What I Am Reading ...
THERE IS NOTHING like losing oneself in the pages of a good book. From Anita Amirrezvani’s first novel, The Blood of Flowers (2007), a story about the place of women in 17th-century Iranian society, to Zhang Su Li’s first travel narrative, A Backpack and A Bit of Luck: Stories of a Traveller with No Sense of Direction (2007), there’s always something to savour and digest. Zhang is a traveller who doesn’t know what a map is. But her nose has served her well so far. Though the book’s back cover categorises it as travel writing, it is not really a travellogue per se, but a spiritual journey written with lots of humour, linguistic verve and a devil-may-care voice. What I like about this book is that it appeals to the human spirit’s sense of freedom and adventure. It is great fun to read!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjef1ino63h361e-kH292Xr2e3YksC67_QCbFIYX-TQL2CRudo0fH1VXZrIyH1UCwU6mRGdPmbwtPfOOAbAK2dC645vFNz_oQRUE9WcpW2GHMIu3GSpz50GCIVj2n1486Lq1rNGpw/s200/oystercatchers-susanflecther.jpg)
1. The Blood of Flowers (Little, Brown, 2007) / Anita Amirrezvani
3. Divisadero (Bloomsbury, 2007) / Michael Ondaatje
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUBUMq7gBkuZAC8hpu7blYFAsttVeVOIPhV6_Rf8Kp00OpgqAsXUaAPtLJj9C4lIREJlNJt_Xd4q4KJXQIfyIVEFF_IM5XuTdSiSrJQqRfAq6OavE3jppRWgRbZZXOaz8e4QDMPA/s200/divisadero-michaelondaatje.jpg)
Prizewinning Asian Fiction (Times Books International, 1991) / Leon Comber (ed.)
Nonfiction
1. Live and Learn (Harper Perennial, 2005) / Joan Didion
2. The Sailor in the Wardrobe (Fourth Estate, 2006) / Hugo Hamilton
3. Andalus: Unlocking the Secrets of Moorish Spain (Doubleday/Transworld, 2004) / Jason Webster
4. God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (published in the U.K. as God is Not Great: The Case Against Religion) (Twelve Books/Atlantic Books, 2007) / Christopher Hitchens
5. A Backpack and A Bit of Luck: Stories of a Traveller with No Sense of Direction (Marshall Cavendish, 2007) / Zhang Su Li
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home