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F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby

The Great GatsbyThe Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Every summer, either in the early months of June after the universities have let out their wards, or in the late months of August when the first wisps of an autumn breeze tumble through the crack in the windows, I find myself falling into the days of my youth. Every year, like clockwork, I would set myself down on my front porch and read a certain novel from start to finish.

To some, the Great Gatsby is nothing more than an addition to the curriculum of a lazy high school English class. To others, it was a novel that explored and defined the pomp and excess of the post-war generation. To me, the Great Gatsby will always be that lost summer, that self-contained unit in time where one suddenly discovers how out of place with their society they are, how confidences can be broken, and some friends become swept away with the first leaves of autumn.

Regardless of the place this book holds, or fails to hold, in your mind, memory or nostalgia, few could argue that F. Scott Fitzgerald was anything but a master storyteller, with a hold over the English language that few authors allow us to witness.

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George R. R. Martin – A Game of Thrones

A Game of Thrones (A Song of Ice and Fire, #1)A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin

Not only is A Game of Thrones one of the better novels of the past 10 years, but it also happens to be the first in an absolutely addictive series.

Based loosely on the British War of the Roses, A Game of Thrones tells a tale of warring houses, a murdered king, and the family that fights to restore order in the mythical kingdom of Westeros. Narrated over the shoulder of a handful of main characters, we’re given insight into the back stories of major players along with the tangled past of Westeros. It quickly becomes evident that not everything is as it seems and that everyone, big and small, has a part to play in the overall plot. By the end of the novel, what could have easily been straightforward story becomes something more, something special.

While fantasy is a sorely overused genre, Martin breaks free from the usual conventions and doesn’t bombard us with elves, parlour magic or any of that silliness. Instead, he focuses his tale on humans and how the decisions they make are more powerful and have longer lasting consequences than any spell could ever have.

As a note, the novel starts off slow, almost agonizingly so, but once you cross that hump (somewhere between pages 100 and 200) you’ll likely be hooked on Martin’s prose, characters and overarching stories.

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Looks like it will a good year, in reading at least

It’s late July and that dastardly summer heat wave is finally over, which means I can get back to being a human and acting like one, rather than hiding in the shade all day reading books. Enemy of the sun, pavement and all other things that give off heat (including the very air itself some days) my apartment became a four room cave of hell, with my only recluse fleeing to Second Cup, the mall or the movies. With my wallet groaning at all the added strain that iced coffee has caused it, I’ve been reduced to counting pennies and paying for film passes with exact change.

Yet, despite the reality that my body was never made to endure this sort of tropical weather we’ve been “enjoying” ( hey, we live in Canada, I only bought tickets for terrible winters, not summers too) it hasn’t been as soul destroying as I may have been making it out to be. I have, after all, managed to plow my way through over 22 books so far this years (more than my previous last year total) and show little sign of giving up. Calming down, sure, but there’s still five months of days left in this year and if I can even remotely keep up my pace I should be hitting some sort of personal milestones along the way.

Though, realistically, the summer always contributes more to my book knock-out tally than the rest of the year combined, largely due to the absence of evening classes and all the reading time they generally require. As exciting ancient texts, commentaries and ethnographic studies are, they aren’t as easy to burn through as all the trashy fiction, Stephen King and other nonsense that make up my usual fare, or entirely eligible for reading list tallies, since they, in effect, are part of other tallies issued by my classes. Competing tallies? Perhaps.

Regardless, it looks like it should be a good year, at least when it comes to reading. The weather, well that’s another beast altogether.