Archive | May 2009

Short Takes on YA

I read a few books over the past couple of months that I don’t have too much to say about. These books are all four O.K., maybe more than O.K., but none of them provoked me to verbosity.

Flipped by Wendelin Van Draanen was a toned-down version of Stargirl (Semicolon review here). Boy meets girl (second grade). Girl chases boy (second through seventh grade). Boy runs away, doesn’t appreciate girl. Girl falls out of love as boy begins to appreciate what he’s lost. Recommended by Melanie at Deliciously Clean Reads.

Saving Juliet by Suzanne Selfors. I had a professor once who said that every time he read Romeo and Juliet he hoped against hope that it would all end differently, that the star-crossed lovers would somehow sort it all out and live happily ever after. In Saving Juliet, Mimi Wallingford, a young actress with problems of her own, magically gets a chance to save Juliet and turn Shakespeare’s tragedy into a comedy. But Mimi, and her leading man, pop star Troy Summer, may not be able to survive long enough in dangerous sixteenth century Verona to do anyone any good. The dialog is kind of hokey, and there are some holes in the plot. Nevertheless, not bad re-imagining. Recommended by Melissa at Estella’s Revenge.

Winnie’s War by Jenny Moss. The setting is a fictional town right here where I live near Friendswood, Texas. The war is World War I and Winnie’s own personal war with her grandmother and with the 1918 influenza epidemic and with growing up. This one is pitched a little younger than the two above-mentioned books; Winnie is twelve years old as the story begins. However, I would give it to middle-schoolers. Here’s an author interview with Ms. Moss at Cynsations.

Just One Wish by Janette Rallison. Annika is desperate to get the star of her brother Jeremy’s favorite TV show, Teen Robin Hood, to come visit and convince Jeremy that dreams can come true. Jeremy has a big dream, that he’ll get well after his surgery for cancer. And it’s up to Annika to make it come true. Kind of cute, kind of sad, kind of unbelievable, not a bad way to spend an hour or two.

By the way I haven’t ever expressed an opinion on the whole off-with-her-head controversy as it pertains to book covers because I’m not an art critic and the last time I said something negative about the cover art on a book I got in trouble with the author, even though I liked the book itself very much. Let’s just say I much prefer Winnie’s picture to Mimi’s. What’s with the trend toward guillotining protagonists on the cover of their own books anyway?

Diversity in Reading Meme

Name the last book by a female author that you’ve read.
I read lots of books by women, probably as many or more than I do by men. The last female authored book I read was To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis. Semicolon review here. I don’t think women are particularly “marginalized” or left unread because they’re women in today’s world.

Name the last book by an African or African-American author that you’ve read. Ummmm, I would have to look up all the authors of all the books I’ve read lately to see if any of them are African or African-American.
The last one I know for sure was African was Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah.
Oh, I read Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese in March, and his bio says: “Born of Indian parents who were teachers in Ethiopia, he grew up near Addis Ababa and began his medical training there.”

Name one from a Latino/a author.
I haven’t read any Hispanic authors lately.

How about one from an Asian country or Asian-American?
The Secret-Keeper by Mitali Perkins, and before that one, Walking from East to West by Ravi Zacharias.

What about a GLBT writer?
I do not inquire as to the sexual preferences of the authors I read, and if they start writing in detail about sin and perversion, homosexual or heterosexual, I quit reading. I did re-read Oscar Wilde’s delightful play, The Importance of Being Earnest, not too long ago.

Why not name an Israeli/Arab/Turk/Persian writer, if you’re feeling lucky?
Finding Nouf by Zoe Ferraris. Semicolon review here. Ms. Ferraris isn’t exactly of Middle Eastern extraction, but her book is set in Saudi Arabia and paints a sympathetic, but realistic, picture of that culture ane the people who live in it.
I’m reading a much less sympathetic but no less realistic book now by Lebanese author Kamal Saleem, nonfiction memoir about terrorism and redemption/conversion. The title is The Blood of Lambs.

Any other “marginalized” authors you’ve read lately?
I dunno. Who’s marginalized?

Now, I have a couple of questions to add to this “diversity exercise”.

What have you read lately that takes an opposite political view from your own?
I’m not too good about this attempt at cross-cultural understanding because reading an entire book from a liberal, anti-religious point of view is annoying in the extreme. I get enough of that bias anytime I look at Time or Newsweek or any other major news source.

Have you read any Jewish authors lately?
Again, it’s hard to say. Half the authors on my list could be Jewish for all I know.

How about Muslim writers?
The above-mentioned Mr. Saleem is a former Muslim. The last book I remember reading that was truly from a Muslim perspective was Orhan Pamuk’s Snow. Semicolon thoughts here. (I didn’t care for it much.)

If you are Christian or at least monotheistic, have you read any books from an atheistic or agnostic viewpoint lately? Or if you are non-religious, have you read anything written by a Christian or other religous person that specifically form a Christian point of view?
I am a Christian, and I’ve read lots of books that incorporate a non-Christian worldview, but nothing lately that has an anti-Christian theme as its main point.

Do you think a reader should deliberately try to sample other cultures, other worldviews, and other ethical and religious perspectives? Why or why not?

Sunday Salon: Gleaned from the Saturday Review and Other Places

The Sunday Salon.com

These books are the ones I’m adding to my own unmanageable reading list. I can hardly wait to read them all plus the 100+ others on my list. Thanks to everyone for all of the great suggestions.

The Household Guide to Dying by Debra Adelaide. Recommended by Dawn at 5 Minutes for Books. I’d like to read this one and compare it with a couple of other books about death and dying that I’ve read lately: Tender Graces by Jackina Stark and Passage by Connie Willis.

The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway. Recommended by Carrie at Books and Movies.

Every Eye by Isobel English. Recommended by Fleurfisher. This “quiet story” from Persephone Books sounds delightful.

The King’s Daughter by Sandra Worth. Recommended by Deanna at Mom Musings.

The English Patient by Michael Odaatje. Recommended by S. Krishna.

The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery. Recommended at Civil Thoughts. This one sounds, well, elegant.

The Great Emergence by Phyllis TIckle. Recommended by Raima at Complexity Simplified.

Also Laura reviews Tea TIme for the Traditionally Built, Alexander McCall Smith’s latest No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency saga, and I’m looking forward to it. And I also want to get my hands on a copy of Tuck, the third in the King Raven trilogy by Stephen Lawhead.

The Semicolon Book Club selection for May is a children’s book that I thought should have won the Newbery Award. Instead, it was a Newbery Honor book: The Underneath by Kathi Appelt. Here are my thoughts on the book after I read for the first time last October. I’ll be interested to see what others who read it this month think about it. It provoked pretty strong opinions, both pro and con, among the kidlit bloggers who read it last year. Leave me a comment or email me and I’ll be happy to link to your review of The Underneath anytime in May.

Books Read in April, 2009

To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis. Semicolon review here.

Eat Drink and Be from Mississippi by Nancy Kincaid.

Tender Grace by Jackina Stark. Semicolon review here.

Passage by Connie WIllis.

The Rule of Claw by John Brindley.

Winnie’s War by Jenny Moss.

I Remember the Alamo by D. Ann Love.

Just One Wish by Janette Rallison.

Alexander Hamilton by Ron Çhernow.

Best fiction book read in April: To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie WIllis.

Best and only nonfiction books read in April: Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow. (Hey, it’s a long book, and it took a while. But it was good and went right along with my John Adams reading from March.)

Only 9 books in April, but they were mostly good books and some were quite long. I didn’t read Paradise Lost for the Semicolon Book Club as I had intended. It was actually a very difficult month, family-wise, and it’s a wonder I read as much as I did. However, reading is also my preferred form of therapy. It’s a lot cheaper than a psychiatrist.