YA hist fic, set at a boarding school in Saint Germain where Hortense de Beauharnaise (Josephine Bonaparte's daughter), Caroline Bonaparte (Napoleon's daughter), and Eliza Monroe (daughter of the future US president all actually attended.
The writer changed their ages a bit, and of course they went to masked balls and all sorts of silliness, but it was a fun and quick read.
Saturday, March 31, 2012
Running With Trains, by Michael Rosen
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Love and Haight, by Susan Carlton
Uneven but good YA set in 1971, in San Francisco. Wanna-be hippie Chloe and her best friend MJ go to visit Chloe's free spirit aunt Kiki, but Chloe has another reason to be there- she needs an abortion. Interesting look at womens rights and the hippie scene.
The Crazy Things Girls Do For Love, by Dyan Sheldon
Charming, fun, and better-than-it's-cover YA book about what happens after a new hottie student turns the environment club into the hottest club at high school. I really enjoyed this, but did wish that the girls had had more self-respect.
Blueprints of the Afterlife, by Ryan Boudinot
Extraordinary post-apocalyptic novel. In the years after the FUS (Fucked Up Shit), residents of the Pacific Northwest are creating New York Alki on Bainbridge Island, using newman (essentially cyborg) labor, people are hooked into Bionet, which can be hacked by DJs who control them, the climate is fucked, polar bears (ACK) are gone, a rogue glacier has hunted down cities...
Overwhelming, epic stew of ideas and words, brilliantly done, but not super focused.
I loved it, it read like Bacigalupi in some ways, but I do wish it was a tiny bit tighter. So good though, and wildly different from Boudinot's first novel, Misconception, which I also thought was insanely good.
Overwhelming, epic stew of ideas and words, brilliantly done, but not super focused.
I loved it, it read like Bacigalupi in some ways, but I do wish it was a tiny bit tighter. So good though, and wildly different from Boudinot's first novel, Misconception, which I also thought was insanely good.
Flatscreen, by Adam Wilson
This was so much less than I was hoping for. For a book to be praised the way this one was, I hoped for a lot more than the usual mopey rich white Jewish boy on drugs in the suburbs shit that every other 'slacker' novel has as an antihero.
In fact, this was such a letdown, it deserves a whole new tag: dissapointing, for all the books that come with so much hype that I feel cheated by the blurbs and reviewers.
In fact, this was such a letdown, it deserves a whole new tag: dissapointing, for all the books that come with so much hype that I feel cheated by the blurbs and reviewers.
In The Merde For Love, by Stephen Clarke
Very funny continuation of the story started in A Year In The Merde, but this time focusing more on his ludicrous (but very frisky!) love life.
Defending Jacob, by William Landay
Fantastic, dark legal/family thriller with excellent style and a haunting end.
This reminded me in some ways of Lionel Shriver's agonizing We Need To Talk About Kevin, but with more of a thriller tone. Wonderful.
This reminded me in some ways of Lionel Shriver's agonizing We Need To Talk About Kevin, but with more of a thriller tone. Wonderful.
White Girl Problems, by Babe Walker
UGH. One of the worst books I've read in a long time- I can't believe I finished this shallow foul cesspit of a book.Waste of paper.
I Am J, by Cris Beam
Interesting book about a teenage transgender person. Jenifer has always wanted to be a boy, and starts looking into how to actually make that happen. Testosterone shots and surgery and all that- it was interesting, but not to me relatable.
Monday, March 19, 2012
The Fear Index, by Robert Harris
Fantastic sci-fi/financial thriller. Hedge fund genius Alex and his parter Hugo are pitching a new product to client that Alex has created to run on algorithms he has created around an AI called VIXAL 4. The AI makes trades based on the fear index and on news it gathers from thousands of sources, and the book is a great and truly chilling ride.
The Odds: A Love Story, by Stewart O'Nan
Beautifully written yet ultimately unsatifying novel from one of my favorite writers, O'Nan. Art and Marion have lost almost everything- their marriage is fractured from infidelities and they are on the verge of losing their home. In a last desperate weekend, they revisit Niagara Falls, the site of their honeymoon, and bet their last remaining assets on a roulette wheel.
These Days Are Ours, by Michelle Haimhoff
Repellent post 9/11 novel about underachieving spoiled rich kids in NYC. From the vain and narcissistic protagonist who wants another terrorist attack to happen so she wont be under pressure to get a job to the trust fund kid who walks around with holes in his sweaters, every character was unpleasant except Adrian, a 'poor kid' who went to Brown on scholarship, and doesn't need to hang out with this pack of losers.
Death Comes to Pemberley, by P.D. James
Yet ANOTHER sequel to Pride and Prejudice, this time in the form of a mystery byt the usually talented P.D. James, but as with almost every Austen adaptation/sequel/whatever, it was pretty awful.
The A-Circuit, by Georgina Bloomberg
Pretty terrible YA about riding on a competitive level. Usual rich girl/working girl nonsense with lots of horsey stuff mixed in.
172 Hours on the Moon, by Johan Harstad
Flawed YA sci-fi. NASA in a wildly improbably decision, decides to hold a worldwide lottery for 3 teens to travel to a secret moonbase (with a trained adult astronaut crew, at least) but of course everything goes wrong.
Required too much suspension of disbelief to work.
Required too much suspension of disbelief to work.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Getting Somewhere, by Beth Neff
4 teens are offered the choice between juvenile detention, or working on a CSA farm. Each girl has different reasons for being there- as the back of the jacket says, there's
The Junkie
The Dealer
The Thief
The Recluse
and they all have terrible secrets, and they all blah blah blah.
Was actually an absorbing read, but I feel like I've read it 8 times before.
The Junkie
The Dealer
The Thief
The Recluse
and they all have terrible secrets, and they all blah blah blah.
Was actually an absorbing read, but I feel like I've read it 8 times before.
Chopsticks, by Jessica Anthony and Rodrigo Corral
Haunting and absorbing YA graphic. Piano prodigy Glory Fleming is missing- but the events that lead up to her dissapearance are as unclear as her fate. Passionate romance, intense pressure, and a serious obsession with playing the childrens' waltz Chopsticks add up to a dizzying, twisting graphic novel that I want to read over and over. This was one of those books where the format is so perfect for the story, and the questions that linger after the last page just make you want to start over again, focusing on every single perfectly chosen image and painting.
Labels:
Anthony,
Chopsticks,
Corral,
graphic novel,
Wonderful,
YA
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Various Positions, by Martha Schabas
Dark and disturbing YA about a young ballerina whose obsession with sex ruins lives. Very much Black Swan but younger.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity, by Katherine Boo
Intense and depressing and heartbreaking and illuminating look at life in an airport slum in Mumbai. This was a harrowing read. The whole book left me wanting to hide from the world, but was certainly one of the best nonfiction books I've read in a long time.
People Who Eat Darkness: The Fate of Lucie Blackman, by Richard Parry
Intense and disturbing non-fiction account of the disappearance, search for, and ultimately, the trial of the killer of Lucie Blackman, an English girl who went to Tokyo to work as a club hostess.
Parry, who had spent a decade in Japan before Blackman's disappearance made headlines, followed the case from the start, and kept at it through the 6 year trial of the unusual Korean-minority killer who never did admit to killing Lucie, although he did admit to multiple rapes and one "accidental" death of another gaijin bar girl.
A deep look at the Japanese justice system and it's failures, but also a searching portrayal of a family when a member of that family disappears...
Great non-fiction read, for true crime fans. Would recommend to anyone who enjoyed The Devil in the White City, or similar.
Parry, who had spent a decade in Japan before Blackman's disappearance made headlines, followed the case from the start, and kept at it through the 6 year trial of the unusual Korean-minority killer who never did admit to killing Lucie, although he did admit to multiple rapes and one "accidental" death of another gaijin bar girl.
A deep look at the Japanese justice system and it's failures, but also a searching portrayal of a family when a member of that family disappears...
Great non-fiction read, for true crime fans. Would recommend to anyone who enjoyed The Devil in the White City, or similar.
Arctic Rising, by Tobias Buckell
Wow! Straight out awesome climate disaster scifi thriller. Not as well written as Bacigalupi, but a hell of a plot, and out-of-the-box refreshing protagonists made this an un-put-down-able read. Futuristic Arctic cities, climate modification schemes, chase scenes, I want this to be a movie.
Anne of Hollywood, by Carol Wolper
Well adapted take off on Anne Boleyn's story. In this adaptation, Henry Tudor is the head of a major studio, Anne and Mary are establishment party girls, Theresa Cromwell is a scheming executive who can't force Anne into her own plans, and Jane Seymore is a vapid San Fransisco socialite.
Except for beheadings, this was pretty faithful to history- and maybe in Hollywood, divorce after an airtight prenup feels like a beheading?
Fun, but not what I hoped for.
Except for beheadings, this was pretty faithful to history- and maybe in Hollywood, divorce after an airtight prenup feels like a beheading?
Fun, but not what I hoped for.
1222: A Hanne Wilhelmsen novel, by Anne Holt
Excellent Scandinavian locked door mystery, with a train derailment, and a strong, prickly, hard-to-like protagonist in Hanne Wilhelmesen, a paralysed ex-detective.
Belles, by Jen Calonita
Well written, enjoyable YA. Wrong-side-of the-tracks Isabelle's world is shattered when her Alzheimer's suffering grandmother is deemed no longer capable to care for her, and she is sent to live with wealthy relatives she has never known. Pampered Mirabelle, nearly the same age, is supposed to help Isabelle fit into this new world of prep schools and country clubs, but Mira's friends are mean girls. Solid characterizations and believable personal growth lifted this out of standard chick-lit, despite the misleading cover, which I hope changes before it's April pub date. I really liked this.
A Year in The Merde, by Stephen Clarke
SO funny, and so out of control, this was a re-read that I enjoyed and will look for his next book, In The Merde For Love, right now. Ludicous fictionalized look at trying to start a chain of English style tea rooms in France.
Labels:
A Year in the Merde,
Adult,
Clarke,
Funny,
Non-fiction,
Travel
My Not So Terrible Time and The Hippie Hotel, by Rosemary Graham
Well done but predictable divorced families issue YA. Really not a lot to say about this. Cute. Charming.
How To Ruin a Summer Vacation, by Simone Elkeles
Not very good YA about a Chicago girl being sent to the Golan Heights to spend the summer with her estranged father and unknown extended family. The culture clash didn't excuse Amy's ignorance, and the buildup to her changing from a silly and spoiled girl into a brave and devoted Zionist was predictable and rather unpleasant.
The Final Crumpet, by Ron and Janet Benrey
Strange and pretty terrible mystery that left me boggled that it got published. Not only was the mystery weak, uninteristing, and unsolvable in fair-play terms, God kept popping in the most unexpected and inappropriate of ways.
The Agency: The Traitor in the Tunnel, by Y.S. Lee
Fun and fast paced YA historical mystery, with a unique heroine with guts and wits to spare. This was so enjoyable, and I want to read the other books in the series.
Trafficked, by Kim Purcell
Thought provoking book about human trafficking out of Moldova. 17 year old Hannah thinks she will be a nanny in Los Angeles, earning $400 a week, which she would use to send home to pay for her grandmother's cataract operation, but upon arrival, she realizes how naive she was.
This could have (and more realistically, should have) been much darker, but aimed at a YA audience, maybe the author didn't want to take it as dark as it really might have been.
Well done, but with some weak spots.
This could have (and more realistically, should have) been much darker, but aimed at a YA audience, maybe the author didn't want to take it as dark as it really might have been.
Well done, but with some weak spots.
A Million Suns, by Beth Revis
Fantastic follow up to the awesome YA sci-fi Across The Universe. This was a great continuation, much more than a "middle book". Elder and Amy continue to grow as characters, and the ethical conflicts aboard the space ship continue to introduce ideas about the nature of leadership, and the value of freedom. Just a great read, and I can't wait for the next.
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
The Third Gate, by Lincoln Child
Ludicrous adventure thriller filled with psychics, billionaire eccentrics, Egyptian tombs and curses, and even a nice episode of possession. Quick read? Yes. Good read? If you are into ludicrous adventure thrillers filled with psychics, billionaire eccentrics, Egyptian tombs and curses, and even a nice episode of possession, then this is your book!
Missed Connections: Love Lost and Found, by Sophie Blackall
A little too whimsical for my taste- very Miranda July. I was hoping for more like Leanne Shapton's slightly more edgy Was She Pretty? which is one of my favorite graphic novels. This read like some kind of hipster cupcake.
This Is Not A Test, by Courtney Summers
FANTASTIC zombie apocalypse novel, with an intense protagonist and wonderful writing. This was just so well done, and the ethical conflicts of Sloane, the suicidal heroine of the book, as she is forced into a fight for survival, added an incredible new twist to a well trod road- I really found this to be a special book. Better even than Zone One, which I LOVED. I really liked her mean-girls issue book, Some Girls Are, but this was on a whole new level of awesome.
The Darlings, by Christina Alger
Well written and involved story of a family caught up in a financial Ponzi scheme, and the ramifications of losing all they thought they had. Ethical crisis + family ties = great, dramatic, timely novel.
I've Got Your Number, by Sophie Kinsella
Delightful, light and funny romance from the uneven Kinsella. This one is a winner, though. When her phone is stolen, Poppy steals another phone for reasons already complicated. Through the new phone, she and Sam begin an exchange of messages that are just really well done. One of the better romance/text message books I've read.
Perfect Summer: England 1911, Just Before the Storm, by Juliet Nicolson
Interesting but fragmented social history of pre-WWI England. Nicolson, as the grand-daughter of Vita Sackville-West, has so many anecdotes thrust into the book that it was hard to follow as a cohesive whole, but some bits were certainly memorable.
Desert Wind, by Betty Webb
Excellent topical Betty Webb mystery set in the desert Southwest, this time dealing with the aftereffects of nuclear testing on Downwinders- people whose lives have been ruined by cancer and governmental neglect.
Wake Up, Sir! , by Jonathan Ames
Funny yet wierdly depressing novel about a failed writer/alcoholic who hires a butler named Jeeves to basically run his life, using up settlement money from an accident.
The Little Victim, by R.T. Raichev
Decent Raichev mystery, but this one set in Goa in India wasn't as enjoyable for me as the ones set in traditional English Country House settings.
Rumors, by Anna Godberson
Sadly, as with the first book in the Luxe series, the cover was the best part. Sold as Edith Wharton meets Gossip Girl, it reads more like Danielle Steel got hit on the head and traveled back in time.
Willow Weaving, by Truss Stol
Pretty lovely but short how to book on making sculptures with woven willow, which was lovely, but I was looking for a book on how to work with live willow to make structures, not sculptures.
Deader Homes and Gardens, by Joan Hess
Pretty good for a Claire Malloy series mystery, pretty weak for Joan Hess. I wish she would drop the Claire Malloy books and write more of the Maggody series.
A Nation of Wimps: The High Cost of Invasive Parenting, by Hara Estroff Marano
Interesting and well argued book about helicopter parenting and the squashing of childrens' autonomy.
The Night Swimmer, by Matt Bondurant
Deeply atmospheric and wonderfully written book. American couple Elly and Fred think they have the chance of a lifetime when Fred wins a small Irish pub in Baltimore, on the southern coast of Cork, but resentment from the locals dooms the pub from the start, while Elly becomes obsessed with long distance ocean swimming, and wants to swim from Clear Cape Island to Fastnet Rock.
The scenes of the ocean swimming were haunting and intense, but the book itself was disturbing and sad. Great writing, and made me spend an hour in a Google-hole last night reading about the area.
The scenes of the ocean swimming were haunting and intense, but the book itself was disturbing and sad. Great writing, and made me spend an hour in a Google-hole last night reading about the area.
Death of a Kingfisher, by M.C. Beaton
OK Hamish MacBeth mystery. Not the best of the bunch, by far, but maybe when you get to #28 of a series, you're running out of juice, which is fair.
Brandwashed: Tricks Companies Use to Manipulate Our Minds and Persuade Us to Buy, by Martin Lindstrom
EXCELLENT book about marketing from a major insider. Lindstrom is coming from a fascinating ethical place- his career has been about creating demand for products he can't really support, and his guilt is palpable, but for all that, there's an almost viscious glee in his ripping off the veils of his industry. The book is like a fascinating self-flagellation, but at the same time is one of the best books I've read on the topic of marketing manipulation. Fantastic book.
The Spy Who Jumped Off The Screen, by Thomas Caplan
Sweeping Bond-style thriller, jewels and nukes and a pretty great protagonist in an ex-special forces movie star, whose very fame provides him with the perfect cover.
Fun read, and sweetly, blurbed by President Clinton, which makes me hope this stuff doesn't really go down, but makes me love Clinton all the more.
Fun read, and sweetly, blurbed by President Clinton, which makes me hope this stuff doesn't really go down, but makes me love Clinton all the more.
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