Showing posts with label Snow flower and the secret fan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snow flower and the secret fan. Show all posts

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Notes on a book



I had the thought that I should keep a notebook with each book I'm reading to jot down notes when the book has a quote I really like or something that seemed profound or interesting comes along that I really want to remember. I wonder, for instance, when someone writes an article about the most interesting first lines of a book - how did they remember those? Did they go back through all the books they'd read? or did they keep a list while they were reading? In some books, I think it would be beneficial to write down the characters as they are introduced so I can keep them straight as to who-is-who. Books with complicated family schemes are always nicer when they print the family tree on the inside cover. If I wrote down the characters and a brief statement about them, I might not have so much trouble confusing who is who when there are two or more similar looking foreign names. When audio books first came out, I listened to"Hunt for Red October" and couldn't keep any of the Russian names straight.

So, from the last book I just read, "Snow flower and the secret fan" (which was a wonderful book), I would have noted that I learned about the secret writing of Chinese women called "nu shu" and about "laotongs" which were something like the perfect matched friend. A very small and insignificant mention of facial hair in moles has also stayed with me - and I bet its true since the author did so much historical research. I couldn't find the passage again, because I didn't write it down in a notebook - so I can't quote verbatim, but... In China, the longer the hair from a facial mole, the wiser you were seen to be. I'll forget all the important things, but I'll remember that one.

Susan