Back to regular book blogging, however the vlog from the other week went so well I might consider doing more. Do let me know if you’d like that! It was fun.

Anyway! I’m procrastinating. Help me? Thanks! I’m trying to work on a poem and it’s not being very cooperative. Cinquains are cheeky.

Can you tell I’ve had a lot of coffee this morning?

Okay, settle down.

[Serious blogger face on.]

Thin books are marvellous. Take this week for example. Were you to ask, What have you finished? I’d reply, A Tolstoy and a Fitzgerald. Sounds posh! Like I’ve not slept! But, coming in at 106 and 188* pages respectively, the speed at which I was able to knock them over was also due – I hardly need add – due to their magnificence.

I couldn’t help reading The Death of Ivan Ilyich without having my father in mind, for it is the story of a dying man coming to terms with his immanent departure from this world. I cried.

The Great Gatsby and I have a past. Sort of. Well we have a past without having a past, if that’s possible. I got through high school, then a BA, then a MA, without ever being assigned it to study when it seemed a lot of my other friends did. I’ve had it on my shelf for years, even picked it up once, but never got beyond the second page for a variety of reasons that include laziness and – bafflingly – reluctance.

I thought I ‘knew’ what it would be like (parties, jazz, decadence etc) but that doesn’t come close to the heart of the story. Luckily I lived thirty-two years of my life without knowing the plot, so I could enjoy it without any preconceptions. I think that’s why I’m still thinking about it days after turning the last page.

Perhaps it’s a good thing I didn’t read it before: I do have a hunch that certain books – those which leave a true, lasting impact – come into our lives at exactly the right time. Another example would be Dracula, age thirteen. Or The Name of the Rose, age twelve.

The Great Gatsby comes close, I must say. Very close.

ha ha. it's a great gatsby joke

photo credit: Rakka

* My copy of The Great Gatsby isn’t the same as this picture, but this picture comes closest to the ‘look’ of mine, which was done in watercolours.

karen andrews

Karen Andrews is the creator of this website, one of the most established and well-respected parenting blogs in the country. She is also an author, award-winning writer, poet, editor and publisher at Miscellaneous Press. Her latest book is Trust the Process: 101 Tips on Writing and Creativity