What I'm Reading (and More): Quarantine Edition

Well, folks…we’re all hunkered down, now officially. I hope everyone is staying well. It’s also been a while since I did one of these posts, so it seemed like a good time. Feel free to share your own updates in the comments!

Reading

Silence

Finally read Silence by Shūsaku Endō! It is not a book one enjoys, but I did appreciate the challenge of deciphering the message (or losing my voice attempting to). You can watch the video review here.

TL;DR version: The book is gut-wrenching and, as I put it to another reader, “psychologically horrifying.” The writing style is masterful, from the use of silence as a motif to the mix of tenses/perspectives which create distance between the reader and the protagonist. I feel the surface message is unbiblical, but I also believe there is a second, more nuanced way to read it, where rather than view it strictly from Rodrigues’s eyes, you view the sequence of events holistically and see his flawed thinking. This gives the novel a level of depth that makes it worthwhile, especially for Christians.

What next?

I ought to read Yōko Ogawa’s The Memory Police, because I have it on ebook from the library for eight days. However, Silence was so emotionally draining, I’m thinking I’ll take a break from fiction. I’ll probably read one of my exploration nonfiction books, like The Lost City of Z.

Watching

Gaslight

The other day I watched Gaslight (1944) with my family. This is an Ingrid Bergman film, about a young woman who marries a handsome stranger and bad things happen (ya don’t say?).

It is a verrryyy slow film. I couldn’t help wishing Alfred Hitchcock had directed it. On the other hand, it has a level of artistic restraint that I did appreciate and which Hitchcock never seems to be able to leverage. So, overall, it was an ok film. Charles Boyer’s character made me want to punch the screen, but Ingrid excels in this genre and made me stick it out. Also on the plus side, the plot reminded me of Charlotte Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper.” Fortunately (?), Gaslight is not nearly as bloodcurdling as that short story.

Listening

I started my personal blog back up, so have been journalling there about the shutdown, plus music recommendations and funny videos.

I’ll share this song now—“Vancouver Waves” by August and After, a calming song for times like this.

Listen on YouTube

Comments

5 responses to “What I'm Reading (and More): Quarantine Edition”

  1. Mudpuddle Avatar
    Mudpuddle

    bertie wooster as i live and breathe! have to catch with him one of these days and see what he’s been up to (or Jeeves)…

    Liked by 1 person

  2. liviepearl Avatar
    liviepearl

    A couple scary things! Well, I guess Gaslight could’ve been scarier, I was scared and bored by that movie.

    I only have had the stomach for light stuff even before all this happened.

    Have you seen Frank James 16 Personality Types and Enneagram Types during Quarantine? They are hilarious.

    Like

    1. I have not, but I’ll look that up! I hoard funny videos for times like this 😀

      Like

  3. Mudpuddle Avatar
    Mudpuddle

    this is off topic, but i wanted to share… just saw the funniest movie i think i’ve ever seen: Detective School Dropouts… i don’t know where Mrs. M found it but it was truly hilarious…

    Like

    1. Oooh I’ll look it up, thanks for the recommendation! 🙂

      Like

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