Musings of a South African Bookworm

sharing my love of books with a special focus on SA literature

The Mists of Avalon – Marion Zimmer Bradley

guide_mistsofavalon

This review was submitted by Patricia Meredith, thanks Pat!

There are as many books that “re-write” the story of Camelot and take a “new spin” on Arthurian legend as there are fish in the sea. “The Mists of Avalon” however, is a different retelling of the legend; the focus of the tale is shifted, from the Christian male perspective, to that of the old religion led by women and centered in the Isle of Avalon.

The tale is told from the points of view of Morgaine, (Morgana Le Fey), Priestess of Avalon and Gwenhwyfar, (Gwynivere),princess and future queen of Camelot.

Morgana Le Fey is normally portrayed as the evil antagonist to Arthur and the round table. Here she is Morgaine, a Druid High Priestess, who is struggling to keep her dying religion alive against the growth of Christianity. She struggles with her dual roles as wise-woman and priestess, sister, mother, lover and wife in a growing Christian society.

Gwenhyfar is not the perfect yet tragic heroine we all know, but a person with insecurities and neurotic tendencies. Her religious fanaticism is accompanied by her doubts of God and her insecurities as a woman. At first reading, Gwenhyfar is quite a disagreeable character but one realizes that she is in truth just as complex as Morgaine and that she is actually a woman of the times.The reader also views other well-known female characters from a different vantage point, including Igraine, Morgaine’s and Arthur’s mother.

This novel has often been criticized as being feminist and anti-Christian (as if they go hand in hand!) when in truth the novel portrays a time of extreme upheaval when Christianity was settling into England and struggling for dominance over the goddess/female-centered Druidic religion. One must remember that Bradley is not portraying the Christianity of today, but as it existed during the age of the inquisition and when women were being burned at the stake for their herbal lore. As Morgaine realizes; “I came to see that my quarrel was never with the Christ, but with his foolish and narrow priests who mistook their narrowness for his.”

King Arthur is still the noble, ahead-of-his-time man we always loved but it is not Guinevere or her affair that destroys him, instead he is a man destroyed by the small-mindedness of humankind (both men and women).

I really loved this story but did feel at times that Ms. Bradley bit off a bit more than she could chew with the large scope of what she was attempting. However all in all it gave me a perspective on the Arthurian legend that will stay with me forever and I found it to be a mystical and magical read.

Pat, I have to agree with you, I have also read this book and found it to be a fascinating and absorbing read.

No Comments »

So far so good

So, we have been up and running for two weeks and what a great response we have had. Thank you to you all who come and visit us here at The book Club Blog and for those of you who comment and submit reviews. Its great to have you on board!

Some news…

All the books that are reviewed on the site are linked to Kalahari which makes it easier for you to purchase if you are interested in the book. Just click on the book cover and away you go.

We are in the process of setting up the online bookshop and will be letting you all know how it will work once it is ready to go. Please leave a comment if you are interested in selling your books via us. This will only be available for South African buyers and sellers unless otherwise stated by the seller.

We are also in search of authors to interview so if any of our readers know of any, that would like to be contacted to appear on this site, again, please leave a comment.

And on that note, I leave you with the words of Sherri Chasin Calvo (dont worry I have never heard of her either):  If you have never said “Excuse me” to a parking meter or bashed your shins on a fireplug, you are probably wasting too much valuable reading time.

2 Comments »

Its a Magical World

The beginning of Spring means the sunshine and flowers come out to play. Not quite Summer so the intense heat has not hit just yet, which means its the perfect time to indulge in some light hearted reading.

Reading which reminds us why we are alive and brings smiles and giggles to the face. Reading which relates to that which is true. Reading for pure pleasure’s sake. Its the lighter side of life as we know it, though some of the realities of the less lighter side come out too.

So, to celebrate Spring, I present to you, our loyal readers, The Best Cartoon Books, taken from the library of Imsonotablogger:

CALVIN AND HOBBES!

calvinThis is one of my favourite strips by Bill Waterson. And if we can imagine dancing to classical music at 78rpm at 1 in the morning, then that should be sure enough to bring a smile to our faces!

Here is a list of the books that I own and have read and can vouch for each of them bringing something magical to your day. You know that feeling of, ‘Just don’t have the energy to do anything’ well, this certainly perks up the spirit and sends those frown lines on a bit of a holiday.

Yukon Ho!

Sunday Pages 1985 -1995

The Calvin and Hobbes 10th Anniversary Book

Its a Magical World

The Days are Just Packed

Homicidal Psycho Jungle Cat

The Indispensable Calvin and Hobbes

the Essential Calvin and Hobbes

the Authoritative Calvin and Hobbes

Take your pick and Happy Reading!

1 Comment »

Jitterbug Perfume – Tom Robbins

jitterbug perfume

Jitterbug Perfume by Tom Robbins is one of my favourite novels of all time.It is a book I go back to often. It is like my very own ‘Happy Place’ in the world of books.

Jitterbug Perfume is an epic. Which is to say, it begins in the forests of ancient Bohemia and doesn’t conclude until nine o clock tonight (Paris time). It is a saga as well. A saga must have a hero and the hero of this one is a janitor with a missing bottle. The bottle is blue, very, very old and embossed with the image of a goat-horned god. If the liquid in the bottle actually is the secret essence of the universe, as some folks seem to think, it had better be discovered soon because it is leaking and there is only a drop or two left. …’It sparkles with original insights, wild ideas, erotic juices, prose poems, extraordinary characters, sermonettes, surprises and sacred monkey-shines’.

This book has everything a book needs, it is original, it brings both the fantastic and the reality to the reader and the words are brimming with wit. It has love and relationships at its heart, with a shot of religion, eternal life, and death thrown in to make you think. And wonder.

An exerpt:

‘The beet is the most intense of vegetables. The radish, admittedly, is more feverish, but the fire of the readish is a cold fire, the fire of discontent not of passion. Tomatoes are lusty enough, yet there runs through tomatoes an undercurrent of frivolity. Beets are deadly serious’

‘The highest function of love is that it makes the loved one a unique and irreplaceable being. Still, lovers quarrel. Frequentely, they quarrel simply to recharge the air between them, to sharpen the aliveness of their relationship. To precipitate such a  quarrel, the sweaty kimono of sexual jealousy is usually dragged out of the hamper, although almost any excuse will do. Only rarely is the spat rooted in the beet-deep soil of serious issue, but when it is, a special sadness attends it, for the mind is slower to heal than the heart, and such quarrels can doom a union, even one that has prospered for a very long time.’

This book can be rather philosophical but I believe that it gets the juices flowing, the mind thinking, agreeing and disagreeing. The ride is a fantastic one and I couldn’t recommend any other book more highly.

1 Comment »

Welcome!

First up, thank you all for your comments and warm welcome, we feel all tingly inside as the excitement begins to grow.

There has been a great response to the online bookclub and this is how it will work.

In order to join you need to submit a review.

We have a submit review tag at the top of our home page, please head along there with the review that you would like to see here. It will be sent through to us, and we will then publish your post.

We do not have any ‘banned’ books but we will decide wether we think the book that you are reviewing is right for this blog space. We are looking for all genres and are hoping to have a wide variety of books ranging from chick lit to murder mysteries, poetry to philosophy, recipes to religion. There is no hard and fast rule as this is meant to be a community and as we all know, any community has diversity, which is what we would like to portray at this book club. Saying that, we are not looking for sleaze:-)

So, pour yourself a glass of vino/cup of coffee/mug of tea, haul out those chocolate biscuits and put finger to keyboard and get reviewing.

(We are also here to help if you need to purchase a book as a gift and require some help in deciding what to buy. Both Shayne and I are well read and can put that knowledge to the test! If we are unable to help, we can ask our readers for their opinion. Gift sorted!)

Please note that we are also hoping to have a ‘second hand bookshop’ within this blog which will allow you to purchase books at a fraction of the cost compared to an IRL bookshop.

So get those reviews in and let’s get this show on the road!

2 Comments »