Saturday, March 30, 2013

March 2013: Week Four

Books Bought:
  • Leaving Everything Most Loved (Jacqueline Winspear)
  • America's Musical Life: A History (Richard Crawford)

Books Read:
  • Me Talk Pretty One Day (David Sedaris)
  • Struggling to Define a Nation: American Music and the Twentieth Century (Charles Hiroshi Garrett)

This was a pretty good week. I preordered Leaving Everything Most Loved a couple of months ago, so I didn't really buy it this week. Back in December, I wrote about Jacqueline Winspear's Maisie Dobbs series - mysteries solved by a female detective during the 1920s-1930s. The early books dealt with the aftermath of WWI; the most recent ones cover the changes leading up to WWII. I'm completely hooked, so I preordered the latest one, but I'm not going to let myself read it until I can see the light at the end of the tunnel...I have far too many papers to write, and I know I'll be unable to exercise any sort of self-control with this book. The blurb on the book jacket says that Leaving Everything Most Loved "marks a pivotal moment in this remarkable series," so I'm intrigued. 

The book I actually did spend money on this week was Richard Crawford's America's Musical Life. Richard Crawford is part of the tradition of musicologists who have written histories of American music that include popular and folk music, but the reason I first heard his name was back in my band literature class - this book is the only chronology of American music to include two full chapters on band history. At the band conference I was at last week, more than one band director mentioned Richard Crawford to me when they heard I was a musicology student, and I had a great talk with my old band director from Baylor about his experiences in Dr. Crawford's classes at the University of Michigan - he was there when Crawford was writing this book - so I decided that I really needed to own it. I plan to read it this summer - it will tie into my thesis research quite nicely!

David Sedaris's Me Talk Pretty One Day is another book I have frequently heard mentioned over the past few years, but have never read. I checked it out from the library and loved it - the book is a memoir told in short essays, and they are all hilarious, although I especially enjoyed the second half of the book as it takes place in Paris, one of my favorite settings. I read about half of the book on my conference trip last week; it's the perfect book to pick up when you have twenty minutes or so to fill.

Struggling to Define a Nation was the second book I read for my Music in the US II class. Garrett examines some of the less-talked-about genres that were popular at the beginning of the twentieth century, and all of them relate in some way to cultural conflict. This is an unconventional way of looking at the history of American music, and I appreciated the way it opened my mind not only to the variety of music that makes up our history, but to the idea that the diversity we celebrate in our music is sometimes difficult to discuss due to the contestation out of which much of the music grew. 

I'm getting pretty deeply buried in three research papers, so I foresee less reading in the month of April - almost all of my free time is being devoted to researching and writing!

Sunday, March 24, 2013

March 2013: Week Two and Three

Books Bought:
  • The Waste Land and Other Poems (T. S. Eliot)
  • Leaves of Grass (Walt Whitman)
  • Johannes Brahms (Jan Swafford)

Books Read:
  • Ecomusicology: Rock, Folk, and the Environment (Mark Pedelty)
  • Band of Sisters: U.S. Women's Military Bands during World War II (Jill Sullivan)
  • The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Stephen Chbosky)


Mark Pedelty's Ecomusicology: Rock, Folk, and the Environment is such an interesting and inspiring read! Pedelty is an anthropologist who learned to play an instrument and formed a band in order to study musical environmental activism as a participant-observer. In this book (part ethnography, part history) he explores music's ability to promote sustainability, moving from a global to a national to a regional to a local viewpoint. It's really interesting to read about the ways music can affect communities, especially on the local level (this is where the ethnographic viewpoint comes in). This book is super accessible - don't let the title fool you; this is not a book for musicologists (or even musicians) only!

I interlibrary-loaned Band of Sisters when I thought I was going to be writing a paper on a similar topic (women in college bands in WWII), but I decided to read the book even after I changed my topic. The book is a quick read and quite fascinating - I found the writing quite dry, but the information itself is still interesting. Sullivan includes a good amount of oral history, and the thing that stands out the most about this book is how much playing in a band meant to these women - obviously, they are all quite old now, but many still say it was the greatest time of their lives.

I watched The Perks of Being a Wallflower with some friends over spring break and realized that I remembered very little about the book (I read it in high school). So I checked the book out from the library and reread it in a couple of days. I appreciated it more than I did in high school - in high school I related to the "wallflower" part, but not much else (which is probably why I didn't remember much), although I do remember that several friends quoted "and in that moment I swear we were infinite" all over the place (which I think was kind of a hipster thing). I liked that the movie acknowledged the popularity of that line by moving it to the very end, instead of pretty early on as it is in the book. I think the movie represented the book really well, and I'm glad it inspired me to reread the book. 

Friday, March 8, 2013

March 2013: Week One

I'm trying a new format this month because I always want to talk about every book I read, and that makes my posts turn out reeeeally long. I usually only finish 1-2 books per week, so I hope this is more effective!

Books Bought:

  • Revolutionary Road (Richard Yates)

Books Read:

  • My Ideal Bookshelf (Thessaly La Force and Jane Mount)
  • The Color Purple (Alice Walker)

My Ideal Bookshelf is described as a coffee table book, but I read it cover to cover. The book features about 100 famous (or accomplished) people talking about books and includes an illustration of what they would put on their "ideal bookshelf" - favorite books, books that are important to their careers, etc. I love reading books about books - I checked this one out from the library, and I didn't love it enough that I would want to own it, but it was entertaining to see which books were most often selected: some were not surprising (Lolita, To Kill a Mockingbird, Catch-22, The Catcher in the Rye, anything by F. Scott Fitzgerald or Flannery O'Connor) and some that I'd never heard of (Elizabeth Bishop's poems are very popular). Mainly, this book reminded me how many books there are out there that I just have to read. (So when I saw Revolutionary Road, which was included on two or three ideal bookshelves, for $4 on Amazon, I bought it!) 

My favorite quotation from the book came from Malcolm Gladwell, and it completely summed up my love affair with buying books (and could also easily be hash-tagged "musicology problems"): 
"I've probably acquired 150 books just for this project. I haven't read all of them, and I won't. Some of them I'll just look at. But that's the fun part. It's an excuse to go on Amazon. The problem is, of course, that eventually you have to stop yourself. Otherwise you'll collect books forever. But these books are markers for ideas that I'm interested in. That's why it's so important to have physical books. When I see my bookshelf expanding, it gives me the illusion that my brain is expanding, too."

I adored The Color Purple and will definitely be adding it to my list of favorite books. It includes some of the best character development I've ever seen in such a relatively short novel (actually - I'm not really sure how short it is because I read it on my Kindle...it felt short). I believe part of the reason I enjoyed The Color Purple so much because I really didn't know anything about it beforehand, other than it won a Pulitzer Prize at some point. I think it's be incredibly tempting to throw one of a handful of different labels on this novel (and one look at the reviews on Amazon confirmed this), but the beauty of the book is that it fits into so many categories. I read this book in less than 24 hours and highly recommend it to pretty much anyone. 

Sunday, March 3, 2013

High School Revisited

I was inspired by my friend Paige to reflect on high school...but from a reader's point of view. Here is the tale of the books I read for high school English classes, told through a series of lists (each list is in chronological order):

Books I enjoyed in high school and will certainly reread: 
  1. Le Morte d'Arthur (Thomas Malory)
  2. To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee)
  3. The Count of Monte Cristo (Alexandre Dumas)
  4. Flowers for Algernon (Daniel Keyes)
  5. The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald)
  6. The Devil in the White City (Erik Lawson)
  7. The Sparrow (Mary Doria Russell)
  8. The Poisonwood Bible (Barbara Kingsolver)
  9. Candide (Voltaire)
  10. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead (Tom Stoppard)

Books I wasn't quite sure about in high school and will reread one day:
  1. A Separate Peace (John Knowles)
  2. Cold Sassy Tree (Olive Ann Burns)
  3. The Awakening (Kate Chopin)
  4. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (James Joyce)
  5. A Yellow Raft in Blue Water (Michael Dorris)

Books I disliked in high school, but plan to reread: 
  1. All Quiet on the Western Front (Erich Maria Remarque)
  2. The Scarlet Letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne)
  3. The Sound and the Fury (William Faulkner)
  4. Of Mice and Men (John Steinbeck)
  5. The Things They Carried (Tim O'Brien)

Books I hated in high school and don't plan to ever reread, even though I probably should:
  1. Their Eyes Were Watching God (Zora Neale Hurston)
  2. Invisible Man (Ralph Ellison)
  3. Farenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
  4. Grendel (John Gardner)
  5. Heart of Darkness (Joseph Conrad)

My most loved book from high school: A Prayer for Owen Meany (John Irving)
My most hated book from high school: A Farewell to Arms (Ernest Hemingway)

If you read my last post, you already know how I feel about A Prayer for Owen Meany. So let me just say that I have a real problem with A Farewell to Arms. Which is quite sad, really, because I've been told that I would enjoy other Hemingway books. But nope, you missed your chance, Mr. Hemingway, for writing the lousiest ending in the history of literary lousy endings. It's the type of ending I would expect from a Jodi Picoult or Nicholas Sparks novel. If someone can formulate a really convincing argument, maybe I'll move this book up to the "plan to reread" list, but that has yet to happen. 

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

February 2013

Books Bought:

  • Nineteenth Century Music (Carl Dahlhaus)
  • A Composer's Insight: Thoughts, Analysis, and Commentary on Contemporary Masterpieces for Wind Band: Volume 2 (ed. Timothy Salzman)
  • The Oxford History of Western Music (Richard Taruskin)
  • Music and the Skillful Listener: American Women Compose the Natural World (Denise Von Glahn)


Books Read:

  • In One Person (John Irving)
  • An Available Man (Hilma Wolitzer)
  • Looking for Alaska (John Green)
  • This One is Mine (Maria Semple)
  • The Book of Music and Nature (Rothernberg and Ulvaeus)
  • Frontier Figures: American Music and the Mythology of the American West (Beth E. Levy)


How you can tell that February is a busy time of the semester for a musicologist: I only bought books related to my classes and my thesis, and I only read four books for fun this whole month.

Things you need to know about the books I bought:

  1. A Composer's Insight is really neat because it includes basically everything you would need to know to have a solid background about a handful of composers and the pieces they write for band...including David Maslanka. 
  2. The Oxford History of Western Music is five volumes and 3,586 pages. It is every musicologist's dream to read it cover to cover (ok, maybe not every musicologist - I might be making that up. But these guys did it.) Richard Taruskin's writing style is wonderful. How did I afford this on a graduate student budget, you may ask...here's how: for every birthday/Christmas, my grandparents send me an amazon.com gift card. I always spend them on books. This year I just combined birthday and Christmas...totally worth it.
  3. Dr. Von Glahn is teaching my musicology seminar this semester on music and nature. We're going to read her brand new book! (In this case, by "bought," I actually mean preordered.)

Things you need to know about the books I read:
  1. I'm not sure how I missed reading Looking for Alaska in high school, but I did. I decided to remedy that when my sister showed me the book over break, and I was pleasantly surprised...the book is a nice mixture of A Separate Piece and Perks of Being a Wallflower.
  2. This One is Mine is nowhere near as good as Where'd You Go, Bernadette (see last month). Overall, I was disappointed.
  3. Frontier Figures is one of the best class-assigned books I've ever read. If you are even remotely interested in American music, read this book. It's completely fascinating and almost reads like a novel. And it's not just me saying this - it's not even just musicologists! One of my favorite oboists is in the class with me, and she will tell you the same thing. (Confession: as I am writing this, I haven't actually finished the book...but the last 25 pages are Thursday's assignment, so I'll still have finished the book in February.)

And finally - time to talk about In One Person. If you have ever discussed reading with me, you probably know that John Irving's A Prayer for Owen Meany is one of my all-time favorite books. However, the only other book by Irving that I've read (I think I talked about it on this blog a long time ago) wasn't one I particularly enjoyed, so I was intrigued when I heard that his newest book was the first since Owen Meany to be written in first person. I've had a few weeks now to digest my reactions to In One Person, and I have to conclude that it is probably going to become one of my favorite books if it holds up when the first re-reading comes around. 

The book is narrated by Billy and covers almost his whole life. Billy is bisexual (although for the first chunk of his life he is just confused), and Irving has created a character who I think is impossible to fail to empathize with. Aspects of the plot are very similar to Owen Meany (and many of Irving's other novels) - we've got a narrator whose biological father is out of the picture and a private school for boys in a New England, pre-Vietnam setting, for one thing. More importantly, the second half of this book covers the AIDS epidemic, something we rarely hear about, in the same deftly poignant way that Owen Meany tackles the Vietnam War. 

While I recommend Owen Meany to almost everyone I meet, I'm hesitant to do the same with In One Person - I'm just not quite sure why. Yes, the topic is one that some people might not feel comfortable with, but in my eyes, that's more reason to read this book. (Also, what is the point of reading literature that doesn't make you uncomfortable?) However, I think it's the type of book that readers need to discover for themselves, if that makes any sense. I think two types of people will appreciate this book: people who personally identify with Billy (which clearly won't be just bisexuals) and people who read enough to tackle the deeper meaning behind the topics introduced in this book - readers who recognize when a book should be read slowly and thoughtfully and are patient enough to do so. I read this book over a span of two weeks, which is a fairly long time when I am completely absorbed in a book...I wouldn't recommend reading more than a chapter in one sitting. 

That's all I have for this month - happy reading!

Sunday, January 27, 2013

January 2013

Books Bought:
  • Howard's End (E. M. Forster)
  • Adventures of an American Composer (Michael Colgrass)
  • Out of Oz (Gregory Maguire)
  • Shadows in the Field: New Perspectives for Fieldwork in Ethnomusicology (Barz and Cooley, eds.)
  • Fierce Style: How to be Your Most Fabulous Self (Christian Siriano) 

Books Read:
  • The Mapping of Love and Death (Jacqueline Winspear)
  • Suffering Succotash: A Picky Eater's Quest to Understand Why We Hate the Foods We Hate (Stephanie V. Lucianovic)
  • Half a Life (Darin Strauss)
  • The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World (R. Murray Schafer)
  • The Uncoupling (Meg Wolitzer)
  • Where'd You Go, Bernadette (Maria Semple)
  • Why We Broke Up (Daniel Handler and Maira Kalman)
  • I've Got Your Number (Sophie Kinsella)
  • The Wings of Merlin (T. A. Barron)

First of all, Stephanie Lucianovic's Suffering Succotash is basically about me. That's what makes this such a good read - picky eaters will be thrilled to read about themselves, and non-picky eaters probably know at least one picky eater, so they'll identify, too. It was really nice to find out that I'm not really strange at all by picky eating standards - in fact, like the author, I'm questioning whether I legitimately am a picky eater after all. The best line from the end of the book - read it and remember it next time you feel tempted to criticize or poke fun at a picky eater:
"The thing of it is, adult picky eaters are more common than I imagined. . . . We get what it's like to dread eating at friends' houses or at strange restaurants. We get why it's simply not possible to 'just try' a bite of this or that and how hard that is to explain to people who don't get it. . . . But most of all, we get that it's not a personality defect that makes us picky; it's just who we are. And whatever the cause, it's not our fault or choice."  (Lucianovic 219)
I definitely recommend this book - it's a quick, highly entertaining read that opens your mind to the way our mouths and brains interact!

Half a Life, a memoir by Darin Strauss, is the other book I wanted to briefly mention before moving on to my two favorite reads of the month. Strauss hit a girl with his car when he was a senior in high school; her death changes the way he lives his life. This memoir seems like it was therapeutical for him, and it's a very worthwhile read. I read this book because Nick Hornby recommended it in More Baths, Less Talking (again, Nick Hornby's writings are what inspired me to write about what I read).

And now...

The best book I read this month: Where'd You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple.
Coincidentally, I was checking out Stephanie Lucianovic's blog after finishing Suffering Succotash and discovered her review of this book - she also loved it. This book is so funny, but also incredibly thoughtful. Semple was a writer for Arrested Development, and based on the three or four episodes I've seen, I can totally see that in this book. Bernadette is a people-phobic ex-architect who hates driving, so I kind of identified with her in some ways. Also, they go to Antarctica. I know for a fact I've never read another book where an average (or not-so-average) American family goes on vacation to Antarctica - doesn't that alone pique your interest? This was one of those books that I couldn't put down - I read it in less than 24 hours! I can't say enough how much I recommend this book.


The second best book I read this month: Why We Broke Up by Daniel Handler, illustrated by Maira Kalman. (NB: Daniel Handler is the author of A Series of Unfortunate Events under the name Lemony Snicket)
Ok, I wasn't expecting to read another book that I fell in love with this month, but it turns out that the very next book I read was just perfect. First of all - Maira Kalman's illustrations are BEAUTIFUL. Second of all, I loved the writing style - long, descriptive, stream-of-conscious sentences that if any of my students wrote, I would mark as incorrect, but Handler's are the most beautifully constructed run-ons I've ever seen. An example:
"I never took you to Leopardi's, which is my first-favorite coffee place, the best one, a crumbling Italian palace with bright red walls unpeeling their paint and photographs hung crooked of dark-skinned men with their hair in great slick stylish curves and the kindhearted smirks they give to their mistresses and an espresso machine like a shiny mad-scientist castle, steaming and gleaming and spouts everywhere curving down and out in a writhing metallic next underneath a stern brass eagle perched on top like it's looking for prey." (Handler 177).  
Love it! You can SEE the coffee shop. I checked out some reviews on Amazon after finishing this book and was surprised at amount of the negative reviews. Some hated the writing style, most hated the narrator, Min. I imagine those that couldn't identify with her were more like the average high school student than Min, who is clearly not. Anyway, the point is, this is a wonderful book and illustrates perfectly why it is sometimes still worthwhile to read "young adult" books - you never know what you might be missing.

Whenever I fall in love with a book, I just want to keep it forever. Unfortunately, both this book and Where'd You Go Bernadette belong to the Leon County Libraries, so they are already no longer in my possession. :(

Good month for reading!

Monday, December 31, 2012

December 2012 - Part Two

Books Bought:
  • 21 Days to Glory: The Official Team Sky Book of the 2012 Tour de France
  • The Ninth: Beethoven and the World in 1824 (Harvey Sachs)
  • Mozart: The Early Years, 1756-1781 (Stanley Sadie)
  • From the Clarinet d'Amour to the Contra Bass: A History of Large Size Clarinets, 1740-1860 (Albert R. Rice)
  • An Incomplete Revenge (Jacqueline Winspear)
  • Among the Mad (Winspear)
  • A Passage to India (E. M. Forster)
  • The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World (R. Murray Schafer)
  • The Book of Music & Nature (David Rothenberg and Marta Ulvaeus, eds.)
  • Ecomusicology: Rock, Folk, and the Environment (Mark Pedelty)
  • Struggling to Define a Nation: American Music and the Twentieth Century (Charles Hiroshi Garrett)
  • Frontier Figures: American Music and the Mythology of the American West (Beth E. Levy)

Books Received:
  • Suffering Succotash: A Picky Eater's Quest to Understand Why We Hate the Foods We Hate (Stephanie V. W. Lucianovie)
  • Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking (Susan Cain)
  • Tim Gunn's Fashion Bible (Tim Gunn with Ada Calhoun) 
  • Composition in Retrospect (John Cage)

Books Read:
  • The Hobbit (J. R. R. Tolkien)
  • A Great and Terrible Beauty (Libba Bray)
  • Rebel Angels (Bray)
  • The Sweet Far Thing (Bray)
  • An Incomplete Revenge (Jacqueline Winspear)
  • Among the Mad (Winspear)
  • 21 Days to Glory: The Official Team Sky Book of the 2012 Tour de France
  • From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (E. L. Konigsburg)
  • Last Night at Chateau Marmont (Lauren Weisberger)
  • Winds of Change II: The New Millennium (Frank L. Battisti) 

Many of the titles on these lists remind me of a joke one of my musicology friends made when we got back from the AMS/SEM/SMT conference - "Academic Allure: The Role of Colons in Constructing Evocative Academic Titles." It's so true.

I acquired a lot of books this month because I went back to Texas and had access to the wonderful HPB in Rice Village. That's where the three music books near the top of the list came from - my favorite was the book about large size clarinets. I also bought (and read) the fifth and sixth Maisie Dobbs books and the official Team Sky book about Bradley Wiggins' win at the 2012 Tour de France. I actually found A Passage to India at one of the used book stores in Tallahassee - for $2.00! Maybe I misjudged that store when I moved here. The last five are textbooks for two of my classes this semester (Music in the US and a seminar on music and nature) - all look fantastic!


I received four books for Christmas, and I'm excited about all of them. The first two are from my parents - I was a little concerned that they were trying to point out my personality flaws, but both of these books look fascinating. I started reading Suffering Succotash and am already feeling better about being a picky eater! My brother got Tim Gunn's Fashion Bible for me - basically a fashion history book. Erik's sister Laura got me the John Cage book, which will tie in quite nicely with my music and nature seminar this semester. I always complain about not getting any books for Christmas, and everyone always says it's too difficult to choose books for me, so I was pleasantly surprised this year. 

Rereading The Hobbit was probably the highlight of my reading over the break. I think I enjoy that book more every time I read it. I haven't seen the film yet, but if you have and have NOT read the book yet, definitely try to pick it up! Another childhood favorite I revisited was From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. This book still makes me wish that I could run away to live in a museum! My musicological read over the break was Frank Battisti's Winds of Change II: The New Millennium. Although not written by a musicologist, this was a great overview of information I need to be knowledgeable about going into my thesis! The best thing I discovered reading this book: there exists a concerto for bass clarinet and wind ensemble that is inspired by Balinese gamelan (so, basically, everything I like). 

Christmas break - definitely a great time for acquiring and reading books!