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A Couple of Disappointments

June 26, 2012 |

As an adult, I’ve come to enjoy realistic survival stories. As a teen, I needed some sort of fantastical element to make it compelling, but I don’t require that anymore – the promise of real-life danger is excitement enough. So when I saw the blurb for Michael Cadnum’s latest, Seize the Storm, I figured it would be my kind of book. The premise is pretty simple: a family is taking a vacation on their fancy yacht and come across an abandoned boat full of cash. They decide to take the cash, not realizing that the drug dealers – including the drug lord’s teenage son – who own the boat (and the cash) are after it too.
It’s a great setup, but I found myself pretty disappointed in the execution. There’s a long list of characters: the teenage son of the drug lord, a teenage assassin, and another man in the employ of the drug lord all on the plane sent to retrieve the cash; plus a teenage girl, her male cousin, her parents, and a teenage sailor all on the boat that took the cash. Cadnum tells at least some of the story through each character’s eyes, which means there’s no true protagonist and we’re encouraged to root for the “bad guys” just as much as the family on the boat. Unfortunately, while Cadnum gives us a little insight – via telling rather than showing – into each of the characters, it’s not really enough to make any of them truly compelling. 
The story itself is surprisingly thin, too. The family finds the boat and takes the cash; the drug runners hunt down the boat and a stand-off ensues. I expected there to be more of a sense of danger, a bit more action, more excitement overall. Perhaps I would have been more invested in the story had I cared about the characters, but what little development we get makes them all pretty unsympathetic. I know it’s not necessary for characters to be likeable to also be well-drawn, but everyone was just so unpleasant, I honestly didn’t care what happened to them. If they all drowned, I wouldn’t have felt much of a pang. 
I went in expecting a survival story, but what I got was more a story about some unpleasant people who make a series of bad decisions. I think kids who go into this book expecting a thrilling read will be disappointed, although I’m sure it will have its fans among those who like books told from the “bad guy’s” point of view.
Justin Halpern’s Shit My Dad Says was a surprisingly fun read for me. I appreciated that it didn’t eliminate sentimentality entirely in favor of the profane humor, and I looked forward to more of the same mix in his follow-up, I Suck at Girls. In this volume, Halpern chronicles his romantic interactions with the opposite sex, beginning as a young child. He strives for ribald humor peppered with deep thoughts, but he’s not terribly successful on the humor front.
There are certainly funny bits – unfortunately, they’re mostly relegated to Halpern’s conversations with his father, which is what made the first book such a stand-out. When it’s just Halpern dishing about his girlfriends, the book is mostly forgettable; when it’s Halpern discussing girls and women with his father, it’s frequently hilarious. What this makes for is an uneven book that doesn’t linger very long in the reader’s mind.
Perhaps part of the problem is that Halpern’s dating disasters aren’t really disastrous – they’re fairly run of the mill and not terribly exciting stories in themselves. He’s got a nice way of writing, but it’s not enough to elevate his pretty pedestrian stories into comedy gold. His father is still the star, and he doesn’t make enough appearances to salvage the book. Still, if you’re a fan of the first book, this is certainly worth a read.
Review copies received from the publisher. Both books are available now.

Filed Under: Adult, Non-Fiction, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell

December 13, 2011 |

I’ve heard a lot of great things about Malcolm Gladwell’s writing. Friends and co-workers tell me that his subjects are interesting and his writing style is easy to follow without talking down to the reader. I wasn’t disappointed with Outliers. In it, Gladwell tackles the subject of success – how people obtain it and what contributes to extraordinary success as opposed to everyday success.
The thesis – that our success depends much more on circumstances out of our control than any effort we put forth – isn’t exactly revolutionary. Most of us know it to be true. However, I don’t think I’m lying when I say that most of us also believe that we if we just try that much harder and develop our talent that much further, it will be enough to become wildly successful, despite bad or just mediocre beginnings. Not so, says Gladwell.
Most of the evidence Gladwell gives us is anecdotal, which is my favorite kind to read. I can’t really speak to how scientifically valid it is, but it sure makes for engrossing listening. For example, did you know that successful hockey players are almost all born in January, February, or March? Kids born during these months are older than the others kids when they start playing in the youth leagues, which means they’re already better at the game (because they’re bigger). Thus, they get more play time, which means their skill increases at a faster rate, and it compounds as time goes by. Within a few years, they’re much, much better than the kids born just a few months later in the year. Basically, these kids’ birthdates are a huge factor in their success as adults – and it’s nothing they can do anything about. If anyone could make hockey interesting to a Texan who only grudgingly admits the sport even exists, it’s Gladwell.
Gladwell also talks at length about Bill Joy, one of the co-founders of Sun Microsystems. Joy is brilliant, yes, but he also had a wealth of opportunity presented to him when he attended the University of Michigan in the 1970s. One of Gladwell’s main arguments is it takes 10,000 hours of practice to become an expert at any one thing. At Michigan, Joy had access to a computing center where he could program continuously for hours. It was one of the few places in the country where this was possible. Joy didn’t go to Michigan intending to become a computer programmer, but once he got there, the circumstances provided a way for him to get in his 10,000 hours. Pretty darn lucky.
I could go on and on with the examples. With so much emphasis on circumstances rather than effort determining our success, it can get a little discouraging at times, but Gladwell stops short of saying circumstances are all that matters. All of the people he profiles had both luck and talent. It actually made me think of the ways my own circumstances contributed to my current success, and I realized that I’m a pretty lucky woman (but I work hard too).
I really enjoy nonfiction in audio format, and Outliers was no exception. Gladwell narrates the book himself, and his voice is great for the conversational tone of the book. Like his writing, he’s friendly and easy to follow. I’d pick up another audio by him any day.

Filed Under: Adult, audiobooks, Non-Fiction, Reviews, Uncategorized

Making an Exit by Sarah Murray

November 25, 2011 |

It’s been a while since I’ve talked about a non-fiction book, and admittedly, it’s because little has struck my interest lately. I’m not a huge memoir reader, and I’m not a reader of celebrity biographies, and it seems to me that’s where a lot of the push has been lately. I’ve found fewer of the sorts of things that work well for me. But when I stumbled upon Sarah Murray’s Making an Exit, I knew I stumbled upon something that was right up my alley.

Murray’s book is an exploration of a topic most people don’t like to talk about: death. But it’s not a grim book by any means. Rather, it’s a book about the different means of celebrating or mourning the deceased that span the globe. This aspect of the book is paired with a small narrative thread that talks through the experience of Murray losing her father. Her father — who she refers to only as Fa throughout — was not a religious man, and he believed heavily in the idea that the physical body was merely “organic manner,” an idea that emerges over and over throughout the book. So for Murray, the burial aspect of his death is really quite absent, and it’s the precise reason she finds herself curious how other cultures approach grief and loss.

The two lines of the book don’t get overwhelming, and more specifically, the secondary thread about the loss of Fa is small enough that it never detracts from the greater purpose of Murray’s book. It’s rather a means of comparison and discussion, and it works as breathing room after reading about some of the heavier methods other cultures have in burial rituals. Moreover, what works so well in this book is that the chapters are not dependent upon one another, and I bring this up because it’s an important reason why this book worked for me — I love non-fiction, but sometimes, I am not always interested in the entire book. If I can skip around and not feel I’m missing out, it gives the book that much more power. That’s not to say there’s not merit in non-fiction that builds upon itself, but rather to say, a book like this one is strong because it doesn’t employ that tactic. Reading this never felt like work. Though this isn’t a fast paced book by any means, the set up permits readers to go at it leisurely. It’s the kind of book you can pick up and put down for periods of time without missing out on anything.

Perhaps most importantly, this book is never morbid. Where it could have tread that world, it didn’t. Murray skillfully explores without exploiting either the topic nor the reader.

The more interesting rituals I found included, first and foremost, the tradition in Ghana for the dead to be buried in elaborate coffins. That means instead of thinking about death like we do in America, which involves somewhat stuffy and standard coffins, Ghana tradition allows people to decide what sort of bright, elaborate or symbolic coffin they’d like to be buried in. We’re shown this in a picture at the start of the chapter, where there is a coffin made in the shape of an airplane. Murray commissions one of the top coffin makers in the country to build her a coffin in the shape of the Empire State Building. While she muses about how many could think this a strange piece of furniture to store in her living room in New York, she offers a lot of interesting insight into the idea that Ghanaians are celebrating life in death through these cheerful caskets.

Easily, the most engaging chapter for me was the one set in the Czech Republic and looked at the tradition of the ossuary. If that’s an unfamiliar term, I suppose the image might be helpful a bit — an ossuary is a cathedral of bones. The idea has always fascinated me, but I’ve never quite thought about why these things exist. Murray though has, and it turns out these were developed out of necessity of space. Centuries ago, space in burial grounds was at a premium, and rather than bury the dead as whole, it made more sense for bodies to be separated bone from flesh. The decomposition of flesh is quicker than bone, and it was easier to bury flesh, as it’s smaller than bone. The bones were put into these “cathedrals,” and the reason sometimes they’re not whole but instead are in interesting or unique displays had to do with the person in charge. It makes sense that when you’re surrounded by death, sometimes you have to have a sense of humor, right? I could have easily read an entire book on this topic because Murray approached it in such an engaging manner.

Other chapters that stuck out to me included the one about Mexico’s Day of the Dead — perhaps what struck me most about this was less the topic at hand and more the complete fascination with which Murray approaches it. I’m quite familiar with the rituals of this day, but Murray herself was unfamiliar, and the curiosity in her writing and exploration was simply fun to read. There is a respect in her tone that resonated with me as a reader, and it strengthened my trust in everything she was doing. This is the sort of experience I desire when reading a non-fiction book because it’s key to what makes the book work. If I don’t trust the authority, I can’t trust the book. Reading Making an Exit reminded me a lot of my experience in reading Eric Weiner’s The Geography of Bliss — there is a balance of respect and curiosity in the topic, and never once does the reader feel cheated or belittled in the process. These two books have an interesting conversation with one another, as both explore a heavy topic through a cross-cultural lens.

My only complaint about the book is the photography: there are black and white photos that open each chapter, and they relate to something of the ritual in the country in which the chapter’s set. However, the photos are small and only in black and white, and I found them to sort of be a lost opportunity, especially in the chapter about Ghana. I would have loved seeing the full color image, and more photos throughout would have made this book just that much stronger.

Hand this book off to readers of non-fiction, those interested in other cultures, and those who love reading about social rituals. As I mentioned earlier, it’s not at all a morbid book, despite the topic at hand, and I would have no problem handing this off to teen readers of non-fiction, even though it’s technically an adult non-fiction publication. It’s the kind of book I would have devoured in my teens, and because of the set up, it keeps the readers interested by allowing them to cherry pick what they want to read (and also has a payoff for those who read cover to cover).

Making an Exit is available now. Review copy received from the publisher.

Filed Under: Adult, Non-Fiction, Reviews, Uncategorized

Reviews, Twitter-style

July 13, 2011 |

Kim’s post last week had me thinking about a bunch of books I’ve read lately that I don’t think I’ll get the chance to write full reviews for. So I offer up a handful of reviews, Twitter-style. To be fair, they’re all a little longer than 140 characters, but they’re short and to the point.

The Geeks Shall Inherit the Earth by Alexandra Robbins: I’ve read every one of Robbins’s non-fiction books because her writing appeals to me. In this book, she’s looked into the lives of a number of high school kids from all areas of the country and with a variety of backgrounds and explores what and why they are considered geeks in their schools. She then gives her reasoning for why these kids will grow up more successful than those who aren’t willing to embrace their geekdom in school. This wasn’t a favorite of mine, as I felt she dragged too long into the individual stories, and spent too little time on the social science aspect of her thesis. It’s one worth skimming.

My Life Undecided by Jessica Brody: This is a lightweight book about a girl who decides to put her life into the hands of her blog readers. Brooklyn had gotten herself into a heap of trouble, and now she needed help making good choices. At times this book was funny, and at other times, I found Brooklyn an annoying and unsympathetic character. I kind of felt like the story here (about her blog) didn’t develop soon enough, and a number of really interesting and huge topics were brought up at the very end of the book that would have merited longer exploration. That said, it has appeal to those who like lighter, girly reads. I liked this one a lot more than Brody’s first novel, The Karma Club.

The Day Before by Lisa Schroeder: This is my first Lisa Schroeder book, but it won’t be my last. This novel in verse follows two teens — a boy and a girl — who are spending “the day before” at a remote beach to clear their minds. Of course, they run into one another and have an amazing day together, wherein they’re able to forget the things they’ll be facing the next day. It’s a bit of a tear jerker ala Gayle Forman and will work for younger teens, as well as older teens. The issues these teens face are fresh and interesting, and the romance is quite sweet.

The Near Witch by Victoria Schwab (August 2): I’m not a big fantasy reader, but this fairy tale came highly recommended, and I really did enjoy it. Lexi, the main character, is a great leader in resolving the problem at hand — the appearance of a strange boy in town and the sudden disappearance of local children. It’s a story about a small town fearful of outsiders that has developed a mythos about the landscape surrounding them. Lexi’s determined to figure it out and she’s quite an optimistic character, but what really stood out to me was how flawed she was in some of the decisions she made, being too trusting, then too untrusting; it made her lovable. This is a clean, well-paced story with quite a bit of action and suspense and it’s a stand alone!

To Timbuktu by Casey Sciezcka and Steve Weinberg: This non-fiction book’s non-traditional format really worked for me. It’s told in vignettes and through illustrations, and it’s the story of Casey and Steve’s exploration of nine different countries in the two years following their college graduation. It’s funny and enlightening, and I thought they did an excellent job depicting the countries they were in quite well. I loved that China exceeded their expectations while Thailand didn’t. That said, there were times this book really dragged, and I felt like there was too much whining from the characters. I guess my challenge was I felt there was a real sense of entitlement in the story, and a lack of acknowledgment to this. It became hard to sympathize in some of their plights. That said, I liked watching their relationship grow and flourish in their travels, though I think it’s definitely a much more mature relationship than is usually depicted in ya, making me question whether this book is really meant for a teen readership or if it will really appeal more to the college and post-college crowd.

Filed Under: Non-Fiction, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Audiosynced: A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson

June 21, 2011 |

I’m not a big nonfiction reader.  I like it in theory, and I often bring stacks of interesting nonfiction titles home with the intention of reading them all, but I’m usually distracted by the latest dystopia or mystery or romance and then the nonfiction books are overdue and I need to return them to the library.
That’s why I’m especially glad I brought home Bill Bryson’s A Short History of Nearly Everything on audio.  This is most likely a book that would have languished in my “to read” pile if I had checked out the print version, but the audio proved a delightful way to keep myself entertained on a road trip I took earlier this month.
The basic concept of the book is this: Bill Bryson describes how the universe, and everything in it, came to be.  This is a pretty tall order, but it’s precisely because he covers so much in so little space that he manages to keep the lay reader (or listener) interested.  He covers the big bang, evolution, plate tectonics, ice ages, and volcanoes, among a dozen other subjects.  He also talks a lot about the people behind the major discoveries and includes a few funny stories that show just how odd (or just plain human, really) scientists can be.  The book is never dry or boring, but it also doesn’t give the reader a full picture on any one subject.  It’s a fascinating look at science for non-scientists.
One of the greatest joys of the audiobook experience was Bryson’s narration. The book is full of humor, and Bryson’s voice lets that shine through.  He speaks deliberately and with a very slight English accent (I may be imagining this, since I know he is American but spends a lot of time in England) that adds interest to the listening.  He also occasionally refers to himself in the text, which makes the fact that he’s narrating all the more real.  I also really appreciated that the book was tailored to the listener, not the reader.  By this I mean that whenever the text read “If you’re reading this,” it was changed to “If you’re listening to this.”  It’s a nice touch that iced the experience for me.
I should mention that I listened to the abridged version, which I normally try to avoid at all costs.  Abridgements are the bane of my audiobook existence and I’m baffled as to why they exist in the first place.  I think this book suffers from the abridgement.  The unabridged version is short in the first place, but abridged it’s simply too short (only five discs!).  Bryson skips from one topic to another with almost no transition in many places, and I needed more elaboration at certain points to really satisfy my curiosity.  Perhaps, though, that’s also a success of the book: it left me wanting more and feeling even more curious about the world in which we live.

Filed Under: Adult, audio review, Non-Fiction, Uncategorized

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