Sunday, October 20, 2013

Review: Somewhere Inside: One Sister's Captivity in North Korea and the Other's Fight to Bring Her Home


Somewhere Inside: One Sister's Captivity in North Korea and the Other's Fight to Bring Her Home
Somewhere Inside: One Sister's Captivity in North Korea and the Other's Fight to Bring Her Home by Laura Ling

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



This was a New York Times notable book a few years back and lingered on my reading list. Glad I finally got to it. It was a quick read, but one that kept my attention.

Laura Ling and Lisa Ling are both journalists. Embarrassingly, not sure I realized they were two different people until I read this book. Laura was a reporter for CurrentTV (Al Gore's network) and Lisa is best known from being on The View and then being one of Oprah's correspondents.

This book starts when Laura visits China to report on North Koreans who are fleeing the country; she goes to a common location for their defection on a river between the two countries, and when she goes onto North Korean land momentarily (not really mistakenly, but just for a moment), she is captured and imprisoned.

The rest of the book chronicles her imprisonment and her sister Lisa's tireless work to get her freed. Laura is held more under house arrest than in a traditional prison, so she develops some unusual relationships with her captors, some of whom are young women. With the fear of imprisonment in a labor camp lingering, she tries to figure out what the best strategy is for being freed.

Lisa, meanwhile, is in the US and is able to talk to Laura three or four times during her four month captivity. She works her relationships with the media to control how the story is played on TV and to contact government officials who can help. At one point she sees how surreal her situation is when she is corresponding with Al Gore, Bill Clinton, President Obama, and Oprah calls to find out what she can do to help.

This book was unique in that in chronicled both sides of an imprisonment - the person captured and the person fighting to get them back. I really enjoyed learning about how relations worked between countries that had no official diplomatic relations, and how Laura and Lisa became a very unusual conduit through which the US and North Korea could communicate. I was also fascinated by how easily Lisa could influence what the major network were and weren't reporting, and how.






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Review: The Mango Bride


The Mango Bride
The Mango Bride by Marivi Soliven

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Found this one just shelf-surfing at the library. I really liked it. I've read so much fiction about the immigrant experience set in India and China, it was really interesting to read a novel where part of the story takes place in the Philippines and the rest is about Philippine immigrants in the US.

The story is about two women, seemingly unrelated although as the book continues their stories end up intertwining. One is the daughter of a high-class family in Manila, the other the niece of a housekeeper, also in Manila. Both women find themselves in Oakland, California, far away from home for different reasons.

Class played a very strong role in this book - particularly in Manila, the comparisons between the "haves" and "have-nots" was sharp. Both women were very likable and both made decisions that were mistakes as young women that had impact throughout their lives. I liked how the author switched between the two stories and through different time periods to weave the narratives together.







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Review: The Aviators Wife


The Aviators Wife
The Aviators Wife by Melanie Benjamin

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



For my first time flying with my 8-month old baby (and husband and dog) I was so panicked leaving the house I forgot to bring a book with me for the weekend at my inlaws'! Thankfully my mother-in-law had a copy of The Aviators Wife and recommended it.

While reading this book I kept thinking about how it reminded me of The Paris Wife and Loving Frank - other novels I enjoyed based on the lives of the wives of famous men, in those cases Ernest Hemingway and Frank Lloyd Wright, respectively. I was both happy and disappointed to see the Goodreads review say the same thing. This book was about Charles Lindbergh's wife Anne, told from her point of view. I really enjoyed learning more about Lindbergh and his accomplishments, while also appreciating how difficult a person he was in his private life.

I thought this book did a pretty good job of capturing the time-and-place of the story (the US in the 1920's through the 1950's). The kidnapping of their child played a prominent role in the story, as did Lindbergh's skilled piloting and right-wing politics. The relationship the Lindberghs had with the media was also interesting - they were victimized by the paparazzi as badly as any of today's celebrities are. I was sad for Anne through most of the book, as Lindbergh was not a warm or kind husband or father. She saw some of his weaknesses but also supported him blindly it seemed, even when he was demanding, unfair, or bordering on abusive.

Benjamin (the author) says in her afterword that the best way for her to feel like she's succeeded in writing a compelling historical novel is when her readers want to learn more about the actual history. She definitely succeeded with me.



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Saturday, October 12, 2013

Review: The Reeducation of Cherry Truong: A Novel


The Reeducation of Cherry Truong: A Novel
The Reeducation of Cherry Truong: A Novel by Aimee Phan

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I found this at the library and it was good. The story is about a Vietnamese family spread between the US, France, and Vietnam. The title character Cherry grows up in the US but the story goes back two generations to the Vietnamese War.

The book jumps around in time, which I liked, because there was an element of mystery around how the characters in the present time connected to the characters in the past. The book also interspersed a set of short letters between characters with the chapters; the letters themselves then became part of the plot and not just a device to reveal certain information.

I thought the character development was pretty good, although some of the characters seemed like caricatures. It made me think about the women I know from my nail salon and whether their families and lives were similar to the ones in the book. That is, is this book representative of the multi-generational Vietnamese immigrant experience, or is it just one example experience.

Either way, I enjoyed it.



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Review: The Abstinence Teacher


The Abstinence Teacher
The Abstinence Teacher by Tom Perrotta

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



This book was ok. I noticed it on the library shelf and needed something for the weekend.

The story is about a born-again Christian and a sex education teacher in a small town whose paths cross. The teacher says something in class that the Christian right doesn't like and the school changes her curriculum to be about abstinence, and not grounded in science. Most of the book is about each of the two characters' individual lives and how they developed the values they have, then there is some part of the plot about their interactions with each other.

The writing in this book was very good and I enjoyed getting to know each character. Where I felt like the book fell short was in the conflict between the characters. Each one had such a rich back-story and so many complexities, then their interactions with each other just weren't interesting enough to hold my attention.

The other thing about the book I wasn't wild about was that it seemed to make a socio-political statement that sex ed is good while not respecting religion. I thought the depictions of the born-again character and his church were negative stereotypes while the sex ed teacher was a really positive character - I agree with him, don't get me wrong. I believe in sex ed and science and all that. I just think that the story would have been more interesting if the Christian side of the story were more accessible.



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Sunday, October 06, 2013

Review: The Twelve


The Twelve
The Twelve by Justin Cronin

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I like a good post-apocalyptic story as much as the next person but nothing could have prepared me for this trilogy - particularly since I didn't know it was a trilogy when I read the first one.

This book is a worthy successor to [b:The Passage|6690798|The Passage (The Passage, #1)|Justin Cronin|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1327874267s/6690798.jpg|2802546]. It's similarly complex, character-driven, and at times totally gross. (Did I forget to mention that the post-apocalyptic nature of the story was brought on by blood-drinking neon green viral vampires?) At its core, this story is not about vampires, it's about good vs. evil, David vs. Goliath, maybe about the different forms evil can take.

The only problem I had with the book was that I found it hard to remember some of the details from the previous book. I was probably about a third of the way through the book before I remembered all the details of the setup, who was who, and where different allegiances were.

That said, I look forward to the third and final book in the series.



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Review: The Light Between Oceans


The Light Between Oceans
The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Mom and Jo both eagerly recommended this book to me. I thought it was ok.

The story follows a couple who live on an island and mind a lighthouse. They are unable to have a baby, but one washes up on shore and they decide to keep her. Only when they return to the mainland several years later do they realize the ramifications of their decision.

I thought the characters in this book, both the major ones and some of the minor ones, were really well-developed. Having recently had a baby, I also felt for all the characters in the book who bonded with the little girl.

Conversely, I didn't think the plot was that interesting. After the setup of the story, the narrative was pretty predictable. There were a few things that happened that came from a character or motive I couldn't have predicted (and that I appreciated), but overall that wasn't enough to push the book over the edge into "great" territory.




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