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Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Thieving Teens


Money Run by Jack Health
Rating 4/5 stars

This book had everything you could possibly want: action, adventure, mystery, assassins, thieves, billionaires, gadgets, and humor. The novel tells the story of fifteen year old thief Ashley "Ash" Arthur and her friend Benjamin. Ash and Ben are professional thieves who receive mysterious tips from someone known as "the source" who tells them when and where valuable things will be the most easy to steal. But when they take on the job of robbing Hammond Buckland, one of American's richest men, they have no idea what they've gotten themselves into. Ash, you see, is not the only person with an interest in Buckland. Peachey the assassin wants to put a bullet in Buckland, and he won't let anyone stand in his way. In one night, Ash is thrust into the fight of her life and she has to decide what kind of thief she will be. Along the way she is swept up into a whirlwind of action, suspense, and conspiracies.

www.goodreads.com
First off, Ash is a great protagonist. She's smart, sarcastic, and insensibly likable. She's a thief with a conscious, and she's just 15, so she's struggling like any teenager in finding what it is she wants to do and what she's good at. In her case, it turns out being a thief is what she's very good at. Right alongside Ash is her tech support Benjamin, who, although never actually present during the story, is made very real by his snarky dialogue. Then of course, we have our villain: Peachey. Once you get passed the name, he turns out to be a likable villain, which is not always an easy thing to accomplish. These are the main characters, but several others appear and all are well written, like the millionaire Hammond Buckland and Detective Damion Wright. Admittedly, some of the characters are a little one dimensional. But in the case of many of them, the one dimensionality is exactly what is needed.


The Dreams Continue


The Dream Thieves (Book II in the Raven Boys Cycle) by Maggie Stiefvater

Last year, I was fortunate enough to review the first book in the Raven Boys Cycle. At the end, I was so wrapped up in the suspense that I couldn’t believe the book was over. Naturally, I jumped at the chance to review the second book, and it does not disappoint by any stretch of the imagination.

Blue and her friends are back again, picking up where the last book left off. Gansey is continuing his search for Glendower, the old Welsh king, trying to deny his unusual attraction to Blue. Blue is trying to keep Gansey at bay, knowing all too well his fate –  Blue comes from a family of psychics (but possesses no psychic ability herself), and it has been predicted that he is her true love, and if he is to kiss her, he will die. Adam, the boy who has worked hard for everything he has (overcoming an abusive home in the last book) has made an unusual sacrifice that causes him to become more important to the quest than he ever dreamed he would be. And Ronan, the underplayed character in the first novel, becomes crucial.

www.goodreads.com

Ronan has the ability to steal objects from dreams. While not quite understanding himself, Ronan comes to realize that he is not only important to Gansey’s quest, but also is being targeted by several who are searching the ley lines (the sources of magical energy which are being used to find Glendower) as well. The possibility of murder and a desperate sense of urgency underlie this book, leaving the readers scrambling toward the finish line, only to be left with a new series of questions that beg to be answered in book three.

Stiefvater has done it again. Her writing pulls the reader in, engrossing them in the story so completely that the book becomes impossible to put down. The dialogue sounds so realistic, and there are some quips that make the reader laugh out loud. The complex plot line is woven in such a detailed manner that forces the reader to pay attention to even the slightest details. In short, it is a work that should definitely be considered one of the greatest in current YA fiction. The plot is unlike anything else on the market, yet plays into the themes that are so hot right now – the sense of a ticking time-bomb, a hint of magic, and a dash of romance combine to create the second in a series that leaves readers begging for more.


By: Natalie Hamil

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The House of Paranormal YA


Marked by Oil, Caught in Love 


Book Review on Marked by P.C. Cast and Kristen Cast
*May contain spoilers!!!

“Zoey Montgomery! Night has chosen thee; thy death will be thy birth. Night calls to thee; hearken to Her sweet voice. Your destiny awaits you at the House of Night!” He lifted one long, white finger and pointed at me” (P.C. and Kristin Cast 3).

Marked by P.C Cast and Kristen Cast is about a sixteen-year-old girl named Zoey who, on top of being a teenager, has to deal with a huge change in her life: being marked as a vampyre. After being marked, Zoey must leave her family and friends to go to a boarding school called “House of Night” where all of the marked teenage vampyres must go to be educated and trained on how to live if they survive the “change.” This change is when fledging vampyres become full, adult vampyres and unfortunately some are killed in the process.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

In The Land of Stories

A review of Jodi Picoult's Between the Lines and Chris Colfer's The Land of Stories: The Wishing Spell.

What if every book you read was real? If the characters within had lives of their own that carried on long after you turned the last page? These are the questions that Jodi Picoult with her daughter and co-author Samantha van Leer, and Chris Colfer asked themselves as they wrote their most recent/ debut novels.

Releasing a mere three weeks apart, Jodi and Samantha’s Between the Lines on June 26th and Chris’s The Land of Stories: The Wishing Spell on July 17th, both authors tackle the idea of fairy tales invading the lives of children in our world in the most wonderful ways.

Book Review: Mercy by Rebecca Lim

“There’s no discernible pattern to the Carmes, the Lucys, the Susannahs that I have been and become. All I know is that they stretch back in an unbroken chain further that I can remember – I can sense them all there, standing one behind the other, jostling for my attention, struggling to tell me something about my condition.” (Page 30)

wickedawesomebooks.com
Mercy is the story of girl/ angel who has fallen; she has no memory of where she came from, she has no body of her own, and the only thing that she remembers are her physical features. Since she does not have her own body she is forced to dosomethingunnatural: inhabit other people’s bodies and sort of take over their lives. While she is the body of the stranger, that person has no idea what is going on, and, when they come back, have no recollection of what happened — in other words it is as if they are asleep. She has no control over what person she will inhabit next or for how long. The only thing that remains constant in Mercy’s shifting life is Luc. A guy/angel that appears in her dream, she loves him. Luc keeps telling her that she should find him but she does not know how to do that, or where to start.

Trash Talk: A Review of Spoiled and Messy by Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan


Summer is the best time of year to read a trashy novel. Whether you’re relaxing on the beach or just lazing around on the couch, nothing beats the heat like a fun and frothy novel. Thankfully, Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan understand that need for a trashy read. Best known for writing the hilarious fashion and pop culture blog Go Fug Yourself (www.gofugyourself.com), Cocks and Morgan are also the authors of two young adult novels.

gofugyourself.com
Their first novel Spoiled was released under the Poppy imprint of Little, Brown and Company in June of 2011. Two months before its release, I had the pleasure of interviewing Cocks and Morgan for one of my classes. During the interview, Morgan described Spoiled as “Clueless plus Mean Girls with a dash of The Parent Trap.  Basically, it's the story of a girl who learns on her mother's deathbed that her father is actually the most famous movie star in the world. She goes to live with him and her half-sister—who is NOT happy about this development. Shenanigans, of course, ensue.”

Sixteen-year-olds Molly Dix and Brooke Berlin each narrate the story in alternating chapters. Their dad, Brick Berlin, is an action hero (think Tom Cruise but taller) under the impression that he is a philosopher. Since he believes “children, like protein shakes, are God’s greatest presents,” Brick is eager to introduce his new daughter to his fans. While Molly must come to terms with her new life in Hollywood, Brooke is more concerned about sharing her father—and the spotlight—with someone else. “It’s a classic outsider tale, so we get to poke fun at this town from both an inside (Brooke) and an outside (Molly) perspective. That way, you don’t have to live here to get it,” says Cocks.

Through new friends and romances, school plays, Hollywood parties, and the scheming daughter of a tabloid editor, Molly and Brooke have a lot to overcome as they try to form a sisterly bond. There are a lot of elements in the novel that may seem trashy, such as the Hollywood scene and the slew of pop culture references. The story opens with two teenage girls going shopping, but the book is not nearly as shallow as such a scene might imply. The plot strays from a typical fish-out-of-water story into a smart, funny tale about friendships, relationships, and family. As Cocks put it, “We wanted Hollywood parody, but it needed a soul too.”

Spoiled is now available as an e-book or in paperback for $8.99 wherever books are sold.

best-of-ya.blogspot.com
And once you finish Spoiled, pick up its companion novel Messy, also by Cocks and Morgan and published by the Poppy imprint. Released in June 2012, Messy picks up not long after Spoiled left off, but things are pretty stable for Molly and Brooke. Now the relationship that takes center stage is that of Max (Molly’s best friend in Hollywood) and Brooke. When Brooke decides she wants to be an actress, she realizes she needs to make a name for herself as someone other than Brick Berlin’s legitimate daughter. So she starts a blog, but she doesn’t have the time to write it herself. Just as Brooke is looking for a “celebrity blogographer,” Max is looking for a job to help her pay to attend a summer writing program at NYU. With her green hair and permanent scowl, Max doesn’t seem like the ideal blogographer for Brooke. But Molly likes Max, and Brooke is starting to trust her sister’s opinions. Thanks to Max’s honest and witty entry about the escapades of a Miley Cyrus-esque starlet at her birthday party, the blog takes off, and Brooke is on her way to the fame she always dreamed about.

Messy is even more fun than Spoiled. It may be a bit trashier, but it is not lacking in soul. Max and Brooke both deal with their insecurities. For Brooke, it is a struggle to hear everyone—including her father—tell her how smart she is on her blog when she knows that someone else deserves all the credit. And Max must deal with a crush on Brooke’s costar when she thinks he only has eyes for Brooke. Eventually, the secret of who really writes Brooke’s blog becomes a burden for both girls, and things really get messy.

It’s a fast and enjoyable read. While it’s not necessary to read Spoiled before Messy, it will make some of the jokes funnier.

Messy is available in hardcover for $17.99 wherever books are sold and in e-book format for $9.99. And for more of Cocks and Morgan, Go Fug Yourself is always available for free!

There is no word on whether or not the Fug Girls will write a third book, but here’s hoping they do. (And hopefully it will be told in the point of view of Brooke’s sidekick Arugula and Molly as they fight for Teddy’s affection. If they don’t write that book, I might have to start writing fan fiction.)

Both Spoiled and Messy are the perfect summer reads, and if you have any interest in trashy books or the world of pop culture, you must read these books.


Written by Chelsey Falco

Book Review: The Iron King by Julie Kagawa


I was afraid again…. I didn’t want to be here, in this eerie forest, with this person I only though I knew. I wanted to go home. Only, home had become a frightening place as well, almost as much as the Nevernever. I felt lost and betrayed, out of place in a world that wished me harm.

Ethan, I reminded myself. You’re doing this for Ethan. Once you get him, you can go home and everything will go back to normal.

juliekagawa.com
The Iron King is a Young Adult book that incorporates, adventure, romance, and social commentary that has interested me into reading the whole series. This book also combines characters and references from stories like Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream and Alice in Wonderland. Regardless of your previous knowledge of these two stories, you will still find that this book is very unique and quite enjoyable. These additions are entertaining because it is not a retelling of the two stories but just using certain aspects of them, an example is Meghan the main character many times at the beginning of the story talks of remembering Alice in Wonderland and as if she had stepped into a similar world. What makes the story unique however, is that the author has created a world unlike any which influence is heavily based on nature, as well as she has given a clear imagery of that world.


On Meghan’s sixteenth birthday she finds out that the world is not as it seems. That day when she returns from school she finds out that her six year old brother Ethan was kidnapped by evil faeries. She is determined to bring him back home but she needs the help of her best friend Puck/ Robin Goodfellow to get into the magical world of the Nevernever.  The Nevernever is a world of fairies and other fantastical creatures as well, and to her it seems as if she were dreaming when she steps in. One of the creatures we meet in this book is a cat named Grimalkin; who is similar to the Cheshire cat of Alice in Wonderland since he tends to disappear and appear once again when Meghan needs help. Ash the Winter Prince also helps her with his amazing fighting skills. Through her journey Meghan learns the truth about herself- that she is indeed a powerful girl- and the world she thought she knew. The world around Meghan changes further when she realizes that there are faeries everywhere in the real world outside of the Nevernever but only those with “The Sight” or great imagination, such as children, are able to see them. The story explains the reason for this with a bit of social commentary on the reliance of technology that people experience today. It explains that once we grown up we start to lose our imagination and creative thinking by using science and technology to find the answers for us. These booms of scientific progress that are assumed to be good because they help make our lives easier, also begin to destroy the magical place of the Nevernever and bring an entire new group of Faeries into it which are a threat to everyone.  Through her adventures and the interesting creatures she meets, the story tries to display how technological progress must be done in moderation or it will severely affect imagination and creativity. This book was entertaining and an amazing way to escape reality by getting sucked into this alternate one. It not only has well developed characters and an exciting plotline, but it teaches the reader a little about society and challenges them to question the world they live in today. 


Written by Gilma Velasquez

On Love, Loss, and Clockwork

A Review of Mathias Malzieu’s The Boy With The Cuckoo Clock Heart
list.co.uk
I first came across The Boy with the Cuckoo Clock Heart by Mathias Malzieu in a Waterstones bookshop on Oxford Street in London.  I found the little book nestled away among the legions of stacked bestsellers and beloved classics. It seemed a perfect oddity as I plucked it from the shelf and observed the scrolling white lettering on the cover, and an illustration of two Tim Burton-esque figures dancing; a raven-haired girl and a man in black that I could only assume to be the owner of the cuckoo clock heart. I promptly bought the book and began reading it (and subsequently finished it) on the train ride to Edinburgh.
 Edinburgh is where my tale ends but where the story of The Boy with the Cuckoo Clock begins. For in 1874, on the coldest day on earth, Little Jack is born on Arthur’s Seat, the towering hill that looms over the city of Edinburgh. It is so cold that his heart is frozen solid and the midwife and tinker, Dr. Madeleine, is forced to replace it with, of course, a cuckoo clock. Jack’s mother leaves the delicate boy in the loving care of Madeleine. She keeps Jack at home until his 10th birthday, when he finally convinces Madeleine to bring him into town. But already, Jack’s delicate little cuckoo clock is in danger when he meets and falls hopelessly in love with a beautiful and bespectacled street singer, Miss Acacia. Such emotions are too much for the cuckoo clock and the gears start grinding, the clock heats up, and the cuckoo makes an awful racket.  Madeleine rushes him home and decrees that he can never fall in love if he should hope to survive.
But Jack is beyond saving, smitten to the point of obsession. He enrolls in school hoping to see Miss Acacia but she is nowhere to be found. Instead, he attracts the attention of a bully, Joe. Several years go by and Jack decides he must go find Miss Acacia. On that day, he and Joe get into a fight; Joe loses his eye, and Jack must flee Edinburgh to evade the police. So, ready or not, he starts out on the journey to Granada in the AndalucĂ­a region in Spain , where Miss Acacia is from.  Along the journey he has a run in with Jack the Ripper and in Paris meets George MĂ©liĂšs , a mustachioed magician and inventor with a specialty in clockwork who agrees both to tend to the maintenance of Jack’s clock and to accompany him on his journey to AndalucĂ­a.  It seems as though everything is in place and Jack’s dream is within reach, but nothing ever quite goes according to plan, does it? 
Jack lives in a world where eccentricities and impossibilities are not only possible, but taken for granted.  I love this world of magical realism; all the little quirks of the world author Malzieu created are what I found most intriguing about the book. Jack’s clockwork heart is of course at the forefront. The gears which keep his flesh heart beating also help (or hinder?) the emotional functions mythically associated with the cardiac muscle; although in Jack’s world they are unquestionably part of its function. But Jack’s prosthetic is not the only such one in the story; Madeleine fixes up her friend Arthur with a creaking metal spine which can be made into a xylophone of sorts when struck with a small hammer, and Madeleine keeps draughts of her own tears mixed with vinegar to abate deep sadness. Quirks aside, another decided strength of the book is the understated humor that often arises from the eccentricities of characters.  For example, Jack names his hamster Cunnilingus, a word he learns from Madeleine’s prostitute friends Anna and Luna, imagining Cunnilingus to have been some brave Roman warrior. Acacia refuses to wear glasses, though she needs them desperately, and her arrivals and departures are often marked by the thud of her walking into something. Jack finds this endearing.
The entiretya of the book is told from the present perspective of Little Jack, the narrative providing details even before his own birth, with the additional curious insight from the future looking back.  Jack speaks as though he goes through the world with eyes open wide in amazement. He is poetic in his observation, his descriptions both curious and startlingly accurate. For example: “She has this gentle way of laughing, as light as beads tumbling over a xylophone.” For the first half of the book, the style is enjoyable and even refreshing, but by the second half of the book, it becomes a bit old and cumbersome. I should add, though, that I’m unsure whether this is purely Malzieu’s writing, or due to choices made by the translator, Sarah Ardizzone. The second half of the book also went downhill for me because while as a reader I was pleased that Jack was so happy, I did not like Acacia very much, and liked her less as the book progressed. She refused to see Jack for what he was and to believe that the cuckoo clock kept him alive; it made Jack feel inadequate, somehow less than human. But, at the same time, the way Jack regarded her was very much as an object of his affections. She didn’t often speak, and most of Jack’s descriptions of her were possessive and focused solely on her looks. A reader is not given the opportunity to hear and know Acacia and when she does speak, it’s generally antagonizing. Her portrayal, in the end, doesn’t lend much to liking her. Although I would not call the book perfect, it is still to be appreciated due to the lessons about love, passion, and loss that Malzieu encases in this fantastical story, which is ultimately not unlike the tales of the Brothers Grimm.
La MĂ©canique du Coeur in the original French, the story of Jack and his clockwork heart it the brainchild of French musician and author, Mathias Malzieu.  I say brainchild because the story does not end with the novel, but rather contributes to an entire body of work including an album and soon to be released movie. Before taking a literary bent, Malzieu was (and still is) the lead singer of the French rock band, Dionysos, whose work has been heavily influenced by the films of Tim Burton. After the release of the book in October 2007, the band released the album, La Mecanique du Coeur, in November of that year. I was curious, upon discovering there was an album for the little boo, to see how well the story as a whole could be told through music and (French and English) lyrics as opposed to words.
My original intention was to compare Malzieu’s telling of the story in the book and on the album.  But upon listening to the album, I realized that that really wasn’t the right way to treat these works. The album on its own creates a much more mosaic kind of narrative (Especially for me because my French skills are limited. Google translate is wonderful).  There are songs for major events of the story, songs which may be an expression of the characters’ strong feelings, or songs which illustrate the struggles at a point within the narrative, much like a musical.  The instrumentation for each song was really creative and (for a lack of a better word) just good; each song really characterizes the scene it corresponds with, though some did so in a way that surprised me. Tim Burton/Danny Elfman influence was very strong in the instrumentation. In the lyrics, each character expressed their voice in every sense; each was sung by a different performer. Despite the theatrical quality of the album, something of the narrative quality was undoubtedly missing.
That being said, it seems best to consider the book and the album not as separate works, but two parts of the same work. If we look at these two in the same vein as a work of musical theatre, the novel is the script and the album the music book and score. The novel is needed to fill in the story between the songs in a more descriptive way than the music can. The music is needed the give a scope and feeling to the story that the words alone cannot impart. I went back and reread parts of the book while listening to the album and the story came alive in a way that it hadn’t when I read the book on its own.  My suggestion is, for those who want to experience Malzieu’s works at their fullest, to do so simultaneously. Below I’ve included the track listing for the album and suggested points within the book where the songs should accompany, with all the page numbers drawn from the UK edition.
La Mécanique du Coeur
1.       TRACK 1- Le Jour Le Plus Froid du Monde (The Coldest Day on Earth)- Start with the opening of the novel.
2.       TRACK 3- When the Saints Go Marchin’In Page 12.
3.       TRACK 3- La Berceuse Hip Hop du Docteur Madaleine (The Hip Hop Lullaby of Dr. Madeleine) Directly after Track 3.
4.       TRACK 4-Flamme À Lunettes (Candle Glasses) Page 17.
5.       TRACK 5-Symphonie Pour Horloge CassĂ©e (Symphony for a Broken Clock)-Start at the beginning of Chapter 3.
6.       TRACK 6-Cunnilingus Mon Amour! (Cunnilingus My Love!) Should be played directly after Track 5 (about page 26).
7.       TRACK 7-ThĂ©me de Joe -Start this song when Jack first arrives at the school and is told off by Joe in the school yard. (Or don’t. Admittedly this song isn’t that great.) Page 31.
8.       TRACK 8-L’Ecole de Joe (Joe’s School)-Start at beginning of Chapter 4.
9.       TRACK 10-La Panique Mecanique (Mechanic Panic): Start at beginning of Chapter 5.
10.   TRACK 9- L’Homme Sans Trucage (The Man Without Tricks): Start at beginning of Chapter 6.  
11.   TRACK 11-King of the Ghost Train -Page 75.
12.   TRACK 13- Candy Lady - Page 82.
13.   TRACK 12- Les Effets de Mademoiselle ClĂ© (Mademoiselle Key)-Start about a page into Chapter 9, when Miss Acacia comes to visit Jack at midnight. Page 97.
14.   TRACK 14-Le Retour de Joe (The Return of Joe)-Start at beginning of Chapter 10.
15.   TRACK 15-Death Song- Page 132.
16.   TRACK 16-Tais Toi Mon Coeur (Shut Up My Heart)-Page 150.
17.   TRACK 17-Whatever the Weather – Start directly after Track 16.
18.   TRACK 18-Épilogue -During or after the epilogue. Do listen all the way to the end.

Happy Reading and Listening!




Written by Meaghan O'Brien

Book Review: Grave Mercy by Robin LaFevers

Why be the sheep when you can be the wolf?

robinlafevers.com
If that isn’t enough of a compelling tagline, then I don’t know what is. Robin LaFevers’s Grave Mercy is her first installment in her debut series His Fair Assassin, containing various elements that attract audiences of all sorts: the history junkies, the action fans, the romance lovers, and anyone who just appreciates a strong, capable heroine who don’t need no man unless she wants one. Why? Because she’s an assassin who can defend herself just fine. That’s right.

In fifteenth-century Brittany, a time when the region struggles to remain independent amidst conflicting interests and political corruption, Ismae Rienne is introduced as a poor, abused farmer girl who learns she is blessed with a dark identity and violent destiny: she is an actual daughter of Death himself, and must serve him and learn from the institution devoted solely to him—the convent of St. Mortain, the patron god of death.

It is here where Ismae transforms into one of Death’s most skilled handmaidens, female assassins trained in the arts of defense, seduction, and espionage that prepare them to be the perfect predators until they are finally ready to take on murder assignments. When the abbess of the convent bestows upon Ismae the responsibility to serve the interests of and protect of the duchess of Brittany, she finds herself masquerading as a mistress of the cynical Gavriel Duval, the duchess’s most trusted advisor. Her assignment is to observe the corrupt happenings of court and uncover and kill the traitor among friends who tries to sabotage Brittany’s independence. However, as Ismae spends more time away from the sisters of St. Mortain, their tight grasp on their assassin begins faltering once she discovers and experiences life outside of the convent. Throughout this journey, Ismae’s duty grows cloudier as she feels a vast array of emotions she never thought were possible and poses questions she never thought to ask. Her story, which begins predominantly as a female empowerment tale, gradually becomes much more than what was expected.

For those who shirk the idea of lofty historical fiction or frown upon a YA author’s attempt at the genre, release those judgments at once. This book does not only showcase the author’s knowledge and familiarity with the time period, but bends the genre into the fantasy category without being too overdramatic. I’m usually a big fan of historical fiction pieces, but LaFevers style and ideas made me love it even more. The way she introduces the convent of St. Mortain and his handmaidens is so sleek and compelling, not only in the smooth introduction of characters and vivid world building they present, but also in that awesome femme fatale vibe that everyone loves and is believable even in fifteenth-century Europe. Having the main character grow up from her lowly beginnings to a lethal assassin really makes Ismae a well developed and interesting character to follow—she’s spunky, strong, and a daughter of Death for crying out loud. It would be hard not to develop a girl-crush on her— she is that cool.

And of course, there is the love aspect to consider in this novel. For those who are bored with the hackneyed, romantic clichĂ©s that most books seem to put forth these days, the romantic development in this book really feels like a breath of fresh air to me. It isn’t too forced, isn’t that love-at-first-sight crap— it is a match between equals and a natural progression in the story rather than its driving point.

Overall, this book has many things to offer besides all the things I have listed. It deals not only with overcoming weakness to discover your strength, but covers a lot of issues that modern teens face everyday: the weight of responsibility, independence, trust, the freedom to act as your own, and finally discovering your identity and purpose and taking it into your own hands. So if you ever wish to read something empowering, see a girl kick ass because it’s literally her calling, brush up on some history, or take a break from those hot dystopias, then I definitely recommend you pick this book up and read.




Written by Janella Angeles

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Book Review: The Call by Yannick Murphy


www.tower.com
I spent about an hour scouring the “newly released” section/shelf of my local library for anything with a synopsis that didn’t read like a Lifetime movie. Yannick Murphy’s third novel, The Call, not only fulfilled this requirement, but also enticed me with its cleanly designed cover (not exactly a great judge of a book’s quality, but I was desperate, having forgotten to leave enough space in my suitcase for winter break reading materials) and copyright page boasting an excerpt’s appearance in McSweeney’s #29 [Murphy’s work is also featured in the current issue of McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern, #39—a coincidence which I find amusing mainly because I am bored].

Of course, The Call is good: I wasn’t going to force myself to read something unsatisfying or dull during my short break from psychology textbooks and literary theory. And it’s good despite the fact that it’s about a veterinarian, taking calls to heal horses and cattle in a small, mountainside town.

Wait, that description enticed you? Is the last book you read Misty of Chincoteague? Or was it maybe something from the Animal Ark series? I mean, that’s fine, but then you shouldn’t read this book.

The Call is a novel about more than the immature themes of “family, community, [and] the human bond with animals,” which Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks applauds Murphy for tackling. Although we’d all love a book about animal activism because, hey, bunnies have feelings too, this one wasn’t written by Jonathan Safran Foer. If you look closely enough (I’m talking eighth-grade-analysis level), it’s about human interdependence. It’s about the decay of American subsistence farming and waning attitudes of self-sufficiency in a country proud of its DIY fetish and rebellious heritage. It’s about aging and losing and slipping away.


We watch David, the protagonist whose name really is unimportant, forgettable, fail to save the animals he’s paid to treat. But instead of focusing on the image of a stillborn calf’s carcass being torn in half as David tries to pull it from its pained mother’s uterus, an image Murphy relays with a disturbingly clinical affect, we are struck by the character’s reaction (or lack thereof) to the blatant display of annihilated innocence: “THOUGHTS ON DRIVE HOME WHILE PASSING RED AND GOLD LEAVES ON MAPLE TREES: Is there a nicer place to live?”

This is a book of reactions; most of the time, conversations—about a comatose son, a sperm donation, a crime unsolved—aren’t even dictated to us. Murphy, instead, presents us with a slew of David’s silent regrets and desires, and, from them, we feel him straining against piles of problems unresolved.

Composed of thoughts categorized and labeled by their subject, The Call is a novel that pushes the notion of a first-person perspective to the extreme. Consider the “meta” trend that is enhancing/destroying contemporary art: The Call embraces the fad, going so far as to announce David’s unreliability as a narrator each time he offers up snippets of dialogue by explaining that these are words filtered by the ears of a distressed/crazed/vengeful/homicidal mountain man. It seems that even mainstream authors (because someone published in McSweeney’s can hardly be considered “underground”) are experimenting with post-modern techniques in addition to shrouding their work in dramatic post-modern attitudes.

Does The Call prove that hipster isn’t hipster anymore? Maybe. That is a topic for discussion in an essay to be written for an Emerson literature course.

But if you are suffering from an existential crisis and would be pleased with the ability of a contemporary author to capture crushing despair in a book structured like a medical log, you should stop reading when the section entitled “Still Winter” comes to a close. What follows is the emergence of an unforeseen springtime cure, which sprinkles its magical fairy dust along the creases in David’s crumpled life. Oh, spring and it’s stifling aura of rebirth.

The change in season renders the world a calming place where the character’s tense muscles are kneaded into a sugary cake iced with vanilla familial love.  Maybe the intrusion of positivity in Murphy’s exhaustingly depressing novel is merely an indicator of her optimism for the human condition. But David’s decline is preferred to any neat-and-tidy ending fraught with clichĂ©s and excess sap.

I guess I failed to avoid the Lifetime novel, after all.



Written by Ellen Duffer

Thursday, March 8, 2012

The Lorax: Book & Movie

I think The Lorax is a cool book.
The movie might be worth a look.
The Lorax is also its name;
It’s different but still the same.


en.wikipedia.org

The Lorax, which opened in theaters March 2nd, is the tale of a world destroyed by consumerist greed. Based on Dr. Seuss’ book of the same name, the movie goes into more detail than the short book ever could. Seuss’ world is expanded onscreen as the movie builds off the colorful illustrations in his book for its aesthetics. For example, the unnamed city of the book is given life and dubbed Thneedville. It is portrayed as a colorful plastic place where the “trees” are inflatable, light up, and work as disco balls too. The imagined city, based off the buildings on the first page of the book, fits with Seuss’ whimsical illustrations even though it was never explicitly described. However, the Lorax, Humming-Fish, and bearlike Bar-ba-loots all look like they jumped right off the page. The beautiful Truffula Valley appears almost exactly how Seuss portrays it in his book. While the movie’s animation imitates the book’s pictures fairly well, the plot is expanded and altered in order to extend the story into a feature film.

www.joblo.com

One of the main ways the book was adapted was to add in subplots and develop the characters. For example, Dr. Seuss addresses the reader in his book, but the movie has an actual character. The boy in the red-striped ensemble from Seuss’ illustrations becomes young protagonist Ted. Other additions to the story include love-interest Audrey, bad guy O’Hare, and Ted’s crazy mom and grandmother. The Once-ler’s family, while only making a brief appearance in the book, becomes individualized and developed – we’re treated to a greedy aunt, uncle, and cousins along with a doubting mother. The Once-ler gets a detailed backstory, which explains his motivations for making Thneeds. The tale of how he destroyed all the trees is embellished and features the Lorax’s attempts to get rid of him, along with their burgeoning friendship. This relationship is not explored in the book at all. In another deviation, the Once-ler gives the Lorax his word that he will not to chop down any more trees. But of course he breaks his promise.


According to the production notes from the official movie website, the movie team tried “to flesh out the book’s characters and create a complementary world” in order to “craft a feature production that would draw audiences further into its story” by filling in “what happened before the book began and after it ended.” This technique of fleshing out characters and building off of the given plot is generally used to make short books into longer movies. The Lorax, following the great tradition of books into movies, maintains Dr. Seuss’ whimsical vibe while expanding upon his classic story.



Written by Alex Kowel

Book Review: Divergent by Veronica Roth

“I stare into my own eyes for a moment. Today is the day of the aptitude test that will show me which of the five factions I belong in. And tomorrow, at the Choosing Ceremony, I will decide on a faction; I will decide the rest of my life; I will decide to stay with my family or abandon them.


For anyone who is an avid fan of The Hunger Games trilogy or just loves a good helping of action-packed dystopia, Veronica Roth’s debut book Divergent definitely earns it place as one of the freshest young adult dystopian novels on the bookshelves.

Set in the futuristic urban environment of Chicago, our heroine, Beatrice “Tris” Prior, lives in a society divided and ruled by five personality-based factions: Dauntless (the brave), Amity (the kind), Erudite (the intelligent), Candor (the honest), and Abnegation (the selfless). Although separated, these factions work peacefully together in a checks-and-balances fashion that allows everyone to live harmoniously without the consequences of warfare or corruption. The story begins on the day of Tris’s aptitude test, an examination that all sixteen-year-olds of the society are required to take that recommends which faction best suits their character. Because her parents are from Abnegation, Tris has endured a strictly basic lifestyle with her family, a selfless and simple life that has left her feeling more like an outsider than a member of society. Upon this realization comes the allure of the Dauntless, the notoriously dangerous and dare-devilish faction that Tris feels drawn to despite her modest upbringing.

www.divergentthemovie.net

Ultimately, Tris grapples with her identity and her independence, the choice to stay with her family or to embark on a different path, and the novel traces the shocking reveal of her tests results to the faction she inevitably chooses in the end. Does she choose the faction that she feels safe and familiar with, or the one that can help reinvent her into the person she feels she was meant to be?

Seriously, for anyone who loves dystopia, an action-packed story, or a heroine who isn’t annoying, this book is definitely for you. Dystopia has sky-rocketed to one of the hottest genres in young adult literature, and this book is a clear example of why. For starters, Roth sets the reader in a very grounded environment and society, one that is so creatively and eerily systematic that something is bound to go wrong. This situation gives the opportunity to tell the story of Tris, an unassuming, bullied Abnegation girl who starts to grow into herself through the decisions she makes and the shocking secrets she discovers about her seemingly perfect society. The story doesn't really begin until after she makes her choice of what faction she wanted to choose—but of course I couldn't reveal that little spoiler. 

The book then goes on to trace the initiation process of her chosen faction, where she encounters an interesting handful of characters, along with a mysterious and intense guy (a.k.a. the love interest), who help guide her and the plot line itself. One of the best things about this book is that although there is romance, it does not define the story’s momentum or slap you in the face every other page. While the romance factor is a definite pull for all the love-junkies out there, this book has a lot more to offer than dewy-eyed teenagers repeatedly mooning over each other. Roth has managed to ground real life teen problems within this unbelievable and futuristic setting, such as independence, identity and self-discovery, fear, bullying, parents’ expectations, separation, and more. Roth has even created a pretty strong heroine that people can actually appreciate, one who becomes stronger and tougher in dealing with these real life issues in her surreal world (no Bella Swans in here, I assure you). There is action and good, quick writing in this book, and there are also messages that hint at something in our own society like a precautionary tale. But then again, what did you expect from a dystopia? I promise you, pick this book up and it won’t disappoint.

Written by Janella Angeles