Sunday, November 17, 2013

Don't Miss These Great Books!

So, even though I haven't been posting lately, it doesn't mean that I haven't been reading. Everytime I finish a book that I particularly like, I swear I'm going to take some time to write about it but the reality is that it never seems to happen.  These are books that I have really enjoyed for the past few months and would like to pass on to you.  Do not miss them!

Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter
Travel to Italy for this one.  Its about a young man who runs a small hotel on a tiny island town in Italy.  A famous film star comes to stay and sets the story in motion.  The author takes us back and forth between the original (1960's) visit and the present day as we find out about the visit and its consequences.  For all you artists, there's a wonderful set of paintings in a grotto that makes an appearance.  Magical. Liked this one far better than I expected to.



Bad Monkey by Carl Hiaasen
You can't pass a Hiaasen book by without a quick read.  His books are always fun and silly and well told. This one doesn't disappoint.  Strange characters, a pet monkey, a severed leg and a fishing boat.  What more can you ask for.  Also makes a great gift book because Hiaasen's characters are so approachable. Everyone likes a good laugh.



A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozecki
I wasn't sure what to expect from Ozecki this time.  I read one of her books years ago and liked it. Her's are always great stories that usually take on a world problem or societal issue.  The one I read was about the meat industry.  This one was not so cut and dried. This, her newest, was written up in a book magazine I subscribe to. It is a thoughtful and sometimes jarring look at Japan teen culture and the after affects of War. An American writer living off the coast of Washington, finds a plastic bag with a box of childhood mementos, a WWII kamikaze watch and a diary in it.  She thinks its trash that has made its way to America from Japan after the tsunami.  We follow her journey to find out about the girl, while reading the teenager's diary and learning of her troubling and difficult life in Japan.



The Interestings by Meg Worlitzer
I absolutely loved this book.  I was sorry that it had to end.  In the 1970's a group of teenagers meet at a summer camp for artistically gifted kids and become fast friends when they thought it not possible to do so.  We follow their lives through college, marriage and kids through to their fifties with all the twists and turns of relationships and success.  Its a magical book that, as a child of that era I could definitely relate to.  Everyone who became teenagers in the 70's, graduated college in the 80's and is in their fifties now should check this one out.



Where'd You Go Bernadette? by Maria Semple
Here's a quirky one.  I thought this was going to be a little light and fluffy, but in fact it was so not the case.  Bernadette lives in Seattle.  Her husband is a Microsoft wunderkind and her daughter, a gifted 7th grader. As a reward to her daughter, the family decides to take a trip to Antarctica, a place her daughter has asked to visit.  Bernadette is a funky, anti-establishment mom who disappears on the ship.  I loved her character and could totally understand and relate to her.  Anybody who thinks to outsource the help she needs to organize and run her life to a service in India is cool with me.  Funny, quirky, lovable and poignant.



Wednesday, August 14, 2013

In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex by Nathaniel Philbrick

Reading behavior is a funny thing. Some people read several books at one time or others only read mysteries or historical novels.  I have one friend that reads the ending right away and then works from the front and back, finally meeting in the middle to finish the book.  I tend to read in themes.  I read one book at a time, but I find myself reading book after book based on a common theme.  A few years ago I went on a sea voyage binge.  For about six months I read lots of sea voyage fiction.  It was really fun to learn about those early seamen (and women) who braved unbelievable odds and little knowledge of the earth to travel the world.  Somehow in my bingeing and bias against nonfiction, I missed In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick.  Boy am I glad I found it this spring.  What an adventure!

I've read Philbrick before (Mayflower) and found him really engaging and interesting (for a nonfiction writer), but this book was especially good.    In the Heart of the Sea is an account of the Whaleship Essex, a Nantucket whaleboat that was stove in by a rogue sperm whale in 1819 and sank in the South Pacific.  Its crew inhabited three lifeboats and survived, drifting on the open sea for over 90 days.  Its story is the one that inspired Melville's Moby Dick.  The story is told from the point of view of the ship's cabin boy who wrote a little known account of his adventures. Philbrick used his account as the basis for the book.  Its a harrowing tale of the whaling industry, survival and how people live with the consequences of their actions.

Philbrick is a Nantucket sailor himself and an obsessive researcher.  His breadth of knowledge on these subjects is amazing.  The detailed accounts of the Nantucket whaling industry and the inner workings of life on a whale boat were fascinating.  Coupled with the explanations of how the human body reacts to starvation and the psychological musings about why the participants acted as they did, Philbrick transports us into a story of cowardice and bravery, ego and intellect.  I am always intrigued by the human spirit and how it beats unbelievable odds to survive, especially 200 years ago when modern technology and scientific information was all but nonexistent.  The fact that these people were bobbing around the oceans of the world with little or no reliable navigation with little to live on for years at a time just boggles my mind.  Its amazing to me that anyone came home, with or without whale oil.  

As a career wildlife educator, I was leary of how the wholesale killing of our largest mammals would sit with me.  I surely wasn't anxious to read about the slaughter of these critically endangered species, and, yes, it was hard to imagine the process, but Philbrick was careful to tell the story of the whales as well.  I learned quite a bit about pre-whaling population numbers and behaviors and why sperm whales might behave as they do. Little is known about these reclusive animals today so the information that he was able to uncover was very interesting. 

As I thought about this post, it struck me that late summer is a time for one last beach book before life begins again in the fall and an sea adventure story is a great choice.  Usually I get bogged down in the factual details of nonfiction but this book read more like a novel and less like a text book. I had fun thinking about my friends who would enjoy it - those fishermen or sailors who would be intrigued by the tale as much as I was.  I know its a good nonfiction book if I keep prodding my husband and telling him what I'm learning.  Let's just say, his arm is sore.  

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Life after Life by Kate Atkinson

I have a friend who is always talking about the cosmic.  She's truly interested in the big questions...why are we here, have we been here before, what are we supposed to do while we are here?  Her perspective is always thought provoking, often enlightening, and always makes me stop and think about the big picture. Kate Atkinson's new book Life After Life is like that too.

Life After Life is a look at what happens when young Ursula Todd figures out that she has been reincarnated over and over during the course of her life.  She realizes that she can change her life events and those around her as she makes choices about her actions and life decisions each time she's reincarnated.  Set in England, in the years spanning Pre-World War II through the 1960's, the story takes Ursula from birth through old age and plays life events over and over as she changes her actions, therefore changing the outcomes. Interesting premise.  

I love Kate Atkinson.  I've written about her before.  She is a great storyteller, wry and fun to read. Her characters come to life and resonate with readers.  She describes settings and atmosphere so well that you really feel as though you are there.  She's one of the few writers that I will buy in hardback and I have never been disappointed with the results.   

This book was a bit of a challenge though.  I imagine Ms. Atkinson plotting her story on a big bulletin board memory map to figure out what happens and why.  The board would be filled with post it notes and index cards connected with string - like something out of a movie about obsessed murderers.  I imagine her process this way because that's the only way I can think that she could keep track of all the characters and plot lines in the book.  As I was reading it, I felt as if I had to do the same in order decipher how the story fit together.  About midway through, I had gotten so turned around that I almost went back and started over, but then decided to just go with it and let it play out.  While the timeline of events and how her reincarnation worked doesn't totally become clear, I did get the sense of how Ursula's life could take many different turns depending on the choices she made at critical junctures.  It made me think back about how my life would be different if I had made different choices.  It got really interesting when Ursula became aware of her past lives and began to make those choices consciously in order to avoid danger for her and her family.  What would you change if you knew in hindsight how your life would change given your actions?  What would you avoid?  How would you position yourself to influence the future?  

Its because of these thought provoking questions that I think this book will be popular with book groups. Atkinson is posing a pretty cosmic question with this book and is challenging her readers to think, telling a good story all the while.  Its also why my friend should read it.  She'd enjoy the mental gymnastics it takes to think about such a thing.  And while its a little murky on the why, when and how, I enjoyed it too.  



If you want to think more about this and other cosmic subjects...meaning of life, why are we here sort of stuff, then check out my friend's blog.  meaningofstrife.wordpress.com 


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Phantom by Jo Nesbo

Like mysteries and crime stories?  Don't miss Phantom by Jo Nesbo.  He's done it again, a wonderfully gritty, well crafted mystery with terrible bad guys and a troubled but lovable detective.  This time he's taking on the international drug trade, the Russian mob and addiction in its most flagrant form. 

Nesbo is a lot of fun to read, but not for the faint of heart.  I've reviewed his work before: check out The Snowman and The Leopard here.  This, his newest installment of the Harry Hole series is just as good.  I always give his books to my husband who is a Nesbo convert.  He devours them in about 48 hours and then passes them on.  Whether you are in need of a gritty and gruesome Norway mind vacation or a chance to flex your deduction muscles, you won't be disappointed.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro

Its not that often that you come across a book that is just fun to read.  Its interesting and well told, doesn't require changing your mind about anything, you are transported someplace else, and there's no serious violence or controversy to make you cringe.  Its just a great story told by a talented author.  The Art Forger is just that book.

B.A. Shapiro lands us in the cut throat world of the high end art business where talent is king and ego is the name of the game.  We follow Claire, a young struggling artist who has been wronged by the gallery set and is asked  by an influential owner to copy a notorious painting for good money and a one woman show at his Boston gallery.  The painting was one of the 13 stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990 in a now infamous and unsolved case where the brazen thieves dressed as police officers broke into the museum in the middle of the night, tied up the guards  and stole $500 million in paintings.  Among the paintings was a Vermeer, two Rembrandts, five Degas drawings, and a Manet.  Claire, who has been copying paintings for an online copy house, has become quite good at copying Degas, and is asked to copy his After the Bath II.  Aiden, the gallery owner assures her that there is no way for her to get in trouble, as he is poised to sell the copy to one of his Mideastern collectors and will return the original to the Gardner.  What follows is an intricate story of art and forgery, complete with detailed painting techniques, dusty archives, secret rooms and the FBI.

What makes this book so much fun is the details.  The story is well crafted and interesting.  Shapiro has really done her homework and understands Claire's world of pigments, chemicals, collectors and ambition.  She has obviously studied the processes that forgers use to copy great old works of art and how they negotiate the art world to be successful.  She certainly knows a whole lot about Degas and his painting techniques, Isabella Gardner and her collection, and the heist that remains perhaps the most famous unsolved art theft in history.  All that detail supports a great story with a likable but somewhat naive character who finds herself plopped right in the middle of a dark and dangerous world of international art forgery.

This book could have been light and trite had a different author had the helm.  I am intrigued with books about art and artists. I've read quite a few, and many come off as simplistic; the starving artist, the powerful gallery owner and the bad guys who are always on the fringes of any market that deals in millions. Without the detail and the insider's view into a mostly closed and interesting world, the story could have been just another art book, but in fact Shapiro made it believable.  She is deft at creating complicated characters that move in unexpected ways. Plot twists engendered great suspense with a big payoff in the end.  Most art books are written about the New York City Art world.  I think an unintended consequence of writing about the Gardner heist is that, for once we're reading about Boston, a new twist on an old theme.

Coincidentally, as I was beginning to read The Art Forger, the news came out that the FBI thinks that they have identified the thieves in the real Gardner Museum heist.  While they won't reveal names at this point, it is thought that they have ties to Whitey Bulger and Boston Irish mob.  Even having identified the criminals, they have yet to actually recover any of the stolen paintings. Thirteen years later, the case is still considered unsolved.

I wouldn't say that The Art Forger was a deep and meaningful novel.  It didn't change my life or tell the great American story, but it did engross and entertain me for a few days.  When I finished it, I turned to my husband and said "Boy was that fun!".  If you're reading for entertainment, then what better way to feel when you read the last page.  Bravo Ms. Shapiro!

Monday, March 25, 2013

Flight Behavior by Barbara Kingsolver

True Confessions:  I love Barbara Kingsolver.  I love her stories, her characters and her subject matter.  I buy her books in hard copy when they are first released.  Her novel "The Poisonwood Bible" is among my top ten books of all time.  I even loved "Animal, Vegetable, Miracle", her collection of essays about the joys of eating close to home and supporting local farms.  I love Barbara Kingsolver.  With that in mind, I'd like to have loved her newest novel, "Flight Behavior" but I really didn't.

When I bought the book I was so excited to read it.  Its about a young mother in the mountains of Virginia, who stumbles upon an environmental disaster waiting to happen.  Monarch butterflies that usually famously overwinter in the mountains of Mexico, suddenly change their roosting place and move to the Virginian mountains instead.  Scientists gather in a race against the weather to find out why they have moved, sure that snow and freezing temperatures will kill off what they believe is the entirety of the North American monarch population before they can breed and start their migration back in the spring.  The small town where the woman lives is turned upside down as the media, the scientific community, and a host of monarch spectators descend upon the mountain.  Enter a mysterious and exotic scientist, in laws from hell and a sweet but simple best friend, and the story takes off.  The woman is transformed by the butterfly happening and soon finds herself at a crossroads in her life.  Those of you who know me would immediately think that I'd have this book perched on the top of the pile of books eagerly waiting the opportunity to read it.  But in fact it was a chore to finish.

Kingsolver likes to explore social issues in her novels; Native American parentage, missionaries in indigineous culture, environmental and political issues to name a few.  She is outspoken about social change and for that I applaud her.  She has a science background and her husband is a biologist by trade, so environmental issues like climate change are no great stretch for her.  But here's where it went wrong for me.

Flight Behavior is pedantic and preachy.  Her characters are cutouts of real people and their story just doesn't ring true for me.  I felt like Kingsolver took a speech that she or her husband gave about climate change, with key points and issues, and crafted characters to say her words and illustrate the points.  She hit every one. Her characters are stereotypical and their words sound as if they are parroting what the scientific community is telling us about the issue. Not that the message doesn't need to be told, but I would expect a more creative treatment; one with more finesse than what Kingsolver gave us.  In the telling of the story, the local mountain folks are painted as dumb hicks from the back country, an (I'm sure) unintended consequence of the stark contrast between locals and the scientific elite. Frankly, her portrayal of these people was depressing and sad.  Reading it each night proved to be a downer, not an interesting and enlightening experience.

Now, for the record, I am an environmental education professional in my real life, so I have heard the climate change rhetoric for years.  I know the key points and have taught about the issue for the better part of 30 years in one form or another.  So maybe reading this book felt a little like a bus man's holiday for me, but I was saddened to think about those that don't believe and needed to hear the issue spelled out, because I think they got a school house lesson thinly veiled as a novel.  Even the end was not as satisfying as it could have been.  I'm not sure that this approach is one that will entertain people and take them on a ride that will help them understand and change their views, but will give them the feeling of being hit over the head with a two by four until they get it.

Come on Barbara, teach if you want, but don't put away your beautiful storytelling skills while you do it.  They are what engender more understanding than a lecture.  You're better than that.

Friday, March 8, 2013

Someone Knows My Name by Lawrence Hill


I was going to write about another book today, but when I sat down to do it, I couldn't remember the title, just that I didn't like it much.  So I decided that it wasn't really worth writing about if I couldn't even remember the title not 3 weeks after I finished it. 

Instead I wanted to tell you about another book that I read a few weekends ago.  Someone Knows My Name is an epic tale of Aminata, a young African girl who is kidnapped from her village in 1757 and sold into the US slave trade.  She survives the grueling trip aboard a slave ship to be sold onto a South Carolina indigo plantation.  Eventually she is bought by an indigo inspector who takes her to New York City where she eventually escapes and hooks up with abolitionists who take her to Nova Scotia, Sierra Leone and eventually to England to testify in Parliament against slavery. 

It’s a gripping tale.  I started it on Saturday morning and by about 1:00 that day I was already to page 104.  I didn't want to put it down.  Aminata’s life is interesting and action packed and tragic and reads a little like an overview illustration of the slave trade and practices that were so abundant in the 18th and early 19th centuries.  It was a topical book to read during February when we celebrate Black History Month. 

The story is simply written and well drawn so it moves and reads easily.  In fact if not for the blatant violence and somewhat lurid sexual overtones, it might read a little like a Young Adult novel. Imagine “Roots For Girls”.  It was a fun read, something to lose yourself in on a cold rainy weekend.  Even with all the history I've learned and the historical fiction I've read, I was introduced to some new parts of the slave story and gained a new insight on what that journey would have been like for a young woman. 

After the Revolutionary War, the British Government offered those black people who fought or supported their side, the opportunity for freedom and a new start in Nova Scotia.  Runaway slaves and freed blacks were registered in the Book of Negroes, a registry of sympathizers and, with the promise of land ownership, were systematically sent by ship up the coast to Nova Scotia to start over.  Of course the promises were never really fulfilled and the land and climate was such that farming was virtually impossible, so many came back or moved elsewhere.  A group of British abolitionists convinced some of those who were disillusioned to travel back to Africa and begin a colony in Freetown Sierra Leone, right in the backyard of the center of the slave trade.  Its not hard to imagine why that wasn’t such a good idea.  Aminata’s life chronicles these footnotes of history and gives a voice to those who made these amazing journeys. 

My only complaint with the novel was that Aminata’s story is a little coincidental. Some reviewers likened her character to an 18th century Oprah.  She’s just a little too talented and fortunate.  She reads and writes, can translate two African languages, is a talented midwife and healer, speaks well in public, can set type and edit, keep books and write law and survives four long ocean voyages. She even is the scribe for the Book of Negroes.  There’s really nothing she can’t do.  But then again, her story is meant to be extraordinary. 

What struck me as brilliance is the level of detail with which Lawrence Hill writes Aminata’s story.  He must have employed an army of researchers to fact check every detail that lends the color and atmosphere to the book.  He really knows his stuff.  Son of two Canadian civil rights activists, Hill has the perspective and understanding of his subject matter that comes from being around it his whole life.  He is a talented storyteller and understands how to hook a reader and keep them interested throughout the whole book while learning something along the way.

So on these cold and rainy March weekends, give yourself a treat and pick up Someone Knows My Name.  Light a fire in the fireplace, curl up on the couch with some snacks and a warm drink and dig in.  You won’t be sorry you did.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Don't Miss Laura Lippman

The Most Dangerous Thing

by Laura Lippman

Its appropriate that, the week that the Baltimore Ravens will take the field at the Super Bowl, I should write about a true daughter of Baltimore, Laura Lippman. Over the weekend, I finished one of her recent books, The Most Dangerous Thing and realized that I'd never written about her.  She's one of my favorites.

Lippman started her career as a journalist at the Baltimore Sun  and began writing crime novels while she worked there.  I started reading her mysteries years ago.  They are good stories, set in Baltimore with a female hero and lots of plot twists and character.  I have enjoyed these books and liked the way she writes. If you haven't tried them, you should.  Then in 2003, Ms. Lippman began writing stand alone books - ones not in the Tess series - and that's when she really started to shine for me.

The Most Dangerous Thing is about a group of preteens who become fast friends and roam the vast wooded park near their home in Dickeyville, the Baltimore neighborhood where Lippman grew up.  As they approach high school, the kids are part of an event that becomes the secret that changes their lives and those of their parents.  Fast forward to present day when the kids are now in their 40's and one of them is killed in a car wreck (possible suicide) and they all meet again at the funeral.  Eventually the story of that fateful night unfolds.  The story and its characters keeps you engaged and Lippman creates a tension and suspense that keeps you reading and makes your stomach hurt at the same time.

Instead of telling the story in a linear fashion, Lippman tells it from different points of view. First the kids, both young and middle aged, then the parents, both in flashback and present day. In this format, the reader can see how the story unfolded in the way that it did, with innocent kids and self absorbed, closed mouthed parents.   Lippman is a master of character who understands the way people think and how their life changes in different stages.  You really understand their motivations, their sorrows and their reasons for acting the way they do.  She breathes life into the story and gives insight into how the events of the novel proceed.  Since the novel is set in 1979 and 1980, it helped me consider those women of my parent's age who had teenagers on the cusp of the equal rights movement while they came of age without the benefits that their daughters enjoyed.  An interesting perspective on my mother and her friends and sets up a dynamic that makes me think of my relationship to my own preteen daughter.

Baltimore is a weird place.  For those of you who don't know it well, it is a dichotomy of old world class and campy funky kitsch. Its gritty and cultured at the same time. Think a mixture of "Homicide Life on the Streets", "Hairspray" and "Accidental Tourist" rolled into one.  People who live there love their town, their sports teams and their landscape.   One of the fun parts of the novel for me is that Ms. Lippman is obsessive about placing her characters in Baltimore.  She names real streets, restaurants, landmarks and places them in historical context.  Full disclosure here - My husband is from Baltimore and so I've spent some time there.  His family still lives there and I hear a lot about the places and events that happen there.

So, as you settle in this weekend to get ready to watch the Ravens beat the 49ners, you can augment your Super Bowl experience by delving into the one of Laura Lippman's books to steep yourself in the world of Baltimore.  Snuggle up, have a beer and some cheese dip while you read and you might even be able to skip the game.

Monday, January 14, 2013

Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

One of 2012's "it" books was Gone Girl, by Gillian Flynn. I saw a lot of folks reading it around the pool and at the beach.  I put it on my hold list at the library and found that I was like 56th in line. Definitely a popular book.

A few weeks ago, I saw the author interviewed on Face the Nation and decided to go ahead and take the plunge.  The story was touted as "gripping" and "a thriller" and she was an interesting interviewee.  The premise for the book was vague though, and now I see why.

Don't get me wrong, its a good book; it keeps your interest and you want to find out what happens in the end. Its a story about a young couple who move from New York City to Missouri to take care of the husband's ailing father. One day he comes home to a wrecked living room and a missing wife.  He calls the cops and an intricate police investigation begins.  The husband is put directly in the police cross hairs as the missing person case morphs into a murder investigation.  

Pretty straightforward, one would think.  However, the story takes many twists and turns, unveiling the couple's dark past and a plethora of really nasty dysfunctions that make The Real Housewives look like a bunch of June Cleavers.  

I like mysteries, especially ones with surprises and this didn't disappoint.  The story followed the husband and wife, not the traditional police detective, and was more about their relationship than the investigation.  It was well written and plotted.  But about two thirds of the way through the book. I realized that I really hated both of the main characters.  They were miserable!  Both of them had mountains of emotional baggage and their marriage was built on lies and misdeeds.  I didn't care if they made it through the story.  I would have been just as happy if they offed each other and therefore were unable to breed successfully. The only thing I cared about was that they didn't bring children into such a toxic environment.

In the end, I got to wondering.  What makes this book so popular?  Why did it gain such popularity that it was added to almost all of the "Best of 2012" lists?  What does this say about our society?  I would venture to say that all popular mysteries investigate the depravity of our society - I have no problem with that. A voyeuristic glimpse into the dark side of suburbia can be fun. This seemed different because it was depraved, but within everyday limits and the outcome did not provide a good verses evil closure, but a evil verses pathetic one. Miserable!  Had the premise been more illustrative, I think I would have stayed away.

Maybe that's the trick that Ms. Flynn's publisher played on us. They hooked us with a vague story line, when once started, was gripping enough to be hard to put down, even though you wanted to.  Kind of like a train wreck, you didn't want to look, but you couldn't look away.  In this case, the train wrecked, and those that walked away were not the ones we care about.

Monday, January 7, 2013

Book Addict's Best Books of 2012

One of my first posts on this blog was my recap of the best books of 2011.  Since it was the most popular post of the year, it is evident that it should become an annual event.  Every year, I keep a log of how many books I read and, on a very rudimentary scale, I rate the ones I liked the best.  By the way, if you don't keep track of your reading obsession, you might try it this year. Its really helpful when you're buying gifts or can't remember the name of a book in conversation and its fun to look back and remember all the books that you read.  So this year, I read 33 books, mostly fiction plus one classic, one story collection and two memoirs.  Here are my top rated books for the year.

Nightwoods by Charles Frazier

This is about a woman living a solitary existence in the mountains of North Carolina when she is visited by social services and asked to raise her murdered sister's twins.  Set in the early 60's this book is reminiscent of a time long gone before internet and mass media when people lived more simply.  Frazier knows his mountains and the people who live there and he weaves a beautiful story that gives us a glimpse inside their lives.  Reviewed in April




Running the Rift by Naomi Beneron

A gripping and beautiful story about war torn Rwanda - not what you'd expect. About a young man who is training as an Olympic long distance runner.  Its about his coming of age in a world full of chaos, and the political hopes that are placed squarely on his shoulders.  I thought I'd hate the story about the 1996 fratricidal war in Rwanda, but in fact I loved it, especially as it was a summer Olympic year.  It made me thoughtfully consider the athletes from small African countries and what they went through to get to London.  Quite possibly the best read of 2012.  Don't miss it.  Reviewed in May


In One Person by John Irving

John Irving always gets my vote.  He's talented and interesting and ALWAYS takes his readers places that they never thought they'd go.  This one is no exception.  A gorgeous book about sexuality of all kinds.  Irving allows us to follow a bisexual man through his life from adolescence through adulthood, full of quirky characters, poignant plot lines and an exploration of what tolerance really means. I've read all of Irving's work and loved them all.  Reviewed in June




The Dog Stars by Peter Heller

Here's an unexpected one.  The Dog Stars is a post apocolyptic story set in the near future after a terrible epidemic has swept through the world, killing most of the people.  I know, I see the words "post apocolyptic" and my eyes glaze over, but this was one wonderful read.  We follow an airplane pilot and his dog as they search for other survivors and begin to start living with compassion and love again.  Thought I'd hate it, but couldn't believe how much I liked it.  Action packed, sad, happy and hopeful all at once.



The Marriage Plot by Jeffery Eugenides

Based on Victorian romance novels, the story is about a modern day love triangle.  Its an uber character study, rich with detail and voice.  The story follows Madeline, Mitchell and Leonard from college days through young marriage as they grow up, graduate, marry and find out who they really are.  Since I read it, I have heard that some people loved this one and some hated it.  I happen to be in the first category.  Reviewed in February




The Book of Joe by Jonathon Tropper

I love when I get introduced to a new author.  This year, I started reading Tropper, a sarcastic and funny author who writes like many of us think.  This one is about a young writer who writes a scathing book about the small hometown he has escaped from.  The problem is that he has to go back and face the town as he takes care of his ailing father. A great book about guys and friendships, I started my husband reading Tropper and he likes him too.  Reviewed in June



Half Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan

Jazz in Berlin on the eve of World War II.  African American musicians who go to Europe to escape the American Jim Crow laws get caught up in the racism of Nazi Germany.  Its a book about friendship and forgiveness and age.  This is one of the hidden jewels of the year, a gripping novel about this little known substory of World War II.  Really interesting characters and something about the war that I didn't know.  I have recommended it to my book group this year.  I think we'll have lots to talk about.


So there you have it.  The List of 2012.   

I hope you find something you haven't read and or be reminded of something you wanted to read all along.  Happy New Year!


Thursday, January 3, 2013

The Future of Book Addict

When I started this blog a year ago, it was a great experiment.  I told myself I'd blog for a year and see what happened.  Honestly, I didn't know what to expect, but hoped that I'd be able to interact with people about one of my great passions in life.  A year later, I look back and reflect, not sure how to proceed in 2013.

I started out strong and initially enjoyed the experience of reading and thinking about the books in a way that I could write about.  I looked for meaning in my books and thought about them in interesting and sometimes new ways.  I liked the idea of talking to people about the books I love.  Initially it was fun to watch the follower count grow and get some comments.

But by fall, my interest began to wain.  Sometimes I found that I didn't have much to say about a book.  It was ok, some people might like it, but I didn't have much to report.  Maybe it was just a cookie bookie, a filler book to cleanse my pallet from a more difficult read, or maybe it was really straight forward and didn't lend itself to discussion all that well.  I like letting others know about a fun read or a great author, but sometimes I read the same author several books in a row and don't have much new to say. I also found that I read differently - more publicly when I knew I had to blog about it.  I found myself choosing books with more awareness to what my readers might like or changing genres so that I wasn't telling about the same kind of books each time.  Frankly it started to feel more like work and not so much like fun so I quit blogging for a while.  I felt like I was writing an assignment out there that nobody read or was much interested in.

Well, now its a year later and I'm trying to decide what to do about this blog.  Do I continue or do I shut it down?  My audience is small, I'd like it to be bigger. I sort of thought it might take on a life of its own...it hasn't.  Do I still want to review the books I read, or would it be better to fade off into the blogisphere.

I hadn't looked at the blog for a while, and so today I decided to check and see what was happening there.  Surprisingly I had some page views today, As I look back at what I've read, its fun to see what I have written about and remember how excited I was to review.  Several of my friends mentioned the blog over the Holidays and said how much they like it and have read an unexpected jewel because of it. So with trepidation, I think I will continue....with some changes.

This year, I won't be assigning myself to writing about every book I read, but the ones that are particularly good, bad or thought provoking.  The reviews won't be as long unless they need to be, and may not include a complete plot summary - gets boring and book report-y.  You will still get my unvarnished opinion, and I still will review books that I hated as well as those that I liked.  The point is to help you find some great reads you might not know about and save you from some bad ones.

Finally dear reader, Some of this depends on you.  Writing without feedback is really hard and not particularly rewarding.  If you agree (or don't agree) with what I've written, please let me know.  Instigating discussion was a big part of my mission here, and with a few exceptions, there hasn't been much.  If you have any suggestions or ideas about how to make the blog better, let me know too.  I'm new to this, and am not sure how to get the word out better.  If you'd like to hear more about a particular subject or kind of book or if you want to suggest a book, let me know. Spread the word.  The more people we have here the better.  Invite your book group members, friends and other bookies.  Let's see what we can do together.

Now Let's ring in 2013 and see what reading adventures are in store for us.  Happy New Year!