All posts by skyebjenner

The Tale of Katherine of Aragon

Falling Pomegranate Seeds Book CoverOriginally published by Made Global.

The tale of the Tudors, Anne Boleyn and Katherine of Aragon has captured minds and hearts for generations. Falling Pomegranate Seeds, the newest book by Melbourne-based author Wendy Dunn dives straight into this world of mayhem and mystery and brings forth a shining gem in the form of Katherine of Aragon. Katherine’s story as the sorrowful, replaced woman takes you deep into the depths of the time of the Tudors. The mayhem, mystery and murder of the time.

In an online interview, Wendy Dunn reminisced about the fact that “Anne Boleyn has held my heart longer – close to all my life – but the more I learnt about Katherine of Aragon, the more I became devoted to her too.”

Falling Pomegranate Seeds is the literary journey of a lifetime. Katherine of Aragon’s early life is a story of mothers and daughters. The potent mixture of power, intrigue, death, love and redemption will draw you in with every page as Katherine of Aragon’s story sings a song of friendship, love and life.

 

The Tales of Beedle the Bard by J.K. Rowling

Overview

The Tales of Beedle the Bard

Title: The Tales of Beedle the Bard
Author: J.K. Rowling
Series: Harry Potter Companion Book
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: Urban fantasy, Witches
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 2007
5th sentence, 74th page: ‘Fools!’ cried Babbity’s voice from the stump they had left behind.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

The Tales of Beedle the Bard contains five richly diverse fairy tales, each with its own magical character, that will variously bring delight, laughter and the thrill of mortal peril.

Thoughts

This is my all-time favourite Harry Potter extra. It is just so sweet, and made me feel like the Harry Potter universe was a reality. Something which I always appreciate when I read fiction. It’s nice to imagine that young wizards grew up on fairy tales like us muggles. And being able to read the stories of right and wrong in that world (much like our own morality-pointing fairytales), is something that I plan to do again and again and again.

The commentary scattered throughout the book by Dumbledore helped to add a layer of reality to the book. It also helped to add context to some parts that were completely foreign to muggles – I loved this extra layer of understanding and construct.

<- Quidditch Through the Ages Review Short Stories from Hogwarts of Power, Politics and Pesky Poltergeists Review ->
Image source: Harry Potter Wiki

Quidditch Through the Ages by J.K. Rowling

Overview

Quidditch Through the Ages

Title: Quidditch Through the Ages
Author: J.K. Rowling
Series: Harry Potter Companion Book
Rating Out of 5: 3.5 (Liked this)
My Bookshelves: Urban fantasy, Witches
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 2001
5th sentence, 74th page: Quidditch was well established in Ireland by the fourteenth century, as proved by Zacharias Mumps’s account of a match in 1385: ‘A team of Warlocks from Cork flew over for a game in Lancashire and did offend the locals by beating their heroes soundly.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

If you have ever asked yourself where the Golden Snitch came from, how the Bludgers came into existence or why the Wigtown Wanderers have pictures of meat cleavers on their robes, you need Quidditch Through the Ages. This invaluable volume is consulted by young Quidditch fans on an almost daily basis.

Thoughts

This was my least favourite book in the Hogwarts Library series. I just found it a little dry to read. Although, I feel that way with a lot of history books, so that’s probably why. Sport doesn’t fascinate me, and neither does the way it evolved in the world.

Having said that, I thought that it was really well written. It actually reminded me of the PE textbook that I had to read in my first two years of high school. And the attention to detail that J.K. Rowling has in all of her books added another layer of reality to the world.

<- Fantastic Beasts & Where to Find Them Review The Tales of Beedle the Bard Review ->
Image source: Amazon

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them by J.K. Rowling

Overview

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them

Title: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Author: J.K. Rowling
Series: Harry Potter Companion Book
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: Urban fantasy, Witches
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 2001
5th sentence, 74th page: A black market in Runespoor eggs and in the serpents themselves has flourished for several centuries.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

A copy of Fantastic Beasts & Where to Find Them resides in almost every wizarding household in the country. Now Muggles too have the chance to discover where the Quintaped lives, what the Puffskein eats and why it is best not to leave milk out for a Knarl.

Thoughts

I can’t wait for this movie to come out – it’s going to be really interesting to see how people are able to change a cute little textbook into something more. I loved constantly discovering new creatures throughout the Harry Potter series, but having the text book just opened me up to a whole new world of discovery.

I thought that the creatures in Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them were a great mix of well-known mythology and J.K. Rowling’s imagination. As someone who has a slight obsession with mythology and the paranormal world, this was brilliant and refreshing.

<- The Cursed Child Review Quidditch Through the Ages Review ->
Image source: Amazon

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J.K. Rowling

Overview

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

Title: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Author: J.K. Rowling
Series: Harry Potter #4
Rating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)
My Bookshelves: Urban fantasy, Witches
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 2000
5th sentence, 74th page: ‘We’ll be a bit cramped,’ he called, ‘but I think we’ll all squeeze in.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

It is the summer holidays and soon Harry Potter will be starting his fourth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Harry is counting the days: there are new spells to be learnt, more Quidditch to be played, and Hogwarts castle to continue exploring. But Harry needs to be careful – there are unexpected dangers lurking…

Thoughts

I always feel like this is the Harry Potter book that goes from a childish fantasy tale to a series that is complex and a little too serious. Partly it’s because of the content, but I it’s also because if you look in the book case, this book is a LOT thicker than the first three tales in this epic story. Since the first Harry Potter book, I have loved J.K. Rowling’s investigation of relationships. From Ron, Harry and Hermione’s rocky start to their friendship to Malfoy’s jealousy, the relationships follow a really realistic pattern and feel real. And the Goblet of Fire follows this progression.

Ron’s jealousy of his incredibly popular friend is something that I completely understand (after all, my girlfriends all seem to be stunningly beautiful, and I am always jealous of the attention that they get). Not only did this make them seem far more relatable, but it would be hard to believe a story where the best friend (and sidekick) didn’t get jealous. Yes, when you read about his pig-headedness and the ways he manages to ostracise not only Harry, but also Hermione, you kind of want to reach through the pages and slap the boy, but really, if you were in that position, wouldn’t you do the same? Haven’t you?

Then there is Ron’s refusal to see that he has feelings for Hermione. Their relationship is one of my favourite literary romances, not only is it totally natural, but it’s entertaining. There isn’t a moment of wow, we like each other, let’s get together, the end. It’s cat and mouse, people growing up in some really difficult times, and emotions just slowly reaching out to take hold. There’s not even a moment when you realise that they both accept their emotions – it just happens. And, at least in my limited experience. This is what happens in real life. There aren’t grand gestures and roses (at least not for me), but there are these beautiful little moments caught in time. The seconds that make you go “huh”. It’s a perfect contrast to Harry and Ginny’s relationship – Ginny is blatantly in love with him, and then Harry is blatantly in love with her and they take a little while to figure it out. Get together. Break up again.

As I previously said, The Goblet of Fire marked a real change of pace in the Harry Potter stories. And part of this was the return of Lord Voldemort. That moment still brings tears to my eyes and shivers up my spine. Not only is a young life tragically cut short, but the sinister nature of his return and the unashamed disregard for life is kind of terrifying.

<- The Prisoner of Azkaban Review The Order of the Phoenix Review ->
Image source: Harry Potter Fanzone

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling

Overview

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

Title: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Author: J.K. Rowling
Series: Harry Potter #3
Rating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)
My Bookshelves: Urban fantasy, Witches
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 1999
5th sentence, 74th page: ‘The new password’s Fortuna Major!’

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

Harry Potter, along with his best friends, Ron and Hermione, is about to start his third year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Harry can’t wait to get back to school after the summer holidays. (Who wouldn’t if they lived with the horrible Dursleys?) But when Harry gets to Hogwarts, the atmosphere is tense. There’s an escaped mass murderer on the loose, and the sinister prison guards of Azkaban have been called in to guard the school…

Thoughts

Growing up, The Prisoner of Azkaban was my least favourite Harry Potter book. It just seemed slightly slower and a little off-topic. But as I’ve grown up, I’ve finally gotten a good appreciation of how wonderful this story actually is. I love the character of Sirius and finally getting to meet him and watch the story of James Potter’s childhood unfold is really interesting. After reading the whole series numerous times, the set up in this story makes the rest of the series make so much more sense. The small pieces that seemed so insignificant when I was a child are actually what make the series so potent.

My two favourite things about the Prisoner of Azkaban are the introduction of dementors and the twisting of perceptions. It is well publicised that dementors are the manifestations of depression and a reminder of mental illness within people’s lives. I really love the fact that such a potent reminder of people’s inner scars is a large aspect of our current culture and such an astonishingly popular book series. I think that the introduction of dementors into the Harry Potter series was a huge step towards the understanding of mental health in the general population and a great way to raise awareness for such a serious issue.

Everyone has a different take on what is happening around them. Just ask my sister and I, we both have seriously different recalls of the same moments in time, and I’m fairly certain that neither of us is 100% correct in our recall. So, investigating this through the unfolding story of the Potters’ and Wormtail’s death throughout the story, and contrasting it against Sirius’ version toward the end was a great way to highlight how perceptions can so drastically be altered.

The combination of perceptions and depression are probably what has endeared this to me in my adulthood. And will for everyone else out there.

<- The Chamber of Secrets Review The Goblet of Fire Review ->
Image source: Harry Potter Fanzone

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling

Overview

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

Title: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Author: J.K. Rowling
Series: Harry Potter #2
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Urban fantasy, Witches
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 1998
5th sentence, 74th page: They squirmed, kicked, flailed their sharp little fists and gnashed their teeth; Harry spent ten whole minutes trying to squash a particularly fat on into a pot.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

Harry Potter is a wiard. He is in his second year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Little does he know that this year will be just as eventful as the last…

Thoughts

The Chamber of Secrets is one of my all-time favourite Harry Potter books (if I must pick a favourite that is). If I’m in the mood for a Harry Potter book and don’t feel like reading the whole series (since that can take a few months), it’s the second book that I tend to pick up.

I think that it’s the introduction of Ginny and the pure innocence of the book that has made it so important to me. Even though all of the Harry Potter books have a level of darkness about them (which I love to bits), The Chamber of Secrets seems to highlight Ginny’s innocence and the boys’ tendency to find trouble. But, mostly it’s about the fact that a young girl with a crush and annoying older brothers is so vulnerable – well, any young girl can be vulnerable if approached in the right way. Although it’s incredibly dangerous, Ginny’s purity and the way that she is manipulated reminds me so much of my childhood innocence. Something that I think all of us adults sometimes miss.

As I’m writing about this, I am replaying every moment of the story in my head. A very enjoyable way to procrastinate, I assure you.

<- The Philosopher’s Stone Review The Prisoner of Azkaban Review ->
Image source: Hypable

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone by J.K. Rowling

Overview

Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

Title: Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone
Author: J.K. Rowling
Series: Harry Potter #1
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Urban fantasy, Witches
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 1997
5th sentence, 74th page: ‘Anyone sitting here?’ he asked, pointing at the seat opposite Harry.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

Harry Potter thinks he is an ordinary boy – until he is rescued by an owl, taken to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, learns to play Quidditch and does battle in a deadly duel. The reason: HARRY POTTER IS A WIZARD!

Thoughts

I don’t think that you can say anything about a Harry Potter book these days that someone else hasn’t said. It is so ingrained into our culture and our minds, that I can’t even imagine a person who hasn’t read or at least heard of, the Harry Potter novels. It is certainly ingrained into my memory and childhood.

I can remember exactly where I was when I started reading the first Harry Potter book. I was ten. My mum had given it to me because it just happened to be something she picked up, skimmed and then gave to me. I was hooked from the first page. And I, like most of the children of my generation, spent the lead up to my eleventh birthday waiting on my letter from Hogwarts.

I think that the thing that makes the Harry Potter books so damn wonderful is J.K. Rowling’s brilliant writing. Yes, it’s the storyline and the world that she created. But this would be completely useless if it wasn’t for GREAT writing. The sense of humour, the way that her words invoke visions and feelings – that’s what makes me read these books again and again and again. I know the story off-by-heart, but it’s the one-liners, the language and the way the words just wash over me that makes me read these at least once a year.

<- Hogwarts: A Complete and Unreliable Guide Review The Chamber of Secrets Review ->
Image source: Hypable

Brightly Burning by Mercedes Lackey

Overview

Brightly Burning

Title: Brightly Burning
Author: Mercedes Lackey
Series: Valdemar #15
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: Easy readingFantasy
Pace: Medium
Format: Novel
Publisher: Daw fantasy
Year: 2000
5th sentence, 74th page: He won’t kill me.

Synopsis

A CURSE OF FIRE

When Archer and Nelda Chitward moved their family from a small rural village to the bustling city of Haven, it was cause for great celebration. After all, their textile skills had made them leaders among their Guilds, welcomed into the highest of Guild social circles.

But not everyone in the Chitward home was happy about this “improvement” in the family’s position. Lavan, their middle son, had no desire to be a cloth-merchant, needleworker, cloth-dyer, or anything related to his family’s Guilds. He didn’t really know what he wanted to be – except back home in Alderscroft! To make matters worse, his parents had enrolled him in an “exclusive” private school. It was a place where the arrogant older students were expected to keep discipline, and as a lanky, undersized, sixteen-year-old newcomer, Lavan quickly became the primary scapegoat.

It didn’t help that whenever the older boys caught him he turned a bright scarlet with suppressed rage – a rage which left his skin feeling sunburned and tender, and so filled his mind that he was unable to see, hear, or even to think. For days on end Lavan was overwhelmed by blinding headaches and was unable to attend classes, yet even his pain was a welcome respite from the daily torture he suffered at school.

But nothing could have prepared Lavan or anyone in Haven for what was to come. For from his rage a Gift unlike any known in Valdemar would be born in a fiery conflagration which Heralds and Healers alike would be hard-pressed to contain…

Thoughts

As usual, Mercedes Lackey managed to seriously surprise me with this story. Similar to The Last Herald Mage trilogy, I knew that Brightly Burning would be a tragic tale – it’s mentioned in some of the other Valdemar books. But, it still hooked me and took me on an amazing journey through Lavan’s short, and sad journey.

I’ve read about homosexual and heterosexual characters, and love triangles until I’ve been blue in the face, but Brightly Burning is the first story that I can remember reading about a character that is asexual. Or at least, that is the way he seemed to me. There is a huge difference between a lack of sexual interest in the storyline (because they are too young, or it isn’t part of the author’s plot), but to read about a character that actually doesn’t appear to have any sexual interest in another was really interesting. I have read articles that say that Sherlock Holmes is supposed to have been asexual too, but I haven’t had the privilege of reading the original stories yet. So this was a really welcome difference. It was refreshing.

Even though I knew that Lavan wasn’t going to have a happy ending, it was really nice to find out the whole story. As myths and tales of our past are warped with time, I felt that the truth of Lavan’s tale was so much more exciting and surreal than the pieces I had managed to put together throughout reading the other Valdemar books. Lackey is a master of intertwining completely different generations throughout her books – Valdemar has become a very real place within my head because of this. It is so multidimensional that I can’t store all of the facts in my head, much like real life.

The final moments of this book are etched into my mind forever. All I have to do is think of fire of Lavan Firestorm and I can picture his final moments. To so vividly engrave a moment into my mind is a mark of how brilliant Lackey is.

<- Closer to the ChestOathbound ->

Image source: Pinterest

Subversive Spiritualities by Frederique Apffel-Marglin

Overview

Subversive Spritualities

Title: Subversive Spiritualities: How Rituals Enact the World
Author: Frederique Apffel-Marglin
Rating Out of 5: 4 (Really good read!)
My Bookshelves: Anthropology, Mythology, True stories, Non-fiction
Pace: Slow
Format: Ethnographic text
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Year: 2012
5th sentence, 74th page: It goes much further than simply the health of an individual.

Buy The Book Now at The Book Depository, Free Delivery World Wide

Synopsis

Even in the twenty-first century, some two-thirds of the world’s peoples quietly live in non-modern, non-cosmopolitan places. In such places the multitudinous voices of the spirits, deities, and other denizens of the other-than-human world continue to be heard, continue to be loved or feared or both, continue to accompany human beings in all their activities. In Subversive Spiritualities, Frederique Apffel-Marglin draws on a lifetime of work with the indigenous peoples of Peru and India to support her argument that the beliefs, values, and practices of such traditional peoples are ”eco-metaphysically true.” In other words, they recognize that human beings are in communion with other beings in nature that have agency and are kinds of spiritual intelligences, with whom humans can be in relationship and communion.

Ritual is the medium for communicating, reciprocating, creating and working with the other-than-humans, who daily remind the humans that the world is not for humans’ exclusive use. Apffel-Marglin argues that when such relationships are appropriately robust, human lifeways are rich, rewarding and, in the contemporary jargon, environmentally sustainable. Her ultimate objective is to ”re-entangle” humans in nature, by promoting a spirituality and ecology of belonging and connection to nature, and an appreciation of animistic perception and ecologies. Along the way she offers provocative and poignant critiques of many assumptions: of the ”development” paradigm as benign (including feminist forms of development advocacy), of most anthropological and other social scientific understandings of indigenous religions, and of common views about peasant and indigenous agronomy. She concludes with a case study of the fair trade movement, illuminating both its shortcomings (how it echoes some of the assumptions in the development paradigms) and its promise as a way to rekindle community between humans as well as between humans and the other-than-human world.

Thoughts

This book was such a unique experience for me – it was an engaging and insightful look into phenomenological ethnography. For those of you who don’t know (as I didn’t when I started reading this book), phenomenology is the different ways in which we view the world. Our phenomenological understandings of our realities are shaped by culture, personal experience and spiritual considerations, amongst other things. Ethnographies, of which I have read a few, are anthropological texts. Ethnographies involve the author immersing themselves into another’s culture and life. Here they participate and observe at the same time, at once part of the group and separate.

I found this ethnography to be really theoretically engaging, and whilst I have read others, this is the one that left me thinking for a long time after I closed its pages. Not only did Apffel-Marglin open up a whole new realm of studies and theoretical points upon which to pursue my own research, it also introduced me to the world of agriculture in the Peruvian Andes. I loved the combination of scientific understandings and cultural knowledge in the care for these passionate people’s environment. And delving into such a wonderful blend of objective and subjective knowledges of the world struck a chord deep within me. So much so that I used this idea within my own Anthropological Honours thesis.

Not only was the subject matter of Subversive Spiritualties highly engaging, Apffel-Marglin’s writing style was incredibly engaging – you couldn’t help but be pulled into the world she so vividly describes. It was also highly appreciated that she was so aware of her own biases. It helped to highlight my own cultural biases and the ways in which our views of the world completely colour everything that we experience and see.

<- More non-fiction reviews More anthropology reviews ->
Image source: Amazon