Sunday, May 30, 2010

The Rape of Europa

I watched a documentary the other day, The Rape of Europa, which I know is not a book, but it is based on a book of the same name.

It's about the theft, destruction, and in many cases, eventual return and restoration, of the great works of art and architecture in Europe by the Nazis during WWII. The film follows the book in that it is chronological starting in the decades before WWII, when the rising Nazi party began to use their power to acquire great works of art as well as destroy the works of art Hitler deemed "degenerate." Then the film goes through different parts of Europe, chronicling the destruction and theft, mostly by the Nazis, in countries such as Poland, Austria, Russia, France, Germany, and Italy. While the main villains are the Nazis, Allied forces do cause destruction, especially in the bombing of Italy. The film also focuses on the heroic efforts of museum worker, art dealers, etc, who worked very hard to hide many of the precious works, as well as the efforts of the Monuments Men to restore and return many of the art and architecture.

I found this film so incredibly powerful. I am an art history major; art is my love and my passion and I cannot imagine the world without the great masterpieces of Europe, and that almost happened. There is one particular part of the film the was especially heartbreaking, and that is the portion focusing on Poland. The Nazis, Hitler mainly, hated Poland and considered them degenerate, so they set about invading and destroying their entire culture, including bombing the Royal Castle in Warsaw. The castle is a huge part of Polish history and cultural identity, and Hitler knew this and he destroyed the palace, completely blowing it up. The castle that stands there today is entirely a reconstruction. I actually cried while watching this portion, to think that someone tried to wipe out an entire culture and its art makes me so sad and angry.

Art is what makes us human and separates us from animals, gives us culture and identity, and to think that the world came so close to losing so much of its precious art... is absolutely terrifying.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Literary ADD

Since I've finished The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, I have had literary ADD. I also had an extremely intense paper to write, so I've been distracted needless to say.

The quarter is winding down, 2 weeks of class left until finals. Until then, I have to stay focused on school so I can just get done with it all. 

I did start three new books though, because of the literary ADD and not being able to choose what I want to read. So currently I'm reading Labyrinth by Kate Mosse, Saturday by Ian McEwan, and am working my way through The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake. I've had an uncorrected reader's copy of Labyrinth for about 5 years, from when I worked at Book Passage, and I am just now reading, but so far it's pretty intriguing. I always love a good historical epic. Ian McEwan is one of my favorite authors, and Saturday has been on my list for quite some time. 80 pages in and loving every minute of his elegant prose. As for William Blake, he is probably my favorite poet, but I've never read his complete works. I love his words and an enjoying with elegant, Romantic poetry.

That's all for now folks! Happy reading!
 

Friday, May 14, 2010

Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

Wow...been awhile. School chaos.

Like I said last time, I got sidetracked from How Soccer Explains the World by The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson. OH. MY. GOD. It was amazing. I could not stop reading it; literally took me 4 days to finish between work and school. I even turned down watching Avatar in HD to read.
I have not read a book that kept me so enthralled for so long. The last one I can remember is Twilight, and that was shit writing, I just liked the vampires.

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo is NOT shit Stephenie Meyer writing. It's perfect crime novel writing, at least for me. Keeps you hooked, no flowery, existential shit, and witty all at once.

The plot is quite complicated, so I leave it to my fave, Wikipedia to summarize:

Mikael Blomkvist, a middle-aged investigative journalist who writes for the magazine Millennium, loses a libel case against corrupt Swedish industrialist Hans-Erik Wennerström and is sentenced to three months in jail.

Before beginning his sentence, Blomkvist is hired by Henrik Vanger, the aged former CEO of a group of companies owned by a wealthy dynasty. Vanger wants him to solve the disappearance, thirty-seven years ago, of Vanger's great-niece when she was sixteen. Vanger is convinced that the girl was killed by someone in his family. Blomkvist is ultimately helped in his quest by Lisbeth Salander, a young punk who has been victimized or misunderstood by those in authority throughout her whole life, but who is also a brilliant computer hacker. The unlikely couple become a classic detective pair.

It is one of the best crime novels I have ever read. Please read it, and the other two books in the series, The Girl Who Played With Fire and The Girl Who Kicked a Hornets Nest . Lisbeth Salander (the titular girl) is such a bad ass. Not evil, just follows her own rules and is not one to be fucked with. Love her and her crazy, violent tendencies. She makes up for the sometime annoying-ness of the protagonist, Mikael Blomkvist. But this book is a definite summer, really all year round, read. Do it.