
Winner of the coveted "Early Bird Award"!
(Now let's get going, the rest of you. These books aren't going to read themselves!)
This a place for next year's Honors English students to meet and exchange ideas about their summer reading (and other things). I'll be checking in from time to time, observing, but mostly I'll be staying on the sidelines. This is your blog. (If you have any questions, drop me a line at my THS e-mailbox.)
In the Time of Butterflies is a historical novel, based on the true lives of the Mirabal sisters, four women who fought against an oppressive dictatorship in the 1950’s in the Dominican Republic (homeland of Manny Ramirez, Pedro Martinez, and David Ortiz – none of whom appear in this novel).
The narration of this novel alternates between all four of the sisters, giving us their story from different perspectives. (It can also be a little confusing. I’ve only give this book a quick read through; I’ll be taking notes next time.)
The novel shows us how the sisters, of different ages and temperaments, are gradually radicalized and become involved in a revolutionary movement – and reminds us of the cost that must sometimes be paid for freedom. In a time that tosses around the term hero quite loosely, these women are bona fide heroes.
If you think there was a lot of plotting and scheming going on in Hedda Gabler, it’s nothing compared to this play, written by Connecticut’s own (sort of) Eugene O’Neill. The heroine of this play, set in 1923 on a Connecticut farm, is Josie Hogan, “so oversize for a woman that she’s almost a freak”. Josie is a fierce, independent woman who lives life according to her own rules. The love of her life is Jim Tyrone, a Broadway actor who from time to time visits the family home (the family that owns the land the Hogans rent). Jim claims he loves Josie, but unfortunately, he is a raging, self-loathing alcoholic, who had countless lovers. (Josie, apparently, also has many lovers in her 28 years.)
Is it possible for these two wounded souls to find each other, under the harvest moonlight. Phil Hogan, Josie’s father, would like to see that, but is he concerned about his daughter's happiness, or just trying to get his hands on Tyrone’s money?
(Oh, and when you come where Jim is telling Josie about the “girl on the train” , the scene is a lot like the Lovborg telling Hedda about his “nights on the town”. Josie’s reaction, though, and Hedda’s, though are miles apart.)