Friday 25 February 2011

Saturday 19 February 2011

Indulgence



I just wanted to say that I'm absolutely in love with Clipper tea (thank you Iris), especially the green tea with ginkgo enhanced blackcurrant flavor and the orange & coconut one. Tangy, fragrant yet subtle and soothing, they're basically heaven in a cup and that's saying a lot for someone who dreaded the sight of tea until six years ago when the pumpkin give me my very first "ok" cup of tea which would soon become part of our evening ritual. Who would have thought that I'd become such an avid drinker a few years down the road with no less than nineteen flavors in my tea box? I still can't stand black or plain tea but Clipper's has got it right on every level. Plus due to their amazing designs, these fairtrade teas look so cute in your kitchen! What more could a girl ask for?

Thursday 17 February 2011

Tuesday 15 February 2011

Faulks on Fiction


Two weeks ago the BBC started off their brand new literary season with Faulks on Fiction, a four-part documentary in which novelist Sebastian Faulks takes a journey through British literature based on the its characters instead of the usual authors or periods.

In the first two parts he focused on the Hero and the Lover features books such as Robinson Crusoe, Tom Jones, Vanity Fair, 1984, Pride and Prejudice, Wuthering Heights, Lady Chatterley’s Lover and many many more. By alternating bits from several glorious BBC adaptations and interviews with several renowned novelist and thinkers, Faulks tries to give us a provocative character-based evolution of the Classics while at the same time reminding us of what makes them an intricate part of the canon.

I was personally very excited when the BBC announced an entire season of literary documentaries, adaptations and review shows. I was almost peeing my pants with book anticipation, especially seeing as BBC book adaptations are one of my guilty pleasures: the drama, costumes, old-fashioned language and manners, simply divine.

The result: I’ve already bought several classic novels that I’m dying to (re)read (some day) and a couple of BBC adaptations to torment my sweet pea with like Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones, the four-part drama that started off my lavish love for literature and Tess of the d'Urbervilles, a mesmerizing adaptation and my sole reason for reading the novel, besides it being the main text of one of my favorite courses at the time: HEL aka History of English Literature. Enough said.

Next up: the Snob and the Villain, I can hardly wait.

Thursday 10 February 2011

Sunday 6 February 2011

Little Miss Moody

It’s been almost a month since I last posted anything. It’s not that I didn’t have anything to say but whenever I thought “I should really blog about this” I didn’t have the time and when I did have some time, I just didn’t feel like it hence my subsequent silence.

To me blogging is like reading, I have to be in the mood. On average I do read a lot but not every day. Some weeks I’ll devour several books and other weeks, I’ll barely read a chapter. This is why my blogging hiatus is usually accompanied by a reading hiatus. I started several books in January and usually lost interest after the first chapter because I didn’t feel like it. I wanted to read but I just couldn’t find the right books to suit my mood, yes I’m that fickle.

The books that I did manage to finish were Emma Donoghue’s Booker Prize nominated Room, which I personally thought was a sure fire winner seeing as it got rave reviews and tons of publicity so I started the novel with some pretty high expectations. The story is about Jack, a five-year-old boy who grows up in a room and isn’t aware of the outside world. His mom was kidnapped, impregnated and forced to spend the remainder of her life in that room by Old Nick. The tale is told by Jack which takes a while to get used to seeing as it’s a five-year-olds vocabulary but ultimately I really liked the book although I was surprised (spoiler alert) that they get out of the room halfway through the book. I was expecting that that would be the end but it’s just the beginning. Although it was a good book, it didn’t quite live up to my expectations.

The second book was Dave Eggers’ The Wild Things. I was very skeptical about this one because writing a book based on a movie that’s based on a children’s book seems a bit strange to me but I was in the mood for light entertainment. I personally love Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are and I’m still dying to see Spike Jonze’s adaptation but Egger’s version, although very good, just seemed obsolete. I just don’t get why he would write a book based on an existing story/book. Ok, he co-wrote the screenplay and thus had to elaborate on the original which is basically one long sentence, but write a book based on his own elaboration? If you don’t know the original, by all means give it a go.

What else? Well, one of the main reasons I haven’t felt like blogging is because Flanders Today has been keeping me on my toes and seeing as I spend a lot of time in front of my screen professionally, I tend to avoid it in my downtime. Besides my monthly column, there have been some other articles that were due last minute. Don’t get me wrong, I love it but if you get an assignment that is due in a couple of hours, the heat is on.

And then there’s my dear friend, Television, who’s been showering me with an abundance of quality fiction. I have become a slight addict the past few weeks but in my defense, there are some really good shows on. I’ve now finally started watching The Tudors: a period piece with loads of drama, sex, intrigue and violence, what more can a girl ask for? BBC 2 started airing the fourth season of Mad Men on a daily basis, enough said. I personally though this show was off to a slow start but trust me; it keeps on getting better and better. And finally, Boardwalk Empire, an utterly phenomenal show set in the prohibition era in the US starring the always great Steve Buscemi. Luscious sets, colorful characters, fantastic costumes, drama, you name it. It gives Mad Men a well deserved run for its money seeing as it’s simply sublime.

Besides writing a lot of articles and watching way too much TV, I’ve also spent a lot of time with my grandmother who hasn’t been doing too well lately. Seeing as I literally can’t imagine a world without her, I’m taking advantage of every moment. I know it sounds corny but we’re really close. We call each other every day, even when I’m on vacation, so the thought of losing her is simply unbearable to me yet becoming more real each day.

On a lighter note, my new vegetarian lifestyle is going really well. I also started doing pilates and yoga again so health wise everything is A-OK, except for my ear. I have a swollen eardrum, don’t ask me how I managed that, but the result is hearing your own heartbeat 24/7. Annoying, is just an understatement.

Last but not least, the Groene Waterman Prijs. On Friday this prize was awarded to Elias Khoury for his magnum opus, Gate of the Sun. The prize is award to a literary gem that has been overlooked by the mainstream media and his novel about the Palestinian struggles in 1948 is just that. We had a great ceremony at city hall and Khoury himself was there to accept the award. On Saturday he gave an interview in the Groene Waterman’s cozy basement and talked about his novel, Palestine and Egypt. It was really interesting and afterwards he signed some books, including mine. I’m intrigued by this novel but seeing as it’s a rather meaty topic, I’ll probably have to wait for the right mood to present itself.