Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Guest Giveaway!
There is a lovely giveaway taking place over at Kristi Loves Books! The giveaway is open internationally and you can win a wonderful Vintage edition of a Victorian novel. You can visit this post to enter!
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
A Victorian Celebration Giveaway Contest.
There is an AMAZING contest and giveaway going on over at Roof Beam Reader starting today! The prize is your choice of any Victorian novel shipped from the Book Depository-yep, an international giveaway! :)
You can enter by clicking this link.
Good luck, and keep on reading those lovely Victorian novels!
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Guest Giveaway! (A Victorian Celebration).
The lovely Karen over at Books and Chocolate is hosting a FANTASTIC giveaway for you! There are...22 books to choose from, so I am sure there is something that will catch your eye. ;)
Good luck!
Thursday, June 7, 2012
A Victorian Celebration: Guest Post and Giveaway from Avid Reader's Musings.

- The Warden by Anthony Trollope (1855)
- The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (1844)
- Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray (1848)
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Gulliver's Travels Part 4: Guest Post from my Mom!

Book 4 of Gulliver’s Travels takes him off again, this time as a captain of a merchant ship. He hires replacements for his crew who became ill and they turned out to be pirates and organize a mutiny on his ship. They end up setting him free on the
Here the Houyhnhnms are horse’s who run the
The slaves are human creatures called Yahoo’s. They are filthy and smell. They eat meat and garbage. He sees them as vulgar and they throw their excrement at one another. He compares the two and places himself somewhere in the middle. His clothes are what makes him different from the Yahoos and helps the Houyhnhnms accept him as different. Gulliver tries to become more like the horse and not like the human Yahoo’s.
Gulliver explains his society and war and the reasons for it. He basically is explaining the justification of reasons countries go to war, take over land and its people. He also explains how lawyers use laws and reasons to justify their means. Gulliver goes on to explain how money can corrupt; how the rich can buy gourmet food and then become unhealthy.
Gulliver lives with the Houyhnhnm’s for three years and he starts to imitate the horse by walking, speaking and acting like them.
The Houyhnhnm hold an assembly every 4 years, which shows that they have no problems living peacefully together. The horses become frightened with Gulliver trying to be like them, he is more a Yahoo and they want him to leave.
They help him build a boat and he ends up eventually being taken aboard a Portuguese ship where the captain convinces him to return home to his family.
His family is happy to see him again, they thought he was dead, but he cannot stand the sight or smell of his Yahoo-wife and children. He sees himself in the worst way and his pride is in disarray. Over time he reasons to change his thinking and starts to come back to normal.
Gulliver swears he’s telling the truth about his journeys. Are countries, politicians, authors telling the truth? The end comes down to Gulliver’s pride, just as those he mocks throughout the book.
This book makes you stop and think about ourselves, our own society, country and world. He takes a look at himself in different situations throughout the book where any one of us could see ourselves dealing with moral, political and societal issues today. The truth and pride we each have is what Gulliver himself is struggling with in his adventures.
In the end, I really like the book. It was thought provoking. You can read it for the enjoyment of the story as it is, but when you look at what issues he is raising, it also becomes much more, which I am sure is what he wanted.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Gulliver's Travels Part 3: Guest Post from my Mom!

Book Three is a lot different from the first two books. Gulliver is once again taken to a different world where he is lifted up to a flying island, Laputa. He goes into detail on how the
He moves on to the other lands of Luggnagg, Glubbdibdub and then onto
I started to think, who would I like to talk to if I could. I think George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Benjamin Franklin are up there for me. Just to know where they were actually coming from and what our leaders today use in their perspective of what these leaders meant at their time in history, I think would be interesting to talk with them about.
Quite a different book from the first two-looking forward to Book IV.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Gulliver's Travels Part 2: Guest Post from my Mom!
I really liked Book II where Gulliver finds himself in Brobdingnag and now he is the “small” person with the Giants now 12 times larger than he is, just the opposite of Book I and Lilliput.
He is also repulsed by the human body of the Giants-being able to now look at it up close and the vermin that prey upon the body. So it gives you a perspective of what is really revolting, the Giant people or the vermin who prey upon them, or both. Does this mean the Government and Royalty and then the regular society of people?
Gulliver thinks the society as mostly a moral people with just a few that are jealous or corrupt, the King’s jester, with a little malice at times. Just as Governments and Kings have also been at times.
Gulliver discusses the English society and government with the King and he then gives Gulliver his view and judgment by comparing them to Brobdingnag. This then causes Gulliver to take a different look and view point at the English. So it looks that if you take a step back, or remove yourself from a situation, you just may be persuaded to a different perspective of what you now think is what your government and society really are.
Gulliver is also knocked down literally by hailstones, and a few other things. He is also stripped of his clothes by the maids and is just a plaything to them. He is offended, but the maids do not see him that way and are just curious about him. Then a monkey takes him captive and treats him like a baby monkey. He has been reduced down, is this representing that the Giants are morally superior? Does this also mean that royalty and governments can do what they want, and the people are treated like pets, or do the people become a society where the corruption is low as that of Brobdingnag.
Gulliver escapes Brobdingnag. He is pampered by the royal family, but he is also treated as a pet. He misses being part of a society. He escapes by being at the sea shore in his traveling box and it is picked up by an eagle. An English ship finds his box in the ocean and he is rescued and brought back home. Everyone there now seems tiny to him and he is a giant. How his perspective has changed at first and as time goes on, it goes back to where he started.
I really liked this book. It helped to put both Books I and II together for me. Not having read Gullivers Travels before, it is really starting to come together. Thanks Allie for inspiring me to read this. Didn’t know what I was missing. There is so much you can compare and insinuate in all of his situations he comes into. You can really look at today’s world and put it into this book.
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Gulliver's Travels Part 1: Guest Post from my Mom!
Okay, this is my first read-a-long and commentary on any given book. What a book to start with. As I have told Allie, in person, my literature education is sadly lacking. I have not personally read very many ”classics” either as a student or during my adult life. That is one of the reasons why I just love that she is doing this blog on the classics. Her reviews are filling in so many blanks that I’ve had when references in other books I read mention quotes from many of the “classic” literature. I’m also having a bit of trouble remembering my history from the early 1700’s when the setting of the satire of this book takes place. Trying to remember the political parties and Royalty of Europe was not one of my personal strong suits back in my days. I heard of Gulliver’s Travels, when I was younger, but it was not something that was required to read and I really had no idea what this book was about before starting it.
So what I’ve basically got out of Book I of Gulliver’s Travels is the correlation of the little people being Politicians and Royalty of the time. I also think many of the references have to do with the different religions that were a big part of politics back at that time and the influence they had on both the Royal families and politicians.
I have to say that I truly enjoyed many of his settings, especially, his method of putting out the fire. I can’t help but feel that he was really ingenious in his writing of the many ways to represent people and actions that he is taking his shots at. I think making the little people represent the politicians and royalty is his way of showing that normal people are more moral. Being little is making you small in your thoughts and actions. What also really points out to me, is how this behavior will always be there. Isn’t that how we perceive politicians and Royalty today?
I am looking forward to Book 2.