Just what I read..

Inspired by Nancy Pearl's "Book Lust Journal." I knew I would lose my book journal if I didn't keep it online.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Od Magic

I love the way Patricia McKillip has with words. I love her language and the twists and turns that her mind weaves. Brenden Vetch has a way with plants they speak to him. He saved the village during an epidemic but failed to save his parents. He is drowning in grief when Od appears to him and sends him to the city to become a gardener at her school for magic. He is to look for the school under a shoe. His arrival starts many political intrigues typical of McKillips books and I have to admit that the twist in this one is not one I saw coming. Although looking back on the book, all the clues were there. Maybe I’ve been reading too much fluff and not enough to cause thought lately. Reading thorough this made me realize that.

Three Heroes

Jo Beverley is best known for her Mallorens and her Rogues series but in among the Rogues is the Three Georges. This book puts them together in their post Waterloo romances. All three have been published separately and I know I bought Devil’s Heiress but I never read it and have no clue where it disappeared too. Van, Con, and Hawk had tattoos applied to their chests prior to Waterloo so they would be able to identify each other’s bodies if it became necessary. Those tattoos are objects of female speculation in each book. George Van Deimen (Van) has a demon tattoo and he is rescued from suicide by a rich widow who wants to “hire” him to keep fortune hunters at bay. A fortune hunter himself, Van needs money to restore his estates which his father almost lost in a bad investment scheme. The widow has money but is wary of tying herself and her fortune to a man like her former husband. Other issues (such as infertility) have play in this story but like all romances it turns out in the end.
Con is a Rogue as well as a George. His dragon is from a distant relative whose estate Con never expected to inherit and he definitely didn’t expect his first love to be the housekeeper there. A true Rogues story involving smugglers, lost pasts, arcane objects, and true love is woven here with great craft.
And what happens to Con when a George sets himself against the Rogues. Hawk must save the family estate from the mortgage of an industrialist by capturing the fortune which went to a poor schoolgirl following the Rogue’s escapades with Lord Devlin. Hawk’s stepfather has spent the family fortune to win the title of Lord Devlin, Hawk has no way to get the 20,000 pounds needed to redeem Hawk in the Vale without either marrying the Devil’s Heiress or proving her to be a fraud. It’s nice to see a romance heroine who isn’t a raging beauty and Regency woman who are followers of Mary Wollstonecraft.

Monday, April 24, 2006

Long Winter Reads

I"ve read several novels in the past few months -- so I'll talk about them all at once.

A Room of One's Own -- Virginia Woolf -- Early 20th
This is non-fiction, bascially the transcript of speeches she gave -- honestly, it was one of those books that I had to force myself to read -- but it was for class, and it did give a good foundation for the later novels. A good place to start, academically, when interested in literature -- particularly, women's lit.

Their Eyes Were Watching God -- Zora Neale Hurston -- Early 20th century --
The dialect may give some a stumbling block, but to put proper language in it's place, would really detract from the story. The Heroine, Janie, is well developed and the pacing is excellent. While Hurston's novel was criticized by some as not being true to the struggles and daily life of African American's then, it does give a glimpse into a world and a time and place most of us will never know. Some of the concerns and conflicts Janie had, modern women still have. Not having watched Ms. Winfrey's version, I can't compare it, but the book is excellent.

The Journal Of A Solitude -- May Sarton -- mid 20th Century
One of several journals by poet and author May Sarton. It is non fiction, an account of a year of her life. Fluffy, well written description is interspersed with bouts of anger, depression, pain, and a few good things. I didn't care for it, but I prefer stories, not depressing recounts of life, which can be depressing enough as it is.

Tracks -- Louise Erdrich -- mid 20th century
Fictional story of life during the resettlements, land grabs, and government schools, of the Native Americans by whites, from the Native American's point of view. We follow one family over the course of several years as they deal with the coming problems. It is a bit confusing, it took several chapters before realizing the "occupation" of one of the main characters. And there is a shift of POV that happens at regular intervals. Disorienting at first, but there is growth in several characters, with the main characters showing depth and emotion.

Bone - Fae Myeen Ng -- 1993
A look inside life of Chinese American's in Chinatown. Flat. Confusing.

The Handmaid's Tale -- Margaret Atwood -- 20th century
Set sometime in 21st Century in what was once the USA. Now, known as Gilead, it is a tyrannical approach to an extremely narrow interpretations of several verses of the Christian Bible. Women have been reduced to possessions (again) with some women being forced to become surregate mothers for the elite. One of the scariest things is the people's refusal to stand up for themselves, and how easy they bought all of the BS, fed to them by the government. Scared that an attack will occur again the people are okay with suspending the Constitution and giving up all of their freedoms for what -- imagined security -- families are split and destroyed, children ripped away from their parents -- up, that was worth it. Good story, character growth is visible. Mostly it makes you sit up and take a whole new look at things. Read it.

I'm anxiously awaiting Blood Ties: The Turning, Book One by Jennifer Armintrout. Pleasure. Pure Pleasure. Not for school. Yeah.

Thursday, April 13, 2006

"Bitter is the New Black:

Confessions of a Condescending, Egomaniacal, Self-Centered Smartass, or, Why You Should Never Carry a Prada Bag to the Unemployment Office"

Hysterical book. Ok - complete chic-lit fluff. But I love this girl. We should be best friends.

Anyway, it's a book about this gal who was making a six-figure salary during the dot-com boom, and once the bubble burst she found herself unemployed. She has opinions about everything... and sadly enough people think she is a you-know-what for her opinions. I knew this before I read her book, curious to see why people thought that way of her. As I was reading I couldn't help but say to myself (numerous times) "Oh, I've thought of that in that circumstance" or "yeah I know what she is talking about". Well, I guess I know what people think of me!

But honestly people. Sometimes things just need to be said. LOL...

Completely recommend. And she just sold the rights to her next book "Bright Lights, Big Ass: Urban Mis-Adventure is the New Black". CAN'T WAIT for this one.

Check out her website www.jennsylvania.com