sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I read this several months ago, after seeing the Runaways movie, and I am writing it up now so that I can add the link to my recently read books. Since I already reviewed the movie, I'll focus on the things in the book that were not in the movie:

First of all, I was very relieved to get to the end of the book and find that it is the expanded version of Cherie Curie's 1989 co-written YA memoir (with Philip Shusterman! I love him!), since if there had been an even darker version of this memoir floating around, I'd have been worried. XD; This book already has Curie's rape at the hands of her sister's BF before joining the Runaways, "Kim's Sex Education Class," records of her many experiences with downers and uppers, that time she was kidnapped, raped and tortured by an insane fan[1], and oh yeah, her crack cocaine addiction. -_-

Read more... )

Final note. R wanted to know whether Cherie admits to a sexual relationship with Joan Jett in the book. The closest she comes is in a paragraph about a third of the way through, when she says there was a "sexual attraction" and they had "many close moments that leave me quaking to this day". XD; And, in the meantime, Joan Jett's introduction to the book is surprisingly dry, reading more like a letter of recommendation than an emotional reconnection. But possibly that's just because Joan Jett is an undramatic person, unlike Cherie Curie.

On the other hand, R was somewhat mollified to hear that Joan Jett's business partner, Kenny Laguna, was the driving force behind the legal battle to obtain royalty rights for the members of the Runaways. She was bummed out that Joan had shacked up with a guy, but if Kenny is a Runaways fan, that makes it a bit better.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
This novel, on the other hand, doesn't show its seams at all - even though (reading the reviews) it was originally published as a series of short stories.

About a Jewish family, told from various POVs. I guessed that the younger son was gay and had slept with his boss, and he was (and had!). However, he eventually finds more happiness by moving to England, marrying a sensible woman who enjoys his nervousness, and becoming an eccentric landowner.

Throughout the story, Ed (the older brother) is the least sympathetic family member, but he eventually becomes sympathetic by... being the adult? Having the most stable family life? Being the person that the mother can move back to in her old age, and the eccentric childless couple can come to visit? In which case, does he become sympathetic because of his wife?

....And because of his work (writing about the basis for peace in the Middle East), and because he mellows out in his old age.

The book is sort of like The Documents in the Case in that it opens from a perspective (Rose's) that is in some ways the most narrow, and has the least in common with the other perspectives. I like Rose though. She is elderly and addicted to painkillers, which is a combination that occurs way more often in real life than it does in fiction, I think.

Overall, the book is not quite as sympathetic towards its characters as Kaaterskill Falls, which was a book that managed to find the beauty in even the most hidebound Orthodox person. The two really unsympathetic characters in this story are Karen, the postdoc who won't marry a Jewish boy... and Ed's oldest daughter, the medical student who turns ultra-Orthodox. :p

There is a chapter towards the end where Allegra Goodman recounts a Seder - ALL of a Seder, including who came, what they said, how they said it, and what they ate afterward. I thought this was actually pretty interesting, because every Jewish family does the Seder differently, so it was interesting to see how theirs was like mine, and how it was different. I wonder if this section is as interesting to people who aren't Jewish.

One final note )

I took Naomi Novik's new book out from the library! I heard it wasn't as good as the other books - that it is a bridge book - but I am going to read hoping that it will meet my lowered expectations. I also took out another Carol Goodman book (The Night Villa), and another Allegra Goodman book (Paradise Park). Michael Lewis' new book (The Big Short) is on backorder.

If you would like to see any of my other recently read books reviewed here, please let me know.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I also picked up "Lake of Dead Languages" on Tin's recommendation, but after a couple chapters I decided to read the book in the teaser chapter at end of the book, instead. This was "The Ghost Orchid."

I thought, based on the first chapter, that this was going to be a story about creative writing types living at an artists' retreat being snobby towards each other. I figured that Carol Goodman would be able to "write what she knew" and show what it is like to live in creativewritingland - the world of "MFA programs and writers' retreats." And in a way, the book is about this. But it is also a supernatural romance novel of exactly the kind that Bethesda looks down on Ellis for writing. XD

The conceit of the story is that everyone living at the retreat - three writers, a poet, and a landscape architect - is inspired by either Aurora (wife of a lumber magnate, and the person who founded the retreat in the 1800s), or the spiritualist who died under mysterious circumstances after a seance to revive Aurora's dead children. A chapter set in the present day, about Ellis writing her historical mystery, is proceeded by a chapter set in the 1800s, about the events leading up to and following Corinth's death.

At first I thought that these events were meant to *be* Ellis' novel, as she was writing it - especially because the first such chapter is not very well written, ahaha - but the further the novel goes, the more the two sets of events don't quite line up - for instance, something is revealed in the past but it's not shown how Ellis, in the present, would have found out about it. On reflection, the 19th century parts are probably supposed to either be what actually happened, or Ellis' book after she has finished with it sometime after the novel ends. Which means that the first chapter of her book is not badly written on purpose, alas.

...Or perhaps it was badly written on purpose, but Carol Goodman didn't bother to be absolutely internally consistent with her story. :p On the whole, I enjoyed this book. The infighting among writers carries the story in the beginning, the "twists" and backstory keep you reading in the middle, and by the end of the novel, the supernatural elements have gotten so crazy that you've forgotten about the minor problems of the first two parts. XD. However, I wished I'd kept better notes as the story went along, because this is a novel that shows its seams. I'm pretty sure that the plot twists are surprising, not just because they are unexpected, but also because there were a lot of false hints dropped, for instance. XD But, on the whole, the story is interesting enough to be worth reading anyway.

Here's my beginning-novel complaint:

Nitpicking Part One )

Here's my middle-of-the-novel complaint:

Nitpicking Part Two )

And here's what I thought by the end:

No spoilers! )

What else can be said about this book? Well, it is full of Indians, for one thing. XD The main character and another writer are part-Indian, the 19th centurry spiritualist Corinth is half-Indian but feels much closer to her (Indian) mother, there are tons of pregnant Indian ghosts said to be running around, and Wanda, the maid, is a full Indian. There are also lots of references to (living!) Indian communities. I don't know enough tribal lore to know whether these portrayals are respectful, but the lack of erasure was nice.

[personal profile] ayalesca might appreciate the bitter - but charming! - one-time genius WASP writer who is wasting his talent, after a stunning debut novel about his mean grandfather, bumming around smoking pot and pretending to write. :p
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
I liked that this one was set in modern - almost - England, and that there was no attempt to localize for the American middle school audience, so you get super British vocabulary like "roundabout" for merry-go-round and "bouncy castle" for those blow-up things at carnivals that the kids jump around inside. (Although yesterday I saw an ad for a children's birthday party magician that used the same term, so maybe that's just what they're called.)

However, I don't know if I can get over SPOILER the middle-aged man (with white hair!) proposing marriage to the recent college graduate who works for him, after previously considering same with his research assistant, thing long enough to give this a fair review. ^^

But I will try! WARNING: Severe spoilers are whited out but some details that do not affect the plot - but do give away character development arcs - are revealed )

This is a total tangent, and not at all related to the rest of the review, but I was very excited to see an explanation of the "learning hockey stick" in this book. This is a thing R and a friend of hers have talked about, where you put in effort and don't see any results... until suddenly, after a long time, you do. Anyway, I was amazed when R's friend immediately knew what she was talking about with this because it was an unknown concept to me - but maybe not such an unknown concept to others, haha.

I heard there's a new Temeraire book out?
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
Contains answers to: Clay, Kara, and Bell.

Clay )
Kara )
Bell )
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
No more book reviews until my Statistics class ends in mid-July, because the only book I should be reading between now and then is my textbook :(

However, here is a movie review:

Children of God )

I'm taking questions for R, since some of you said you were curious. First up: "things you think we should know," c/o [personal profile] bell: Read more... )

Questions here, or you can ask them in comments to this post.

Recently

Jun. 7th, 2010 12:34 pm
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)
The week before last, [personal profile] tarigwaemir was in town and I brought up the possibility of restarting [profile] bibliophages on Dreamwidth -- funnily enough, nearly everyone who was involved with that community is over here. She gave her blessing, so I'll probably start direct-messaging the old members soon, to see what the interest level is like and to collect ideas for the restart. Getting the community to work is mostly a matter of - as the mod - "matching" and then bettering the efforts of the members -- kind of like the NY Philharmonic Board of Directors agreeing to match the first $750,000 of raised donations. ^^;

The weekend before last, I went up to Montreal for my brother's graduation & hung out with [personal profile] petronia & met [profile] jokersama and [personal profile] calintz. We broke the ice over delicious, delicious food, but the highlight of the trip was probably on the third day when Puu and Sabina traded gossip about musicians while Sakkit and I grew gradually more quiet. XD; I don't know how Sakkit feels about it, but I was definitely entertained.

Puu and Sakkit are doctors not night owls! Next time I will try to remember this sooner, before dragging them over to look at a dessert menu at 10pm, when we're all full anyway.

R showed me this: Korean madness! In Korea they put popular internet memes on television (the ultimate in low-cost programming!) so that is what is happening here. Actually, this one was popular enough that it was turned into a series: a competition to find the best humorous karaoke by high school girls. I'm not sure whether the original pair won or not. The people looking unamused in the reaction shots are the original artists.

One more youtube find: My Date with Magibon. It's an obvious joke, but someone had to do it. XD; Would be better without the totally unnecessary freak-out at the end, though.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)

Don't read Tao Lin before bed. Repeat after me! Don't read Tao Lin before bed. Though you know, (re)reading Ellen's sections (and stopping when her nice but clueless but nice Mom dies in a plane crash) doesn't get at your brain in quite the same way that (re)reading Andrew's sections does. Ellen's narration is fragmented in its own way but she is trying harder to really capture her experiences using her full vocabulary. Andrew's thoughts are repetitive and distilled.

I do think that even in Ellen's sections, you see her attempts to be truthful and clear-sighted occasionally interrupted by kinds of repetitions and themes you find in Andrew's sections, a kind of premonition of what's to come. (Or alternately the author was just feeling particularly exhausted and uninspired on those days, but made himself push through, retreating to simple sentences and absurd events until the feeling went away.)

My fuller, more critical review of the book is here.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)


Thoughts on the last section of The Omnivore's Dilemma:

It is, as R promised, hilarious. Pollan starts cooking on Tuesday! For dinner on Saturday! And then he worries that his dinner won't be good enough! (Oh noes! The pie is burnt! That means my dinner is ruined!)

Also, take a look at what Pollan does for this dinner:
1. Learns to shoot a gun so he can hunt wild boar.
2. Gets up at 4:30 in the morning so he can beat other mushroom enthusiasts to a recently cleared (burnt) pine forest.
4. Goes abalone fishing in dangerous and freezing tidal waters wearing an ill-fitting wetsuit.
5. Harvests fava beans - which must be shelled, washed, then shelled again, and then washed again - and lettuces from his garden.
6. Scours his neighborhood for cherries for pie, herbs for seasoning, and yeast (!!) for bread.
7. Comments that gathered meals are not practical and are only for "sometimes," as a ritual to remind ourselves of where our food comes from.

Maybe if you weren't making everything from scratch in an elaborate and restaurant-quality meal to serve to professional chefs, it would be more practical, dude!

Another thought is that this kind of gathering is more possible in Berkeley, where there are a lot of these kinds of nut cases running around. (I'm not knocking it, actually it sounded tasty... and fun! =D)

The author hypothesizes that there are four kinds of people: those drawn to the mathematics of building, those drawn to the... something of knitting, those drawn to the "comedy" of gardening, and those drawn to the "emotional drama" of hunting. However, from where I'm sitting, it's hunting that looks like the comedy. You wait all morning in the bush, a mighty hunter... and then on your way back from the lunch, chatting with a friend, the pigs come over the hill and you don't even have your gun loaded. Ha, ha!

I have always tried to be a mathematics of building person but truthfully, I'm probably best suited to hunting. ^^; As you are no doubt aware, the flip side of an ADDer's short attention span and normal obliviousness is an ability to hyper-focus at key places and times.

R also wanted to be a mathematics person but she is probably more a gardener... she likes to take care of small, helpless things. Sitting around would bore her. Also - going by Pollan's definitions - R would definitely agree that her life is a comedy.
sub_divided: cos it gets me through, hope you never stop (Default)


Finished the first (industrial), second (industrial organic), and third (true organic) sections of The Omnivore's Dilemma. The value of the book, and the reason it was on so many bestseller's lists last year, is that it points to clear government policies that have been behind the overproduction of cheap food in America and, thus, the obesity epidemic. It also emphasizes the "hidden costs" of cheap food.

Read more... )

Will report back once I've reached the end of the hunting-and-gathering-in-the-wilderness chapter. I suspect, though, that the best section of this book was the first section. (And maybe also the second, for people who try to buy Organic: it's shown that many Organic farms are run the same way as agribusiness farms, but with fewer chemicals - thus the higher prices because, his true organic farming buddy claims, you can't raise so many plants or animals in crowded monocultures without drugs to combat the diseases that inevitably spread. Raising industrial crops without chemicals is like "farming with one hand tied behind your back." However, crops and animals raised in diversified "inspired by nature" settings don't need drugs.)

So far the only thing that is making me look forward to the last section - other than R's assurance that it is "hilarious" - is Pollan's decision to go hunting with a seasoned veteran, rather than attempt it on his own. Real ancient hunters didn't go out into the wilderness alone armed with nothing but a pocket knife: they hunted in groups with at least one experienced member. So this is the more authentic way.

March 2022

S M T W T F S
  12345
67 89101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

  • Style: (No Theme) for Transmogrified by Yvonne

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags