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Readalong & Blogalong: THE OUTSIDERS by SE Hinton

October 13, 2016 |

readalong-outsiders

 

One of my favorite things over the last few years of blogging has been reading titles with other bloggers and having us all write something of interest relating to the book we read. It gives a chance to do something akin to a bookclub but on our own time. It’s fun to see all of the different things that come up and all of the different ways readers interact with text.

Leila Roy and I decided it’s time to do another read and blog along, and we’d love for anyone to join us in the fun.

You may or may not know that the 50th anniversary of SE Hinton’s classic, groundbreaking YA title The Outsiders is coming up early next year. We could think of no better book to pick up and dig into as part of our read/blog along. I’ve never read it (gulp) but I snapped up a copy cheaply and am eager to go in.

Want to take part? It’s super easy and laid back. Read the book and write about it in any way you’d like to between November 7 and 12. You can do a review, favorite quotes, passages that struck you, anything that you feel like doing once you finish reading. Any social media platform is fine. Then, the week of November 7, I’ll create a starting line post, where you can all share your links to what you’re writing that week. Leila and I will both write our own pieces as well, and we’ll share them all across social media.

Don’t want to write but want to read the book with us? Totally fine! This is a no pressure event.

You’re welcome to snag the logo from this post, too, to make it look even more “official” that you’re taking part in a laid back event.

Hope you join us!

 

Filed Under: Outsiders Readalong

The Memory Book by Lara Avery

October 12, 2016 |

memory-book-averySamantha – Sammie – has a rare genetic disease called Niemann-Pick Type C (NPC). This is a real disease that exists outside of fiction. It essentially causes a person’s body and mind to shut down – memory loss leading to dementia, slurred speech, tremors, seizures, and so on, resulting in early death. It’s usually diagnosed in young children, but when it’s diagnosed later, like in Sammie’s case as a teenager, the prognosis is a bit better. People may live a little longer. It’s what Sammie is counting on, since she has a whole life planned out for herself: win the debate competition, graduate as valedictorian from her high school, go to NYU and get her degree, live happily ever after.

Of course, things don’t go as planned. Sammie’s symptoms worsen, and everything she’s worked for seems in jeopardy, despite her dogged determination to remain independent and live the life she’s dreamed of for years. In order to help her with her memory loss, she starts writing the memory book – a record of her life from the time she was diagnosed until she can’t write anymore.

This is a heartbreaking read. The first bit is a little slow, unless you’re a debate nerd, since it chronicles Sammie’s national debate competition, which is where her first real memory loss occurs. Aside from debate, Sammie’s memory book also features her first relationship with her long-time crush, her reconciliation with a childhood friend-maybe-more (one of the sweetest romances I’ve read in contemporary YA fiction), her fight to keep her grades up at school even as her memory fails her, and her eventual realization that none of her plans will come to fruition. After the debate competition and high school graduation, Sammie begins to decline pretty quickly, and her writing style reflects this – less punctuation, more run-on sentences, and disjointed thoughts. At the very end, her friends and family take over the writing of the memory book, and I suggest you have a full box of tissues for those pages.

All fiction is manipulative in some way, but books like The Memory Book – carefully crafted to produce tears – are more manipulative than most. I’m more annoyed by tearjerkers than other books designed to make the reader feel a certain way because they are just not my thing generally; if I want to cry for hours, I’ll listen to a sad song (and I have a whole playlist I just call “Sad,” so I definitely do this). It’s why I haven’t read The Fault in Our Stars and why I avoided all of the Lurlene McDaniel books when I was a kid. This is not to say I avoid all sad books (The Book Thief is one of my all-time favorites and you don’t get much sadder than that in the end), but when the whole point of the book is to make you sad, I usually pass.

All that aside, this is a really well-done example of something I don’t particularly like. Sammie’s voice is strong and clear, even when her mind is almost completely gone, and the relationships between her and her family and friends feel multifaceted and real. Sammie has a really fulfilling and believable character arc: she is so determined to stick to her plans in the beginning, and when the disease forces those plans to change, she resists until she can’t anymore. And eventually, she finds a way to get the most out of what the remainder of her life allows her, which includes genuine romantic love, deep friendships, and more loving bonds with her family. I expect this book will be very meaningful for lots of teens, either as a “what if” scenario or as an example of the choices you can still make even when unwanted circumstances are forced upon you. And for those readers who love a good cry, you can’t do any better than this.

Book borrowed from my local library.

Filed Under: Reviews, Young Adult

Cybils MG/YA Nonfiction Reviews: THE BORDEN MURDERS by Sarah Miller & TEN DAYS A MADWOMAN by Deborah Noyes

October 10, 2016 |

I haven’t written many reviews this year, so it’s been interesting to try to get back into that mindset with these books (in a genre I generally do not review so much as consume!). But I want to be better at talking about the strengths and weaknesses of nonfiction, so expect a handful of reviews over the next few months as Cybils season rolls on. Some will be stand-alone reviews, while others, like this one, will pair up books for shorter reviews.

 

the-border-murdersConfession time: I know nothing about Lizzie Borden or the entire field of study and obsession with the murder case involving her father and stepmother. Her name is familiar, as is that song you sing as a kid, but otherwise, I am ignorant about it. And I think in a lot of ways, that was the ideal mindset to have while going into Sarah Miller’s excellent true crime book The Borden Murders: Lizzie Borden and the Trial of the Century.

Miller’s book begins by exploring how little is actually known about Lizzie Borden nor the murders of her family members, and it continues through its pages by setting up the scene, discussing what is known, and talking about how a number of missteps and missing pieces of the puzzle have created a flurry of conspiracy theories and questions surrounding Borden’s involvement in (or non-involvement in) the crime.

The book attempts to be even-handed, though savvy readers will understand that Miller’s portrait of Borden is quite sympathetic. Since little information exists about Borden’s demeanor — and little consistency exists even about her appearance — Miller wants readers to feel as though Borden’s entire experience was one that would make today’s general public rightfully angry. This angle was one that helped the book be more than a courtroom drama. We get to “know” Borden through Miller’s depiction.

The Borden Murders does an excellent job in terms of design and layout, though one small thing bothered me a bit: the photos in the book are not in the order of the text. A few photos which fell in the first collection were not written about until later in the book, making looking at them while reading a bit jarring. Likewise, Miller talks in depth about the gruesome murder photos at length, and when we finally get to see it, it’s really not at all gruesome. For the time period, it sure was, but by the buildup of the image and today’s standards, I can see teen readers going “what’s the big deal?”

It was a smart packaging decision to create this in the trim size of a novel. For readers who aren’t familiar with the printing side of things, this can mean making a lot of compromises in terms of how photos are included in the book. In this particular title, they’re in two 8-page spreads on glossy paper. A few reviews I’ve read criticized this, wishing instead the images were interspersed. This would have taken the quality down significantly, as well as made them tiny.

Readers who love true crime and who are fascinated with the legends of history, like Lizzie Borden, will absolutely devour Miller’s book. It’s well-written, compelling, and leaves a nice open door at the end for consideration of what it is that makes a person guilty — or innocent. I can see this being an easy sell to readers who love mysteries, too, and who enjoy procedural television shows like Law & Order.

A small nugget that stayed with me and I think was a great takeaway from this read: Borden was NOT a girl when this all happened. She was in her 30s. Many readers may know this, but knowing how she’s rendered in pop culture, it may also come as a surprise she was a fully mature adult woman.

 

ten-days-a-madwomanWhere I knew little about Lizzie Borden before diving into Miller’s book, I’m able to say quite the opposite of my knowledge of Nellie Bly. I’m having the hardest time remembering whether it was a film I watched or a book I read, but my familiarity with Bly and her stint at Blackwell Island was good when I began Deborah Noyes’s middle grade title Ten Days a Madwoman.

That said, after coming out of reading the book, I loved Bly even more than I already had.

Noyes traces through the early part of Bly’s life, and she does so in a way that doesn’t depict Bly as a woman with everything made for her to succeed — that was an image I had, not knowing her young upbringing — but rather, she’s shown to be a grit-fueled, hard-edged girl who came from little. Her mother, widowed when Bly was young, remarried because she needed help financially after Bly’s father’s death, but she ended up marrying a violent alcoholic. Her mother then divorced him, causing the cycle of money challenges to continue; Noyes does an excellent job of painting an image of being a woman in this time period and the sorts of challenges making a decision like divorce had, not just in terms of finances, but on social standing and more.

At age 23 (!!) after dropping out of school and working in Pittsburgh for a number of years, Bly decided she was going to go to New York City and get a newspaper job. It wasn’t a successful idea immediately, and she struggled to get work that was beyond the socially acceptable women’s reporting jobs. Until she busted down the doors of the World newspaper and was given the assignment of investigating the conditions of the public mental institution on Blackwell Island. This would, of course, be Bly’s break into the newspaper world.

Noyes balances this period of time in Bly’s life well with the actual conditions of Blackwell Island. We get a sense of what it was like to be there, but we’re not given the blow-by-blow. The focus remains on Bly and how she did her reporting.

This isn’t the whole of the book, and Noyes continues by highlighting many of the other important pieces of work Bly did. She’d interviewed — and was one of the first to offer sympathy for — women like Emma Goldman, who she interviewed whole Goldman was in prison. Although logically, I knew many famous individuals were alive during this time, it was still fascinating to see names referenced throughout as Bly’s contemporaries, including Susan B. Anthony and Charles Dickens.

But my favorite part of the whole book was a tiny part: Willa Cather wrote a scathing letter about Bly’s style of journalism. Despite breaking barriers for women reporters, many, like Cather, believed stunt journalism wasn’t valuable or groundbreaking, either. Seeing what Cather wrote about Bly mirrored so much of what happens in contemporary times: one person does a thing, gets recognition for it, and then also sees criticism from those who don’t agree with their work. I loved that push and pull and think Noyes does a huge service in showing how feminism and women in America struggled with representation, with work conditions, and more.

Ten Days a Madwoman is formatted with a bigger trim size and utilized double columns of text, just like many newspapers do. There are a lot of boxes and images scattered throughout, all of which are laid out smartly and make the work of stopping to read them easy on readers. There is excellent back matter, as well.

Hand this book to middle graders who are writers or who love stories about women breaking down boundaries. Bly was daring and full of grit, and it’s a story so many readers will relate to in terms of their desires to pursue their dreams, no matter how they have to get there. Noyes’s exploration of working conditions at the turn of the century, especially in the ever-industrializing city of New York, will appeal to readers who love history. It’s neat to see the parallels of this era in time with our contemporary times.

The most interesting takeaway from this: when Bly took her infamous round-the-world-by-ship trip, she decided on only one souvenir. It was a monkey she named McGinty. Nellie Bly owned a pet monkey. I’m not going to be over this for a while because I cannot think of anything more fitting to her after reading this book. (Also, if you’re interested, the first thing the monkey did when they got back home was break her dishes).

 

 

Both of these books are available now. Both copies were picked up from my local library. 

 

Filed Under: cybils, middle grade, Non-Fiction, nonfiction, Reviews, ya, Young Adult

This Week at Book Riot

October 7, 2016 |

book riot

 

Over on Book Riot this week . . .

 

  • 131 YA novels hitting shelves through the remainder of 2016

 

  • This week’s “3 On A YA Theme” looked at YA authors who’ve also written middle grade

 

Filed Under: book riot

Nemesis by Anna Banks

October 5, 2016 |

nemesisOne of the interesting things about reading a review copy months before its publication date is there are no professional reviews out yet. I’ve mentioned before that I’m a big review reader and use both professional and Goodreads reviews to help me select my next book. I deviated from my normal routine with Nemesis by Anna Banks, which I picked up simply because it sounded interesting and I was in the mood for some high fantasy with magic. I really enjoyed it, and I’m kind of surprised the professional reviews, which are out now, are pretty wishy washy about it. I wonder if the cover, which I really dislike and doesn’t make much sense in context, is influencing opinion.

Princess Sepora of Serubel is a Forger, which means she can produce a substance called spectorium from the palms of her hands. It’s an energy source in demand by all countries in the region, but it can also be weaponized. Her father, the king of Serubel, keeps Sepora’s abilities a secret, as she is the only remaining Forger and no one in any of the surrounding countries knows how spectorium is made. When Sepora learns that her father plans to use the spectorium to wage war on the mostly peaceful neighboring countries, she escapes to Theoria to prevent him from doing so. There, she finagles her way into the royal court as a servant where she meets the newly crowned teenage king, who is struggling himself with the waning supply of spectorium (used to power almost everything in the country) and a disease called the Quiet Plague that killed his father. To complicate matters, it’s possible that spectorium may be part of the cure for the Quiet Plague, but Sepora knows she cannot reveal her secret – can she?

I loved two main things about this story: the genuine human conflict and the world-building. Sepora fears that if she reveals she is a Forger, she’ll be used as a weapon by Theoria (a very real possibility), or returned to her father and used as a weapon by him, or kept captive to be a producer for the cure – essentially, she wouldn’t be free, and in the worst case scenario, she’d feel responsible for a war that would cause mass suffering and death. But if she doesn’t reveal it, people will continue to die from the Quiet Plague. There are some interesting subplots that provide additional conflict, too: Sepora’s attempts to forge an alliance with the vicious mermaid-like people who live in the nearby river and eat humans; her burgeoning romantic feelings for Tarik, the king of Theoria; Tarik’s need to use the remaining spectorium to defend his country from a potentially aggressive Serubel versus his need to use it to create a cure for the Quiet Plague. The perspective shifts almost evenly between Sepora and Tarik, so we get a good idea for Tarik’s own struggles as well.

But it’s the worldbuilding that really delighted me. Theoria has an Ancient Egyptian feel to it in the people’s clothing and the pyramids they build to house their dead, though they use spectorium to power the pyramids and preserve the bodies within rather than mummification. There are non-human creatures, both sentient and non, like the mermaid-like people in the river (this whole subplot is just really cool and imaginative) and the dragon-like creature Sepora rides to escape from Serubel. The idea of the spectorium is interesting, too – Sepora is the last person who can produce it (as far as anyone knows), but she must periodically excise it from her body or it builds up and weakens her, which can make it difficult to hide her ability. It’s clear that Banks put a lot of thought into her world, and it’s fascinating to read about. There is the love story referenced in the title, too – Sepora and Tarik fall for each other, when they are supposed to be each others’ nemeses – which should satisfy romance lovers but shouldn’t bother non-romance readers too much, as it’s not the entirety of the plot.

I’d recommend this to fans of high fantasy who really enjoy diving headlong into a new world. This is the first in a duology, and the second book, Ally, will be out sometime next year. Nemesis just hit shelves yesterday. An advance review copy was provided to me by the publisher.

Filed Under: Fantasy, Reviews, ya fiction, Young Adult

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