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Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver

March 2, 2010 |

This last week, I was only able to get through one book. I’m a quick reader, so it was a little disappointing to get through little, given the growing pile of books I want to read right now. Although there are a number of reasons, one of them was that I picked up Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver, on account of Janssen‘s request.

Weighing in at nearly 500 pages, this is a book that asks for an investment.

Samantha Kingston is a mean girl, and on February 12, she and her clan of chicks who rule the school, will be celebrating Cupid’s Day. The school lets students purchase flowers for one another that get delivered in the classroom, and the flowers are a status symbol (does this not sound exactly like a scene in Mean Girls?). More than just that, this is the day Sam will lose her virginity to her long-time boyfriend Rob.

It just so happens that this Cupid’s Day, there’s also a big party at Kent’s house, where anyone who is anyone will be (even though Kent himself isn’t all that popular). But of course, it’ll be more than just the popular girls who’ll be there: Juliet Sykes will make an appearance, and she’s the girl who not only Sam and her clan hate, but she hates them back with just as much fire.

Everything lines up for an unforgettable night. And that’s when the accident happens.

…and Sam gets to relive February 12 yet again.

Before I Fall is what you would expect if you combined the social aspects of Mean Girls with the storyline of Groundhog Day. Mix in a little bit of the after-death and ability to interact post-death of Amy Huntley’s The Everafter, and you’d have a good idea of what this book is and attempts to do. It is a very lengthy book that asks readers to invest in long chapters that chronicle the span of one day in Sam’s life. At the end of each day, we know something is inevitably going to happen and that Sam will get to relive it again.

I didn’t find this book to move much. I thought that the pacing was quite slow, given the premise and the storyline. I never found myself believing in the mean girl aspect, as I never understood what made Sam and her friends mean girls. Juliet certainly didn’t like them, but they never gave me a real reason to believe in them. Sam never gave me anything to hold on to nor anything to make me want to either hate her or pull for her. They stole a parking spot from someone and ditched class, and they said mean things about other people amongst themselves, but that seems like what happens to high schoolers. It didn’t stand out as identifying this subset of people “mean girls.” Perhaps I’m still convinced they’re not mean girls unless they’re written like the ones in Some Girls Are.

The reliving aspect of this story didn’t push the story forward very well. It seemed to get tangled in on itself, and quite frankly, there were a number of times I got confused when reading. And the ending was completely confusing to me as a reader, as it didn’t seem to jive or make sense as to why things had to end the way they did. I think this all goes back to not having enough character development to reign in reader sympathy or understanding.

Although the premise was a construction of many others, I thought it was original enough to stand on its own. Oliver is a good writer, and I think this is a good debut that promises she’ll strengthen her writing in the future. I think that this book asks a lot of its readers — you have to buy into the premise (even the blatant rip off of the flower idea from Mean Girls) and you have to give the book nearly 500 pages to come to a conclusion. I didn’t find the conclusion satisfactory, but many might find it works. It’s quite possible along the way and the week long reading the book required I missed a detail here or there, but that in itself might be problematic.

That said, I still think on a scale of 1-5, this one lands as a 3 for me. It wasn’t a favorite, but it was just different enough to stay a little memorable. It’s a dead girl story without being a dead girl story, and the fluid writing it something that stands out. Sure, it’s slow and lengthy and the characters don’t always work, but there will be readers who absolutely eat this up. This is the kind of book you can read when you’re reading another one, too, and still know where you are when you pick it up again. Fans of The Everafter or mean girls inspired books that aren’t as gritty as Courtney Summers’s titles will enjoy this book.

Before I Fall debuts today from Harper Teen.

Filed Under: Debut Author Challenge, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

AudioSynced Round up — Inaugural Edition

March 2, 2010 |


Welcome to the inaugural edition of AudioSynced, hosted by Stacked and Abby the Librarian. This is your monthly stop for all things audio. If you didn’t get to participate this month, join in next month at Abby’s blog. All that you have to do is blog something audio related — a review, a discussion, or any news you have.

Reviews Around the Blogosphere:

  • Playing by the Book gives us a great review of Katie Morag and the Two Grandmothers by Mairi Hedderwick. Not only do we get a great review, we get to see all of the inspiration from the book and recording. And that display from the library is brilliant. She writes: “With illustrations playing such an important role in the Katie Morag books I was curious to see how an audio book could possibly do the printed books justice. And yet, and yet, this recording does transport you to Scottish island life, in a magical and unforgettable manner.”
  • Amanda at A Patchwork of Books offers up a variety of mini reviews, including A View from Yesterday and The Heretic’s Daughter on audio. She writes of the latter, “Listening to it, there were some moments I found my mind drifting away, but overall, the reader, the reading, and the overall story were very good.”
  • Janssen reviewed Susan Beth Pfeffer’s Moon series. Of the audio books for Life as We Knew It and The Dead and the Gone, she writes: “I found myself looking for excuses to listen to it (the laundry has never been so well-managed in my house).”
  • Elisabeth at YS Princess gives us her take on the first and second of Libba Bray’s “Gemma Doyle” series. She writes, “I have never heard a narrator with such amazing accents for all of her different characters. I was delightfully surprised that listening to this book on CD didn’t feel like I was listening to War and Peace, or some other Old English book.” She also offers up a review of Fairy Haven and the Quest for the Wand, which she says, “I found this audio book difficult to pay attention to. If I stopped paying attention even for what seemed like only a moment, I was really confused as to what was going on.”
  • Abby reviewed the 39 Clues audio books. She writes, “David Pittu gives a full-voiced performance and the number of accents he includes is impressive. These would make great family listens for road trips with the lively narration and the fast-paced plots keeping the interest of everyone in the car.”
  • The Book Lady’s Blog gives us a three-for-one review, to include Naked, Mennonite in a Little Black Dress, and Assassination Vacation. She writes, “You can’t go wrong with any of them.”
  • Kylee read and reviewed a cozy mystery — Joanne Fluke’s Cherry Cheesecake Murder. For those of you not in the know, they do have entire mystery series based in food, and this is one of the most popular. Of the audio, Kylee says, “I was expecting to miss out on the recipes that are in the books, but the unabridged is truly that! The recipes are on the audio, how cool is that?”
  • Right here at STACKED, I reviewed I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You, The Geography of Bliss, and Saving CeeCee Honeycutt. I had some issues with the first book’s narration, but I absolutely loved the second book and found the third an engaging, fully-voiced audio with perfect southern flair.

Looking for places to find more Audio reviews?

  • Reading with My Ears has such a wide variety of audio book reviews, but what stands out is how well the review covers audio-related issues apart from the plot. Haven’t tried an audio book before? This will guide you the right way, as this librarian has served on the Odyssey Committee and knows a thing or two about quality audio.
  • Audiobooker, part of Booklist Online’s blog series, covers not only audio reviews, but offers a lot more than that. Here you can get inside the studios, meet the readers, and much more. To learn more about the dirty work of audio books, this is the place to go.
  • Books for Ears covers a little of everything and does a good job of breaking down the author, title, and the reader, which as we know, can make or break the audio book.

How about where to find audio books?

  • Janssen offers a great overview of finding free downloadable audio books from your public library. Now, you no longer have the excuse of being unable to make it to the library – try it from home!
  • Playing by the Book started a resource page for audio books, which gives you some places to go to for free audio books (and some great resources on the value of listening).
  • Sterling Publishing is beginning a new program to offer free downloadable audio books of some of their greatest print hits. You can find out more about the program and get to downloading today (March 1!) by going right here.

Did you review or give audio books a spot light in the last month on your blog? Share your links in the comments, and I’ll add them to the roundup!

Filed Under: audio review, audiobooks, Reviews, Uncategorized

Wherever Nina Lies, by Lynn Weingarten (Kim’s Take)

February 25, 2010 |

Kelly reviewed this book over the weekend, so I won’t rehash the plot too much. Ellie sets off on a road trip with her new crush, the only person who believes they can find her sister Nina who disappeared two years ago. Check out Kelly’s review for a more detailed synopsis.

Wherever Nina Lies, by Lynn Weingarten, is a mix of road trip book, romance, and mystery/thriller, and I was pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed it. I admit that I judge a book by its cover, and I am not sure the cover of this one really portrays it accurately. Despite the blurb on the back of the book, the cover led me to expect something very girly and very fluffy (all that pink, and the soft image of the cover model). While the target audience is definitely female, and there are some fluffy aspects, it is a much weightier book than I initially anticipated.

The pacing is perfect. The mystery unfolds at just the right speed, imparting just the right amount of creepiness and growing unease. The climax of the book proves it to be a real thriller, and I could not put it down – I read it while walking around my house and even pulled it out once while I was stopped at a red light. While I read, I was reminded a lot of Wish You Were Dead, by Todd Strasser, another excellent teen thriller I read a few months ago.

One of the aspects I most enjoyed about the book were the drawings sprinkled throughout. Nina was an aspiring artist, and her drawings provide clues to her disappearance. They’re not phenomenal drawings – they look like they were drawn by an 18 year old girl, which is a good thing. One of the strongest features of the book is that it includes so many different elements (the drawings, the road trip, the romance, the mystery) without seeming hodge-podge and disjointed.

It’s not a perfect book. Sometimes characterization is sacrificed for plot, and full enjoyment requires the reader to very willingly suspend her disbelief – but fans of the mystery/thriller genre are practiced at putting their incredulity on the back burner for awhile. Wherever Nina Lies is a real page turner, and reading it was a wonderful way to spend an afternoon.

Check back tomorrow – we’ll be giving away THREE copies of the paperback book to three lucky winners.

Filed Under: cover designs, Mystery, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

AudioSynced: Saving CeeCee Honeycutt by Beth Hoffman

February 25, 2010 |

One of my favorite reading genres is southern literature — I can take it in just about any form, as long as it has a healthy dose of the south. I’m amenable to trying different genres with the southern element, including titles like Beautiful Creatures, which I’d otherwise never pick up. When I first read about Saving CeeCee Honeycutt in a trade journal, it sounded like something right up my alley, even though I’m not a huge fan of so-called “domestic fiction” (is that not the most useless term?). The description immediately made me think of Sue Monk Kidd’s Secret Life of Bees, which I read years ago and liked well enough.

I decided to give this one a whirl on audiobook, hoping I’d get some nice southern vocals, and I was not disappointed.

CeeCee Honeycutt hasn’t had an easy childhood: her father is always gone away on business, and she is left at home with her mother in Willoughby, Ohio, who is herself losing her mind. CeeCee’s mother was once a pageant queen in Georgia, and over the course of the beginning of the story, she becomes more stuck in her past to the point she is wearing old prom dresses, garish makeup, and making a show of herself in the small town. On one of her regular trips to the Goodwill cut her mother’s life short, though, when she gets hit by a car, and now CeeCee is left to fend for herself.

Fortunately, an aunt of CeeCee from Savannah, Georgia, offers up her home and her love for young CeeCee. Aunt Tootie takes her in, moving her from Ohio to Savannah, where CeeCee gains not only a home, but a wealth of new motherly figures.

This book doesn’t have a whole lot of action, but it is a sweet story of growing up. I found CeeCee’s discovery of the power of southern women particularly interesting, and I thought that each of the women depicted in this story were well-drawn. Savannah can be tasted in the story. Hoffman’s story delves into many issues facing the south in the late 1960s, as well, including racial tension, politics, and the emerging power and importance of women. None of these topics were included to serve a point but instead, they enhanced the setting and period of the novel. This is a book about growing up and appreciating what’s around you when it’s easy to overlook the everyday. Book clubs will love this title — more on this in a second. This is marketed as an adult novel, but I can see teens enjoying this title as well, particularly those who are into lighter reads, Oprah-esque books, or even the Bronte sisters.

Jenna Lamia gives a wonderful fully-voiced reading of this title. CeeCee is a young main character, not quite in her teen years yet. Lamia is believable and her waivering voice for CeeCee is spot on, with just enough fear and confidence to render her a true-to-live pre-teen. Lamia’s ability to create a fully-voiced audiobook is impressive, given the range of accents and ages she needed to develop. The production quality of this audiobook is top notch, with no sound changes, volume changes, or obvious seams in the editing. This was a smooth listen that forced me to sit in my car once I got past my destination more than one time.

Does this title seem familiar to you? Perhaps it’s because it is very similar to that of the previously mentioned Secret Life of Bees. The books both have the same editor, who started at Penguin with SLoB, left for a year, and then was offered her own imprint by Penguin, Pamela Dorman books. Oh, and it’ll be the first pick of the Sam’s Club book club (perhaps they’re capitalizing off the incredible money-making book club Target has going)? Dorman has an eye for southern fiction, so expect more of this type in her line, which you can read about here.

So, after putting those pieces together, I dove into learning a bit about Jenna Lamia, the book’s reader. Guess what book she also read and won an audie for? If your answer was SLoB, then you’re good. Her repertoire is strong, and I definitely plan on seeking out other books she’s read for, as she was a pleasant companion for the last week.

If you’re looking for a strong audiobook to begin listening to, whether as a new listener or a seasoned one, Saving CeeCee Honeycutt will not disappoint. In fact, it might make you want to learn more about the author, the editor, the reader….which is always a bonus, isn’t it?

Filed Under: Adult, audio review, audiobooks, Reviews, Uncategorized

The Sky is Everywhere by Jandy Nelson

February 24, 2010 |

Sometimes, you have to admit that you just didn’t like a book and just didn’t quite understand the hype surrounding it. Jandy Nelson’s The Sky is Everywhere — her debut novel that will hit shelves in March — fell flat for me and forced me to do a lot of thinking about whether or not the publisher is missing the target audience on this one. Dial is pouring a ton of money into developing a huge buzz over this one through blogs, early and wide ARC distribution, a print and radio campaign, and banner displays galore.

The Sky is Everywhere tells Lennie’s story: Lennie’s sister Bailey died suddenly. She and Bailey were very close, in part due to the fact their mother disappeared from their lives at a young age, and they were sent to live with their grandmother and uncle.

Sharing in Lennie’s family loss is Toby, Bailey’s former boyfriend. As the story progresses, we come to learn that Toby and Bailey were not only engaged, but they were expecting a baby. At the same time, Joe steps into Lennie’s life; he’s a cute boy that Lennie’s best friend thinks that Lennie definitely needs to go for. But as Lennie and Toby spend more time together, their relationship seems to evolve from companions in grief to something more romantic.

The crux of the story is when Lennie makes mistakes between the boys in choosing which one she wants to be with while she simultaneously makes sense of her position in loss. It is slow and deliberate. Part of the story unwinds in poetry lines Lennie has written and placed in different places.

Nelson’s prose is poetic — every word is carefully chosen, and each line is constructed with great intention. For me, this book is absolutely about the writing and not at all about the story. Quite frankly, the story is way too slow and never coalesces. The entire reading experience left me wondering when something would actually happen, but unfortunately, nothing does. Although the language use in this story is incredible, that in itself further shields the story. Instead of writing the story, the story was written around. I never once felt myself caring about Bailey (she dies when the story opens, and I never learned anything about her) and I found everyone around Lennie was flat. At times, they were simply stereotypes — the girl who loves all things philosophy and the insistence on making the characters allusions to other literary works really grated on me. Lennie herself left me wanting more, too, as she seemed to be everyone else and not herself; that is, we know she likes two boys, that she misses her sister, that her best friend is Sarah, but we know almost nothing about her.

The Sky is Everywhere has been drawing comparisons to Sarah Dessen or Elizabeth Scott, but I must disagree wholeheartedly. Dessen and Scott are character-driven writers: we know so much about the main characters and secondary characters. They both have strong writing skills, but they are less on the literary side. We know their stories intimately and feel we are there. Nelson left me knowing some good writing and sparks of a story, but I never felt like I got close enough to the story or the characters. I felt very distanced. The romance between Lennie and the boys is much weaker and less developed than in either a Dessen or Scott title. I think handing this book off to a fan of Sarah Dessen or Elizabeth Scott might not be the best bet.

In the course of reading, though, I felt like fans of Justine Chen Headley’s North of Beautiful would really enjoy this book. The slow pacing, the slow unraveling of story, and the literary styles are similar, and I believe that the relationships that the main character in each develops with the boys in her respective story are similar. The difficult family situations will also resonate.

My biggest disappointment in reading this book was the target audience. I don’t believe this is a book meant for teens. I believe this is an adult book — the story feels much more mature than teen books, and the use of allusions to deep philosophical ideas and to “great literature” were far above the appreciation level of most teens. The language, while beautiful and can be appreciated at that level, left even me needing to look up words. The teen slang was stilted and wince-inducing at times. The story is very mature, and not in the appropriateness sense of the word. It’s a mature story about understanding who you are and what makes you survive. These concepts can be broken down for teens, but this was not an attempt at that. And of course, if you have a background in literature or writing, you know that books like this are also often a treatise on writing itself. I’d suspect Nelson’s education and training in the art of writing made this a total work of love to language.

Marketing decisions aren’t always in the hands of the author, and part of me wonders if that’s the case with The Sky is Everywhere. I can’t hazard any guesses, of course, but the book struck me as one that’s being published in a market where it won’t do as strongly as it could in another one. That’s not to say this isn’t a book worth reading because it should be, if for the writing and appreciation of language alone, but this is a book that young adults and adults will enjoy far more than a typical teenager.

Filed Under: Debut Author Challenge, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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