, as I won't be around to grab the book while I am traveling.