Saturday 20 February 2016

#4 The Painted Lady

Slip No. 4 - Read a non fiction book

My pick for Slip No. 4 is The Painted Lady - The art of tattooing the female body by Dominique Holmes with photography by Terry Benson


Title: The Painted Lady - The art of tattooing the female body
Author: Dominique Holmes, photography by Terry Benson
Date Started: 20/02/16
Date Finished: 20/02/16
Star Rating: 3.5 out of 5
Thoughts and Quotes:  Part of the reasoning behind selecting this particular title is due to a personal interest in tattooing and body art. At present, I personally have five tattoos, two of which contain literary references.

The book itself charts a basic history of tattooing for women, and discusses the origins behind the most common themes, relating to vintage, nautical, butterflies & flowers, Japanese, Mehndi and fusion, touching upon roses, koi carp, Buddhism, swallows and many of the other common images relating to those core themes.


The books illustrations and photographs are crisp and clear, displaying pictures of real tattoos that relate to the topic discussed on the pages, sometimes sharing snippets that explain the personal reasons behind why they chose a particular tattoo for themselves.


I quite enjoyed the book, learning a little more detail behind the different tattooing styles as they related to female body art, making a refreshing change towards the normally male dominated angle that tattoo books use.

On a personal note, I would have given the book a higher rating if two key points that I have never seen referred to in a tattoo art book had been addressed.  (1) the nature of rip-off tattooist art work and the effect this has - many of the tattoo artists that I personally know, have worked on me or have spoken to, have all told me that the reason they never do the same tattoo twice is because they want to be artists, not just tattooists, and that it is not uncommon for people to ask for an exact replica of an image, to only find that that copying artist makes more money and gains more recognition for an image that they did not create.  This book, and others on tattooing that I own talk about looking for a picture, but never about using that picture as inspiration for a completely new and original art work.  (2) Cultural appropriation - on many occasions, I have seen men and women with tattoos of images that do not relate to their culture, and then behave in a manner which is racist or discriminatory towards those who do belong to the culture of which their tattoo image was taken from. This in itself is a clear example of cultural appropriation, and has never come up in tattoo books either. perhaps this is down to the fact that refusing to tattoo an image for this reason may result in the loss of work for the artist, who is doing their job by giving the customer what they wanted. For this reason, cultural appropriation falls to the customer. 

However, if the book were to discuss these issues, it would be a much thicker book as it would have to delve deeper into politics and social history rather than focusing on the core themes behind tattoos.





In summary, I would recommend this book to any woman who is looking to get a tattoo who wants to learn more about the images that she has in mind. It would also make a great coffee table book to anyone with an interest in female body art or tattooing in general.   

Wednesday 17 February 2016

#3 Paddington Bear *updated*

Slip No.3 has now been drawn from the tbr jar.... "Read a Paddington Bear book"




For this one I have selected from the bookshelf 'Love from Paddington : Letters from the world's favourite bear' by Michael Bond, illustrated by Peggy Fortnum and R. W. Alley

Pre-existing fans of Paddington will know that Michael Bond and Peggy Fortnum are the original author/illustrator duo who created Paddington Bear and the charming images of him that we have all come to know and love, however with advancing years, it makes sense to bring in a new artist to carry on creating new paddington artwork once Peggy has to stop for good, and so I look forward to seeing the new life that Alley will bring to the books.  As a life long fan and collector of Paddington bear, and as an avid pen-paller,  I was extra excited when this book was published back in 2014.

I have not read the book fully, having only flicked through at the time of receiving as a Christmas gift that year.

TBR Challenge Participants: if you do not own this Paddington bear title, but have other books from the series, feel free to discuss those in the comments below or in the Paddington thread of the bookshany goodreads group. 

Start Date: 15/02/16
Finish Date: 20/02/16
Star Rating:  4 out of 5
Thoughts and Quotes:

....And with that he put a finger to his lips and we settled down to our cocoa and buns. .....

Love from Paddington, in many ways is a summary or collected edition of the Paddington bear books, in which each 'chapter' takes the form of a letter from Paddington Bear to his Aunt Lucy, which are numbered because Paddington doesn't use dates or fully understand the calendar.

Aunt Lucy reading one of the many letters she received from Paddington
Each letter to Aunt Lucy appears to summarise an adventure had by Paddington from each of the books published prior to this title. For those who want a change in the format of Paddington, you won't find that here, but if like me, you've grown up with Paddington, then 'Love From...' will be a welcome nostalgia trip, complete with marmalade sandwiches, regular visits to Mr Gruber's Antique Shop and even a ride on the London Eye.

I gave this book 4 out of 5 stars for ease of reading and lovely illustrations that don't deviate from the original style used in the earlier books. Ideal for existing fans of Paddington Bear, or those who want to introduce their children / children in their life to Paddington and all of his charming antics without the financial investment of buying the complete series of books.



Sunday 14 February 2016

M M Feb Highlights

Mid Month Feb Highlights

This month so far as brought two exciting developments in the worlds where literature and culture meet.
 The first was the introduction of the first ever International Women in STEM Day (Feb 11th),  which if you're struggling to think of notable examples, then 'Headstrong: 52 women who changed science and the world' by Rachel Swaby needs to be added to your tbr pile. For far too long the contributions made by women to STEM fields has been overlooked, and I look forward to seeing positive changes in the future.

The second, and some might argue bigger piece of news, depending on who you're asking is the announcement of  A NEW HARRY POTTER BOOK!!! yes, here at Bookshany, I was that excited I used exclamation points when sharing the news on my own private facebook account. Of course, I have the new book, which shall be the playbook/script for 'Harry Potter and the cursed child' on pre-order at Waterstones. For UK readers, the pre-order cost at Waterstones is £10, which is half price of the final RRP.

Finally, as this weekend brings with it both Galentine's Day, (feb 13th) aimed at celebrating female friendships and Valentine's day (feb 14th) the new titles I've added to my tbr pile are: 'Beautiful Broken Things' by Sara Barnard [the cover itself on the UK release is very beautiful and shiny with accents of light gold and rose gold] and 'I Love You Beth Cooper' by Larry Doyle [I've never seen the film, so I have no idea what happens beyond the synopsis]

What are your recommendations for this month's holidays? Comment below!

Tuesday 2 February 2016

Festive Reads: Chinese New Year

As the Chinese new year approaches (Monday 8th Feb 2016 is The Year of The Monkey), I thought about what I knew of the literature of the region of Asia. (China, Japan, Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea etc) and I realised, not much at all.

MCR - Photo Credit: Pamela Berry 2014


I know that my favourite book by a Korean author is 'The hen who dreamed she could fly' by Sun-mi Hwang, which is a beautiful yet simple story of a hen named Sprout, and her determination to be a mother, my favourite foods have their origins in Asia, and that as a fan of manga and Anime, I am familiar with the works of the collective known as CLAMP, the animation studio Studio Ghibli, and the film distributor Tartan Asia / Tartan Asia Extreme (responsible for the import of many Japanese live-action films and horror films), but I have read very little from that region of the world that was a novel, and not a comic [Manga is the name of the comic strip in Japan & South Korea, it differs greatly in style and format to the newspaper comic strips of England, and the brightly coloured American comics industry of which most people are familiar with, having seen comic adaptation films such as batman, Spiderman, superman or tv shows such as Arrow, Smallville for example]

MCR - Photo credit: Pamela Berry 2015


Of course, there are hundreds of English translations of Asian authors works available, if you know where to look, for this Chinese new year's festive reads, I have chosen:

Snakes & Earrings by Hitomi Kanehara
[synopsis can be read here - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Snakes-Earrings-Hitomi-Kanehara/dp/009948367X ] 

The Man with the Compound Eyes by Wu Ming-Yi
[synopsis can be read here - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Man-Compound-Eyes-Wu-Ming-Yi/dp/0099575620/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1454414205&sr=1-1&keywords=the+man+with+the+compound+eyes ]      

I will, of course, update with reviews shortly.