I read the sequel to The City of Ember. It's called the People of Sparks. I thought it was better than the first book. If I were teaching a history class, any history class, this is the book I'd have my class read.
It's good. I was pleasantly surprised.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Guernsey pouting
I've been away from my book blog for a while, trying to find something to recommend that as good as Guernsey. I would stay away, I vowed, until I could wow you with something fabulous.
Finally I concluded that I need to stop looking for Guernsey reincarnated. It's not to be found. But if you are still pining for Guernsey, and want something like it/sort of, then try 84 Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff. Delightful non-fiction letters between Hanff and a bookseller on 84 Charing Cross Road. Hanff is sassy and fun. Quick read.
If you are looking for a great book, however, try Fleishman's Seedfolks, the narrative about a fictional community garden and its gardeners. Poignant. Inspiring. It will make you want to put your hands in humus and get to know your neighbors. If you are looking for more Guernsey, this is like recommending Beethoven to you when you are looking for Bach. Sorry. But if you want a good book, do read Seedfolks. Short. You can read it in an afternoon or two. (Anjanette, really, this is just SHORT short, not Deborah short.)
I can also recommend The Ladies Auxiliary by Tova Mirvis, which was recommended to me by the darling and daring Sarah Comin Baker. The main character, Bathsheva, a Jewish convert, comes to Memphis to surround herself with the Jewish orthodox community. That's the plot. It's good. The writing is delicious. Written partly in the first person "we" (as in "we the ladies of the town"), you'll hear all the small towns/religious communities/church congregation concerns and cares. Confessions and complaints. For me, this book was part Turlock, CA; part Montpelier, CA; and part every-ward-I've-ever-been-in. Funny in parts, heart-breaking in others. Mirvis doesn't shy away from serious themes: outward vs. inward religion, repentence and forgiveness, how to teach children to be religious while letting them develop their own religiousness. Good book. I liked it. Read it and come back and talk about it with me. This would be great for a book club book.
And lastly (the next in my line of YA novels), I read Keeping Corner by Kashmira Sheth. About a Brahmin child widow in the time of Ghandi. But great window, really, into India of that time and the Brahmin culture. Good. I would not have liked it as a teenager, but I get it now. Since I know very little about India of Ghandi's time, this was a nice introduction. Nothing scandalous. Clean. Decently written.
Finally I concluded that I need to stop looking for Guernsey reincarnated. It's not to be found. But if you are still pining for Guernsey, and want something like it/sort of, then try 84 Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff. Delightful non-fiction letters between Hanff and a bookseller on 84 Charing Cross Road. Hanff is sassy and fun. Quick read.
If you are looking for a great book, however, try Fleishman's Seedfolks, the narrative about a fictional community garden and its gardeners. Poignant. Inspiring. It will make you want to put your hands in humus and get to know your neighbors. If you are looking for more Guernsey, this is like recommending Beethoven to you when you are looking for Bach. Sorry. But if you want a good book, do read Seedfolks. Short. You can read it in an afternoon or two. (Anjanette, really, this is just SHORT short, not Deborah short.)
I can also recommend The Ladies Auxiliary by Tova Mirvis, which was recommended to me by the darling and daring Sarah Comin Baker. The main character, Bathsheva, a Jewish convert, comes to Memphis to surround herself with the Jewish orthodox community. That's the plot. It's good. The writing is delicious. Written partly in the first person "we" (as in "we the ladies of the town"), you'll hear all the small towns/religious communities/church congregation concerns and cares. Confessions and complaints. For me, this book was part Turlock, CA; part Montpelier, CA; and part every-ward-I've-ever-been-in. Funny in parts, heart-breaking in others. Mirvis doesn't shy away from serious themes: outward vs. inward religion, repentence and forgiveness, how to teach children to be religious while letting them develop their own religiousness. Good book. I liked it. Read it and come back and talk about it with me. This would be great for a book club book.
And lastly (the next in my line of YA novels), I read Keeping Corner by Kashmira Sheth. About a Brahmin child widow in the time of Ghandi. But great window, really, into India of that time and the Brahmin culture. Good. I would not have liked it as a teenager, but I get it now. Since I know very little about India of Ghandi's time, this was a nice introduction. Nothing scandalous. Clean. Decently written.
Monday, March 9, 2009
For Jenny Baker: The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau
Jenny asked if I'd read The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau and I hadn't, so I did.
It was good. Plot was good. Character development was good. Ending was good---I skipped to end by about page thirty. Read it. Nice! So I went back and read the book. The writing is decent---not art, but decent. (Stephanie Meyers proved that artistic writing isn't what sells anyway. Plot sells. Character sells.) Jenny, Emma can read this and be fine. Nothing questionable. I'm not sure that I'll go on to read the rest of the series today, but someday I'll own the series for my kids when they are tweens.
It reminded me, actually, of Margaret Peterson Haddix's Running out of Time. Similar plotlines. Young hero and heroines find themselves in the middle of a community experiment gone bad. The adults won't solve the problem, or admit there is one, so it's up to the youth. Who face danger head on and, with cunning, face the problem. I think that Ember and Running would be nice compliments for discussion. You could have Emma read both and then talk about the similarity in themes. That would be good, actually.
It was good. Plot was good. Character development was good. Ending was good---I skipped to end by about page thirty. Read it. Nice! So I went back and read the book. The writing is decent---not art, but decent. (Stephanie Meyers proved that artistic writing isn't what sells anyway. Plot sells. Character sells.) Jenny, Emma can read this and be fine. Nothing questionable. I'm not sure that I'll go on to read the rest of the series today, but someday I'll own the series for my kids when they are tweens.
It reminded me, actually, of Margaret Peterson Haddix's Running out of Time. Similar plotlines. Young hero and heroines find themselves in the middle of a community experiment gone bad. The adults won't solve the problem, or admit there is one, so it's up to the youth. Who face danger head on and, with cunning, face the problem. I think that Ember and Running would be nice compliments for discussion. You could have Emma read both and then talk about the similarity in themes. That would be good, actually.
The Year of Living Biblically by AJ Jacobs
I just finished The Year of Living Biblically by AJ Jacobs. Subtitle: One Man's Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible. I had already read Jacob's The Know it All (One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World). Here's what I can tell you about Jacobs:
1. He's a decent writer. Witty. Clever. Intelligent.
2. He isn't afraid to talk about his own insecurities and neuroses, which is nice, because his issues make my own insecurities and neuroses look farily normal. Comforting to find such humanity.
3. He obssessively pores over the Internet looking for blog posts about what people think about his book. (AJ, if you are reading this, leave a comment and I will send you and Julie and Jasper and Zane and Lucas some of my killer vegan peanut butter cookies. They're good even though I am not a vegan.)
4. He is the editor of Esquire, so he can not be depended on to edit out sketchy ideas or sketchy scenes or even his own sketchy thoughts. Since I am something of a prude about what I'll read---I skip passages when it looks questionable. I can't tell you for sure, but I'm usually correct, and what I skipped was sketchy.
5. I laugh out loud when I read his work. He is funny. Funny, funny, funny. If he were put in the same room with my brother Aaron, he would find his match for funny. So funny.
Having said that, I enjoyed the book. My favorite theme was that religion can't be something we just do and study---it really is about what we become because of what we know. And that holiness is found in the mundane.
Marianne, I think you'd like this one.
1. He's a decent writer. Witty. Clever. Intelligent.
2. He isn't afraid to talk about his own insecurities and neuroses, which is nice, because his issues make my own insecurities and neuroses look farily normal. Comforting to find such humanity.
3. He obssessively pores over the Internet looking for blog posts about what people think about his book. (AJ, if you are reading this, leave a comment and I will send you and Julie and Jasper and Zane and Lucas some of my killer vegan peanut butter cookies. They're good even though I am not a vegan.)
4. He is the editor of Esquire, so he can not be depended on to edit out sketchy ideas or sketchy scenes or even his own sketchy thoughts. Since I am something of a prude about what I'll read---I skip passages when it looks questionable. I can't tell you for sure, but I'm usually correct, and what I skipped was sketchy.
5. I laugh out loud when I read his work. He is funny. Funny, funny, funny. If he were put in the same room with my brother Aaron, he would find his match for funny. So funny.
Having said that, I enjoyed the book. My favorite theme was that religion can't be something we just do and study---it really is about what we become because of what we know. And that holiness is found in the mundane.
Marianne, I think you'd like this one.
If you liked Guernsey
If you like Guernsey Literary and Potato Pie Peel Society, you should try The Persian Pickle Club by Sandra Dallas. It's delightful. Not as good as Guernsey (in my opinion), but good all the same and worth reading. I'm going to try more Sandra Dallas someday and report back. I tried to do her Alice's Tulips and didn't care for it. But maybe that book was the runt of the litter. I'll give Dallas another chance.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
*Have you met Charlie Ravioli? If not, you should. He's one funny guy.
There are many things I studied in graduate school that I haven't thought about since. But there are a few pearls that come back every now and then. One is the theoretical work of Wayne Booth, who wrote The Company We Keep. The gist is that when re read, we create a relationship with characters or authors, etc. Like . . . once you've met Alice in Wonderland, they you have a relationship with her, of sorts. That's the way simplified version, buy you get the idea.
But on that note, you need to meet Charlie Ravioli. He's one funny guy. I found him in the book Through the Children's Gate, by Adam Gopnik. Gopnik is a fantastic writer. This guy knows how to capitalize. He gets a little parenthesis happy---which is like speaking my language becuase I am (unedited) the queen of dashes. In this book, Gopnik writes a series of personal essays about his experiences returning back to the US after living in Paris for five years. I haven't read the whole book, but what I have read is superb. Funny. Insightful. Intelligent. Witty. Entertaining. Thought provoking. Good stuff so far. Can't vouch for all the content, but what I have seen is just fine.
Anyway. Charlie Ravioli appears in the essay "Bumping into Mr. Ravioli." It's worth finding the book in the library or going to Borders to sit in their comfy chairs just to read this chapter. Really. It's good.
So go read it. And then come back and let me know that you know him so I can say something like, "I felt like I was talking to Charlie Ravioli . . . " and you'll know what I'll mean and we'll both sigh and say, "Yeah. That Charlie Ravioli. It's like that sometimes."
I do this with Emmanuel Levinas and my cousin Dave. We nod. And we get it.
But trust me. Go meet Charlie Ravioli.
But on that note, you need to meet Charlie Ravioli. He's one funny guy. I found him in the book Through the Children's Gate, by Adam Gopnik. Gopnik is a fantastic writer. This guy knows how to capitalize. He gets a little parenthesis happy---which is like speaking my language becuase I am (unedited) the queen of dashes. In this book, Gopnik writes a series of personal essays about his experiences returning back to the US after living in Paris for five years. I haven't read the whole book, but what I have read is superb. Funny. Insightful. Intelligent. Witty. Entertaining. Thought provoking. Good stuff so far. Can't vouch for all the content, but what I have seen is just fine.
Anyway. Charlie Ravioli appears in the essay "Bumping into Mr. Ravioli." It's worth finding the book in the library or going to Borders to sit in their comfy chairs just to read this chapter. Really. It's good.
So go read it. And then come back and let me know that you know him so I can say something like, "I felt like I was talking to Charlie Ravioli . . . " and you'll know what I'll mean and we'll both sigh and say, "Yeah. That Charlie Ravioli. It's like that sometimes."
I do this with Emmanuel Levinas and my cousin Dave. We nod. And we get it.
But trust me. Go meet Charlie Ravioli.
Seer and the Sword, City of Masks
I don't get much time to browse in the library anymore. When I take the kids, I spend most of my time trying to keep the kids from pulling the books off the shelves. So when I want new books, I have to look fast. Usually I come up with duds, but sometimes I find some good stuff. Which is what I was lucky to find on my last trip---really good stuff. I was in the mood for more YA lit, so I pulled two from the shelf. Both good. Both well done.
The first is The Seer and the Sword by Victoria Hanley. Fantasy, with a good strong female character---which isn't what you always find so that was a nice suprise. Nice writing. Good plot. Little nuggets about human nature. Good. Perfect for a tween, nice escape if you are an adult and you just want a pleasant YA fantasy. There are more in the series and I'm glad. If I get lonely for the characters, I'll go read the rest.
The second is The City of Masks by Mary Hoffman. Fantasy again, this one with an alternate world much like Venice, Italy. The fun thing about this book is the it delves into 1700 Italy (sort of). Not history heavy, which wouldn't work in a YA novel anyway, but there's enough truth about the past to make it authentic and interesting. Hoffman likes Italy and you can tell. This book also had another delightful heroine with a strong mind and spirit. Yet another book in a series. Yet another series I wouldn't blanch to read.
So there are two books that I would've recommended to the tween crowd who want something clean, well written, interesting, and worth reading.
Bravo, Hanley and Hoffman. Well done.
(End note: If you don't like fantasty, don't understand fantasy, and don't ever want to read fantasy, skip these. It's OK. The authors will never know and I won't be offended.)
The first is The Seer and the Sword by Victoria Hanley. Fantasy, with a good strong female character---which isn't what you always find so that was a nice suprise. Nice writing. Good plot. Little nuggets about human nature. Good. Perfect for a tween, nice escape if you are an adult and you just want a pleasant YA fantasy. There are more in the series and I'm glad. If I get lonely for the characters, I'll go read the rest.
The second is The City of Masks by Mary Hoffman. Fantasy again, this one with an alternate world much like Venice, Italy. The fun thing about this book is the it delves into 1700 Italy (sort of). Not history heavy, which wouldn't work in a YA novel anyway, but there's enough truth about the past to make it authentic and interesting. Hoffman likes Italy and you can tell. This book also had another delightful heroine with a strong mind and spirit. Yet another book in a series. Yet another series I wouldn't blanch to read.
So there are two books that I would've recommended to the tween crowd who want something clean, well written, interesting, and worth reading.
Bravo, Hanley and Hoffman. Well done.
(End note: If you don't like fantasty, don't understand fantasy, and don't ever want to read fantasy, skip these. It's OK. The authors will never know and I won't be offended.)
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