Book Warriors

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Archive for the 'historical' Category

What I Saw and How I Lied

Posted by bookwarrior on 18th February 2009

“When Alice fell down the rabbit hole, she fell slow. She had time to notice things on her way down–Oh, there’s a teacup! There’s a table! So things seemed normal to her while she was falling. Then she bumped down and rolled into Wonderland, and all hell broke loose.”

I love this quote from the opening chapter of What I Saw and How I Lied, not only for its imagery but also for the way it tries to prepare you for the story to come. The narrator, 15 year-old Evie Spooner, is looking back, trying to figure out how her life unraveled in just a few short months. She goes back to the beginning, the day it all started, on a warm day in Queens just after World War II has ended. Joe, the step-father she adores, has returned from the fighting to open appliance stores for a country ready to buy “not only what we needed but what we wanted.” Evie and her gorgeous mother are trying to make home life the picture of perfection for him, with roast beef and mashed potato dinners and everything neat and tidy, though it is a strain living under Joe’s mother’s roof.

Joe comes home from work that day with a wild idea to pack up and drive down to Florida for a vacation…that night. He convinces Evie and her mom with his slick sales skills, and in a few days they find themselves in a half-empty Palm Beach resort during the off-season. There Evie meets Peter, a dashing soldier who makes Evie feel like a woman, her mother light-hearted, and Joe strangely moody. As Evie plots to spend more time with Peter, her mother and step-father’s relationship grows tense, and Joe becomes increasingly erratic. Soon events spin into a downward spiral of passion, blackmail, and secrets, and Evie finds the adults in her life are not what they seem. Evie must choose her own path and make a decision that will control all their destinies.

Author Judy Blundell won the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature for this suspense-filled, noirish, dramatic novel. Those who love attention to detail will revel in the vivid depictions of post-war America, from the fashion (Revlon’s Fatal Apple lipstick and nail polish and full-skirted evening gowns) to the dialogue (”Don’t be in such a hurry to grow up, baby…it’s not all polka dots and moonbeams, you know.”) Those who love crime dramas and Bogey and Bacall movies will delight in the stylish mystery and suspense. And for those who appreciate album covers as much as albums, check out the cover, which I thought stunning (and an accurate depiction of the story, something becoming more rare in the book world). I loved this book, which brings me to two years in a row where I thought the National Book Award winner was better than the Printz Award winner.

Posted in award winner, crime, favorites, historical, mystery | No Comments »

Harry, A History

Posted by bookwarrior on 7th January 2009

While I am a very loyal and enthusiastic Harry Potter devotee today, I do feel a bit of a fraud because I came to the series so late in the game. My husband, my mom, and my sister were all on board from the first book, but I just never got around to starting. Talk about humiliating for a librarian! Anyway, around the time the first movie came out, I finally got hooked (I have a firm policy against viewing a movie before reading the book), much to my husband’s relief and triumph.

I tell you this story because I recently finished the memoir/literary journalism Harry, A History: The True Story of a Boy Wizard, His Fans, and Life Inside the Harry Potter Phenomenon. The author, Melissa Anelli, is the long-time editor of the popular fan site The Leaky Cauldron and, I am relieved to say, a fan who also came late to the Harry Potter party. That is not to say she is an unreliable source–by no means. She quickly became immersed in the fan culture, and as an aspiring journalist, fell into the role of BNF (Big Name Fan) and found her hobby and passion often took precedence over her “real” professional life.

While I found the organization of the book a little confusing at first (chapters are organized by themes, not necessarily linearlly), I soon found myself engrossed in the back story of the little book series that could. Anelli recounts the unlikely beginnings of the first book, the struggle to get it published, and the grass-roots efforts that helped it become an international powerhouse. She examines the birth of wizard rock and the importance of the growth of the Internet and interactive websites to the success of the books. I found the sections about the inner workings of the publishing industry and the drama and controversy surrounding the writers of fanfiction particularly fascinating. Throughout she recounts personal anecdotes about the experiences reading the books the day they came out, her meetings with J.K. Rowling, and her funny and sometimes bizarre interactions with both fans and detractors.

The story feels a little uneven to me, but overall I thorougly enjoyed the journey and the chance to wax nostalgic over my own experiences with the series. A must-read for Harry Potter fans and the people who love them.

Posted in funny, historical, nonfiction | No Comments »

Newes From the Dead

Posted by bookwarrior on 21st November 2008

Anne Green wakes to pitch blackness. She can’t move or speak or even open her eyes. The last thing she can remember is walking up to a scaffold to be hanged for the murder of her baby. Is she in purgatory? Or has she been buried alive?

So begins this chilling and fascinating tale based on the real-life story of a British serving maid convincted and hung for infanticide in 1650. The story begins with Anne regaining consciousness and shifts back and forth between her recollections of how she got to her current state and the perspective of Robert Matthews, a young medical student originally assisting with the dissection of Anne’s body and later with its resuscitation. Even though you know what will happen, the creepiness of the circumstances and the horrorific details concerning Anne’s seduction, labor, and jailing give the book a nice tension and suspense. The historical details are fascinating, though the book remains accessible to those not used to the historical fiction genre. All in all, Mary Hooper has crafted a creepy, bewitching tale perfect for a long car trip or airplane ride.

There’s a great book trailer by the publisher at YouTube as well:

Posted in based on real life, historical | 1 Comment »

Ten Cents a Dance

Posted by bookwarrior on 19th September 2008

Ten Cents a Dance, the second novel from Christine Fletcher, is a riveting tale about a 15-year old girl living near the slaughter yards in 1940s Chicago. When her Polish-American father died, her Irish-American mother went to work for a meat-packing house, doing dangerous, thankless work for very little pay to support her daughters. When she is nearly crippled with rheumatoid arthritis, it is up to Ruby to quit school and support her family. Ruby quickly sees that this work will make her old in just a few years and will never earn them enough to get out of debt and poverty and when local bad boy Pauly tells her she could be making $50 bucks a week taxi dancing, Ruby jumps at the chance. But taxi dancing, or dancing with men for ten cents a dance plus tips at a dance hall, is not considered respectable work, and Ruby must hide what she does from her family while providing them with the money they need to improve their lives.

Ruby grows up quickly in this world of men, racism, jazz clubs, and chop suey joints, learning that the only way to make the big money is to reel in the “big fish” who will pay for dinners, clothes, and other luxuries. Ruby has talent and could be the best of the bunch, but is she willing to pay the price to get there?

Interestingly, the author wrote the book after learning that one of her ancestors had worked as a taxi dancer in secret, which led her to research the “ten cents a dance” girls. Rich in period detail, this fascinating and fast-paced novel had me hooked from page one. It has drama, suspense, history, and romance all rolled up into one and this book would certainly get my vote for a Printz award. This is an author to keep your eye on.

Posted in favorites, historical | No Comments »

Dreamhunter: Book One of the Dreamhunter Duet

Posted by bookwarrior on 14th May 2008

Enter a world very like our own around the turn of the century (1900, not 2000). It is a world where automobiles are still newfangled toys for the rich, where ladies still wear long dresses, and where wealthy young girls attend finishing schools to prepare them for coming out into society. Laura and Rose are cousins living in this world of privilege each with one parent who is of high society and one parent who is a famous and rich dreamhunter. The dreamhunters are people who can enter an otherworld where dreams reside and bring the dreams back for sale to hospitals, the government, and public dream opera houses. Some dreams are used to heal, some to soothe, some to delight and the best dreamhunters (and Laura’s father and Rose’s mother are the best) can earn fortunes.

But all is not as it seems. Laura’s father is acting stranger and stranger, and Laura and Rose are about to make their Try to find out if they will become dreamhunters themselves. The girls’ charmed life is quickly spinning out of control and they soon have a dire mystery to solve.

The pacing on this novel is a little slow at times, but the premise is so interesting and the world so compelling that I plowed through and was rewarded with cliffhanger of an ending. The good news is that Book Two is already out and was named a Printz Honor book this year so I won’t have to wait to find out what happens next and the story is only going to get better. If you love fantasy, especially ones by Garth Nix and Libba Bray, you’ll definitely enjoy this imaginative and spellbinding tale by Elizabeth Knox.

Posted in fantasy, historical, science fiction | 1 Comment »