Pages

Thursday, 26 December 2013

Silver Linings Playbook Review

I loved it. I absolutely loved it.

I loved how the book ended: Those last lines, that short fragment, all so powerful!

"I think I need you too."

But other than that beautiful ending, I loved how Quick had brought out all those emotions. The way he used speech to bring out the characters, and even more so, the speechless parts. How he described Pat's fear, his inability to control his temper... He brought Pat to life.


However, most of all, I loved how he perfectly presented how biased society was against the mentally ill. How unfair, how cruel, it was to be mentally ill and still be mocked. My favourite paragraph was this extract:

Cliff looks at me for a second, as if he does not know how to respond, and then says, "Tell me what worries you." 
"My father refers to T.O. as a psychotic pill popper. And on the phone this week, Jake also made jokes about T.O. taking pills, calling Owen a nutter." 
"Why does this bother you?" 
"Well, the reports I read in the sports pages claimed that T.O. was possibly battling depression." 
"Yes." 
"Well," I say, "That would suggest that he needs therapy." 
"And?" 
"If Terrell Owens is really depressed or mentally unstable, why do the people I love use it as an excuse to talk badly about him?" 
Cliff takes a deep breath. "Hmmm." 
"Doesn't my dad understand that I'm a psychopathic pill popper too?" 
"As your therapist, I can confirm that you are clearly not psychopathic, Pat." 
"But I'm on all sorts of pills." 
"And yet you are not abusing your medications." 
I can see what Cliff means, but he doesn't really understand how I feel — which is a mix of very complicated and hard-to-convey emotions, I realise — so I drop the subject.

I think it's a beautiful paragraph. Awesome read! Definitely very much worth buying! The movie was great too, though they left out a number of good scenes from the book. Still, Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper did a great job!


Tuesday, 24 December 2013

Addition Review

So I was in London just last week and I bought a whole lot of new books from WHSmith. Books are so much cheaper there than they are in Singapore. One of the books I bought was 'Addition'. It's about this girl named Grace who is obsessed with counting things, anything, everything. She just counts and counts and counts and counts. It's not exactly OCD. It's different, and that's what I love about it.

Nikola Tesla, Grace's idol

Then comes in this "average man" named Seamus. He doesn't count stuff like she does. And he just works in the theatre, lives with two of his brothers. But somehow one thing leads to another and next thing you know, they're in the bedroom. But, of course, that is not why Grace loves him.

I think Seamus really goes the extra mile by bringing her to therapy and all. I mean it's tough, that's for sure — therapy, that is. I think it's a really brave thing to do but unfortunately, sometimes, no matter how brave you are, it just doesn't work for you.

One thing I really love about Toni's (Or Jordan's) work is that she really has a lot of word play in there. For example, just in the synopsis itself: Grace's problem is that Seamus doesn't count. Her other problem... he does.

Or towards the end of the book, she beautifully states one about "Average" but I shan't spoil that. It's a gorgeous revelation. Average is unique. That's all I can say.

Apart from the occasional bedroom scene, I really think this is an awesome book. It especially gives insights into anxiety, obsession and a teeny bit of OCD. I think Silver Lining's Playbook definitely covers more on mental illnesses so if you are interested, stay tuned.

P.S. The Silver Lining's Playbook movie was awesome though! Should catch it! Still halfway through the book. And Merry Christmas. :)

Toni Jordan

Chapter 1: Clearly an Angel

     In every story, there is a protagonist and an antagonist. And in the end, the good will always wins the bad: The knight will slay the dragon, the angel will beat the demon, even the good old office guy will get the girl instead of the evil used-to-be-popular hunk.

But maybe not in this story.

I’ve learnt from a certain man that sometimes you fight the bad guy for so long, you end up becoming the bad guy who realizes he was so wrong. Maybe, an angel wasn’t always an angel. And likewise, maybe a demon wasn’t always a demon. Things happen and people change. And I guess that’s not too bad.

The more obvious angel though, in this story, would be my friend Frank.

No, no — “Friend” is much too much an understatement. Frank was my neighbour, my brother, my family. Frank was the brother I never had. We weren’t tied by blood. We weren’t tied by bonds. We just two souls intertwined by the hands of Fate. A dead knot. Never to be removed.

     The first time I met this dear fellow was on a night I could not remember. I had awoken on this strange grass patch, before me a barren land with absolutely nothing.

Except this man.

He was dressed in a peculiar manner, almost like Charlie Choplin. Clothed in a crisp new suit, complete with a black bowtie and a bowler hat, stood a fair man about six foot two. The gentleman approached, trudging up the muddy hill towards me, with his weight resting on a similarly-colored umbrella cum walking stick.

“My goodness, Missy, are you doing alright?” he asked while pulling out a neatly folded handkerchief from his brest pocket and offering it to me. For my tears, that is.

That night, Father had been long gone on another one of his business trips. He always went for long flights to faraway lands, meeting new people, making deals, deals and more deals. Working hard to earn money: That’s his job. So I had kind of gotten used to him not being around much. After all, he was doing it for the family.

Mother on the other hand was glued to the tele outside. She had probably been marking math workbooks meanwhile. She is a great multi-tasker really: marking one question whilst watching a television series, grabbing a drink, checking emails on her Blackberry… The amount of things she did at once! She was a math teacher and taught upper primary students. Sure, she didn’t have to travel and all. But that didn’t make her any less busy.

And that didn’t give me more attention either.

     While they were both immersed in their own worlds, I had been running a fever possibly as high as the Saharra. Or at least, to a four year-old me, it had reached  a temperature of which I felt the need to settle my funeral arrangements.

It had been a cold and wintry night. As I cuddled in the bed with my armada of soft toys, for once, I didn’t feel any safer. Lightning flashed and thunder rumbled. If there were anything I was frightened of as a child, it’d be that duo.

Father wasn’t around (as always). Mother occupied with her extreme multi-tasking. I was on the verge of tears, shivering, silently crying and just really darn scared. Out of the blue, in the darkness, I heard a little voice. A soft yet loud “psst” sound, like how you’d signal to someone but don’t want to be heard.

“Psst…” It went again. I slowly pulled down the covers, just a little past below my eyes. I scanned the room in the darkness for the source. Lo and behold, it was this little glowing face in the lights. “Don’t fret child, I will be here to protect you…”

He smiled the kind of smile one would only see once or twice in a lifetime, comforting and calming. “If you’re scared, just look to me. There’s no need to worry. I’m here. Wipe up those tears dearie, you look beautiful that way.”

I giggled a little and lifted the blanket to dry off my face. I must have stared at him forever.  His eyes lighted up the dark dark room. His nose, it kind of crinkled every time he laughed. It kind of made me laugh too.

“Just close your eyes, little Miss. Imagine a new world. Safety from everything.”

Back then, I was a relatively religious kid. I believed, that night, that I had met God. I mean who else could have been so kind to rescue me from this torment at such a timely hour? I squeezed my eyes tight shut and when I opened them  again, everything was like he said: The rain, the thunder, the lightning, the fear, the feeling of abandonment — Gone, all gone.

At that moment, I felt as if I was Alice who had fallen down the rabbit hole except that there was never a hole to ever fall down except deep deep into my consciousness. That, of course, was when I caught sight of the gentlemen coming up the muddy hill.

“My goodness, Missy, are you alright?” he inquired while offering me a handkerchief from a breast pocket on his coat. Due to my relatively slow reaction, and inability to operate due to extreme confusion to what the hell was happening, he dabbed my tears for me.

I honestly cried even more because no one had ever been so kind to me. (And also, I’d always seen adults cry under the prescence of God, so I thought it was only right of me to do the same.) It might not seem like much to you, but what he did, it meant the world to me.

Being the only child, I followed my parents everywhere, including their occasional social gatherings. In those parties, I was the only kid there, so I had only the adults to mingle with. I tried, of course, talking to them and trying to sound smart. But I was tired of pretending.

Pretending to be smarter than who I am; Pretending to be older than who I am; Pretending to be happier than who I am. That little magic trick I carried with me well into my teenage years and I believe many people still carry it with them till present.

But with him, I could be all me.

     All of a sudden, the formal gentleman, with his suit now slightly soiled, jumps to his feet. “Oh forgive me, dear Miss, how rude of me,” he says, removing his bowler hat, “My name is Frank. And yours?”

He bows down with his hat in front of him like how those royal princes do at posh parties. I try and curtsey but all I have is a T-shirt and shorts, so it ends up looking a bit funny. “Karina,” I giggle, just as he places his bowler back on his mop of blonde hair.

He beams as he hears my name and that makes me beam as well. Slowly but surely, we began to talk. Though it started of with explanations of why I was crying, the conversation slowly bloomed into a diverse range of topics.

He became, indirectly, my father when my real father was absent. He became my  “trusted adult” who I could freely talk to about anything and everything that bothered me. I loved Frank, and I knew he loved me. “And that is all that matters,” he’d say. ”Nothing can ever tear us apart.”

He was my silent guardian angel.

     “Watch this,” Frank announced, as he closed his eyes and stretched his hands out towards the empty land. Within seconds, a small shoot was visible in the ground. In another few moments, it grew and grew and grew, so much I thought it would’ve touched the sky (though it didn’t).

My eyes widen as the small shoot bursts into branches and leaves and into the tallest fig tree I have ever seen. Standing forty metres and strong was a fully grown fig tree, bred with nothing but imagination and will power.

I gasped.

“Yeah, you try! You could build my house!” He encourages, sounding like he believes in me. I stutter and retort, try to cancel the deal, because obviously I don’t believe in myself. I never have. And probably never will have reason to.

But then he smiles that cheeky smile, the one that’s secretly whispering that ‘no’ ins’t an answer.