Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

Wao! Or should I say wow! Without giving too much away, I will say that the main character, Oscar, is called Wao as a joke. In fact, Oscar is picked on a lot growing up, but this book is not really about that after all.

Junot Diaz has written a book about family and how, even though we try to deny it, we are tied and bound to family through their past and our future. Okay, sounds corny, but that is what the book is really about.

It follows the brief, maybe not so wondrous life of Oscar, but we also follow his mother, sister and family friend. All these people are intertwined, yet each person's story is very separate and personal and when I was done reading this book, I too felt connected to all these people in my own separate way.

Be ready to brush up on your Spanish as well. As Dominicans, these characters use a lot of it. Some I knew, some not - and how it was used in context didn't always help either. But don't let that discourage you. It was still very readable and the Spanish only helped to make me feel as if I was part of this family.

This book also has lots of footnotes, and not to translate any of the language throughout the book. Diaz uses footnotes to share historical facts about characters and locations, but as if the author has interrupted himself in telling a story to get a fact across. Since they are all written in the same tone and style of the narrator, they could have easily been made just part of the story itself instead of the sometime two page long interruption of narration.

Diaz won the the Pulitzer Prize for this novel, and it was well deserved. He writes with feeling and emotion, but not cliched or stagnant and when it's all down and over, and you find out why Oscar's life was so brief and wondrous, you want to just hold the book close to you and tell Oscar it's all going to be alright.

Nausea rating: Mildly - for violence and sense of pain and loss

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Curious indeed.  How did a sappy movie about a troublesome dog beat out this beautifully told story is what I am very curious about.

Brad Pitt only improves with age in both his acting and his looks, as he gets younger and younger in this movie.  Cate Blanchett improves with age as well, but I wonder if her looking like she had too much makeup on was done on purpose to show how vain women really are about getting older?  With Brad de-aging thanks to CGI, couldn't they have aged Cate the same way? Either way, beautifully told and beautifully done.

Based on a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald, a man who loses his son in WWI designs a clock for a local train station that runs backwards - and in sync to Benjamin's life.  Much like the seats at the theater, I think.  They re-did our local theater at the mall, including stadium seating.  Long overdue in my opinion, but what happened to those well worn seats with protruding springs?  They were at the smaller theater we saw this almost three hour movie in, and I had that seat that was trying to de-age too.  My bad seat made the movie seem longer than it really was, but like a really good novel that follows a person's life from beginning to end, I almost didn't mind.  I was as lost in this movie as I am in a good book.

Verdict?  Not nauseous at all.  In fact, I felt pretty good when it was done.