Fiction

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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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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Nancy Drew keeps me going #readathon

So sad, my copy of The Clue in the Old Stagecoach is in bad shape. The binding is a mess and I was terrified I was going to lose the last 75 pages with each turn of the page. Also… gah, the girls dating different boys always throws me, does it throw you?  Thankfully, Ned and gang showed up in the end.  😉

180 pages – good late readathon book.

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One book down #Readathon

Well that took a long time, didn’t it? Heh. The Raven’s Bride, 356 pages, and pretty interesting to read about Virginia Poe when we tend to hear so little. I cannot imagine what it was like to live with Edgar Allan Poe – or maybe I can now that I’ve read The Raven’s Bride.

Also interesting, the controversy surrounding this book – as pointed out by someone on BlogHer.com.

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The Peach Keeper

I’m a Sarah Addison Allen fan so you won’t be surprised when I say that I loved The Peach Keeper!

I was prepared for the “magic”, or I thought I was… I’d been reading awhile without any obvious magic happening and just as I was starting to wonder if maybe this one wouldn’t have the same touch of magic – bam! There it was. And it was pretty terrific.

The magical elements were slightly different in this book, than in previous books – and that’s all I’m going to say about that, you’ll just have to read it to see what I mean.

Also, it was really nice to see Claire Waverly make a brief appearance. Like seeing an old friend. I’m surprised by how big of a feel good moment that was for me. Nice touch – and her appearance added just the right thing to the story at that moment.

Great book – give me another one!

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Three of the Best Books I’ll Read This Year

I’ve already read some really great books and I know I’m going to read more but these three from the Cybils shortlist are going to hold their own in my favorites for the year list – I think they are probably going to hold their own for a lot longer than that. These three books were that good. You should read them, even if you don’t normally read  kids lit.

First, The Shadows: The Books of Elsewhere, we listened to this one on audio and I, for one, was sorry to see it end. Thankfully, book two will be released in a few months.

Olive is a little girl who doesn’t really fit in – she’s never fit in with the other kids at any of the schools she’s lived in. She doesn’t really fit in with her parents, who are math teachers. Olive can’t count to 100 – she gets lost somewhere in the 80s. Or 70s. Or somewhere.

She and her parents move into a very old house, with all of its belongings – after the previous owner died without any heirs. The house is interesting but something about it makes Olive feel uneasy. One of the things that makes her uneasy is the paintings that are hanging throughout the house. The first night, she tells her mom about this and her mom says they’ll just take the painting down that is outside of Olive’s bedroom – but it won’t come off the wall.

Olive plays with some of the things in a dresser in one of the bedrooms – scarves and gloves and such… and then she finds some glasses, on a chain. She puts them off and is playing when she notices movement inside of a painting – she presses her nose to the painting and… she’s inside of it.

Crazy things happen. Scary, creepy, crazy things and Olive has to piece together clues and figure out what in the heck is going on… with the help of some of the people inside of the paintings and the three cats who are guarding the house.

OK that’s enough – go read it for yourself.

Next, the best zombie book I’ve ever read (and I’ve read a lot)… Rot & Ruin. I did not expect this book to be this good. I did not expect to find myself tearing up in places throughout the story – but I did. The zombies don’t talk, they aren’t “good”, they are just zombies. It’s what the humans do that’s what gets to you. The really horrible things humans can do to each other, and to those who are weaker or somehow less than.

Benny goes from hating his older half-brother, who is a Zombie bounty hunter but not the kind who wanders around bragging about his kills and showing off his fighting skills, to respecting his brother for the job he does. Benny learns that those big, tough bounty hunters might not be what he thought they were either.

Great post-apocolyptic fiction – zombies or no zombies. Kids are going to love this book.

Last, but definitely not least, The Strange Case of Origami Yoda. Hahaha. This book should be made into a movie. I’m not sure I want a sequel but if one arrives, I’ll definitely read it.

Is the origami Yoda on Dwight’s finger real? I mean he’s definitely real in the way that you can see him and stuff – but is he really giving advice to the kids in school or is the extra weird Dwight being even weirder than normal? And if it is Dwight – how is that even possible? The kid is so clueless and not so smart, except in math, how could he come up with this stuff? That’s the question…

I’m leaning toward Yoda is totally real – the force was using Dwight and the Origami Yoda to help the kids sort out their issues.

Totally real. Also.

Purple.

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