Sunday, November 4, 2012

October 11

Growing Up Amish by Ira Wagler
We recently got hooked on a TV show on the National Geographic Channel called Amish Out of Order.  From there we heard about this book, as the author was on an episode.  I, like I suppose a lot of the outside world, am fascinated with the Amish.  I used to think this was unique to me since I grew up in a state that had a lot of them in it, but I think we are all fascinated with them because of how different they are and are able to remain.  Recently though I keep learning all these things about them that don't really fit the picture I used to have.  While I'm still torn on what to think of them as a culture, I continue to want to read and watch everything I see out there about them.  This book is a true story of one man's continued struggle to leave the only community he ever knew.  He first leaves at age 16 and continues to struggle with finding his identity and coming back and forth with his family/religion/community.  He even gets baptized in his church but still struggles to accept that this is his faith.  The book shares his journey with the reader and ends on a happy note with him finding himself after so many sad years of struggle.  It wasn't quite what I expected, I thought the book would be more about after he left the amish what happened, but it was mostly telling of his upbringing and his struggle to decide what he wanted for himself in life.  I appreciated the honesty though and his clearly thought out story.

Hell is Other Parents by Deborah Copaken Kogan
I really like this author, she's a newer find for me and I love her fiction books.  This was an interesting non fiction look at her own life as a mother and sharing stories of interesting things that have happened as a parent.  She's a great writer and I was certainly entertained with her sharing the most unique moments in her families life but collectively I'm just not sure of the audience of this book.  Mothers?  People who like this author?  I don't know maybe I couldn't relate on some level not being a mother but while I found the chapters entertaining, I just wasn't sure of the message the book was trying to convey.

Maine by J Courtney Sullivan
I'm torn on this book.  I liked the style of the writing and the concept of the plot.  A summer house in Maine, four generations of women, told from different views of the women family members.  I liked the strong female characters.  I liked too that it was an Irish Catholic Alcoholic family, this may be a strange thing to say but I enjoy books with addiction themes.  That being said the characters didn't really go anywhere.  They spent the majority of the book in the same place and then at the very end took one or two tiny steps forward.  The ending was also slightly confusing though I think the author strongly suggested what was happening, it wasn't entirely clear or for certain so I could be way wrong.  The first character we meet is the oldest member of the family, the grandmother who's husband won the property in a bet many years ago and has been coming to the house for many many years.  She has 3 adult children, 2 girls and a boy.  One of the girls is another narrator.  She lives in California far away from her family by choice and continues to work on who she is outside of her family.  Her adult daughter is another narrator, in her early 30s living in New York and having recently found out she is pregnant after also recently breaking up with her boyfriend (the baby's father).  The last narrator is the son's wife who married into the family, but never felt good enough for them.  We hear from all 4 and learn about the unique things that make them them.  An interesting part of the book is that with each chapter you get a different narrator and in each chapter you see the positive qualities of that character but then in the next 3 chapters before you get to hear from that character again, you hear all the negatives about them and decide to dislike the character.  This was the part I didn't like.  You weren't really rooting for anyone.  When they were speaking they seemed strong and then when everyone else was you saw all their weaknesses and faults and in ways that you couldn't ignore by the time you got back to their voice.  I've already picked up another book by this author though to give her another chance because her writing style was unique and the book was far from predictable and I did keep turning the pages.
A quote I liked from the book " "It would be a different story if you didn't let them get under your skin like you do, but they seem to make you so stressed," he'd said.  "Around your family, you never act like yourself."  "I know," she replied, though sometimes she feared the opposite was true, that her real self was that dark, angry one she had shoved in a box years ago, the one that emerged only when she was home." "

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson  *sigh* I'm so sad this series is over.  Especially because this isn't the last book in the trilogy because that's what the author wanted but because he died and couldn't continue the characters moving forward.  These books were difficult to get into, each of the three was a struggle to start but then once you get into it there is no putting it down.  I love love love the strong female main character who is so unique.  In this book she finally gets resolution to the atrocities that have been committed against her since her childhood.  We finally get some new characters on her side and that help her with her murder trial.  She finally gets to exact the revenge she has been seeking out for such a long time.  And it's done in such a clever and skillful way by the author.  I liked too that although there were romantic story lines in each of the three books, they weren't the main focus and the conclusion of the series was about the characters not their love lives.  Each character ended in a way unique and good to them and not about having fallen in love with someone who fixed everything.  Each character really stood on their own two feet even if/when they did have others around them.  I wish their were more books to read and I also wish they had been easier to get into because although I stuck with them, I'm certain many people put them down pretty easily and never got to read about such an amazing character and a really cool plot line.

The Next Best Thing by Jennifer Weiner  I really like Weiner for light hearted reads that share unique stories and make me fall for and root for a usually down main character who would not normally be the character you root for.  However, some of her recent work since she got some movie/tv deals has not been as good as her earlier work.  I keep looking each year with her new novels for the same feelings I got curled up with her first books and each year I finish the book without really getting that same feeling anymore.  This one was about an adult orphan physically scarred main character who moved to Hollywood with her grandmother in her early 20s.  She and her grandmother are super close since her parents died when she was very young.  She moves to Hollywood to be a screen writer and we as the reader get to follow her a few years after they've arrived when her dreams are starting to come through. Of course though Hollywood doesn't allow her to do her show her way and she learns lessons along the way about love, beauty, and having your own voice.  I loved the closeness of the main character and her grandma, definitely made me miss my grandmothers.  I like how Weiner never gives you a 5'8'' 100lb blond hair blued eyed female lead, always give you someone you wouldn't quite expect.  I didn't like the predictability of the romance in the book.  I didn't like too that the character didn't grow anywhere you didn't expect her to.  She went exactly where you knew she would right from the beginning.

Up High in Trees by Kiara Brinkman
Hmm I'm not sure where to start on this one.  The story was told all in very very short sections that were to be linked together.  It's the story of a young (autistic?) boy who's mother tragically and suddenly dies and how he and his father struggle to get through the loss.  He has two older siblings that are much more independent but he struggles with their loss in unique ways.  The story was published in 2007 but takes place in the 90s and has lots of conversation of the political times then and election going on.  The reader is never told if main character Sebastian is autistic but we are given signs pointing that way and clues to make us believe that's a part of the story.  I read the book in an afternoon because it did suck you in and make you want to see what happened, but after putting it down I just wasn't all that sure what I had just read.  What was the author trying to share with the reader?

Diary of a Wombat  by Jackie French
Okay I'm not sure if I should count this or not but I'm gonna.  I read this book and a bookstore/bar.  Yes you read that right, my new city has a bookstore that has a bar in the back how awesome is that!  So as we were standing there drinking surrounded by books (a pretty cool combination for me) I saw this picture book on the shelf.  I immediately thought it was a new book by the same author as Diary of a Worm  I quickly realized it was not but still read through it and found it to be a cute story.  I loved Diary of a Worm, first reading it to a little girl I babysat for many years ago.  I loved it so much that whenever we had story time I tried to convince her it was one she wanted to hear.  It was such a cute story.  Wombat was more or less similar in taking you through some funny moments in the Wombat's life.  I also think kids would just get a kick out of continuing to say the word "wombat" it's a fun word to say.  Cute children's book, and since leaving a job at the library a few years ago, I don't get nearly enough chances to read children's books anymore so I was thrilled just to have read one.

Love Walked In by Marisa de los Santos
Okay so last month I read the book Belong to Me by this same author.  It turned out after I read it that there was a book before that one with some of the same characters.  Belong to Me was about main character Cornelia and her life with her husband in suburbia. Love Walked In was about how Cornelia met Clare and also wound up with her husband.  The story is told alternately from Cornelia and Clare's perspectives.  Cornelia meets and falls for a handsome man that is a look a like for Cary Grant, and as a film buff that seems to be a huge factor of her falling for him.  Clare is 11 years old and sees her mom start to unravel but isn't sure what to do about it.  She calls her father, who is not with her mother or really much a part of their lives, for help but he more or less ignores her call for help.  She then has to take care of herself and try hard not to let anyone know that anything is wrong with her mother.  Then her mother disappears and Clare is unsure what to do.  Meanwhile Cornelia is working on her new relationship and continuing to try to decide what she wants from life in general.  Their paths connect and both lives are changed forever.  I really like this author and was sad this was the last book of hers I haven't read.  I liked this story although there were a few parts of the story that disappointed me, don't want to give away the surprises though.  And even though I was originally upset to be reading this "out of order" there were enough surprises about the characters and how they came to be the people they were in the next book that I got over the fact that I hadn't read this one first pretty quickly.

The Beach House by Jane Green
I like this author because you can count on a good story with characters the reader easily falls for and gets invested in.  That being said this particular book of hers was not one of my favorites.  I did get invested in the characters but a lot of what happened was pretty predictable and then the stuff that wasn't, was very unrealistic.   This is the story of a beach house in Nantucket that becomes one of the main characters year round house.  She starts to run out of money and rents out rooms in her home for the summer.  We meet the characters who will end up in the rooms much before the summer they arrive and get invested in their stories as well.  Nan, the main character who owns the house, lost her husband when her son was only a small child and raised him as a single parent.  She is a quirky 65 year old woman who lives on the island year round.  Her son Michael is in his early 40s and has yet to settle down, never able to find the right woman.  He ends up in an affair with his married boss and quits his job and returns to Nantucket for the summer.  There is also a married couple with two small girls who have a major struggle going on in their marriage as each of them works on figuring out who they are individually and where they come from.  Lastly there is a family of a recently divorced couple with a troubled teenage daughter who is struggling with her parents divorce.  The father cheated on the mother but the daughter does not know this.  She wants to move in with her father to get away from her mother, who she blames for the divorce, and so her mother takes off for the island for the month of August to rediscover herself.  This book has a good enough plot and had some good potential but it just never really went anywhere that interesting.  Still this author is good for light hearted reads.

Madapple by Christina Meldrum  I really like this author, I hope she writes more.  This book was marketed as young adult but I'm not entirely certain why, it read more or less like an adult novel.  It had similar themes to the first book of her's I read, Amaryllis in Blueberry, religion, non traditional beliefs, family secrets, legal systems, etc.  It took a minute to get into the novel as she has such a unique writing style but she does instantly grab your attention you just have to wait a few chapters to keep your attention.  This one was written also in future/past tense as each chapter was from the past events that occurred but between the chapters, and at the very start of the book, readers got to read a transcript of the court trial taking place.  The story is of a young girl who's mother dies and leaves behind many secrets for her to discover after having been sheltered all her life.  She turns to the only family she knows and thinks she can trust but very quickly learns her situation has gotten much worse and not better.  As a reader reading the court transcripts in between chapters it is very easy to side immediately with the young main character.  Since we aren't actually in the courtroom and just given court room scenes it's much harder to not have an opinion very quickly on her innocence in everything she is charged with and to hope that everything will get resolved as it should.  The thing this book made me think about too was that in a court case there is a lot of objecting going on and then the jury is supposed to "strike" from memory questions or answers or whatever.  I started getting confused and in the early parts of the story went back and forth a little on what had happened, even though I had just read in a narrative about what had happened and knew what the truth was unlike the jury.  Meldrum seems to be very educated on various religions and seems to struggle to connect truths and also involve spirituality.  As a reader she takes us on a fun journey of discovery and education that makes it hard to put the book down.  Really wish she had more novels for me to devour as quickly as I did these two.

The Private Lives of Pippa Lee by Rebecca Miller  Perhaps I should be waiting a few more days to write this as I just finished this one last night, and it might need some time to be digested.  I don't know though, this write is well liked by many and now she has some films and what not.  I just don't always get her I guess.  Maybe she and I just don't click but for some reason I keep feeling this need to read her books...  This book was about the main character, Pippa Lee.  Pippa is in her 50s and recently moved into a retirement village with her octogenarian husband.  The book is divided into four parts, the first part explains the move and what is currently happening.  The second part goes back into her childhood and shows themes of mother daughter relationships, addictions, etc.  The third part goes back to the present day but as a reader you now have new info on the character.  The last part concludes the book.  I really liked the very very ending but the chapters leading to the end I did not like.  And maybe that's not the right way to say it, I might more so mean I just didn't understand the choices the author made.  I will say that to the authors credit what you expect to get from her books you usually do not, but in a good way.  You get surprise story changes and themes you did not expect perhaps.  I think this book was about the aging process and life choices we make, about being true to yourself (though that constantly changes throughout the life process), and about family relationships (especially mother daughter)  A quote I really liked:
"Poor girl, she didn't know what sickness had been passed to her through the women in her family.  Mother to daughter in a line as long as Pippa had lived, and maybe farther, maybe past Grandma Sally, to Sally's mother, and her mother before her; the chain of misunderstandings and adjustments, each daughter trying to make up for her mother's lacks and getting it wrong the opposite way.  Some families were cursed like that."


Wednesday, October 3, 2012

September 6

Belong to Me by Marisa De Los Santos  This book wasn't exactly on my list but when I was at the library I saw the name and remembered I had read another book by this author and really liked it.  So I impulsively grabbed it even though it wasn't on the list.  And although I'm glad I did that, I should perhaps have waited since after I finished this book I realized it was the continued story of a character from a book the author wrote previously which is now also on my list.  (I dislike being out of order)  That being said, I liked the book a lot.  It had a semi complicated plot with some expected twists and turns but also some unexpected moves even within the anticipated ones.  The story is of a woman who is wanting to start a family with her husband but they first move out to the suburbs away from their city life.  The woman has to struggle with new friendships, gossiping neighbors, and past events in her family's lives that will shape their future together.  The story is told from 3 points of view.  The main character, a hardened female neighbor who has lived in the neighborhood for years but is in the process of watching her best friend die from cancer, and a young boy who changes everything for the characters.  It was interesting to read from two strong female characters and then from a highly intelligent young male character.  The author could have chosen to have the boy's mother as the third narrator but I think made a good deliberate choice to have his voice heard instead.  Overall an entertaining read that has me excited to read the novel with some of the same characters even though I now know how their story ends.

The Angel Esmeralda: Nine Stories by Don DeLillo  This was a series of short stories which seemed like they would be very interesting, but overall I just didn't get hooked at any point.  A few of the stories were alright and I like this author and like how he writes, I just didn't get invested in the characters or stories as I would have liked to.  Each of the stories had similar themes of being trapped/wanting to escape but didn't really come together to form a cohesive book otherwise.

The Girl Who Played With Fire by Stieg Larsson  I was a bit skeptical of reading this book because although I liked the first in this trilogy I didn't really like the first movie and wasn't sure where things were going from there.  I got sucked in about 50 pages in or so and finished the book very quickly because I couldn't stop turning the pages.  I love the main character, Lisbeth Salander, who is a wonderful female heroine and strong main character for the trilogy.  In this book she is wanted for 3 murders and her "friends" Blomqvist, the journalist and main male character from book one, and her sometimes boss Dragan Armansky, start their own investigations to prove her innocence, while the police look for Salander who has disappeared, believing her to be guilty.  I liked that as a reader you got many narrators stepping in and out aside from just the main characters which allowed you to know much more then the characters knew much ahead of them.  Towards the end there is a very odd narrator briefly which I found funny but I think overall made sense for the book.  I now feel hooked on the series and am excited to read the last one in the series.  In finding the link for this entry I learned that the author had continued on with a fourth book but died before it could be finished.  I'm very excited now to read the last one in the series and also sad to see the series conclude.

The Ladies Auxiliary by Tova Mirvis  I guess I still don't have a final verdict on this novel.  It was a good read, and I like the author, though this is one of two of her books and I've already read the other one so I don't have anymore to add.  The story is of a woman who moves into a small orthodox jewish community in Memphis TN.  As an outsider her neighbors worry about the effect she will have on the community and begin to use her as a scapegoat for the community members wanting to start looking at life in new and different ways.  At first some members of the community attempt to be welcoming and can see the good in this new non traditional member of their hometown.  Then as she refuses to conform to their ways and continues to make her own path for her and daughter, the community grows increasingly intolerant.  The story unfolds as told through most of the women of the communities perspective, but never through, essentially, the main characters view.  We hear from her only through the other narrators.  I like the way the author did this, making her both the main character but also the one voice you never hear from.  I liked the book overall but I did not like the very end.  It felt like the book concluded the chapter before the ending and then the last chapter was thrown in to tie everything together in an awkward way.  I did like some of the things I learned about the orthodox community and I found it personally interesting to be reading about Memphis as that was a city on the list that we almost moved to a few months ago.  I hope this author writes more novels, she has an interesting way of weaving religion and rich characters with hopes and dreams that go above and beyond their religious upbringing.

Trans-Sister Radio by Chris Bohjalian  I have liked this author for a long time.  He has such a way of presenting a story to the reader that is hard to put the book down until you know how it ends and how each character resolves their situation.  This novel was about a transexual professor in a small town in Vermont who is in the process of going from a male to becoming a female.  As a man he meets and falls in love with a woman who is a teacher in their community and they settle into a relationship that they both attempt to keep going after the operation is completed.  The story is told through the transexual's view, the woman she falls in love with, the college aged daughter of the woman, and the woman's ex husband.  The professor comes into their lives in a unique way and has a profound impact on each of them.  The ex husband is a radio personality and the college daughter is following in his footsteps so in between chapters are radio scripts of interviews that both of them have done with the professor and the teacher and sharing their own points of view as well.  At some point in the book I started predicting what was going to happen at the end, but attempted to convince myself that no that would be too crazy of a turn.  I kept convincing myself of that until a few pages to the end where everything was finally answered and I turned out to be right.  Still not sure how I feel about the major twist of an ending, but I of course will continue to read books by this author who leaves me wondering until the end and is able to pull off wild turns in the plot that seem to still fit into the books he writes.

Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys   Okay let's get something out of the way, no this is NOT the erotica porn book, it just has a similar title (which according the Barnes and Noble worker who helped me find it, has led to some awkward moments as this book is labeled a young adult novel and that other book is certainly not!).  This is an amazing book to me and I was so excited to hear about it.  This is the story of a young girl in Lithuania in 1941 during WWII who is taken out of her home and sent to labor camps and struggles to keep her family together and to stay alive and see her hopes and dreams come to be and also to be able to return to her home country.  It is also a love story as Lina, the main character, is 15 and someone in the midst of so much tragedy finds love.  The moment I read a review for this book I was drawn to it.  My mother's parents left Lithuania during the war.  They had a terrific love story that the war could have added tragedy to but instead just left a few surprise elements and suspenseful moments too.  I grew up hearing this story and trying to imagine it.  To read Lina's fictional story felt like it brought me closer to the reality of my family's history.  Lina's struggles and limited joys felt so connected.  Within a few pages so many of my family members unique names had been mentioned, familiar city names mentioned (some of which I have been fortunate to visit), and Lithuanian words/traditions that made me smile.  This book was truly a joy to read and had so much significance to me.  I loved reading each word.  I smiled at the familiar and had tears in my eyes at the tragic.  I raced through the book unable to put it down (except for the hours when my boyfriend, gently, reminded me that taking a book to the wedding reception of one of my closest friends was not acceptable).  The epilogue was both hopeful and also sadly realistic.  I now have a renewed interest in continuing to read about the past history of Lithuania.  I also, in the 10+ years since she has been gone, have never quite missed my grandmother as much as I missed her in reading this book.  I feel it brought me closer to her in a way that I haven't been able to feel in so many years.  I so appreciate this author and hope that since her debut novel seems to have been a success she might continue to write more on this subject.

As a side note, I think it's interesting that many of this months books were about women and a new journey in their lives and where it will lead them.  Having just moved a few states away from my previous home state that I had never before left, and starting on my own new chapter in my journey, it seems fitting.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

August 6

French Lessons by Ellen Sussman-  I don't have much to say about this book, I'm writing this only a few weeks after I read it and although I remember liking it enough, I can't remember too much about the book which I think says a lot.  Three French tutors share the story of one day in their world and the people they meet.  The "students" get to share from their perspective too which is where you get more rich details and a background on some of the characters which holds interest.  I liked it enough but there wasn't anything different or special about it.  It was borderline romance novel too which I really dislike.  It had some good moments though with the individual characters and well it took place in Paris so that's a huge plus always if you ask me, that just shouldn't be the only plus.

Anything you Say Can and Will be Used Against You by Laurie Lynn Drummond-  An interesting fiction story of several women in the police force playing various roles.  Each woman gets a section of the book and some of them within that section get to tell several stories.  I liked that some of the women's lives intersected at times and that the story was consistent within the same setting.  Some of the book went into very graphic/gory detail which I could have done without.  I liked though that it was more realistic then the Law and Order police we tend to see on TV.  I don't think it's a secret that being a female police officer is difficult to say the least, I liked the personalized take on what this means not only for the force/on the job, but also at home in their personal lives.

Mothers and Other Liars by Amy Bourret-  So back to July's theme, this book wasn't quite what I expected it to be.  The concept was unique, a woman finds a child in a dumpster takes it home with her to raise instead of involving the police, thinking the family clearly does not want the child.  9 years later the woman reads an article knowing it's about her "daughter" and it turns out she wasn't tossed in the dumpster by her own family but by her kidnappers who really only wanted the car she was in and not a baby too.  Interesting concept very unique, a bit "Face on the Milk Carton"ish but with it's own twist.  Then the book got a little odd.  The non bio mother is pregnant and the bio parents wanted their daughter back but have trouble bonding since she isn't an infant anymore.  The non bio mother to the girl has formed a new relationship with a Latino man who is the father of her unborn child and when she decides she wants to, forgive me I don't know how else to write it, "trade" children, he and his family are against it.  So now we have kidnapped children, court cases of kidnapping, court cases of grandparents rights, nature vs nurture, foster care, oh and the lesbian couple.  The woman also made friends with a lesbian couple who have become her greatest support system and weigh in on their rights, or lack thereof, to parent.  Are you confused yet?  I think this book had great potential to be a good book, but it's almost a case of too many ingredients and not enough substance.  It jumped around from this storyline to that storyline and then surprise here's something new for the mix.  I liked all the subject matters, but if only a few had been focused on instead of the always adding more it may have been much better to read.  I also disliked the near ending for how unrealistic it was.  Overall I was disappointed because the potential was so right there, but ultimately just didn't pan out.

Joy For Beginngers by Erica Bauermeister-  This is the story of a woman who survives cancer and is challenged by her daughter to go white water rafting the following summer in celebration of her life.  Her friends beg her to accept the challenge and she does provided they too accept a challenge from her.  It's a great story, though not terribly unique an idea.  That being said I liked reading about the characters and their challenging tasks.  The trouble I had with this book was that just as you were getting to know a character and really enjoying reading about them, their chapter was over and it was on to the next one.  This book may have been better written all together rather then each individual chapter being a different person.  I did like though that if you thought ahead sometimes you got a clue in the chapter before, or a couple chapters before, of what the next characters challenge would be, as they were not revealed in the first chapter but only as you continued on through the book with the characters.

Amaryllis in Blueberry by Christina Meldrum-  I love love loved this book.  I feel bad for the book I read next because it can't compare to this one.  When you read as much as I do it's hard to love every book you read and most go into "I liked it" or "I didn't like it" categories.  But this book really stood out.  It was so unique in both the story telling and the story itself.  The plot is about a woman who is on trial in Africa for murdering her husband.  She and her husband went to Africa as missionaries with their four daughters.  Each of the powerful women characters from the youngest, Amaryllis, to the mother share their secrets with the reader and develop as characters throughout the book.  The story telling starts at the "end" of the novel and weaves in and out from the beginning to the end.  Each character shares a bit at a time about what is happening linearly but throughout the novel is interrupted with moments from the "end" or the middle or the beginning so the reader gets the information at different times, sometimes before the characters have it.  I should not have liked this book filled with religion, romance gone wrong, adultery, etc. but the way the author weaves the story in and out had me so sucked in.  I looked up after the first 6 pages and said, wow a book has never sucked me in like this in the first 6 pages.  I am super sad that this author only has one other book for me to, hopefully, enjoy.

Quote from the book: "Love is not what I thought.  Love is impatient.  It's not always kind.  It does envy, it does boast.  At times it is proud and rude and self-seeking.  And easily angered.  It does, now and then, keep a record of wrongs.  And it doesn't always avoid evil or rejoice in truth.  It can't always protect.  It doesn't always trust or persevere: sometimes love fails...And while I knew hate and love sometimes mixed-that love could be peppered with hate and yet still be love- I hadn't realized hate is integral to love, that it's within the reach of love's expanse.  I hadn't realized what makes love Love is not it's consistency but it's malleability, its magnanimity.  It's abundance: love holds it all.  Love is ugly and full of hate even as it's tender and kind.  There's nothing pure about love.  it's the impurity that is love... Love hopes to be patient.  It hopes to be kind.  It hopes to not envy or boast or be proud.  It hopes to persevere.  But love is not perfect."

Second Chance by Jane Green  This was a typical "high school reuniony" story where one member of an old group of friends from school dies and the rest of the group rekindles their friendships.  What I liked was that it wasn't typical in that it followed them further after the friend's death then just the immediate aftermath.  Most of the stories center around the event that brings them together and then you get to look back in time but not so much forward.  This novel started more or less with the character Tom's death and then moved forward.  The characters not only looked back into their old friendships and reconnected, his death also had a profound impact on their current lives and the novel was about the changes they made in their lives because of the tragedy.  It wasn't an awarding winning book by any means, but I'm starting to like this authors simplicity but also creative story lines.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

July 6

Unorthodox by Deborah Feldman-  Here's the thing this book wasn't really bad and it was informative, it just wasn't quite what I expected it to be.  It is a true story of one woman's "escape" from a strict orthodox community.  The way the book is described though is that it will be the story of her escape and her life after her escape.  The way the story is told however, is more linear and the so called escape happens in a few paragraphs and then we don't learn much about her getting out.  I did learn things I had never known, things that made me rethink the way I have viewed the orthodox Jewish communities.  Growing up I lived in an area that had quite a few orthodox Jews.  Outside of the longer skirts and other differences in dress I never really paid much attention as these seemed like happy good families.  The story Feldman paints does not match with my own views.  I've always struggled a bit with religion but felt that for some people it is a good thing.  At the same time I've always believed that religion in extreme forms is not good for anyone.  Though I hadn't applied it to the orthodox communities, this book reaffirmed that belief.  I'm glad that Feldman stood up and made good decisions for herself and her child and chose the life she wanted.  I'm not sorry I read the book, I just feel like it could have sent a more powerful message then it did.

Another Piece of my Heart by Jane Green-  An interesting take on what makes family a family. This is the story of a stepmom attempting to integrate into a ready made family with two teen girls.  One of the girls takes to stepmother just fine and the other struggles with adolescence and wrecks havoc on the families.  The biological mother struggles with addiction which the oldest child later has to confront as well.  The stepmother, Andi, has also wanted to get pregnant but been unsuccessful in having her own biological child.  In the meantime the oldest daughter, Emily, becomes pregnant adding a whole new dimension to the family.  I have to say that while the book sometimes lost my interest, the unique concept kept me coming back.  The one thing that confused me, was that this was a book I was listening to but then due to the big move I made this month, I had to start reading too to make sure I finished before everything had to be returned, in the disc version the bio mother has one name and in the book version the bio mother has another.  I kept getting confused when I went back on forth on who Janice/Brooke was until I finally confirmed what I started suspecting, not that I was forgetting the characters name, but that in each format it was different.

Black Water by Joyce Carol Oates- Not my favorite JCO book.  This is the fictionalized account of a senator crashing his car in a river with a young girl who gets trapped inside and drowns when he walks away unharmed.  At least I think that's what happened.  To be honest the way it was written, with the character telling one thing but then later saying no that didn't happen left me way confused.  Still a big JCO fan and will continue reading her novels, but am glad this one was very short so that I didn't waste too much time on it.

The Outside World by Tova Mirvis-  This book has been on my list for quite a while and was a really good read even though it wasn't quite what I thought it would be.  It tells the story of two Jewish families in different sects with varying degrees of faith.  Each family gets to share their side of the stories.  In the women's story she is a young adult wanting more then to get married and start a family as her orthodox peers and family want her to do.  In the man's story he is a young adult living with his liberally religious family and wanting more from his religion.  I won't give away the surprise part but the two find each other in Israel and decide to marry.  The ways in which the family must come together and form a new family keep the reader interested to find out how the story will end.  The story is told through both the main characters perspectives and both of their mothers mostly.  The fathers though and siblings are randomly given a voice in some chapters as well which was somewhat unique. Really liked this author and her style and am sad to know she only has one other book so far for me to read.

Between Here and April by Deborah Copaken Kogan-  This is the second book I've read by this author and I really like her.  This is the story of motherhood told in a whole new way and exploring post part-um depression and not so joyous moments of motherhood.  The main character begins to have flashbacks of her best friend in first grade who she had mostly forgotten about after she disappeared a few months into the school year.  The main character now has two daughters the same age as her best friend and her sister were when they disappeared from school overnight never to return.  Very quickly, as in I'm not giving any big secret away here, the reader learns the girls were murdered by their mother and it was not discussed at the school or in the main characters home.  She then explores how these things happen, how it has affected her life, her own role as a mother and wife and daughter.  She also must explore the mental health system somewhat and the way times have changed since her childhood and how the mental health system is now compared to then, for better or worse.

A quote from the book that struck me: " 'Think about it this way.  We do not judge someone who do something crazy to end his physical pain.  A soldier who cut through his own leg to release it from under the rubble.  A person who must eat the raw flesh of the dead in order to survive.  Heroes, we call them... But when a person do something crazy to relieve mental pain we judge.  We say bad person.  Evil, cowardly person.  Maybe a little sympathy for the suffering, yes, but we say, I never do that.  I am better than that.  But maybe somewhere deep inside we want to do that same thing. To end it.  To find peace.' "

Personal Velocity by Rebecca Miller-  This book too has been on my list for awhile, but I have to say it also wasn't really what I expected nor did it live up to it's advertised greatness.  It is a novel of short stories about women and their lives.  As the reader we learn "secrets" about the women or details of defining moments in their lives.  I liked the style of writing and I liked that there were some links to the other stories in a story before or after, I guess perhaps this book was just oversold though.  It became a movie, has "Washington Post best book of 2001" all over it and perhaps I just expected more.  I liked the writing and the stories were okay, but I felt myself waiting for them to get "great."  I may give the author another chance as I definitely see her talent as a writer, perhaps this book just wasn't my cup of tea.


Sunday, July 8, 2012

June 8

Sister by Rosamund Lupton  This book randomly ended up on my book list but I'm glad it did.  I'm not usually one for mystery/suspense novels but this one really sucked me in pretty quickly.  I loved too that the ending was not predictable in the way that most mysteries you figure out before you get close to   the end.  The story is of an English woman living in NYC who gets called home after her sister is murdered but the death is ruled a suicide even though the main character is convinced otherwise.  She sets about on her own to prove her sisters death was a murder not a suicide.  The dead sister had recently given birth but the baby had died as well.  There was also a genetic component to the novel, where it was shared that the sisters had a brother when they were younger who died from cystic fibrosis.  The ending, as I mentioned, gets very interesting and throws a curveball at the reader.  I then got a little worried that I wouldn't like the very end of the book but all came to a conclusion eventually and in interesting ways that were not typical.

The Opposite of Me by Sarah Pekkanen I saw these books in a magazine ad and though that's probably not the best way to pick books they looked interesting enough.  This one was about twin sisters who were very different and didn't really get along very well.  One twin is highly successful in her career and one is about to get married.  The career woman loses her job and has to return home but keeps it a secret that she was fired.  The other one continues to plan her wedding while also keeping some secrets of her own.  The girls are in their late 20s and some big life changes and decisions occur.  Also so past information about their childhood comes about which leads to almost a role reversal for the two.  It was an easy enough read and kept my attention.  The thing I didn't like was that some parts could have been omitted very easily, an extra illness, romance, etc that were added in.  The ending also was pretty predictable from the very beginning.

Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins  This is book 2 in The Hunger Games series.  Katniss and Peeta begin their victory tour as "rebellion" continues to be a threat to the nation.  Katniss becomes the center of this rebellion as a symbol for all the nation.  The love triangle with Katniss, Peeta, an Gayle continues.  In the 75th hunger games, it is explained that this is called a quarter quell (25, 50, 75) and the quarter quells are special.  They are said to have been set up by the original founders of the hunger games but coincidentally when the "special" rules are read they are that the pool of contenders this year will come from victors from each district.  As the only female victor from district 12, Katniss is automatically back in the games.  Before preparing for the games it is alluded to that district 13 may in fact be alive and well and Katniss becomes involved in figuring out if this is true.  Katniss and Peeta end up back in the games along with other victors from each district.  Some are very old and either die quickly or end their own lives.  Katniss and Peeta partner up with various people from other districts and eventually Katniss, with the help of one of their allies, figures out that the arena this year is set up like a clock with the terrible things happening repeatedly in that area of the clock when it is that time.  I really can't wait for the movie on this one because the visual of it in my head is cool so on screen should be pretty awesome.  I won't give away the ending but it was quite unexpected and happened very quickly.

Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins  This is book 3, the final book, in The Hunger Games series.  It was weird to have a Hunger Games book without a Hunger Games event in it.  This book picks up right where book 2 left off, with Katniss in district 13 and the rebellion in full bloom.  We learn a little more about the rebellion and the capital and a full out war begins and ends in the book.  The love triangle is also solved by the end.  The book got a little more graphic for my taste (beware reading the trilogy at night may give you strange dreams, it did for me) but overall I applaud the author for the series and for an ending that was not disappointing.

Skipping a Beat by Sarah Pekkanen  Explores the nature of relationships and the changes life throws at us.  In this novel the main characters husband, who is her high school sweetheart, has a heart attack that changes him from the high powered money spender he became to someone who wants to go back to their simpler roots.  The book explores the changes in their relationships and how they went from high school sweethearts to an almost divorcing high powered couple with no children to attempting to fall back in love.  Overall the book was interesting enough to keep me reading to the end, but was a little too borderline romance novel for me.

These Girls by Sarah Pekkanen  In this novel 3 20 something women share an apartment in NYC after college as they begin their careers and find out what they want from life.  The girls are all keeping secrets from their past but bond together and slowly reveal to each other what is going on and strengthen their friendships to one another.  Of course their love lives were explored too and though I could have done without that part of the book I'm glad in the end the book was about the friendships formed and not about the men.

The Odds by Stewart O'Nan  This short novel explores a dissolving marriage with a husband who got laid off and in a last ditch effort to save their house the couple heads to Niagara Falls to gamble away or win back what little money they have left.  I liked that it explored a different side of a relationship and the mistakes made over the course of a marriage.  There was a lot of looking back in time and seeing over the years how the couple worked and didn't work together.  I didn't like that some things were implied but perhaps not explored enough for the reader to make definite conclusions on.  It was a quick and easy short read and I have always wanted to read a novel by this author.  I'm certain more of his books will make it onto my list because while this particular book wasn't super great I liked his style of writing.

Mudwoman by Joyce Carol Oates  Okay I love JCO but I really disliked this book.  Usually JCO has complex stories that unwind in front of the reader in a wonderful way.  As a reader you want to keep turning the pages to keep unwrapping the story.  In this novel I did that continuing to hope the story would unravel but it never really did.  The story is of an abandoned child who grows up and ends up adopted and turns into an intelligent woman who becomes the president of a university.  Throughout the book I kept waiting for something big to happen or for some pieces of the puzzle to come together but this one was just confusing rather than complex.  The book went back and forth from childhood to adulthood and was hard to follow.  The main character had vivid hallucinations that were confusing to read through and figure out.  I think the author was trying to convey something important and impart a great story as usual but this one just didn't do that for me.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

May 7

Forever in Blue: The Fourth Summer of the Sisterhood  by Ann Brashares- So in all honesty this book was probably not read in May.  I know I read it before I read the last one in the series this month, which is what alerted me to the fact that I hadn't blogged about it, but I have no note of it.  Odd.  Anyway though I did like book four.  The ending was a bit odd but better then I expected it to be and I think it was fitting.  This one was originally meant to be the final book in the series too so in that respect Brashares did a nice job wrapping things up and concluding the characters.  I'm fairly certain she did not intend to revisit them later on as she ended up doing.

Everyone But You by Sandra Novack- I think I enjoyed this book but it did not leave a lasting impression as I sort of forgot what it was when I typed it in from the list (which has also led to me thinking maybe I need to blog about the books much sooner after I read them).  This book was a collection of short stories that were centered around family/love.  Some of the stories I flipped through and really didn't enjoy and then there were some that really got me hooked and I wanted more from.  This is usually my problem with short story collections.  Sometimes a short story is really all you need but if it's really good you get invested in the characters in such a short time and then you want more and by the time you discover that the story is over.  My other issue with short story collections is that sometimes they flow very nicely together and then other times it's like your reading 15 different books instead of 15 stories in the same book.  I think all the stories in this collection had a similar theme, and there were connections between say story (random numbers being used) 1 and 10 or 5 and 7 but no real connection that linked them all other then loosely similar theme.

Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah- So I've heard a lot about this author and I'm pretty sure I've read some of her other books.  Recently I've heard her labeled more as a romance writer and disagreed with that statement a lot.  I almost didn't listen to this book because I was worried it would get all romancy but the plot was about female friendship over the course of a lifetime and I really thought that would be an interesting listen.  I'm glad I didn't shun it just because of her label.  It really was an interesting listen and I liked the way the author brought the music of different decades in as she took us through the lives of the two main female characters who became friends in early childhood and stayed friends throughout their adulthood until a major falling out.  The falling out does not turn out to be as predictable as the reader guesses it to be, or maybe because I was in the mindset of "romance novel author," that this reader thought it would be.  I liked that it wasn't so predictable but I really didn't like the ending and thought it was unnecessary.  Even after thinking about it and trying to figure out why the author would end it in such a tearjerker way, I still don't quite get why that was necessary.  Certainly made me think about my own female friendships, the ones going strong and the ones that have fallen away for one reason or another.

Comfort and Joy by Kristin Hannah- This book, as I sort of knew it would, lived up to the romance novel label I mentioned above.  It was only 5 discs so I made my way through it even though after disc 1 I wanted to throw it back in the library bag and return it.  The story is of a woman who recently separated/divorced her husband and it's Christmas time and she has the urge to get away from her life.  Her marriage ended because her husband ended up with her sister so she feels all alone and can't deal.  She ends up buying a seat on a chartered plane that crashes and then ends up walking away from the crash.  The crash scene is very odd and surreal and had me wondering it was actually happening the way it was being described, but for most of the book you are following the main character after the plane crash.  I suspected in the beginning that she was really in a dream sequence of some sort but after 3 discs of it I figured nope this must actually be happening.  She ends up meeting a young boy and his father who are trying to reconnect after the boy's mother died.  Then it does turn out that my original thought was true and she was in a coma the whole time and never met these people.  But then the last disc of the story was all about her trying to find these people from her coma.  I won't give away the all too sappy ending (unless I might have just done so) but I will say I wish I hadn't wasted even the few hours I did waste listening to this book and was ready to throw it out the window when it finally concluded.

We Need to Talk about Kevin by Lionel Shriver-  This book was really challenging to get hooked on.  I stuck with it only because I really wanted to read it and I wanted to read it before I saw the movie.  After getting hooked on it, it was much easier to stick with and then I couldn't really put it down.  I think it took me a moment to get invested because it wasn't quite what I expected.  I was very excited to be reading a novel based on the fictional perspective of a parent who was responsible for a high school killing massacre.  I have read lots of books on Columbine and similar situations, both fiction and non fiction but what I've always wondered about was the parents of the murderers.  Obviously the main attention goes immediately to the victims as it probably should, but perhaps it's the professional side of me or just my own personality that always makes me wonder about the parents.  And not in the typical "blame the parent's" way that so many others think about them in, but in a compassionate way of wanting to understand what happened in those households, good or bad, that led to this outcome.  So I was very excited to read this book when I learned of it, but was immediately disappointed because the author makes it especially difficult in the beginning for the reader to have compassion for the mother whom we are hearing the story from.  The author paints this picture of poor parenting skills and a cold mother who did not want her child.  At some point in time this did come together and make sense with the story but I think I'm still disappointed it wasn't quite what I thought it would be.  The authors writing style is impressive though and she can clearly tell a story.  I've been browsing her other books to see what else of hers might interest me.

Sisterhood Everlasting by Ann Brashares- I think at least part of the reason it took me so long to read this final book in the series is because I was skeptical of how the author would define the characters relationships all those years later.  On the one hand I was rooting for them to still all be best friends, and then on the other hand (the more realistic hand) I really didn't want them to be because well it just isn't always reality.  I'm not sure if I liked the final conclusions drawn, but I'm also pretty certain I couldn't have done any better then the author did in concluding the series.  It went a little too romancy for me at some points but I do feel like each of the characters came full circle and got their own conclusion that felt right for the series.

The Red Book by Deborah Copaken-Kogen- I haven't read anything by this author before and now all of her books are on my to read list.  It's not so much that this was the greatest book ever or anything but it was an interesting story, I really liked how she shared it with us as readers, and I enjoyed her writing style.  This novel shares the story of Harvard grads coming back to their 20th reunion and gives us the stories of 4 main female characters, but also of other classmates along the way.  It's clearly a story of the paths we didn't know we would take in life and the looks backward and forward individuals take when they get to middle age.  It's not a new concept by any means and the book jacket even mentions some of it's inspiration found elsewhere in movies/books, but her take was original and had some surprise twists and turns that were unseen.  It was very relatable too as we all look back on our pasts and perhaps take a look at where we thought me might be at various points in our lives.  I loved the ending too which then forwards to the 25th reunion and concludes what the next five years held for the main characters.  It was nice to see how they changed aspects in their lives in those five years.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

April 6

Lone Wolf by Jodi Picoult- Picoult is my favorite author.  Every March I look forward to the new release she will be putting out.  Somehow I forgot what month it was this year and ended up ordering this book too late from the library so it took awhile for me to get it.  This story was about a unique family that was divided up many years ago but has to come together when the father is in a car accident and on life support.  The father was an expert on wolf packs and was famous for living in the woods with wolves for a couple years as well as having a wolf sanctuary.  He was very good at communicating with his wolves, not so good at communicating with his family.  The parents divorce and the mother remarries.  The son essentially runs away on or around his 18th birthday and ends up volunteer teaching in Thailand.  The daughter moves back and forth between her fathers and her mother and new stepfathers home.  When the daughter and the father are in a car accident the son has to come home from Thailand for the first time in many years and confront what made him leave and all his legal responsibilities since his sister is only 17 and cannot make the decisions.  The book was very informative on alternative living and interesting animal information.  The story line was interesting enough but just didn't have the same flow and direction that most of Picoult's novels suck readers in with.  Overall it wasn't my favorite of hers but I'll still be waiting for next March to roll around for another read, assuming I don't forget again!


Book 2 will not be blogged about.


Good Christian Bitches by Kim Gatlin  This is the novel of which the new abc show GCB is based on.  I actually really liked the show when it first started a few months ago so I got the book.  I didn't really like the book.  It's the same characters and basically the pilot episode has lots in common with the book but thats about all.  Maybe because I had seen more than one episode, the book felt lacking.  Also though the show sort of started going a little downhill in my opinion towards the end of this season.  Perhaps it will pick up again with season two but it just doesn't seem like there is much room for growth.   It's the same storyline repeated week by week which is sort of how the book felt chapter by chapter.  


The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins  I tried very hard, not even really sure why, not to get into this new popular series.  I saw the preview for the movie though and really thought it looked interesting, so of course I wanted to read the book first.  I guess I can say I see what all the hype is about.  It's a very interesting plot line, the author sucks the reader in very quickly, and although you may know the ending pretty quickly, the twists and turns to get there are still interesting enough to keep you turning the pages.  I also love that the female character is the heroine and hopefully stays that way throughout the series.  I am, slightly impatiently, waiting for the next two books from the library, but am hoping this series doesn't turn into a love triangle romance series, and instead can stay true to the originality of this first book.  Also as a side note I read some negative comments about the movie/book and one of them was about the "glorification of child sacrifice" and how we should not have anything to do with that.  I totally disagree with this comment as lots of classic novels, short stories have had similar themes.  I truly don't believe the author was glorifying or even hinting at "hey lets start doing this."  She just had a unique story to tell and put it to paper.  My favorite short story is Shirley Jackson's The Lottery and although perhaps it was controversial it's just a unique well told story.  Here's to continuing to hope Collins continues with the adventure and keeps the love crap out of it... 


I Know this Much is True by Wally Lamb  I really like this author.  I've read many of his books and I had attempted to read this one a few times last year.  It's long and I got the discs to listen to and gave up a few times before actually finishing it this month.  I'm not sure why I kept stopping and restarting but I think perhaps because a lot of this books themes hit too close to home.  In any case I'm glad I finally listened to it start to finish.  The book starts with the narrator explaining a horrific incident in which his schizophrenic identical twin brother cuts off his own hand at a local library.  We then get to hear the back stories of their horrifically abusive childhood, and the struggles of the narrator to both help his brother and put his own past to rest.  The brothers do not know who their father is and that defines much of the book.  The narrator's own child sadly dies and he loses his marriage as well.  The irony of being an identical twin who is whole while your twin is so split makes for such a wonderful read.  There were some predictable parts, but the biggest mystery of the novel, who the boys father is, is set up in such a way that you think your so smart to have figured it out right away and the author lets you think that for some time until dispelling it and leaving you just as puzzled as the boys have been.  I really love this author and how he weaves the intricate stories he creates.  Oh and I loved loved loved the ending.  When I really like a book it's so hard to see it come to an end and always makes me sad to see it ending, but the way he wrapped this novel up was exactly as it should have been done.  


All There Is by Dave Isay- This was a collection of love stories from StoryCorps.   These were real stories from people who were interviewed for StoryCorps.  The book was divided into three parts, the first one about finding love, the second about losing it, and the third about finding it again/holding on to it.  It was a cute quick read that shared so many stories on the many many many ways and from different people that love can come into one's life from.  



Thursday, April 5, 2012

March 8

The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants by Ann Brashares  I don't know what took me so long to read this book.  I have owned it since it came out when I was in high school.  I suppose there are various reasons along the way that I avoided it.  For whatever reason though I picked it up and finally started the series.  It's a teen read so it's light and fluffy for the most part.  I think if I had read it in high school it would have had so much more meaning to it.  It was still a good read though and made me think of those years and how important friendships are.  It made me think of the silly traditions my own group of girls and I have.  It made me think a lot about how it's sad things can't stay the way they are when you are 15 and also how it's not really that sad because things can get even better even if they change in ways you didn't expect they would.  I also remembered at some point that the conclusion of the series came out last year and am still curious on what that book will be like.  Will the four girls stay best friends forever which is just so unlikely.  Will the same boys be mentioned at 25 that are mentioned at 15?  In any case though I have to read the other ones before I can read the last one, I ordered all from the library and am now making my way through them.  I'm not sure if I am rooting for the last book to have the idealistic ending of BFFs or if I want some harsh reality where one of them is no longer in the group or whatever.  Life changes, you make it work or you don't and maybe in the book world it would be better if these four "sisters" could stay together.  One last note on the book, I never realized it's setting was Bethesda Maryland.  This is interesting as I am about to move near that area and thought it a cute sign from the book that I finally picked it up right before I move to where the book is taking place.

Peony in Love by Lisa See  I did not like this book.  I've at the very least liked everything else I read from this author so I was disappointed that the last book of her's that I read was not very good.  I guess maybe I should have known from the start that it wasn't going to be my cup of tea because it's so unrealistic and most of the time I need to at least be able to believe that the story could happen.  The story is about a young girl who is sheltered from the world beyond the gates of her home in China.  She is to be married but is not allowed to associate with men before her marriage.  Her father brings a production of an opera to her home and she meets a man and disobeys so much to just go outside and speak with him.  She then, like the main character in the opera she sees, starves herself to literal death because she does not think she can be with this man and will have to go on and marry a stranger.  This is only in the first few chapters, then the book gets weird because the girl dies but we still follow her story.  I found it interesting to read about what the Chinese believe happens in the afterlife but it was a bit much to base a whole novel on this and carry the reader through the spirit world.  I really, if you haven't already figured it out, did not enjoy the journey.  

The Second Summer of the Sisterhood by Ann Brashares  You don't see as much change in this book from the first one.  The girls still seem young and immature and caught up in boys and all the silly teenage drama.  This one was very much a continuation of the second book and kept the story lines very similar.  I have this weird thing where I have to read a series in order so I'm glad I read this book but I have a feeling it won't be my favorite in the series.

Little Bird of Heaven by Joyce Carol Oates  Not my favorite JCO novel.  Started off pretty strong and pulled you in as a reader but then the story just never really went anywhere.  The first part follows a young girl who is caught between her divorced parents, her mother fearing for her safety with her father because he is the main suspect in a murder.  You hear the story of her parents marriage ending from her perspective and gain knowledge as a reader that many of the characters don't have the ability to put together as easily.  The second part is then told through the eyes of the murder victims son who is around the same age as the girl and who the girl had a huge, over lasting, crush on.  The third part is then oddly the conclusion that wasn't what the reader expected to hear but was not the least bit shocking or climatic.  I guess I feel as though this book was bits and and pieces of some of the other JCO novels I've read, all thrown together.  Not my favorite of hers, but I'm definitely still a fan.

Eat, Cry, Poop by Rick Kirkman and Jenny Scott  This was a Baby Blues comic book.  Not sure if counts as a read, but I'm counting it.  I saw it at the library while I was picking up my reserves and figured I might as well grab it too.  It was nice to sit and laugh for a few hours.  I don't know why I always liked this comic strip on Sunday mornings, but I did.  I loved when they made it into a TV show, but must have been one of a few who did because it was cancelled so quickly.  I also liked the title of this "album" of theirs, a nice play on a certain other really popular book right now...

Girls in Pants The Third Summer of the Sisterhood by Ann Brashares   I liked the 3rd one in the series much more than the 2nd.  The characters graduated high school and this story was the summer before they leave for college.  The characters have shown growth now since the first and second books where they were more or less the same.  It was interesting to read about the new things coming up and the ways they are taking stands in their lives.  They are over the silly boy giggling phase and more into actually looking at relationships and what they want from friendships, men and college and their futures.  We got some more glimpses into their families too.  Who am I kidding, this one was my favorite so far because the best summer of my life was the summer before we left for college.  My group of 6 was whole and we had an amazing last summer together before the big changes started taking place.  I wanted very badly to be able to keep Lena, Tibby, Bridget, and Carmen stuck in this last summer.  Some quotes: "...like it's demise could swallow up her whole existence- like a change in the present could wipe out the past."  "Whenever you did something because 'life is too short not to,' you could be sure life would be just long enough to punish you for it."

The Ten Make That Nine Habits of Very Organized People Make That Ten: The Tweets of Steve Martin by Steve Martin  Okay so this wasn't really a novel or anything but another good book of laughs.  I've always found Steve Martin to be funny and he seems like a genuinely nice guy too.  You don't hear anything about some crazy thing or another that he has done.  This book was a collection of his twitter account.  From the start when he was confused on what he was doing with this new social media to when he started to have lots of fun with it.  I'm not sure who came up with the idea of throwing them into a book but it was an interesting concept to read from start to finish.  Lots of laughs along the way.  No real order, other then time, to the book but a nice light hearted laugh for a few hours one afternoon can't be a bad thing.

The Wife's Tale by Lori Lansens  I'm torn on this book.  I really liked parts of it and related to a lot of it but I think overall I'm just not sure I got the message the author was trying to send.  The book follows the story of a middle aged overweight woman who has only ever been with one man, her husband.  On the eve of their 25th anniversary the husband disappears and the woman is on her own for the first time ever.  She has never paid bills before, worked a cell phone, etc.  She was totally dependent on this man.  She tries to chase after him but along the way learns how to take care of herself.  One maybe cool thing, I haven't decided yet, was that the author mentioned the characters of another book of hers in the beginning of the novel.  She used the same town as the setting and was able to briefly mention them.  I didn't really know I had read anything by this author until that reference but then I wondered why drop them in if all your readers haven't read that novel yet.  It was a cool reference back but I'm not sure the purpose it served.  The story was interesting and kept me entertained, but a lot of it was very unrealistic and I'm just not sure at the end of it all what the author was trying to say to her readers.  


Wednesday, March 7, 2012

February 8

The Nobodies Album by Carolyn Parkhurst- Interesting plot/concept.  Woman who is a famous author is also the mother of a famous rock musician.  Mother and son are estranged and the reader is given only bits and pieces at a time as to why.  The mother as the main character is working on her latest novel, which is really taking all her previous novels and rewriting the endings of them and putting that into a "new" book.  (Still with me?)  It's a bit confusing, and even more so because excerpts of the main characters books and the new endings are included.  If you can get past that fuzzy part it's an interesting novel.  I understand where Parkhurst is coming from in setting a theme of wanting to change endings/outcomes, especially when we learn details of the mother-son relationship and estrangement.  I liked the concept of attempting to add books within books but the execution was a bit odd.  I had to keep getting back into the original story line after leaving the mini stories behind.  The mother and son come back together after the son is accused of murder.  This mystery within the novel turned out to have a somewhat predictable solution.  I will say though that I loved the ending of this book.  The author ended it by fast forwarding to years later when all was settled but also staying in the present by having the characters say that of course they couldn't know at the time it would all work out that way.  I get the point about endings/outcomes/revisions etc, and it definitely won points for uniqueness.  


Shanghai Girls by Lisa See- Love this author.  Her ability to create visual scenes that feel like they are right in front of you just by words alone is incredible.  This novel shares the journey of two sisters living in Shanghai right as war breaks out with Japan in the 1930s.  The girls and their mother attempt to journey to America but suffer many loses along the way.  The girls once rich girls with many opportunities have to face the harsh realities of the real world and in their case there are many many difficulties to be faced.  Although some of the events are somewhat predictable, mostly I found myself hurriedly flipping the pages to find out what happened next to Pearl and May.  The book made me sad in many ways too to learn of a part of history I didn't know and to learn of the terrible treatment the girls received once they entered America and had to wait out being allowed in at a "camp" in the San Francisco area.  I loved the scenes in this city but felt sad about what a tough life it was for so many people.  The American Dream can have such high prices.  The novel concludes on a sad note as well but probably intentionally as it set the stage for the conclusion to occur in the next book.


The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larrson- Okay so here is another one where I cheated and saw the movie first.  Movie was strange to say the least.  The book has been on my list for some time and I would have liked to have read it first but it just didn't work out that way.  After seeing it I finally got it from the library and listened to it in the car.  The book was equally as strange as the movie but I think after having some time to process it the story now makes more sense.  The movie needed the book to tell some parts and the book needed the movie to make visual some parts.  It's almost like you need to see and read it to get it.  The ending of the movie also makes zero sense unless you read the book. The problem I have with both is that the most climatic part comes and goes quickly.  This is especially true in the movie as it is made very clear this will be the climax.  It was slightly less true in the book but odd because it happened with many chapters still left.  The book was well written and certainly thought provoking at times, but overall I'm still confused...


Dreams of Joy by Lisa See- This is basically the continuation of the other novel I read by the same author this month.  Pearl and May's story continues through a daughter, Joy.  Joy returns to China in the late 1950s during communist times believing this is a good life that she wants.  She surrenders her US identity and winds up on a commune.  Joy also returns to find her birth father who oddly enough is easy to find and that part of the novel is solved immediately.  The rest of the book focuses on the rest of the family's journey back to their home to find Joy and remove her from the commune.  Again See does a wonderful job setting the scene for the reader.  We follow Joy and Pearl on their journeys of learning about their families, where they came from, and what their futures hold.  The extremely happy (possibly too happy?) ending in this novel makes up for the lack of one in the first. 


Bringing Adam Home by Les Standiford- I had somewhat heard of the story of Adam the little boy who went missing in Florida in the 80s which led to new legislature and also to the TV show America's most wanted.  I did not know though that he was so brutally killed.  And though I knew his father ended up hosting that show, I did not realize he had no previous TV or entertainment knowledge/ability.  I also did not know that it took so so so many years for his killer to be determined and unfortunately not really brought to justice.  Turns out after building the case several key detectives/cops really dropped the ball. In the meantime the killer was in jail for other charges and ended up dying before they actually had the opportunity to charge him.  The book was a bit gruesome especially since it is a true story.  It also really made me think about the strength of Adam's parents.  I feel like put in the same situation I would probably give up and that would be it.  These parents incredibly found a way to move forward and worked hard on laws and never gave up hoping to find their son's killer.  It's very encouraging to read about such amazing people and how much they affected the lives of countless others.


The Pregnancy Project by Gaby Rodriguez- So this is also a true story book.  High school senior pretends to be pregnant as her senior project to learn about stereotypes and to shed some awareness to her classmates on this issue.  The book was interesting and a very quick read.  Overall though, while I applaud the author for her ability to come up with such a creative project that would have such a big impact, I was left wondering a little too much.  I also didn't really like a lot of the authors views and unrealistic thoughts.  For instance she can't seem to grasp why everyone thought he college dreams were out the window once she was "pregnant" and seems to think it would be just as easy to continue on with life if she had actually had a baby.  Rodriguez has 7 older siblings who her mom started having when she was a teen and most of those siblings had their own children in their teens.  She was determined not to end up the same as her family which is commendable but I don't understand how she had such unrealistic views and hopes to pass on to other classmates.  Overall an interesting story but not really enough to need to read the whole book, the news articles were more than enough.


Everything We Ever Wanted by Sara Shepard- Only a few pages in I realized I knew this author from another book of hers I read.  I love her writing style and the unique way she shares and concludes a story.  This book was about family secrets in a well to do family connected to a local prep school.  The story unfolds and flashbacks often to bring the past into the present.  Slowly secrets are revealed until the reader sees how each character wound up the way the did in the present.  Some of the secrets were interesting to watch unfold but the big main secret I found to be a bit predictable.  I guessed pretty early on what had happened and since it was so obvious to me it was frustrated that a few of the characters didn't seem to get it.  The story centers around an incident involving the youngest son in the family.  The novel is told from the viewpoint of the matriarch of the family, the oldest son, and the oldest son's wife.  It's interesting that the author chose not to give the youngest son a voice, though he is such a crucial part of the whole story.  Overall a good read and something that kept me turning the pages to find out what happened next to the family, even if I already suspected what that would be.  


Dear Husband by Joyce Carol Oates- In general I'm a little iffy on short stories but I like JCO so I went ahead and starting listening to this book.  It's a collection of I believe 14 short stories.  Individually some of the stories were quite good and catchy.  All together though I missed what united them to be in the same collection.  Some of them I really disliked and was hoping for the next story to begin quickly.  A few of them were intriguing and took unexpected turns.  Overall I really like the author as a writer and even though this once wasn't my favorite book of hers, it won't stop me from continuing to read her books.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

January 6

The Help by Kathryn Stockett - I have a general rule of watching movies based on books only after I have read the book.  My theory is that I want to form my own visual images of the characters and settings before allowing someone else to do it for me.  Sometimes it makes me mad to even see the previews because then boom the visual is there and even though I haven't seen the movie the characters are formed.  I make very few exceptions to my rule but I did make an exception for this book turned into a movie.  My mom really wanted to watch it with me over the holidays so we did.  I then got the book on disc to listen to since I've wanted to read it for some time.  I have to say I think the people who made the movie did a great job of turning the book into a movie.  The timing was way different (understandable for the time constraints of a movie) but all the important elements were in it.


In general both the movie and the book make the viewer/reader think.  It's hard to imagine a time where this book would have been real and yet it was.  As a viewer and a reader you cheer on the characters and hope for their victory.  It's sad though because it's easy to cheer on the characters that you want to get through this tough time because it is so evident now how wrong the time they were in was.  And yet the characters you don't root for, the Hilly Holbrook like characters, thought they were right at the time too.  They thought they would be proved right and that the others were so wrong.  It's scary because some of those people are still around.  I am not naive enough to think there won't always be some group that people are prejudice against, but I wish there always was a happy ending in these situations.  


The Submission by Amy Waldman- Such an interesting book.  I can't recall what landed it on my to-read list but I'm so glad it ended up there.  I don't quite know where to start with this book.  The plot unfolds easily and yet is complex.  The story takes place a few years after a terrorist attack in NYC.  A committee has been brought together to vote on a memorial for the victims.  The submitted memorials remain anonymous until the voting process is complete.  It is then found out that a muslim man has won the rights to build the memorial.  The story unfolds from here.  Readers hear from several family members of victims, from the muslim man, from the head jury member who is responsible for telling the public what has happened, and many many others.  My favorite character, Asma, was the wife of a man who cleaned in the towers that fell in the described terrorist attack (if memory serves me correct the author never says 9/11 though the reader can only conclude it).  Asma is not a US citizen and neither was her husband.  The points this brings up in the book are thoughts I never imagined having.  How many victims went nameless because they couldn't be discussed?  This book had so many twists and turns it kept you guessing and wanting for the ending the whole time.  I have to say too that the ending was one of the best endings I've read.  I tend to hate book endings and give this author immense credit for finding such an excellent way to end such a thought provoking, well written, and well thought out book.


While I'm Falling by Laura Moriarity- I didn't necessarily dislike this book so much as I didn't really get it.  It told the story of a young woman over the course of a few days in her junior year of college that went terribly wrong and had a big impact on her life.  I liked the way the book flashed back to unfold more to the story and sometimes even spoke from the future to give the reader an idea of how some things turned out.  The story was also about the main characters mother who had recently divorced her father and was struggling to regain control of her post divorce life.  One thing I truly didn't understand was that the book was told 90% from the daughters perspective and 10% from the mothers, and I might be being generous with 10%.  If it was meant to have both voices in it I don't understand why one voice over powered the other so significantly.  If it was meant to serve some purpose to have the mom narrate so little, I missed the purpose.  Overall the book didn't really flow and led to a dull ending.  I like the author and other books of hers that I've read but this one was just not a favorite.


The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern-  This type of book is normally not my cup of tea, but I guess I better start trying new teas more often because this book was all kinds of amazing.  I was immediately sucked in and didn't want to leave.  It was the kind of book where you get closer to the end and start reading slower because you don't want it to end.  I'm still pondering the ending to this book too and it's been several weeks since I read it.  I also give the author major credit on this one for coming up with such a fantastical world.  The book is unique also in that it is told by many narrators but before each section the reader is told where and when this part of the book is from.  The years skip around quite a bit so that sometimes the reader knows things the character does not and vice versa.  It threw me off a bit at first but after finishing it I really understand why the author did it that way, just still have no clue how she came up with the idea to do so.  I also was very convinced when I first started reading this that this book was the start of a series, I was so disappointed to find out I had misunderstood, but at the same time it's almost better that it's just the one.  Also in checking out the authors website there is a "trailer" but the trailer is for the book and not for a movie which I really got excited about and then extremely disappointed to realize was not in existence.  Though I'm still fairly certain it's only a matter of time before this one becomes a movie.  I would love love love to see it taken from all the visuals my mind has made and see it on film.  I realize I have said almost nothing about the plot or characters but the fact is that this book is too good to sum up, go read it!


The Taste of Salt by Martha Southgate- This was an interesting read in lots of ways.  It tells the story of a family struggling with addiction with it's male members.  The main character allows for other characters to chime in every once in awhile too and it makes for an interesting writing style.  One really cool part about the book for me personally was that it took place in Cleveland OH where I am from.  It made it that much easier for me to visualize the childhood scenes the narrator discussed.  Oddly enough she also discusses the aquarium that used to be and is no longer, only they just opened a new one!  The sad ending was somewhat predictable but the story moves quickly with flashbacks and some surprising moments.  The female narrator loves the ocean/water and winds up as a marine biologist as an adult which also made me feel connected to her as that was once upon a time a dream career of mine.  I related a lot to the main character and really wanted a happy ending for her even though she did a great job of screwing up some things and then also had things happen way beyond her control.  I still can't quite decide if the book was meant to be a sad story with a happy ending or a happy story with a sad ending.  I did enjoy it though.  Some quotes from the book that stuck with me enough to write down:



“There’s this hollow place in me- this place that needs to be alone, this place that vibrates and can’t sit still... sometimes, in my hear, I feel that toe impatiently tapping, waiting for the other shoe to drop, lonely, scared.  I don’t know how to explain that to anyone.  I’m not sure how to explain it to myself.”
“I could never really believe that it didn’t matter how I behaved.  That my father’s drinking had nothing to do with me.”
“The truth was not to be spoken.  I got that.”





The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh-  This book seems to be wildly popular right now.  I loved how it started off.  The story of a foster child aging out of the system and her rough start into the adult world but that turns into finding wonderful people and starting to understand how to open up and begin a life for herself.  In the meantime we get to also hear a background story of the one and only foster home she had that seemed to work out but all the time knowing she didn't stay there permanently and something tragic happened.   As a social worker I laughed as the narrator told the terrible stories of her social worker and how much she hated her.  As a professional I was sad to hear it but I also agreed with her assessment that she had gotten a bad worker to some extent.  The story changes around the halfway point of the book and suddenly it's almost as though it's a brand new book with one underlying theme.  The title refers to the meaning behind flowers  and the passion the narrator has for these meanings and putting together flowers as she develops both into a young adult and a florist.  I liked the book a lot until the halfway point, then I sort of got confused and felt like it changed directions so sharply.  In the end though when it all came together it worked as a whole.