It's raining books!
Dec. 29th, 2008 11:08 pmI've been ill the last couple of days (a mild flu, nothing major) so I've been catching up on reading.
1. Breaking Dawn, the fourth Twilight book (really, she should have just called them Twilights 1, 2, 3, and 4, it's not like the titles are useful). I'm halfway through it. I'm so, so tired of Bella being angsty and pregnant and Jacob being angsty and in love with her for no reason that I'm hoping her vampire spawn will kick her too death, but I don't think that's going to happen.
2. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, by Mary Anne Shaffer and Annie Barrows, which is an epistolary novel that describes the situation on the Channel Isles during World War II. Did you know that Germany occupied the Channel Isles during the war? I hadn't. And while I had known that rationing continued in Britain after the war, I didn't think what that must have been like.
While the book has a lot going for it (characters, plot, beautiful setting) I think its biggest asset is its use of history. The book is set in 1946, after all the big events are through, which is odd timing for a historical novel. But I think it's a good choice; the novel isn't about big events, it's about a woman who writes magazine articles and decides she wants to write one about Guernsey, and gets caught up in the Islanders' stories. It gives the flavor of the history, instead of names and dates and nothingness like a history book.
Also, the writing style reminds me very much of mid-century British books - I Capture the Castle and that sort of thing.
3. Spirits that Walk in Shadow, by Nina Kiriki Hoffman. I've enjoyed the other Hoffman books I've read (A Stir of Bones and A Fistful of Sky), so I was disappointed when this book couldn't even scrape itself into mediocrity.
The biggest problem is that the book alternates first person narrators - magic-girl Jaimie and her new college roommate, normal (albeit very depressed) Kim - and they have the exact same voice, except that one of them occasionally uses made-up magical terms. Other than that it was impossible to tell who was speaking.
The second problem is that the book lacks tension. Within hours of meeting, Kim figures out Jaimie has magic. Ah, she says. You can turn me into a toad? Rock on. A few hours more, and Jaimie and Kim discover that Kim's depression is in fact caused by, essentially, an emotional vampire creature. Well, shucks. Before they even reach their first classes, the vampire creature is defeated.
It's way too easy, and that makes it boring.
Just about the only interesting thing about the book is that it's set in college, and that's interesting only because college is not a popular setting for novels.
Why isn't college a more popular setting for novels? Because college students don't have time to read? Because high school students, unlike middle/elementary school students, don't want to read about the probable contents of the next few years of their lives?
Or have I just missed all the college novels? I stopped reading school novels midway through high school, because the high school books, unlike the elementary school books, usually bore no resemblance to my life. But still, I think I would have noticed college novels on the bookstore shelves.
1. Breaking Dawn, the fourth Twilight book (really, she should have just called them Twilights 1, 2, 3, and 4, it's not like the titles are useful). I'm halfway through it. I'm so, so tired of Bella being angsty and pregnant and Jacob being angsty and in love with her for no reason that I'm hoping her vampire spawn will kick her too death, but I don't think that's going to happen.
2. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, by Mary Anne Shaffer and Annie Barrows, which is an epistolary novel that describes the situation on the Channel Isles during World War II. Did you know that Germany occupied the Channel Isles during the war? I hadn't. And while I had known that rationing continued in Britain after the war, I didn't think what that must have been like.
While the book has a lot going for it (characters, plot, beautiful setting) I think its biggest asset is its use of history. The book is set in 1946, after all the big events are through, which is odd timing for a historical novel. But I think it's a good choice; the novel isn't about big events, it's about a woman who writes magazine articles and decides she wants to write one about Guernsey, and gets caught up in the Islanders' stories. It gives the flavor of the history, instead of names and dates and nothingness like a history book.
Also, the writing style reminds me very much of mid-century British books - I Capture the Castle and that sort of thing.
3. Spirits that Walk in Shadow, by Nina Kiriki Hoffman. I've enjoyed the other Hoffman books I've read (A Stir of Bones and A Fistful of Sky), so I was disappointed when this book couldn't even scrape itself into mediocrity.
The biggest problem is that the book alternates first person narrators - magic-girl Jaimie and her new college roommate, normal (albeit very depressed) Kim - and they have the exact same voice, except that one of them occasionally uses made-up magical terms. Other than that it was impossible to tell who was speaking.
The second problem is that the book lacks tension. Within hours of meeting, Kim figures out Jaimie has magic. Ah, she says. You can turn me into a toad? Rock on. A few hours more, and Jaimie and Kim discover that Kim's depression is in fact caused by, essentially, an emotional vampire creature. Well, shucks. Before they even reach their first classes, the vampire creature is defeated.
It's way too easy, and that makes it boring.
Just about the only interesting thing about the book is that it's set in college, and that's interesting only because college is not a popular setting for novels.
Why isn't college a more popular setting for novels? Because college students don't have time to read? Because high school students, unlike middle/elementary school students, don't want to read about the probable contents of the next few years of their lives?
Or have I just missed all the college novels? I stopped reading school novels midway through high school, because the high school books, unlike the elementary school books, usually bore no resemblance to my life. But still, I think I would have noticed college novels on the bookstore shelves.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-31 01:38 am (UTC)As far as college novels, I present The Rules of Attraction by Bret Easton Ellis and a few recs (http://scienceblogs.com/principles/2008/10/college_novels.php) for books I've never actually heard of, just to prove that they exist.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-31 03:18 am (UTC)And Mr. Ellis appears to have published that novel when he was 23. I feel like a total underachiever now.