May, 8 2023
THOUGHTS
• I wanted to see the Coronation of King Charles III. I know that opinions are mixed about the monarchy. Nonetheless, I was a toddler last time a monarchy was crowned in the UK and this is a very historic occasion, a red-letter day not just in the history of Great Britain and its monarchy but, in my opinion, for the whole world -- and I might not live to see the next one. What is the coronation ceremony? What does it entail? What does it look like? We recorded it and I finally sat down last night after the kids left to watch it. It was pageantry at its peak, although I really only watched the coronation itself. The ceremony was beautiful, very dignified, long but simple. I felt sorry for most of the guests in the Abbey who saw nothing from where they were seated; at least they could set their DVRs and watch it when they got home. Westminster Abby is really a lousy venue for a show. I'm sorry that it rained on King Charles parade but I truly hope that it was everything he was hoping that it would be.
ON STAGE
• Last show of the season at Gamm Theatre and The Children by Lucy Kirkwood was a real disappointment. It was flat, it dragged and I felt like I was being lectured. Even the actors were not at the top of their game. Yes, there were funny bits but when the underpinnings are a nuclear melt down at a power plant plant, you know it is not a comedy. The season ended with a thud!
However, next season has much promise; it's all Tony and/or Pulitzer winners -- except for Twelfth Night. We bought our subscription before the season was even announced and I am really looking forward to it.
THIS WEEK'S READS
Buddy Read
Partners in Crime by Agatha Christie
Thirteen short story parodies of other detective character of the early 20th century. The problem is that all the details in the story that refer to the other detective are lost on me and I feel like I'm getting only half of what AC has put out there for me to enjoy. I can't say, "Oh, my isn't she a clever boots" because I don't get the joke. So, I'm ditching the schedule and I'm going to finish the the stories before the book is due back at the library on Thursday.
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin
I have been waiting for this one since mid-February. It was the title that hooked me. An author I like, quoting a bit of doggerel that has been rattling around in my head since I memorized it in 5th grade, the only scrap of all the stuff I was forced to memorize that is still there -- and my introduction to existentialism. So, hell yeah, of course I am going to read the book!
I'm glad I did. It is another story about friendships and relationship (aren't they all) full of its share of users, losers and abusers but without being toxic. It's complicated but it is sympathetic. It is also well written. She described a 1980s game show host: "his hair had the color and rigidity of onyx." One sentence and I had this minor character fully formed complete with revolving flashes of some of the more popular game show hosts. If weren't listening. I probably would have underlined a whole lot more.
Fully four stars for this one for not giving us a trite story of love and romance.
Five Little Pigs by Agatha Christie (Christie Centenary Read)
Is it me or has there been a seismic shift in her writing? This was such a different story. It felt much darker and even Poroit wasn't annoying. I wasn't even close to guessing whodunit. I will read this again towards the end of the month.
Four stars
Razzmatazz by Christopher Moore (an Audible Daily Deal)
The book comes with a trigger warning. Moore is definitely not for everyone but I enjoy his Elizabethan sense of humor and his over the top style. Still he has a way with words and he is laugh out loud funny without being juvenile. There is always a deeper, richer story underneath the bawdy surface.
Not quite 4 stars
Witches Abroad by Terry Pratchett
I've escaped once more to DiscWorld. I'm almost finished with this one so I will include it with this week's roundup. Not as good as Equal Rites but still most enjoyable. I do miss Celia Imrie as narrator. I am not sure that I like the new narrations. I can live without the fairy-dust music announcing Bill Nighy reading of the footnote. "We're the kind [of godmothers] that give people what they know they really need not what they think they ought to want."
3.75 stars
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