Posted by bookwarrior on 27th May 2008
While the book Dreamhunter by Elizabeth Knox is not a perfect book, it did get me so wrapped up in its world that I was dying to find out what happens in Book Two–Dreamquake. Lucky for me it is already out (the benefit of starting a series of books that is already published) and even better than Book One. Dreamquake picks up with the final scene of Dreamhunter and tells it from an alternative perspective, which both catches up the reader and gives a new angle to the scene. From there the plot picks up speed with Laura and her Sandman on the run for forcing her nightmare on the Dream Opera Crowd, the Dream Regulatory Body building a secret, dangerous project in the Place, and, not to be overshadowed, Rose’s debut into society. Laura and Sandy’s relationship blossoms, though her continued and deepening reliance on her Sandman causes tension with those around her. The pace is fast, the drama high, and once the pieces of the puzzle came together I was left astounded by the author’s imagination and storytelling abilities. Full of suspense, romance, and questions, this installment brings the duet to highly satisfying close.
Posted in Uncategorized, fantasy, philosophical, science fiction | No Comments »
Posted by bookwarrior on 2nd May 2008
Each year the American Library Association gives out the Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature and awards “Honor” status (like an honorable mention) to 3 or 4 other finalists for the award. I often feel conflicted about the books that get chosen and 2008’s selections are no exception. One of the honor books is Repossessed by A.M. Jenkins. It is the story of a demon (that’s right, demon, as in hell) who realizes after centuries on the job tormenting sinners in hell that the Creator isn’t going to notice if he slips away for a vacation. The demon, who is called many things, among which Kiriel is his favorite, jumps into the body of a slacker teenaged boy who is seconds away from dying in an accident. As Kiriel sees it, “the fact that he missed the last two seconds of his life didn’t really matter; I could see exactly what was going to happen.”
Kiriel sets out to experience all he can of life before he is caught and sent back. He revels in the details, the taste of ketchup, the feel of writing with a pencil, the sound of traffic. He wants to test all the 7 deadly sins to find out what the big deal is, and in the space of a couple days realizes why humans get so worked up with jealousy, lust, wrath and the rest.
The book is funny, poignant, and ultimately life-affirming as the demon makes your realize all you take for granted in your own life. So why do I feel conflicted about the book being honored by the Printz committee? Well I agree the book is very good, and asks a lot of interesting questions, but I’m not sure I agree it was one of the top 5 best YA books of the year. Still, I’m glad the book is getting recognition, because it is a fun read and one that will make you count your blessings.
Posted in contemporary, funny, philosophical | No Comments »
Posted by bookwarrior on 23rd April 2008
This latest novel by Peter Cameron pulls off the difficult task of making a difficult, troubled, antisocial narrator completely sympathetic and lovable. James Sveck, an eighteen year-old outsider is intelligent, philosophical, and yes, even “charming” (as the front cover suggests) but he has problems showing all this to the outside world. James has been accepted to prestigious Brown College, but he has no desire to go, because people, particularly people his own age distress him. In his words, “I just don’t enjoy being with people. People, at least in my experience, rarely say anything interesting to each other. They always talk about their lives and they don’t have very interesting lives. So I get impatient.”
It would be easy to detest someone that brutally honest and snobbish. And yet I found myself continually cutting him slack, in part because I felt sorry for his obvious social anxiety and, also because his character flaws are interesting and complicated in the grand tradition of Holden Caufield. Like Holden, James rejects those who try to help him (his parents, his psychiatrist), believing them to be more interested their own wants than in listening to him. Like Holden, he has one family member who truly gets him, in his case, his grandmother. Like Holden, his few attempts to reach out to the world fail–often spectacularly as when he tries his hand at expressing his attraction to a coworker and when he is chosen to go to Washington D.C. to represent New York at a national student program about the government.
With beautiful metaphors and a true sense of “voice,” Peter Cameron tells a compelling story about a young man failing to thrive in the modern world. You may not know first hand the kind of anxiety and depression that James feels, but this story will help you identify with, understand, and empathize with him.
Posted in contemporary | No Comments »
Posted by bookwarrior on 26th February 2008
I read this book because I’m a Nerdfighter, and the Nerdfighters have started a Blurbing Book Club where we are to come up with a blurb for the book in 10 words or less–the winners will get prizes–yay prizes!
Maureen Johnson has actually written a lot of books for young adults (including the awesome Keys to the Golden Firebird) and this is one of her strongest. The main character is Ginny, a 17-year old with an artist aunt who is important to her but often absent. During her last disappearance to Europe, Ginny’s aunt is diagnosed with brain cancer and dies. But in a typical move, her adventure-loving aunt leaves her 13 envelopes with very specific instructions to open them in order and follow the instructions before opening the next one. These instructions send her on a merry chase through London, Paris, Rome, Amsterdam, and Greece. She finds herself tracing the steps her aunt took, finding the people her aunt met, and trying to piece together what it is her aunt wanted her to learn. While Ginny struggles to find answers, she starts to ask questions about herself and her own priorities.
All in all, it is a fun, fast read with lots of great travel descriptions. And in case you’re wondering, my blurb for the Nerdfighters was:
“An archetypal artist challenges her hesitating niece to seek adventure.”
To read more blurbs, go to: http://nerdfighters.ning.com/main/search/search?q=blurbing+book+club.
Posted in beach reads, contemporary, funny | 1 Comment »
Posted by bookwarrior on 25th February 2008
On a recent road trip to Chicago, I read Sherman Alexie’s National Book Award-winning The Absolutely True Story of a Part-Time Indian. As my husband can attest, I laughed out loud throughout the book, frequently turning off his book-on-CD to make him listen to particularly funny passages. But this is not the stupid-funny, throw away-funny that rules in our modern culture. Like Alexie’s previous books for adults (e.g. Flight, Reservation Blues), this young adult novel’s humor is part healing mechanism, part coping mechanism, and part means of looking at the world. The first-person narrator, Arnold Spirit, Jr., is a member of the Welpinit tribe on the Spokane Indian reservation. “Junior” is an outcast with loads of medical issues due to being born hydrocephalic. His scrawny body and love of reading and drawing comics make him “a natural for the black eye of the month club.” But in some ways, he is like most of classmates–poor, hungry, a child of alcoholic parents with no chance of escaping this fate if he stays on the reservation. Unlike his friends and parents and most all of the tribe, Junior has hope and ambition and commitment. And with these traits he decides to transfer to the off-rez high school 22 miles away. Doing so makes him the enemy of his best friend and a traitor to his tribe. Doing so means he must be the lone Indian in a school full of affluent white kids. His courage, his faith and his hopes are tested over and over by heartbreaking tragedies. And though some of the book’s message is bittersweet, there is a sweet, pure joy in Junior’s strength of character and his victories. This is a great book.
Posted in contemporary, favorites, funny, native american | No Comments »