Monday, September 14, 2009

Citizen of the World

Last December, shortly after Christmas, I made a trip to the local Indigo Books store in my area to pick out a few books to buy with a few gift cards I had gotten for Christmas. After a couple hours looking about I ended up leaving the book store with three books, The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin, The Audacity of Hope by Barack Obama, and Citizen of the World: The Life of Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Volume One: 1919-1968 by an author by the name of John English, a book which I had been eying since a few months beforehand. I've only now just finished reading the three books I picked up that night, and I've got to say, I definitely enjoyed Citizen of the World the most out of the three.
For those who are reading this who may not know anything of him, Pierre Elliott Trudeau is often considered by many Canadians as one of the greatest Prime Minsters in modern Canadian history, though, depending on where it is your from within Canada, he was also despised by many Canadians, as well, for many different reasons, all of which would take much too long to explain. In 1982, as Prime Minister of Canada, Trudeau repatriated our country's Constitution from the United Kingdom where the power to amend it rested solely in the hands of the British Parliament. He also made sure that our newly repatriated Constitution protected the rights of all Canadians by adding the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to it. It is for this reason above all others I have for many years now had the greatest respect for our late Prime Minister; he was a bold and strong enough a leader to do that which a great deal of modern governments often seem loath to do, he gave his fellow citizens rights rather than constantly looking for ways around or restricting them.Citizen of the World is the first volume of a planned two volume biography that focuses on Trudeau's life prior to becoming leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. It was brilliantly written, I really enjoyed reading it. If I had thought he was an interesting man before reading this book it was nothing compared to how interesting I've discovered he truly was. While reading the book, to my utter surprise, I found that in his youth Trudeau seemed to, in fact, be a strong Québec nationalist and, for a time, was a borderline separatist. But during his life, which is often the case with those who keep a truly open mind and seek continuously to educate themselves, his views and opinions were constantly evolving to the point that many of them were completely opposite of the opinions he had held as young man.
Trudeau fancied himself a citizen of the world. He spent over a year in his youth backpacking around the world; a journey that took him from Europe to the Middle-East to Asia and through more than one war zone in the process; he had actually even been shot at on three separate occasions. Later in life he made trips to the Soviet Union, China, and Cuba during some of the most turbulent times of the Cold War, during the days of McCarthyism when making trips to Communist countries was often very dangerous as political idealists sought to prosecute anybody and everybody suspected or proven to be Communists. He didn't seem to perceive the world through the scope of "us and them"; he sought to understand those around the world and didn't begrudge them for holding different ideals and political philosophies. Love him or hate him, Pierre Elliott Trudeau was a fascinating man. If only we could all fall under the category of Citizen of the World.

To-read or Not To-read? That is My Nonsensical Title

Over the past few weeks I've been meaning to compose a list of books I hope to read as soon as I'm able. Unfortunately I'll probably not be able to read most of the books on the list unless I already own them as I can't afford to buy anything at the moment – a very common side effect of not having a penny to your name – let alone heaps of books. I've listed each book under it's author and have written the title of those books I already own but haven't read yet in green text. The list is extensive, and I've had to force myself to stop adding to it for the time being as there are just so many books out there I'd like to read that I could go on adding to the list for days! As I finish reading each book on the list I'll update it by striking it's title out so that everybody will be able to see the progress I've made. Also, look for my latest additions to the list in bold red text, and the book I'm currently reading in bold blue! Finally, books which I "own" in eBook form will be in bold purple text and shall remain highlighted in purple text until I own a physical copy. To signify if I am currently reading an eBook I will instead change the colour of the date I started reading the book to blue rather than changing the title of the book to blue. So, without further ado, my To-read list:

Andrew Davidson
  • The Gargoyle
Alexandre Dumas, père

  • The Count of Monte Cristo
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
  • Infidel
  • Nomad
Barack Obama
  • Dreams From My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance
Bertrand M. Patenaude
  • Trotsky: Downfall of a Revolutionary
Brian Mulroney
  • Memoirs: 1939–1993
Carolyn Jessop
  • Escape
  • Triumph
Cassandra Clare

The Mortal Instruments
  1. City of Bones (Started: Fri., Feb. 5, '10 – Finished: Mon., Feb. 8, '10)
  2. City of Ashes (Started: Wed., Feb. 17, '10 — Finished: Sat., Feb. 20, '10)
  3. City of Glass (Started: Wed., Feb. 24, '10 — Finished: Mon., Mar. 1, '10)
  4. City of Fallen Angles (Started: Mon., Apr. 18, '11 – Finished: Thurs., Apr. 28, '11)

The Infernal Devices
  1. Clockwork Angel (Started Tues., Aug. 31, '10 – Finished: Sat., Sept. 4, '10)
  2. Clockwork Prince (Publishing Date To Be Announced)
  3. Clockwork Princess (Publishing Date To Be Announced)
Charlaine HarrisThe Southern Vampire Mysteries

  1. Dead Until Dark
  2. Living Dead in Dallas
  3. Club Dead
  4. Dead to the World
  5. Dead as a Doornail
  6. Definitely Dead
  7. Altogether Dead
  8. From Dead to Worse
  9. Dead and Gone
  10. Dead in the Family
Charles Dickens
  • A Tale of Two Cities
  • Great Expectations (Started: Sun., Sept. 20, '09 – Finished: Mon., Sept. 28, '09)
  • Hard Times
Charles P. Pierce
  • Idiot America: How Stupidity Became a Virtue in The Land of the Free
Christopher Hitchens
  • God is NOT Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (Started: Thurs., Feb. 12, '10 – Finished: Tues., Feb. 16, '10)
  • Hitch-22: A Memoir
Christopher Paolini

  • Inheritance (Started: Tues., 8 Nov., '11 — Finished: Fri., 18 Nov., '11)
Cormac McCarthy
  • The Road (Started: Mon., Feb. 8, '10 – Finished: Tues., Feb. 9, '10)
C.S. Lewis
The Chronicles of Narnia
  • The Last Battle (Started and finished: Tues., Sept. 15, '09)
Dan Brown
  • The Lost Symbol (Started: Wed., Sept. 16, '09 – Finished: Sat., Sept. 19, '09)
Dan Dancocks
  • Spearhead to Victory
Doris Kearns Goodwin
  • Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
Dover Publications
  • The Wit and Wisdom of Mark Twain: A Book of Quotations
Edgar Allan Poe
  • (Various works)
Fred Doucette
  • Empty Casing: A Soldier's Memoir of Sarajevo Under Siege
Fritjof Capra
  • The Science of Leonardo: Inside the Mind of the Great Genius of the Renaissance (Started: Mon., Sept. 20, '10 at 22:40 – Finished: )
George G. Blackburn
  • The Guns of Victory: A Soldier's Eye View, Belgium, Holland, and Germany 1944–45
George Orwell

  • 1984 (Started: Tues., Mar. 16, '10 – Finished: Wed., Apr. 15, '10)
  • Animal Farm (Started Fri., Mar. 19, '11 – Finished: Sat., Mar. 26, '11)
George R.R. Martin
A Song of Ice and Fire Series
  1. A Game of Thrones (Started: Mon., 21 Nov., '11 — Finished: Mon., 06 Aug., '12)
  2. A Clash of Kings
  3. A Storm of Swords
  4. A Feast for Crows
  5. A Dance with Dragons
Guy Walters
  • Hunting Evil
Harper Lee
  • To Kill a Mockingbird (Started: Fri., Apr. 16, '10 – Finished: Fri., Apr. 30, '10)
Helen Rapaport
  • Conspirator: Lenin in Exile
Jack London
  • 40 Short Stories
  • Sea-Wolf, The
  • White Fang
Jane Austen
  • Emma
  • Mansfield Park
  • Northanger Abbey
  • Persuasion
  • Pride and Prejudice (Started: Thurs., Oct. 29, '09 – Finished: Tues., Jan. 12, '10)
Jean Chrétien
  • My Years as Prime Minister
Jeff Sharlet
  • The Family
John English
  • Just Watch Me: The Life of Pierre Elliott Trudeau: 1968-2000 (Started: Sat., Sept. 4, '10 – Finished: Tues., Sept. 14, '10)
John Ferling
  • The Assent of George Washington
John Milton
  • Paradise Lost (Started: Sun., 7 Aug., '11 — Finished: Fri., 13 Jan., '12)
Jon Anderson
  • Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life
Jon Meacham
  • American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House
J.R.R. Tolkien
  • The Legend of Sigurd & Gudrún
Jung Chang & Jon Halliday
  • Mao: The Unknown Story
Karl Marx & Fredrich Eagles
  • The Communist Manifesto (Started: Wed., 3 Aug., '11 — Finished: Thurs., 4 Aug., '11)
Kevin Patterson & Jane Warren
  • Outside the Wire: The War in Afghanistan in the Words of It's Participants (Started: Thurs., Oct. 8, '09 – Finished: Sat., Oct. 17, '09)
Mark Twain
  • Mark Twain's (Burlesque) Autobiography
  • Prince and the Pauper, The
  • Roughing It
Markus Zusak
  • The Book Thief
Mark Zuehlke
  • On to Victory: The Canadian Liberation of the Netherlands
Max Hastings
  • Finest Years: Churchill as Warlord 1940–45
Michael Shelden
  • Mark Twain: Man in White (Started: Fri., Mar. 25, '11 – Finished: Mon., Apr. 18, '11)
Miranda Carter
  • George, Nicholas, and Wilhelm: Three Royal Cousins and the Road to World War I (Started: Fri., May 21, '10 – Finished: Tues., Jun. 1, '10)
Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • The Scarlet Letter (Started: Sat., May 1, '10 – Finished: Thurs., May 20, '10)
Ray Wiss
  • FOB Doc: A Doctor On the Front Lines in Afghanistan
Rex Murphy
  • Canada and Other Matters of Opinion
Richard Dawkins
  • Ancestors Tale, The (Started: Tue., 17 May, '11 – Finished: Sun., 7 Aug., '11)
  • Blind Watchmaker, The
  • Climbing Mount Improbable
  • Greatest Show of Earth, The (Started: Wed., Jan. 13, '10 – Finished: Fri., Feb. 5, '10)
  • Selfish Gene, The (Started: Wed., Aug. 11, '10 – Finished: Tues., Aug. 31, '10)
  • Unweaving the Rainbow
Rick Hillier
  • A Soldier First: Bullets, Bureaucrats and the Politics of War
Rick Mercer
  • Rick Mercer Report: The Book (Started: Sat., Sept. 18, '10 – Finished: Mon., Sept. 20, '10)
Rick Riordan
Percy Jackson and the Olympians

  1. The Lightning Thief (Started: Fri. 6 May, '11 – Finished: Tue. 17 May, '11)
  2. The Sea Monsters
  3. The Titan's Curse
  4. The Battle of the Labyrinth
  5. The Last Olympian
Robert Service
  • Trotsky: A Biography (Started: Thurs., Jun. 3, '10 — Finished: Wed., Aug. 11, '10)
Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Kidnapped
  • Master of Ballantrae, The
Seth Grahame-Smith
  • Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
Simon Sebag Montefiore
  • Young Stalin (Started: Sun., Oct. 18, '09 – Finished Tue., Oct. 27, '09)
  • Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar
Sir Richard F. Burton (Translation)

  • Arabian Nights: The Book of a Thousand Nights and a Night
S.J. Parris
  • Heresy
Stephenie Meyer

Twilight Series
  1. Twilight
  2. New Moon
  3. Eclipse
  4. Breaking Dawn
Stuart McLean
  • Extreme Vinyl Café
Suzanne Collins
The Hunger Games Trilogy


  1. The Hunger Games (Started: Tues., Sept. 14, '10 – Finished: Sat., Sept. 18, '10)
  2. Catching Fire (Started: ?, Jan. (Maybe) ?, '11 – Finished: Fri., Mar. 19, '11)
  3. Mockingjay (Started: Thurs., Apr. 28, '11 – Finished: Fri. May 6, '11)
Thomson Gale
  • Einstein: His Life and Universe
Tim Cook

  1. At the Sharp End: Canadians Fighting the Great War 1914–1916
  2. Shock Troops: Canadians Fighting the Great War 1917–1918
Tony Blair
  • A Journey: My Political Life
William L. Shirer

  • Rise and Fall of the Third Reich

Look for updates to the list in the future!

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Restful Reading Over Restless Screens

Lately I've been trying to devote more of my spare time to reading. In the past I've normally taken my time with most of the books I've chosen to read, so much so that it's often taken me months to finish some of the books I've picked up over the last few years. It's never been that I've been disinterested in the material I choose to read, nor has it been due to the fact that many of the books I often read have proven to offer a certain information overload that's rarely experienced when reading fiction, which, I might add, normally doesn't take me nearly as long to read as non-fiction. In looking back on the last few years I find that my less-than-frequent reading habits can be, at least in part, explained by the amount of time I've often chosen to spend my free time online.

Until recently most of my time had been taken up sitting here at the computer rather than using it to read or finding other useful ways of spending it. Having spent the bulk of my time at the computer I've often not even been in the mood to read, and normally I never spent too much time reading unless I absolutely feel like doing so. However, lately I've been trying to cut back on how much of my time I spend online, especially since, for the most part, I've been very disinterested with the internet of late. That's not to say I've done particularly well in cutting back on the time I spend online — I generally spend a great deal of time on the internet to relieve the vast amount of boredom I often experience during my highly monotonous days — but I have been spending less time surfing the web lately, which definitely isn't a bad thing.

Instead of spending time online to wind down before bed every night I've been spending more time reading and adding entries to my journal, which, I've got to say, has been much more relaxing and enjoyable than sitting in a computer chair in front of a constantly flickering screen, which, I'm sure, is probably hell bent on either frying my brain, or ruining my eyes. I've really come to look forward to simply relaxing in bed reading for a couple hours before I turn in for the night, and I definitely feel much better about spending my time that way rather than spending my time online all night long.


Keep an eye open for my next blog in which I'll be posting my To-read list!

Friday, September 11, 2009

A New Beginning

During the last few months I have seen my life move in a completely different direction than I would have ever expected. If you had told me a year ago that in a years' time I would be joining the Air Force to become an AVN Tech (an aircraft mechanic) and waiting to go to Québec to begin my Basic Training, I'd have told you you were off your rocker. And yet, that is exactly the direction my life has taken. So much has changed over the last few months I've often felt overwhelmed by it all, but, despite that, I hope I can be said to be taking it head on.

I've done my best to embrace everything life has thrown at me over the past few months and, though I've not always been successful in doing so, have tried to look at everything that has changed for me as the beginning of a new phase of my life. I'm trying to break those habits and routines of mine which, I feel, have always held me back in life and have made me seriously unhappy for as long as I can remember. And so, it is in the interest of change that I've decided to create this blog.

In the past I've written blog entries on my Windows Live Space, but those entries have often been of a highly personal nature and have been quite alike to the entries found in my own personal journal. For this blog, thought I hope it will be said to offer insight into who I am, I hope to be a little less personal than I have been in blogging in the past; if I need somewhere to reflect upon the emotions I am experiencing due to some event that's happened in my life I will probably, though not necessarily, either turn to my journal, or continue to add the odd entry to my Windows Live Space rather than writing it all out here.