I finally had to read Lord
of the Flies for tutoring
purposes, because it is a required reading for our national high
school English finals, and at first it wasn’t as bad as I had
expected from all the bad things I had heard about it. I thought that
the boys’ behaviour wasn’t really any different
from how contemporary kids would behave in a similar situation.
About
two thirds in, however, I had to start agreeing: it was really that
bad.
And
in the end, I am not so sure the behaviour was just a result of the
boys’ spoiled rich British origin. Perhaps any other group of
people (children) in the same uncontrollable, helpless, and scary
situation would eventually react similarly.
I
will not even touch the issue of gender and the lack of girls in the
book – I do wonder whether things
would be worse or better if the group included girls – since
Golding himself was unwilling to explore that and was only able to
ask questions regarding that possibility himself.
My
edition included study materials with useful chapter summaries and
discussion/reflection questions and additional information on the
issues connected with the novel, which were its saving grace.
It
also
included Golding’s essay on fables and his intentions regarding
what he wanted to show about the human nature and how it is governed
by nationalism and prejudice, especially in connection with Nazism
and fascism, which are certainly important issues to consider (and
beware of perpetuating) yet
again nowadays.
Golding
does manage to show the worst of human nature when unfettered by
societal constraints and
bolstered by fear (of the unknown, other) and I definitely agree with
his
notion that we are all capable of the same atrocities if we fail to
check ourselves and each other to keep from succumbing to fear,
prejudice, and other-ing specific groups people. However,
I believe that without accompanying materials
and guidance the
readers
who
are unaware
of the story's connection to British exceptionalism and
colonialism cannot
really discern these themes and their messages, especially not ESL
students
who
are struggling with understanding the language itself.
Even
without language understanding issues, I could
only see
the aforementioned connotations while reading through the additional
materials. Hence,
I
believe that among literally millions of books out there, our
national board for HS English finals could have certainly found a
better book to teach about such important topics as the dangers of
nationalism and prejudice in present times.
Friday, October 09, 2020
Lord of the Flies by William Golding
Friday, August 21, 2020
The Lost Blackbird by Liza Perrat

Separated upon arrival, despite having been promised that they would be able to stay together, they are both thrown in their own set of hardships. The older sister has to endure harrowing circumstances of child labour on a faraway farm. The younger is adopted into a loving, well-off family, but her life comes with its own kind of trauma.
The story is told alternately from both girls’ perspectives, proving once more Liza Perrat’s masterful ability to convey children’s voices from a very young age into adulthood, enabling the reader to not only see but feel them grow up as well as witness the world and people around them in vivid, palpable detail.
Hence, The Lost Blackbird was a fast and utterly absorbing read that taught me something new, as I had no knowledge of child migration from the UK to the other parts of the former British empire (or perhaps I had forgotten about it.)
On the whole, this story sucked me up into its world and still didn’t quite let me go, and certainly left me with a good feeling.
Monday, August 17, 2020
Bout-of-Books 29
I will be participating on Twitter (@strangenewwords), but I thought it would also be handy to have a summary-of-everything post on this blog (so it gets used at least a little once in a while.)
Monday, 17/8/2020
Reading: The Lost Blackbird by Liza Perrat, The Old Guard fanfiction
Pages/words: 24 pages of The Lost Blackbird, ~14K fanfic
Tuesday, 18/8/2020
Reading: The Lost Blackbird by Liza Perrat, The Old Guard fanfiction
Pages/words: 123 pages of The Lost Blackbird, ~13K of fanfic
Wednesday, 19/8/2020
Reading: The Lost Blackbird by Liza Perrat
Pages/words: 83 pages of The Lost Blackbird, ~1.5K of Revolution fanfic (reread)
Thursday, 20/8/2020
Reading: The Poems of William Blake
Pages/words: 9 pages of The Poems of William Blake
Friday, 21/8/2020
Reading: The Poems of William Blake
Pages/words: 6 pages of The Poems of William Blake
Auto-buy Authors, to name just a few: Kresley Cole, Kit Rocha, Nalini Singh, Liza Perrat, Tiffany Reisz. #boutofbooks #bob29igphoto
— Jo Kay (@StrangeNewWords) August 21, 2020
Reading: The Old Guard & AoS fanfiction
Pages/words: ~15K of fanfic
Sunday, 23/8/2020
Reading: AoS fanfiction
Pages/words: ~4.5K of fanfic
Wrap-up:
What I read: Finished The Lost Blackbird and Poems of William Blake
Pages/words: 245 pages +48K words
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
A Seditious Affair (Society of Gentlemen #2) by K. J. Charles
Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Ararat by Christopher Golden
Maybe I've desensitised myself a little by occasional forays into the genre, because it has somehow turned out not to be as creepy as I had expected, but it was still creepy.
The creepiest parts are the first third of the book before the characters start realising what they unleashed (while the readers have more knowledge, or at least suspicions, than they) and, of course, the ending.
In between and throughout the book there was, however, plenty of gore which I tried not to imagine too vividly.
The story overall didn't offer anything new regarding concepts, but it was nevertheless compelling and well-written, and it definitely delivered enough material for a nightmare or two.
All in all, I now feel weirdly accomplished for having read it. ;)
Wednesday, March 25, 2020
Sins of the Angels (Grigori Legacy #1) by Linda Poitevin
I don't consider it a spoiler, because it is evident right from the beginning of the story if not from the title itself, but I'm putting it under the SPOILER tag anyway: Obviously (or not), Alex, the main protagonist, doesn't believe in angels, heaven, etc. and when she starts seeing wings, she fears she is going insane, especially due to her family history. END OF SPOILER
However, the very same thing is also one of the strongest points of Sins of the Angels, because such an attitude is rather more realistic than most books of the genre adopt, which is a quick and more or less easy acceptance.
Anyway, that piece of knowledge the readers have but that Alex keeps trying to remain in denial about for nearly 70% of the story was frustrating as hell for me; I could only bear to read a few chapters at a time.
And after that point, when Alex catches up with the facts, I finished the rest in one go, because Sins of the Angels is ultimately a compelling, well-written story that adds the previously explored concepts their own unique twists.
Therefore, I am, now that we got over with that discrepancy between the characters' and the readers' knowledge, definitely interested to see where the rest of the series takes us.
Monday, January 06, 2020
Bout-of-Books 27
Consider this my sign-up and updates post.
I have no goals other than to read, because I haven't read anything
Monday, 6/1/2020
Reading: Sins of the Angels (Grigori Legacy #1) by Linda Poitevin
Pages/words: cca 66 pages or 20%
Challenges/other: /
Tuesday, 7/1/2020
Reading: The Dandelion Girl by Robert F. Young
Pages/words: 11 pages
Challenges/other: My 2020 reading goals, you ask? To read as much or as little as I want and whatever I want. That's it. (Tweet.)
Wednesday, 8/1/2020
Reading: Sins of the Angels (Grigori Legacy #1) by Linda Poitevin
Pages/words: cca 9 pages (3%)
Challenges/other: /
Thursday, 9/1/2020
Reading: Sins of the Angels (Grigori Legacy #1) by Linda Poitevin
Pages/words: 33 (10%)
Challenges/other: /
Friday, 10/1/2020
Reading: Slave to Sensation (Psy-Changeling #1) by Nalini Singh
Pages/words: 18
Challenges/other: Why, yes, I can't committ to a book, so I started a new one. I also threw some book recs out on twitter for today's One with a Book in It challenge.
Saturday, 11/1/2020
Reading: Slave to Sensation (Psy-Changeling #1) by Nalini Singh, and a lovely little fanfic (unrelated)
Pages/words: 57, 1+ K of fanfic
Challenges/other: I had a blast participating in the twitter chat!
Sunday, 12/1/2020
Reading: Slave to Sensation (Psy-Changeling #1) and The Cannibal Princess (Psy-Changeling #1.1) by Nalini Singh
Pages/words: 284
Challenges/other: I guess I did stretch my non-existent goals!
Wrap-up:
What I read: I finished Slave to Sensation (Psy-Changeling #1) and The Cannibal Princess (Psy-Changeling #1.1) by Nalini Singh, The Dandelion Girl by Robert F. Young, and I also read about a third of Sins of the Angels (Grigori Legacy #1) by Linda Poitevin
Pages/words: 417 pages + 1+K of fanfic
Challenges/other: I did two challenges and joined in Saturday's twitter chat.
All in all, that's a lot more than I'd expected going in and this has been a great readathon-ing week!
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
My Life According to the Books I Read in 2019
That offers a lot of options to fill out my-year-in-books-I-read end-of-year wrap up meme, created by Christine at The happily ever after, but it was still hard to find sensible answers.