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  • Review Policy

What I’m Reading Now, Twitter-Style

December 30, 2010 |

Welcome to another edition of reviews Twitter-style: a brief description of my current reads in 140 characters or less (sometimes I fudge a few characters, but you can forgive me).

Print Books

StarCrossed
Elizabeth Bunce

By the author of the first Morris winner, so I’m giving this one a shot, even though I didn’t really care for her first book. Magic, complex world-building, and a plucky heroine.

Half the Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide
Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn

Depressing but also eye-opening account of women in the poorest areas and worst situations. I look forward most to the sections on how people like us can help.

Fables Vol. 14: Witches
Bill Willingham

The latest in Willingham’s comic book series doesn’t disappoint, with a focus on a few of the more interesting characters (the witches). A bit too much exposition, but still satisfying.

Red as Blood, or Tales From the Sisters Grimmer
Tanith Lee

A collection of re-told fairy tales from one of my favorite authors. Edgy but not true horror (so far). The source material is sometimes difficult to determine, but I enjoy seeing how Lee re-works the familiar stories.

Wither
Lauren DeStefano

Another dystopia. Another trilogy. Girls die at 20, boys at 25. Girls sold into marriage and forced to pop out babies. Weak world-building and a too passive heroine weaken the tale, but it will satisfy diehard fans of the genre. 

Audiobooks

Before I Fall
Lauren Oliver

Mean girl dies and re-lives the same day over and over again, a la Groundhog Day minus the comedy. Terrific narrator, excellent writing, I’m actually enjoying a contemporary YA!

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Sherman Alexie

Yes, it really is as good as everyone says. The story – Indian boy leaves reservation to attend a white school – is a bit slight at times, but the narration (by Alexie himself) is wonderful and it’s full of real humor.

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

Field Notes: A Blue So Dark by Holly Schindler

December 27, 2010 |

Aura’s mother, Grace, is drowning in her own sickness. She’s schizophrenic, and each day has become a bigger and bigger battle between perception and reality. It’s been Aura’s responsibility to keep an eye on her as her only child, especially after he father left. He couldn’t handle the illness anymore after her mother chose to stop taking her medication.

Aura’s life changes abruptly after a horrible episode with her mother. Can she handle taking care of her or is she a lost cause? And what about Grace’s mother, Aura’s grandmother? She may be the glue to this broken family, despite not having been part of the family for a long time.

A Blue So Dark is a haunting, literary read, perfect for those who enjoy their stories to unravel piece by piece. While reading this book, I couldn’t help but see the similarities between it and Blue Plate Special by Michelle Kwasney. The use of an intergenerational plot line worked well here, and it’ll appeal to teens who like their drama family-style. Likewise, watching how Aura needs to take charge and clean up after her mother’s episodes reminded me of C.J. Omololu’s Dirty Little Secrets. Fans of either of those books would find a lot to love here.

What worked for me was the slow pace and the strongly written details of Grace’s descent into her illness. I thought Schindler nailed her metaphors here, using the sea and the beach to mimic drowning. Not only that, the ability to weave in a lot about art vs. reality and reality vs. perception will hit home with artistic types. However, throughout the book, I really wish I had gotten to know Aura more. This book felt at times more the story of Grace, told through the eyes of Aura. She worked more as a vessel rather than a participant in the story. I wanted to know more about her beyond the fact she likes art and a boy named Jeremy. But perhaps it’s because of how the story works — wherein she must be the mature caretaker of her mother — that we don’t get to know her better.

Pass this off to fans of realistic, literary reads. They will sink into this one. Likewise, this is a fantastic book to hand off to your adult young adult readers. The strong storyline and the intergenerational saga will stand out to them.

Filed Under: field notes, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Fall for Anything by Courtney Summers

December 20, 2010 |

Eddie’s dad took his life — jumped off a building and died.

He left no note. No reason. No explanation.

This doesn’t work for Eddie, and she’s made it her mission to get to the bottom of this. To solve it, to come to terms with her grief and the loss. To understand what would possess her father, an artist who experienced brief but intense popularity, to jump off a building and end it all.

Enter Culler Evans: the last student her father ever took on. Another person struggling to come to terms with the loss. When Eddie gives Culler the last remains of her father, a box of photos she collects from his former office space, things change forever between them, between her and her best friend Milo, between her and her father, and between her and herself.

But Culler’s not the person Eddie thinks he is. And maybe he’s just what she needs.

Fall For Anything is Courtney’s first foray outside the mean girl world, though Eddie is anything but untroubled. She’s grief stricken, lost, and searching for answers to questions that may not have any. Best friend Milo wants to comfort her and help her through it, but he can’t. He himself keeps a secret from Eddie: he remembers the day her father died picture perfect, unlike her, and he won’t share it with her.

Although this book that focuses on grief, the true story is in the character development and the relationships that build among these perfectly flawed people. While we know Eddie is sad, there are so many more layers to her. With both Milo and Culler, she finds strong male companionship. She’s both dependent and completely independent, as well as weak and strong. She loves them and lusts for them but rejects them, too. Eddie craves connection to her world but repels it at the same time.

Milo is the true constant in Eddie’s life, despite how she treats him on more than one occasion. He’s the kind of guy girls want in their life but the kind that always get treated like dirt. The ones we misjudge. The ones we as readers can’t help but love a little bit (or a lot). Through the story, we see him lose his best friend in more than one way and our hearts ache for him.

Culler is the catalyst who moves the plot and characters forward. He himself is both lost and not lost as he leads Eddie on a search through the last photographs her father took, a journey meant to help both of them reconcile their grief and understand why her father did what he did. Culler is a photographer, and his method of coping and understanding is by processing through his camera lens. On their trip, he takes photos to capture thoughts and moments, many which include Eddie. These intimate exposures ultimately guide her to answers about who she is, and through this, she can construct the answers she needs about her father.

Courtney’s writing is sparse and so much happens between the lines that you must slow down to pick up what she does. There are incredible parallels between the loss Eddie experiences with her father’s suicide, the experience she has in her relationship with Culler, and the relationship she has with the photos Culler uses to “process” the loss of her father. It comes full circle. Subtle hints also suggest Eddie isn’t really interested in a romance with either Milo or Culler, despite the overt fantasies she has about them. Instead, she desires a different kind of affection: she wants to be loved and cared for because she’s a good and valuable person, something more important to her at this juncture than a traditional romantic relationship. It’s part of her grieving process, and it helps us understand her that much more. A couple of reviews — professional ones — seem to have overlooked the precision and weight of each word in the story, shortchanging the role the writing itself plays as a character.

My one criticism is fairly minor, and it stuck out more on a second read. Eddie repeatedly discusses how she doesn’t understand art and isn’t really interested in it, either. But on more than one occasion, she seems quite knowledgeable on the topic, engaging in dialog about light exposure and photographic techniques. I didn’t know Eddie well enough in this realm to tell if she was lying or if she was just that insecure (though I bet the latter).

The situations Eddie finds herself in are unrealistic, but because the boundaries in this story are pushed so far, they are completely believable. As a reader, you feel as exposed and vulnerable as the characters, smirking with Eddie one minute and wiping your eyes with your sleeve the next. You want to shake her to tell her she’s making mistakes but at the same time, you want to sit back and let them happen. Despite the build up and execution of several plot twists, the strength in this book comes in its moments of complete restraint.

Fall for Anything is unapologetic. Hand this to readers looking for edgy, thought-provoking, raw reads. Although there will be little doubt on appeal to readers and fans of Courtney’s prior works, this is the book that I think will really make her a bigger name and staple in the YA world, especially to those who may have too easily written her off as the person who writes about mean girls. It’s brutal and honest . . . but don’t go in expecting an answer to anything here.

You need to find the same thing Eddie did.

—

If you’re intrigued, you still have time to enter to win one of three copies I’m giving away right here. I’ll pull winners on Wednesday morning. Oh, and if that weren’t enough, Courtney’s got a short story told from Milo’s perspective available, too. It’s set prior to the events of Fall for Anything and there are no spoilers. Enjoy it here.

Filed Under: Favorite Picks, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins

December 17, 2010 |


Anna Oliphant is on the cusp of her senior year, psyched for new experiences with her best friend Bridget and Topher, her cute-as-anything coworker at the local movie theater who she’s almost-kinda-sorta-sure likes her. However, when her father, a wildly popular novelist (a la Nicholas Sparks) decides that she would benefit from a year abroad in France, Anna is not happy to be enrolled at SOAP, the School of America in Paris. However, her anxiety and homesickness soon disappear when she meets a group of friends, including the wonderful Etienne St. Clair. There’s just one problem–he’s taken, in a long-term relationship with Ellie, who graduated from SOAP the year before. However, as Anna slowly gets to know Etienne and the two help each other through respective crises, their friendship slowly flirts with romance and the two circle ever nearer to each other.

Anna and the French Kiss came loaded with hype, with gushing reviews and adoring words. When I picked it up, I was doubtful, unsure of whether any book could truly merit the love floating around in the blogosphere. But, reader, I was wrong. There are no signs whatsover that this is Stephanie Perkins’ debut novel. The woman can write relationships, can choose the perfect phrase to depict that first spark of a crush and the quippiest dialogue to show flirtation. The attraction between Anna and Etienne is sizzling, yet not in a corny way.
Another thing I very much appreciated about Anna and the French Kiss is that the characters were human. There are no Mary Sues, no idealization of either of the main characters. Perkins fleshes out her characters, making both Anna and Etienne flawed…human. Teenagers. Their pride, jealousy, misunderstandings constantly get in the way of them being with each other and cause hurt and harm to others. But all of this is written realistically, in a way that echoes what happens in real life. As predictable as the storyline is in some ways, it also rings utterly true. Even their physical appearances break slightly from the norm–Anna has a white streak in her hair, while Etienne is short, with crooked teeth, not tall and dashing.

And the characters grow and change throughout the novel, a key element for me when reading YA fiction. There is a deliberate progression with Anna and Etienne from casual friends to best friends to “will they or won’t they.” The reader witnesses Anna growing more confident in herself and in the fact that she does belong in this new, foreign environment. We see Etienne faltering, then growing stronger with the support of his friends. Along with the relationship between Anna and Etienne, Stephanie Perkins provides a nice, three-dimensional cast of supporting characters. There’s Meredith, Anna’s best new female friend and next door neighbor, a tomboy who also has a crush on St. Clair. There’s Rashmi and Josh, a boyfriend and girlfriend in a slightly tumultuous and fiery relationship. And there’s Bridget, Anna’s best friend from home who she feels herself growing slowly apart from.

And you can NEVER go wrong with Paris as a setting. Speaking as an adult, I initially was flabbergasted as to why Anna would ever balk at a year abroad. But when I subsequently thought back to how I felt going off to college–scared, nervous, and apprehensive—and then added in the ‘only new girl in a foreign country’ factor, it completely makes sense. But Anna, like the reader, quickly falls in love with her new home. Perkins’ descriptions, of both the scenery and the little touches of Parisian life (rich coffee, croissants, cafes, the Pantheon), are vivid and enticing.
And, on top of everything, there is Nicholas Sparks hate! Anna’s father is described as a writer of books, who writes “these novels set in Small Town Georgia about folks with Good American Values who Fall in Love and then contract Life-Threatening Diseases and Die” (ARC, p.4-5). Stephanie Perkins will win the love and respect of haters of sappy cheeseball romances the world over for her parody.

Anna and the French Kiss was one of my absolute favorite reads of 2010, a sparkling, effervescent romance that made me yearn for a year abroad in Paris. Pull up a chair, grab a croissant and a cup of (real French) coffee, and fall in love.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Book reviews, Twitter Style

December 16, 2010 |

Here’s another round of book reviews, Twitter style. You won’t get much plot, but it should be enough to pique your interest. All of these are books I’ve read for Cybils and are my thoughts only and in no way represent the opinions of any other panelists.


The River by Mary Jane Beaufrand

The river holds many secrets, including the death of the girl Ronnie babysits. This fast-paced mystery is lyrical, albeit a bit predictable.


Six by Karen Tayleur

Austrailian contemporary told through multiple POV about incidents leading to a car wreck. Engaging, fast-paced but twisted end didn’t work.


After Ever After by Jordan Sonnenblick

This companion novel, set when Jeffrey is in 8th grade, is more a story of J’s best friend than himself. Well written not a strong as first.


Folly by Marthe Jocelyn

Historical fiction set in London told through multiple POV and multiple time periods. Very Dickensian tale but too confusing for me.


Crossing the Tracks by Barbara Stuber

Historical set in 1926 rural midwest. Lush setting and characterization. Steadily paced without being about flappers or excess. High appeal.

The Tension of Opposites by Kristina McBride

When a girl who disappeared two years ago returns, how much can she change? Another story about Stockholm syndrome; falls apart a bit at end.

Train Wreck and Too Late by Malin Lindroth

This book is actually 2 books clocking in @ 50 pages each. Intense, plot-driven, edgy, & real narratives are perfect for reluctant readers.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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