Annie Kapur
Bio
200K+ Reads on Vocal.
English Lecturer
đLiterature & Writing (B.A)
đFilm & Writing (M.A)
đSecondary English Education (PgDipEd) (QTS)
đBirmingham, UK
Stories (1971/0)
A Filmmaker's Review: "Saint Maud" (2019)
I have seen a lot of these folk horror films in my short time. One of my favourite films ever is the original version of âThe Wicker Manâ purely because it is such a fun movie. It is something different and the way in which this sub-genre offers this almost fairytale-like and old world horror to us is still frightening yes, but it also makes us feel slightly more frightened because of the belief systems and behaviours being so far removed from our own that we could not possibly imagine them existing in the modern day. Lexicons are filled with cultish dialogue, beliefs and hierarchies rule the character structures and even the way in which death is viewed is something that seems to lack reason and logic, but is believed by a mass of small people who are succumbing to something fairly unusual. Folk horror, we have to see, is making a massive comeback after the films of Ari Aster got so big from their amazing watchability. The film âMidsummerâ especially, is a film I personally love to watch time and time again because of its sheer depth and analysis into the cultish behaviour of mass crowds. We can tell that when it comes to folk horror, as it is a reality we are removed from, a lot of research and work needs to go into making sure that it sends the correct message to the audience. âSaint Maudâ is a film that does that - but only most of the time. I feel like there was so much more that could be done, especially regarding the fact that the film itself is only about an hour and a half long.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Horror
Book Review: "Three Martini Afternoons at the Ritz" by Gail Crowther
Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton are two female poets who practically changed the face of 20th century poetry. Many, many things have been written about the two poets throughout the years that range from their broken marriages to their fights with depression, their years of higher education and all the way down to their methods of ending their own lives. It is clear that we can draw parallels between the two writers and we can also see stark differences in their lives - such as Sylvia Plath moving to England whereas, Anne Sexton remained in America. But the one thing that I think I learned most about the two women was how their lives were marred by other people. I related to that and I think that this book really showed me that I am not alone when it comes to struggling with my own close relations. It is something that these two women not only struggled with, but in the end, it may have actually had a hand in both of their deaths. A brilliant book on two amazing women of literature, âThree Martini Afternoons at the Ritzâ is a biography that you will not want to miss this year.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Humans
Book Review: "Dandelions" by Yasunari Kawabata
I love reading 20th century Japanese Literature. The books of Junichiro Tanazaki, Yukio Mishima and the beautiful commentary on extreme human conditions as written by Yasunari Kawabata are among some of the greatest books to grace the last one hundred years of literature. In the 21st century, Japanese Literature continues the tradition of accurately and beautifully putting into words what others have previously struggled with articulating. The works of Yoko Ogawa such as âRevengeâ and âThe Memory Policeâ have often analysed the feelings of national anxiety as channelled through one or a small set of characters. The works of Haruki Murakami have the Kafkan quality of despair raining over them whilst also managing to tell the most wonderful narratives through extended metaphors. But in this review, I would like to discuss the final work of the great Yasunari Kawabata. It is called âDandelionsâ and it is one of the most beautiful and incredible books to ever be written in Japan.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "34 Patients" by Tom Templeton
I remember when I read a book called âWhen Breath Becomes Airâ and was fascinated about the amount of hard work, love, care and courage that goes into being a doctor and even more so, being a doctor who then requires a doctor for a terminal illness that he himself will later succumb to. It started a fashion off for me to become fascinated with the stories of people who work some of the most intriguing jobs from doctors to architects and honestly, they require the person to know exactly what they are doing as mistakes are hardly ever permitted. Along the way, I have come into contact with many books about doctors and the treatment of illnesses with the books of Oliver Sacks being among the most famous that I have read. But, when this book caught my eye, I have to say that I was not immediately taken by it. In fact, it was more of a curiosity as I had never really read a book on this scale before in which the doctor basically gives us 34 very different patients to look at over the course of their career. Fascinated for a long, long while - I could not even begin to see what was to come in this grand memoir of being in the medical profession.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "The True Heart" by Sylvia Townsend Warner
Romance novels are more than often, one-sided affairs with predictable lines and plots. There have been, though, some better ones of the last one hundred or so years but rarely are they appreciated as much as they should be. Romance novels that do not fit the same piece as being something by Nicholas Sparks and that genre are often ignored but, as I have found recently, there is an author who pretty much has the perfect blend between light and dark though some of the plot may be assumed clichĂ©. The book in question is entitled, âThe True Heartâ by Sylvia Townsend Warner and it is one of the shorter books I have read this week as I wanted to have a nicer morning than my usual heavy reads. âThe True Heartâ is written incredibly cleverly and I have to say that the use of language is amazing for what it does for the atmosphere and characters. Though there are parts of the plot where I found myself guessing exactly what was going to happen next - the writing did shock me as something that was very different for its genre.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Burning Man" by Frances Wilson
I have read a number of author biographies over the years and honestly, there is nothing more refreshing than reading an author biography that does something different with the story. We are not talking about twisting facts into fiction but rather we speak of the way in which the biography is researched. Many biographies have a secondary source text or two that they will reference in accordance with making their own arguments, but less often is the researcher that goes out of their way to get into the minute details of the life of their subject. The book âOscar Wildeâ by Richard Ellman is a great example of the new-age author biography. Using several sources to make the arguments, tales of people who had seen or wrote about or even heard of Oscar Wilde litter the book and are under the critical eye of the author of the biography, an expert in the life and times of the subject. In this text entitled, âBurning Manâ by Frances Wilson, we see a similar yet newer method in this practice.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Empire of Pain" by Patrick Radden Keefe
I think I can say that many of us have seen those programs on Netflix that talk about the American Painkiller Epidemic. I think many of us have even tried some of these painkillers and felt darn good after them. I even bet that some of you sitting here today are possibly addicted to them. But there is one thing for sure - if youâre going to write a book or make a documentary about it, it is better if you are on the inside of the situation rather than standing on the outside. It is no criticism towards this book for its author was very much outside of the situation, but I can state that there have been better attempts to grab my interest when it comes to the word âOxyContinâ. I am a person who loves personal stories, which is why I love listening to people who have stories to tell about journeys they have been on and such. It is just incredible to listen to someone talk with such a passion. Some of this book here, because of the research aspect, falls rather flat at the beginning, but as we get into the grittiness of the story there is a definite attempt to make this more about the entire âgame planâ surrounding the drug rather than a boring research paper which many of us would be familiar with. So, there are definitely very good points to this book, but there is always room for improvement in the eyes of your average reader.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Humans
Book Review: "A Thousand Ships" by Natalie Haynes
When I read retellings of Ancient Greek Literature and Mythology, I am looking for one thing in particular - does it do anything differently and if it does, can I still see where the story is going? That is my idea of balance. These stories are thousands of years old and are known far and wide, loved by cultures and communities alike and so, to tackle them with a different perspective often can come out as self-righteous or even pompous. When I first tackled the writing of Natalie Haynes, the first book I read by her was âPandoraâs Jarâ and honestly, I have to say that I was very impressed with the sheer amount of knowledge there was about these characters included within the text and then to use that to express them differently was a great idea. Characters such as Clytemnestra and Helen of Troy, The Amazonians and others were covered in vast amounts of detail. This second one I am reading entitled âA Thousand Shipsâ is about the sacking of Troy, the story told by the two remaining texts of the Trojan Cycle - The Iliad and The Odyssey. Two of my favourite epics of all time (if we exclude the Aeneid of course) retold from an all-female perspective.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Albert and the Whale" by Philip Hoare
Sometimes, when you read a biography (especially when it is about someone quite far back into the previous centuries such as the teens) you are expecting a certain amount of difficulty in reading it as fact - you must instead read it as research. If the person is dead then you have to accept that something will be out of place or something will be missed or not investigated as much. When this happens, you have to step back and see how the writer fills it in, what the writer has investigated and why they have covered certain things and yet, not covered others as much or as well. In this case of this book, we have our artists - DĂŒrer - and not only his life but the lives of those he took influence from and those who followed as well. The best thing about this book was learning about the entire world around him - it was a huge world in which many people influencers and influenced were involved and each component is important into the way in which we understand DĂŒrer and his time period, art and life today. Honestly, not only did I think this book was pretty well-written for a biography but I also thought that had it been any longer, it probably would have been unbearable because of the way it weaves back and forth through history and artistic period.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Touring the Land of the Dead" by Maki Kashimada
Some of the books I read can be quite upsetting though not a lot physically happens. The last book I read that was like this has to be some of the feminist Greek myth analytics I have been reading. Seeing how unfairly women are treated in Ancient Greek Myth really made me rethinking my stance on this literature and expanded my worldview of mythology all around. But, when it comes to dealing with death and/or Illness, there are not a great number of books in my peripheral that I have read in the last year or so. I think that there a requirement for modernist illness literature because the world is becoming more obsessed with perfection - imperfection needs to be represented especially in difference through people and the way we cannot control who we are or whether we are to get very sick in the near future. Many people have difficulties with their illnesses and feel as if they are a burden towards others. This book really does investigate some aspects of that in the midst of it being about this strange modernist love which almost seems completely lacking in romance and is almost entirely platonic from time to time.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Pandora's Jar" by Natalie Haynes
There is a really odd story to how I came across Natalie Haynesâ âPandoraâs Jarâ and it is something that I found incredibly wholesome. When I went to the shopping centre of my hometown, I was not really looking for anything in particular and had just gone to pick up some reading for my journeys ahead. A woman in the store came up to me and asked me if I had heard of this particular book and after I had said I had not, she persuaded me to read it. Speaking with a lot of passion about the novel, she got me very excited to see what it was all about and I can honestly say that it does not disappoint whatsoever. A brilliant mixture of Ancient Greek Myth and modernist writing styles, we get to examine the major women of the greek literary tradition through new and wider perspectives. We get to examine each character for who they are and not based on their connection to anyone else. Many of these times, women were treated terribly for things they could not control. For example: the fact that Poseidon raped Medusa in Athenaâs temple meant that Medusa would be transformed into a very ugly woman whose look would turn men to stone. Another one is about Jocasta and how her fate was sealed by everyone around her but she did not really have a say in what was happening to her. Instead, she went along with it for years and years. It was absolutely horrifying the read, but it does teach you a lot about the sidelined narrative of women. When I got to the end of the book, I noticed how a lot of things I thought I knew about the politics of greek myths and gender were pretty much world known. Now that I have seen that brilliant book I can say that I really donât but
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks
Book Review: "The Artful Dickens" by John Mullan
Charles Dickens is most commonly associated with making and bringing to life some of literatureâs most incredibly complex child stars. From the friendship and politics of Oliver Twist and the Artful Dodger to the gothic pull of Pipâs âGreat Expectationsâ, Dickens has created a world of amazing characters who move around the social ladder of London and the surrounding area. From his expansive bildungsroman, âDavid Copperfieldâ all the way through the the visitation of three ghosts in âA Christmas Carolâ, Charles Dickens usually holds up this version of society that tries to stay as truthful as physically possible to what actually happens - dispelling any strange and unwanted myths that have arose in-between. There is a surge of electricity in these novels by the fact that Dickensâ characters almost undergo some sort of massive moment of great realisation - an epiphany that changes the course of everything from their story to their politics, their thoughts and their own personal prejudices. Once we see what the true value of life is to these characters, we learn moral lessons about Victorian England and many myths we once thought about social mobility have been dispelled.
By Annie Kapur3 years ago in Geeks