Sunday, February 19, 2012

Home in the Morning by Mary Glickman

Meredith had been recommending this book to me for a long time before I finally got around to it.  The story was really unusual and I'm glad I read it.

The story follows Jackson, a Jewish boy growing up in Mississippi, into adulthood.  Growing up in the 1960's, he sees a lot around segregation and Civil Rights, and befriends some black children his age.  In particular, he harbors a childhood crush on Katherine Marie, and fondly remembers childhood exploits with Lil' Bokay.  As an adult, he marries Stella, a young woman from Boston which may as well be a million miles away from the Mississippi he grew up in.  Spanning three decades, the story evolves an unusual set of relationships among these four people.

Glickman's attention to detail in her character development was a delight to read - she puts her characters in very specific circumstances that show their characteristics and development.  Her alternating different time periods was a good way of keeping me interested and wanting to know both what was going to happen as well as what had happened. 

What I liked the most, however, was how well she was able to capture the feeling of being a newer, younger, generation.

I notice Glickman has a second novel out that I will add to my list of books to read.

Revolution: The Year I Fell in Love and Went to Join the War by Deb Olin Unferth

This memoir is about something that would never, ever, happen to me. 

While in college in the late 1980's, Deb Olin Unfirth decides to drop out of school and follow her boyfriend to Central America.  They were in search of a revolution to join, and it wasn't until they arrived that they figured out how difficult it was to find politically significant work. 

The number of ways that is different from my life is barely countable.  Of course I would never have dropped out of school, particularly not to follow a guy, and I wouldn't have gone to Central America even if I had.  Sure, I like travel and have been to some parts of the world that other people would find risky, but not without my American passport (xeroxed, carried by me and my traveling companion, as well as stored in my Gmail account), credit card (safely xeroxed as well as alerted one week ahead of time to my international travel), and Immodium A/D (both in my daypack and back at the hotel).  That was not how Deb traveled.

Her story is the opposite of all that - she lived with complete uncertainty, hopeful to find some civil war to assist with, riddled with diarrhea and bug bites, expired visas and no money, and several other maladies that would have sent me home immediately.  She was also struggling to figure out her relationship with her boyfriend / fiance who proposes to her in El Salvador but seems to be lacking some of the earnest commitment she herself has. Her newfound Christianity further complicated her already-complex relationship with her otherwise typical Jewish American family.

I enjoyed this book and looked forward to reading it each night.  It's told somewhat non-linearly, not as a factual depiction of what happened, but as a reverie on her experiences.  In the later chapters, she also depicts her return to Central America on subsequent visits, inserting some space for reflection on her younger self.

WWW: Watch by Robert Sawyer

The second book in Sawyer's WWW trilogy, this one continued where WWW:Wake had left off.  After blind teenage Caitilin receives an experimental device to help her see, she figures out that this device has also given her access to a being that exists in the consciousness of the World Wide Web. As national security organizations start to notice strange patters in the Web, and as the consciousness grows in its sophistication, several ethical and practical issues start to arise.

Caitlin remains a likable protagonist, brave and down-to-earth.  Like the first book, this one still feels like a YA novel, although given the recent success of both the Twilight books and the Hunger Games books, that isn't a knock. 

Sometimes when I read trilogies, I can see how the author's style or point of view changed between writing the individual books.  For WWW, this is not the case - Sawyer seems to have had a strong idea of where the story was going and just continued more of the same - which is a good thing.  I found a great interview with Sawyer  that addresses some of his thoughts on the themes in the trilogy as well as whether it is a YA book or not.

WWW:Wonder is staring at me every day, waiting for me to experience the end of the triology.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Say You're One of Them by Uwem Akpan

This book broke my heart and I was not expecting it.  I've read African literature in the past (e.g., Half a Yellow Sun, Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight, Infidel, The In-Between World of Vikram Lall), but nothing prepared me for this book.

The five unrelated stories are all about children in Africa growing up under terribly sad circumstances.  For example, one is about children told they are going to be sent to their godparents, but actually being sold to traffickers in Gabon; one is about siblings watching their mixed Tutsi/Hutu family violently fall apart in Rwanda; one is about a family barely surviving in a shantytown in Kenya.  All of the stories are told from the children's point of view, but the magnitude of the situations ought to be squarely adult material.

One of the stories is just a few pages long, and two are 100+ pages.  The other two stories are of more of a traditional short-story length. 

I won't forget this book for a long time.

Distant Hours by Kate Morton

I liked this book.

The story starts with a woman named Edie in the 1990's.  Edie finds out that as a child, her mother was sent to live at Milderhurst Castle during WWII.  Though her mother is not forthcoming with details, Edie decides to track down more information.  What she finds is a mysterious family - elderly twin sisters who never married and their younger sister, never quite "right" after her fiance breaks off their engagement. 

The book alternates between the 1990's and the 1940's, crafting a complicated story around the three sisters and their relationships, glimpsed for a few years by Edie's mom and then later by Edie. The castle itself is somewhat of a character as well, richly described and harboring lots and lots of family secrets.  Nothing in the story is what it seems - the twin sisters are very different from each other and their motives in life are not revealed right away.  And the seminal moment in the story - the evening when the younger sister's fiance does not show for dinner - is extraordinarily suspenseful. 

The first two-thirds of the book were really good, but the juicy stuff is in the payoff.  A well-done homage to the great Gothic stories...

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest by Steig Larsson

I had put off reading this final book in the Larsson Millennium trilogy, knowing it would be the end of reading something special - that there wouldn't ever quite be another set of books like this.  On my recent trip to Puerto Rico, however, curiosity won out and I devoured it in just a few days.

This book continues to follow heroine Lisbeth Salander, her allies (like Mikael Blomkvist and the Millennium Magazine staff) and her enemies (Zalachenko, Niederman, and Teleborian, to name a few).  Details around secret government divisions are discovered, further making this a novel with a major political axe to grind.  More issues arise around freedom of press, as Millennium and other papers play a strong part in the storyline. Ultimately many loose ends are tied up, and I'd say justice is served.

This may be my favorite of the three books, just because it is very clever. Many of the characters are involved in plots to do all sorts of things, and it was fun to be a part of it unfolding as the reader.  The new characters that were introduced were well-crafted, and seeing the ones that I knew already was like reuniting with old friends.

Rumor has it that Larsson's partner has a manuscript for a fourth book and that Larsson may have planned on as many as 10 books in the series.  Wow.  Hopefully one day the estate will work out its problems and continue publishing his ideas.

The Paris Wife by Paula McLain

I read this book for my new book club, although unfortunately didn't attend the meeting for it at the last minute. I'm like the opposite of most book club members - I read the book but didn't attend.

The story is about Hadley Richardson, Ernest Hemingway's first wife, and her relationship with him during the years when they lived in Paris.  From the beginning of the book, it's obvious that their marriage will fall apart, but the exquisite detail that McLain describes of their courtship, relationship, and (mostly) happy times was delightful to read.  Hadley comes across as immature, striving to fit into an artsy Paris that wasn't natural for her - she finds herself hob-knobbing with Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein, for example, while she is mostly a caretaker, first of Hemingway, then of their child. 

I loved reading the background about what Hemingway was experiencing when he conceived Nick Adams and the events in his life that led to his writing The Sun Also Rises.  The Paris that McLain describes is fascinating and beautiful.  You don't have to know much about Hemingway to enjoy this book - in that way, it reminded me of Loving Frank.

When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguro

I really wanted to like this book.  I still think about Never Let Me Go, also by Ishiguro, and hoped for something I would like as much.  I understood that his books were all supposed to be different, but I had high hopes.

This story is about a boy named Christopher who grows up in Shanghai in the early 1900s.  When his parents mysteriously disappear during his childhood, he is sent to London where he grows up to become a detective.  As an adult he returns to Shanghai to try and find out what happened to his parents, his ultimate reason for becoming a detective.  The storyline was good, with enough interesting characters and plot twists to keep me interested.  Christopher is somewhat of an unreliable narrator - that or he himself doesn't know the difference sometimes between fact and fiction.

However, the telling of the story - the tone - was really not compelling.  I remember while reading Never Let Me Go that the acetic nature of the storytelling was eerie, and supported the story quite well.  In this case, that same tone, rather dry and unemotional, was entirely wrong for this story.  It ultimately ruined my experience of reading this book.

Monday, January 02, 2012

Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri


I really enjoyed this collection of short stories by the author of Interpreter of Maladies and The Namesake: A Novel. It's nice to start the year by reading a book I couldn't put down.

The phrase "unaccustomed earth" is from Hawthorne, referring to being somewhere unfamiliar. The stories are about people who are reconciling their Indian backgrounds and their modern lives. For example, the first story is about a woman whose moves to the West Coast with her husband and young son. Her father comes to visit for the first time since the death of her mother. A later story is about a young girl whose family becomes friendly with another Bengali transplant to Cambridge (MA), then deals with the cultural shock of his marrying an American girl.

The final three stories were a set of related stories about childhood friends who reunite in adulthood. The first is when they are children, the second is when they are college-ages, and the final story when they are adults. The stories were all compelling, many with unexpected twists.

Can't wait for Lahiri's next book. One for one in 2012 so far!

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Top Books of 2011

Happy New Year, Readers.

2011 brought lots of exciting changes.  I started a new job within Dell in February, which led to an extraordinary year of learning among a wonderful new set of people.  The startup for which Webster worked was bought over the summer and he is adjusting to working for a large company, but enjoying the challenge.  Webster and I went to Belize in February and Spain in August.  Lucy - well, c'mon, she's a dog.  But she's great. 

I read over 30 books this year.  Looking at the list, I see that only 6 of them were non-fiction, which is not what I would have estimated.  Also notable is how many of the books were set in a different time and place.  What is it I'm trying to escape? 

Here are my Top Ten favorites in alphabetical order:

Lots of people read and recommended Rebecca Skloot's The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.  It was an intersting story - a poor black woman with an aggressive form of cancer dies, and her cells are used for decades without her family's knowledge or approval.   What was most interesting, however, is neither the science nor the socio-economic circumstances, but the relationship that forms between the author and the family.  While completely anathema to pure journalistic values, it turned the book into more of a memoir, which I really enjoyed reading.

I'm still not sure I really know what Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann is about, but it was good.  It interspersed stories about several New Yorkers during the summer of 1974 with the story of Phillipe Petit's tightrope walk between the Twin Towers.  The writing was excellent and I was overwhelmed by how the characters' lives (at least ten different people) ultimately intersected. 
I read The Lotus Eaters by Tatjana Soli on a long weekend getaway to Toronto. It's a love story about a young American photographer in Vietnam durng the war, the older American she falls in love with, and his Vietnamese assistant.  It's also a strong commentary on what it means to chronicle a war.  I thought this was a near-perfect book - writing, plot, characters.  I still don't know why this didn't get more positive press.
 
Meredith A. recommended Major Pettigrew's Last Stand by Helen Simonson and it was a great read.  Not dissimilar in style to Alexander McCall Smith, this book was a fun story about a proper English gentleman who falls in love with a Pakastani neighbor, much to the chagrin of his materialistic son.  The situations in the book are simple, but it is the irony and tenderness with which the story is told that I liked the most.

Makers by Cory Doctorow is the most creative book I read this year.  I read it while we were in Belize and it kept me up late at night.  The story is set in the near future and is a wild ride through 3D printing, innovation, crowdsourcing and all sorts of other things.  The density of Doctorow's ideas was difficult to keep up with, but fun.  As a techie, I found it really amazing how Doctorow could take technical ideas and make them social ideas. 

When I picked up Our Kind of Traitor at the airport on a business trip, I wouldn't have expected it to land on my end-of-year list.  Sure, le Carre is a famous author in his genre, but I think of most spy books as fun airport reads and little else.  However, this one stayed with me all year: the way le Carre makes this story unfold is unlike any other airport book I've read.   The cover of my copy has an ambitious quote from the Globe and Mail: "Let me be specific, I think the man deserves the Nobel."  See for yourself.

Something about Outlander by Diana Gabaldon caught my eye in the bookstore.  When we went to Spain with Tyler and Jena in August it was the most perfect beach read.  The improbable story is about a woman who reunites with her husband in Scotland after WWII only to accidentally time travel back to 18th century Scotland and be accused of being a British spy.  I'll leave the rest of the 500+ narrative to the author, only to say that it's the perfect mix of trash and historical fiction.  (The first sequel of five more books - Dragonfly in Amber - was more of the same.)  
 
Snow Falling on Cedars by David Guterson was one of the first books I read in 2010.  I remember reading it and thinking, "if I like everything I read as much as this, it will be a good book year."  The novel is about a Japanese-American man accused of murder in a small town off Puget Sound.  It takes place in 1954, with the internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII still fresh in the memories of the townspeople.

State of Wonder was the book I was most excited to get my hands on in 2011, as Ann Patchett is one of my favorite authors.  This book was about a young woman sent into the Amazon by her pharmaceutical company to find a researcher who has been difficult to contact and a colleague who died under mysterious circumstances.  The descriptions of the setting were detailed and evocative, the characters were complex, and the plot was surprising. 

If I had to pick a favorite book this year - which I'm NOT doing - it might be Those Who Save Us by Jenna Blum.  At the very least it was a viscerally memorable book.  Narrated by the daughter of a woman who survived during WWII, this basic narrative is outlined on the book jacket: all Trudie knows of her early life is a photo of herself, her mother, and a Nazi officer that she finds hidden in her mother things.  It is the way the story unfolds, and the burden that children carry even when they don't know the entire truth, that grabbed me.  Thanks to Terry M. for putting this on my list several years ago.
 
And then these are the other books I really, really liked.

The Big Short, Michael Lewis' book on the current financial crisis, and The Big Switch, Nicholas Carr's comparison of the cloud computing revolution to the introduction of centrally made electricity, were two nonfiction books that both took strong points of view on current topics while explaining them in English.  Yes - I know what a credit default swap is.

The Given Day is a novel about Boston in 1918-1919, during the Policeman's strike.  Dennis Lehane, known more for his pop culture books like Gone Baby Gone and Mystic River, paints a vivid portrait of the city during that time, including race relations, union politics, and Babe Ruth.

The Passage by Justin Cronin fulfilled my post-apocolyptic quota for the year.  A whopping 784 pages of the world ending, the survivors figuring out what to do, and oh, yeah, epic battles with vampire-like glow sticks.  Great fun.

The book club I recently left read both Wench by Dolen Perkins-Valdez (historical fiction about slave women who traveled on vacations with their masters in the U.S. during the 1840's) and A Thousand Cuts by Simon Lelic (about a school shooting and bullying - in a few different ways).  I liked those books and miss that book club.

Well that is it for 2011.  Best wishes for a wonderful 2012, with lots of health, happiness, and, of course, great books to read.
Sheryl

Friday, December 30, 2011

Dragonfly in Amber by Diana Gabaldon


I really enjoyed Outlander and this is the second book in the series about a woman from the 1940's who time-travels back to 18th century Scotland.  This book starts twenty years later in the current time (the 1960's), when she visits Scotland with her daughter.  In this sequel, in the past, she and her husband Jamie travel to France to try to prevent a bloody revolution in Scotland. 

The book was a continuation of Outlander and I enjoyed it in a similar way.  While some of the fun of the first book was the novelty of the time travel and the story, the plot in this book is still compelling.  There was more historical information to keep track of in this book too.  Finally, I liked how this book also starts to play around with some of the metaphysical problems with time travel.

Looking forward to reading the next book in a few months.

Monday, December 26, 2011

In the Garden of Beasts by Erik Larson

Yuck.

This book was the first pick of a new book club I just joined. By the author of Devil in the White City, this book is about Ambassador Dodd, the American ambassador to Germany.

I guess the story of his being the ambassador is interesting enough. Considered by many to be underqualified, he moves his family to Germany in the 1930's, refusing many of the benefits in housing and transportation that are offered an ambassador. His daughter, estranged from her husband in the U.S., becomes well-known in German society and I can't describe her as anything less juicy than a hussy. She sleeps with Nazis, Fascists, and several notable writers, seemingly blind to the potential damange it could do to her father's career.

I really disliked the writing style: it felt like I was reading something really dry for school. Occassionally, Larson would foreshadow something very deliberately, but I never appreciated the payoff. I know his previous books were well-liked, but I'm not sure if I'd try them.

Boomerang by Michael Lewis

Generally speaking I like Michael Lewis and this book was pretty good. Mostly it was a chronicle of his visits to several countries with massive economic problems in 2011: Iceland, Greece, Germany, Ireland, and California. (OK, California is not a country but he covers San Jose and some surrounding towns with similar attention.) I think it started as a series for Vanity Fair. He covers each country in its own chapter, exploring the parts of each culture that contributed to their economic issues. Iceland's insular nature, Germany's quest for external perfection, Greece's friendly corruption - each of these qualities discussed using Lewis' personal experiences with people he meets there. Unlike many of his other books, he doesn't make any grand conclusions in this one. Rather, reading it is like getting a set of detailed emails from a really smart friend who is traveling the world to figure out what is happening in the world economy.

Sunday, December 04, 2011

Those Who Save Us by Jenna Blum

This book was excellent.

I've read a lot of Holocaust literature, starting in junior high school both as part of my Hebrew School curriculum as well as on my own.  I remember novels like When Hitler Stole the Pink Rabbit and Number the Stars, as well as memoirs by Frank, Frankl, and Weisel, among many others.  At some point as an adult I (guiltily) felt a little overwhelmed by how much about it I had read and stopped choosing these books. But in recent years I got a lot out of books like Sarah's Key and The Book Thief

When Terry recommended this a one of her top 11 books - ever- I bought it.  It had sat on my shelf until last week. And, wow - t was one of the most impactful things I've read in a long time.  It was heartbreaking and emotional and not a book I will forget for a long time.

As the book jacket explains, Trudy is a college professor who has grown up in Minnesota after surviving WWII in Germany as a child.  Her only knowledge of her father is a photo her mother Anna keeps hidden of the two of them with a man in a Nazi uniform.  I kind of thought that I could figure out what the story was going to be about, but in fact I was reasonably off-base.

Indeed some of the book takes place in Germany during the war, and the reader learns how Anna comes to have a relationship with a Nazi. But the circumstances are not what I expected.  The balance of the book, told in alternating chapters, takes place in current times, where Trudy is trying to understand her past through a research project.  She knows that she does not know the entire story...but Anna won't talk about it and Trudy has grown up knowing it is a missing piece of her history.

Part of what made this book so compelling was that the narration was unflinching.  Blum never used a metaphor, or ended a scene leaving the reader to imagine an atrocity.  It was also compelling because the characters were really good.  Neither Anna nor Trudy was expressive, but they were both characters I rooted for. 

Definitely recommended.

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides


Like many avid readers, I was a huge fan of Eugenides' Middlesex and anxiously awaited the arrival of this novel.  I enjoyed it, although not as much as I did Middlesex

The story is about a young woman named Madeleine, her boyfriend Leonard, and her platonic friend Mitchell.  The story follows them from their senior year at Brown University in the early 1980's  (and some flashbacks to earlier times) through their first few years after graduation.  Madeleine and Leonard meet in a class about literary criticism; the "marriage plot" in the title is an oft-returned-to basis for the classic novel that, the class suggests, is dead. After college, Mitchell goes to India to further explore his ideas around religion, while Madeleine and Leonard navigate post-college life together. 

I didn't know the book took place in Brown when I chose it - I picked it based on author alone. I was delighted to recognize the setting and to learn that Eugenides went there too.  His descriptions of the end of college were very well-done.  I so keenly remember the parties after college ended, and the friends who struggled in ways Madeleine and Leonard and Mitchell did.  This entire book was kind of what I had hoped Emperor's Children to be. 

And even thinking about the book as if I were not a Brown grad, I would have liked it.  Madeleine was a really well-constructed character, and it was hard to believe her author was male.  All the characters were well-developed, even some of the minor ones, like Madeleine's sister and her roommates. I also enjoyed reading about Mitchell's trip abroad, and appreciated Eugenides' description of Leonard's struggles with mental illness.

I am not sure everyone would like this book, but it did capture a very specific place and time; one I remember quite vividly.

Incidentally I caught an interview with Eugenides on NPR the other night, too.