2011

Girl in Translation

I was super excited to receive Girl in Translation by Jean Kwok as part of the new BlogHer BookClub. You can find my review here: Girl in Translation: The Strong May Choose Their Own Road. You should also check out the other reviews of Girl in Translation that were written by members of the BlogHer community and if you’ve read the book, visit our spoiler discussion to talk about that thing that we aren’t talking about in our reviews. Heh.

It was a great book and I look forward to reading Jean’s next book (which is not a sequel to Kimberly’s story but sounds very, very interesting just the same!)

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Three Cybils

After all of the serious Penguin reading I’ve been doing, I needed a light and easy break. Thankfully, I had three Cybils books on my library cart and those did the trick.

First, I’m fascinated by Zapato Power. I’ve never seen a children’s book quite like it. First, we learn that Freddie and his mom live in an apartment complex where the superintendent works hard to keep things neat and tidy – not like the last place they lived where the big kids wrote nasty words on the walls and nobody cleaned it up. And then we learn that Freddie’s dad was not only in the Army, he DIED while overseas fighting. That never, ever happens in early reader books. Never ever. Bravo, Bravo, Bravo!  I am now a Freddie Ramos fan.

Next, a middle grade graphic novel called Smile. Elly read it last week and said it was SAD. That confused me. I expected it to be funny. She’s right, it was sad. Forget the dental drama – it was the mean girl issue that was sad. And unfortunately, felt pretty accurate.

Last and also least, my dirty little secret comes out. I have never liked “choose your own ending” books. I cringed when I saw Meanwhile on the Cybils shortlist. I tried to be hopeful about it. Maybe a graphic novel version would be something I’d like? Alas. No. It was worse. On the first try… the story ended on the second page. (which was cleverly done, by the way.) On my next try, it ended on the third page – or maybe I got confused and did not follow the tube-y lines properly, which is pretty likely because lord help me I cannot follow those little lines. The third and fourth times, I was more successful but again… I cannot follow those lines. The panels not related to my current path distract me and I found myself completely confused.

None of this means that Meanwhile isn’t a brilliant, awesome book. IT IS. Elly loves it. I am just not hardwired for this kind of thing. I’m just not. Your kids (and you) might be. You should check it out. It’s a very clever idea – and nicely drawn.

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The Bird Sisters

The Bird Sisters was in my Evernote as “reserve this later” – well before later arrived, TW grabbed it from the shelf at the library. I growled a little because I was falling behind on reading and was afraid it would have to go back before I could get to it. And in fact, I ended up returning it late because once I started it, I couldn’t take it back. It was EXCELLENT.

I love Milly & Twiss. I even loved Bette – though it was hard there at the end. Very, very hard.

(And for those keeping track – this one has a wee bit of a lesbian theme tossed in.)

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Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse

I finished Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse several days ago but just haven’t had the time or energy to tell you about it. I still don’t but heck, if I don’t do it soon – I’ll forget. And it isn’t that I didn’t enjoy the book – I did… picture Christopher Moore, Mario Acevedo, and that guy who wrote Sandman Slim… once you’ve got that in your head, strip out the demons, vampires, zombies, talking fruit bats and whaley boys. Oh wait, keep the whaley boys, just picture them as Prius’s and not fish like guys who drive the blue whales, (my Prius’s name is Whaley Boy, in case you’re really confused.) Also, hang onto the sequined love nun. Got that? Now picture a spaghetti western set in a post-apocalyptic United States. Make that the southeastern United States.

That’s Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse.

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Two More Nancy Drews

It’s been a rough week. Pretty much the only thing I had the energy to read was Nancy Drew. Long live Nancy Drew – even though I’ve pretty much decided it’s Nancy Drew that’s to blame for disordered eating and not Barbie. I mean the friendly teasing of Bess is one thing but the downright meanness in the last book, well… it’s a little too much for me. This is one of those situations where Nancy and her friends just don’t stand up to re-reading 35-40 years later.

Even when Bess is the one who’s doing great things in the story – she’s still fat. Not chubby or pleasingly plump – she’s fat. Boo, hiss!

The Phantom of Pine Hill wasn’t as bad about this as The Clue in the Crossword Cipher.

Oh – almost forgot. When I opened The Clue in the Crossword Cipher, a little piece of notepaper popped out with the name and address of someone I don’t remember from my childhood. That seems weird. I need to ask my mom about Kristy (or is it Krissy) Holder. I’m sure I should know who this is… or maybe the notepaper was left over from my sister who may have read some of my Nancy Drews after I moved out? I don’t know. There’s some niggling thing in my head that says I should know who this is. Huh. I just don’t know.

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Delirium

Last fall, Diane from Teen Book Fanatics raved and raved about new YA author, Lauren Oliver. She told me I had to read Before I Fall… and I did, eventually. Diane was right – it was a great book.

Flash forward to a couple of weeks ago and Carmen from Mom to the Screaming Masses tweeted to recommend a YA book called Delirium. I looked it up and saw that it was written by Lauren Oliver. Well that was enough for me – I reserved the book right away.

And it was awesome.

Post apocalyptic fiction where all of the world’s problems were solved by finding a cure for a horrible horrible disease – Love. AKA Amor Deliria Nervosa.  When kids reach the age of 18, they’re given the cure (surgical removal of part of the brain), paired with a mate, given a job (and/or a place in a college) and life goes on, without love.

What I really like about Oliver’s books is that there are no happy endings – the right things happen, but that doesn’t mean people are happy and all of the problems are solved in the end. It’s usually just the opposite but it feels real and right.

I would really like a sequel to this book. I’d like to see what happens next – to Lena. Maybe to Alex, if he survived. Or to Hana. Or Grace. Anyone from the story, really. They’re all interesting and I think they all have things to say that they didn’t have a chance to say in Delirium.

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Waltzing at the Piggly Wiggly

A few weeks ago, Sassymonkey mentioned the Piggly Wiggly series to me – it sounded vaguely familiar but I’ve never read them. Seemed like a good series for TW’s mom, so I grabbed the first one, Waltzing in the Piggly Wiggly, in large print… sure enough, she read it and loved it. Chuckled her way through it.  I read it next and it was certainly amusing but boy was there a lot of sex for a book about small town 50/60/70 year old widows in rural Mississippi! Sheesh.

I miss the Piggly Wiggly. No idea why, since my mother didn’t really shop there when I was a kid.

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Nancy Drew: Mystery of the Fire Dragon

Several nights ago, I finished the book I was reading at about 10pm and didn’t feel like that was a good time to start another really long novel, so I grabbed The Mystery of the Fire Dragon (which was still in the bedroom from the readathon last weekend) – Nancy Drews are excellent books to (re) read when it’s too late at night to start another book – or when life is really hectic. Simple, amusing, flashbacks to childhood.

It’s always funny to read about Nancy and her friends getting a passport in an hour. (Always travel with your birth certificate – you never know when you’ll need it to get that passport!) So funny.

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Because of Mr Terupt

What a deceptive little book. The cover is boring. The title is boring. The concept seems boring too. How many books have you read about 4th or 5th grade teachers who have an awesome teacher? A lot, right? Ho hum.

Well there’s something special about Because of Mr Terupt, besides Mr Terupt being a special teacher. The book just works. Even when it shouldn’t. Even when you know exactly what’s going to happen and you should be bored stiff. You aren’t bored AT ALL.

What happens next? I must know.

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Sister Outsider

I decided to re-read Sister Outsider during the #Readathon and as part of my From the Stacks (by color) challenge for this year… there’s nobody better than Audre Lorde to get me riled up and pointing out the patriarchy at every turn. There’s also nobody better to read when you’re also reading Joan Walsh and Angry Black Lady… in fact, I’d recommend Joan Walsh spend some time reading Sister Outsider before she opens her mouth or puts her fingers to her keyboard again.

Hell. Maybe if we all read a Lorde essay every day for the rest of our lives, we might just be able to have these discussions and figure out how to work together.

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