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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Nation of Rebels: Why Counterculture Became Consumer Culture by Andrew Heath and Joseph Potter




I felt like I'd read this before- maybe I had? kind of overly academic writing for what was blurbed as a general appeal book.

How many books with people/barcodes barcode tattoos/etc covers will I read in a year? Only the blog knows, man. Only the blog knows.

Monday, February 18, 2008

House Lust, by Daniel McGinn



Fantastic book about the insanity that has made shows like "House Hunters" block busters and about how competitive consumption crossed with a twisted interpretation of the "American Dream" has led to people buying and obsessively remodeling and furnishing larger and larger houses.

This book was fun to read, gave pause for thought, and included one of my all time favorite bits of trivia, about Robert Toll of the infamous Toll Brothers building group, known for their monstrous and fugly McMansions.

"Despite a net worth that's measured in the hundreds of millions of dollars, company founder Robert Toll lives in a 1750 farmhuose with bedrooms that are smaller than the master bathrooms of the homes his company builds." (p. 34)

Hah! Delightful.

20 all

Some more books

Children's Books

Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules, by Jeff Kinney

Sequel to Diary of a Wimpy Kid, still funny and very childish and mean, but funny stuff.



Tracking Trash: Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean Motion, by Loree Griffin Burnes

Sad, and breezes over how we and the kids who read this are all doomed, but seriously, how do you write about this stuff for kids? good try.



Youg Adult Books

Alice Macleod, Realist at Last, Susan Juby

Sequel to Alice, I Think, and a great teen girl book. I like Alice so much that I wish she were real.



Adult Fiction

24 Karat Kids, by Judy Goldstein and Sebastien Stuard
Pretty awful NYC working chick lit- Dr. Shelly Green starts at a fancy Manhattan pediatrician clinic, and suddenly feels she has to change her image, meets a new guy, yadda yadda. Tired and blah. Also, I HATED the end.

Adrian Mole, The Lost Years, by Sue Townsend
Another Adrian Mole book- I think I've read them all now. I hadn't missed much with this one, though. Your standard Adrian Mole book. Pretty good, though- a bad Sue Townsend book is still a million times better than most books.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

February 9, 2008

Adult Fiction
'Salem's Lot, by Stephen King, 20 adult
Stormy Weather, by Carl Hiaasen, 18 adult

Friday, February 1, 2008

February 1, 2008

Children's books
The Moffats, Eleanor Estes (re-read)


Adult NonFiction
The Art of Polymer Clay, Donna Kato
Bead on a Wire, Sharilyn Miller

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

January 29, 2008

Young Adult Fiction
Extras, Scott Westerfeld
The Finnish Line, Linda Gerber

Adult Fiction
The Lost Decade and Other Stories, F. Scott Fitzgerald (re-read)
And Then There Were None, Agatha Christie (re-read)
The Devil in the Junior League, Linda Francis Lee
A Year in the Merde, Stephen Clarke

Adult Non-Fiction
Marketing and Selling Your Handmade Jewelry: The Complete Guide to Turning Your Passion into Profit, Viki Lareau
The Encyclopedia of Jewelry-Making Techniques: A Comprehensive Visual Guide to Traditional and Contemporary Techniques, Jinks McGrath
The Lost Continent, Bill Bryson (re-read)
Red Lobster, White Trash, and the Blue Lagoon, Joe Queenan (re-read)

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Falling behind on this, I am.

Ok.

Children's books
Ballet Shoes, Noel Streatfeild. (re-read) 20
Tennis Shoes, Noel Streatfeild. (re-read) 19
Gemma, Noel Streatfeild. (re-read) 18
Traveling Shoes, Noel Streatfeild. (re-read) 19
Thursday's Child, Noel Streatfeild. (re-read) 18
Theater Shoes, Noel Streatfeild. (re-read) 19

Young Adult Fiction
Wicked Lovely, Melissa Marr 14
Fresh off the Boat, Melissa de le Cruz 17
Surviving Antarctica: Reality TV 2083, Andrea White 17
Rainbow Party, Paul Ruditis 12
Song of the Sparrow, Lisa Ann Sandell 16
The Alchemyst, Michael Scott 16
The Poison Apples, Lily Archer 16
Yours, Sylvia, Stephanie Hemphill 12

Adult Fiction
Shopaholic and Baby, Sophie Kinsella. (re-read) 16
Murder with Puffins, Donna Andrews 16
Dust, Martha Grimes 17

Adult NonFiction
The World Without Us, Alan Weisman 19
The Ecology of Fear, Mike Davis 18
African-American Gardens and Yards in the Rural South, Richard Westmacott 17
The Working Poor: Invisible in America, David Shipler 20
Neither Here Nor There, Bill Bryson. (re-read) 19

Monday, January 7, 2008

Ethan, Suspended, by Pamela Ehrenberg

Fantastic YA book. Ethan is sent to stay with his grandparents in Washington, DC, while the dust settles down after he is involved in a cruel bullying incident, and while his parents' work out their separation. After a rocky time adjusting, he becomes a much more thoughtful person- it sounds awful the way I'm describing it, but it was really damn good.

9Q + 8P = 17 YA

The Penguin Who Knew Too Much, Donna Andrews

I like her mysteries, but this one was a little not as funny as usual. Still, like the Meg Lanslow character and the supporting cast, and even her worst books are better than many author's best books.

Q8 + 8P = 16 Overall

The House of Elliot, by Jean Marsh

Goodish fun read about dressmakers in 1920's London. Loved the sound of the clothes. Book was ok.

6Q + 6P = 12 Overall

Monday, December 31, 2007

Skating Shoes, by Noel Streatfeild



One of my all time favorite books that I was recently, and blissfully, reunited with. Thank you, Mom, if you read this.

Noel Streatfeild's books were my constant companions as a girl. That sounds so incredibly drippy and naff but it's the truth. I read them all, and loved them all hugely. Ballet Shoes, Tennis Shoes, Circus Shoes, Dancing Shoes, Theater Shoes, Traveling Shoes, Party Shoes, Margaret Thursday's adventures and Gemma's successes- I couldn't (and can't) get enough.

Skating Shoes is one of my favorites of these, though, because, I think, Skating Shoes dealt with something I knew nothing about (I had more of an idea what the characters were up to in the other books tennis, ballet, music- well, not the circus one or the Margaret Thursdays) but also, because Lalla Moore in Skating Shoes does something so bad it's shocking. Streatfeild's characters are almost all good, very good, and although there is competition in some cases (Nicky and Susan Heath, in Tennis Shoes are competitive, but never directly, and although Pauline in Ballet Shoes often experiences success at Winifred's expense, it is never, ever intentional, and Pauline and her sister Petrova even offer to give up a part in a play that Petrova has already won, so that Winifred might have it.)

Lalla Moore, however, really is willing to tank her friend Harriet's chances of having a career- and it wouldn't even benefit her directly. Interesting stuff, and that Streatfeild was able to bring in that level of complex moral dilemma and have the reader (me!) understand why Lalla did it and why Harriet did what she did- well, I honestly think that it was for me an introduction into reading on a new level.

I know that sometimes I can seem ornery and point to something that looks trivial or seem glib when I say Skating Shoes made me a deeper reader, or that Gossip Girl books are damn good, but I do mean it. I guess that's why it's nice to keep this record, so I have a place to try to make sense of it.

Skating Shoes (good luck if you can get it- the books are (criminally) out of print, and I feel so so thrilled to have a copy) Quality: 10 Popularity: 9 Overall 19 C/YA/All

Once Upon a Quinceanera, by Julia Alvarez


Good book about the tradition. Raised some interesting ideas, must read some of the referenced books, actually. Talks about a book called The Invention of Tradition, by Eric Hobsbawm that sounds good. Brought an interesting perspective to it, but (sorry- I really enjoyed the book, and don't want to harsh it at all) I think I expected a less personal book- I took it out hoping to hear Alvarez's amazing voice, but not so much about Alvarez herself. But still, damn good book. Only thing that bothered me really was that the chapter about posed quinceanera photographs being taken instead of having an actual quinceanera party as a way to save money, especially in Miami, was almost identical to Vendela Vida's section on quinceaneras in her super book : Girls on the Verge: Debutante Dips, Drive-bys, and Other Initiations. I suppose there's only so much one can say on the topic, but it was so uncanny that it bothered me enough to make sure that Vida's book was listed in the suggested reading at the back.
Quality: 9 Popularity: 8 Overall: 15

Carpe Diem by April Cornwell

YA book. Pretty good. Vassar Spore goes traveling around East Asia with her grandmother, it changes her. I like this book a lot more than I think is coming across here.

8 Quality + 8 Popularity = 16 YA

Monday, December 10, 2007

Jennifer Government by Max Barry


Fanstastic action packed dystopian novel. In the future, everything has been privatised- Government, Police, etc. The major corporations are taking their marketing campaigns to deadly extremes- and it's up to heroine Jennifer Government to stop them. Fun, funny book- great map of the world in the future.


The world of Jennifer Government. Red countries are part of the US, blue ones are the affiliated countries, green ones are "socialist" countries and purple ones are fragmented markets.

Anyway, damn good fun book. It felt so so good to read adult fiction again. Yay!
9 Quality + 9 Popularity = 18 Overall

Freaks, Geeks, and Cool Kids by Murray Milner Jr.

Another book about consumerism and status systems among teens in the US. Much more academic and dry than the others, but interesting for a very formal analysis of group dynamics, status, and identity.

7 Quality + 5 Popularity = 12 Overall

Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella


Re-read. Bath book. Fun, funny, frothy, consistent in tone, I wish the US version wasn't dumbed down. Do they think we won't recognize Finnish? Jerks.

7 Quality + 8 Popularity = 15 Overall

Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House by Eric Hodgins



Re-read. One of my all time favorite books. Very different from the (equally wonderful) Cary Grant /Irene Dunn movie of the same name (based on the book). I love this book beyond words.

10 Quality + 10 Popularity = 20 Overall

Buried by Robin Merrow Macready

What on earth is there to say about this? It was all going along well and interestingly until the very last bit, when it disolved into the most ludicrous sort of soap opera melodrama implausible goofiness. Until that last chapter, it had me. With the last chapter, I was actually laughing and reading out bits aloud to my long suffering husband.
2 Quality + 8 Popularity = 10 Overall YA (popularity points for good cover)

Prom Dates From Hell by Rosemary Clement-Moore

Buffy crossed with Veronica Mars. This one I actually enjoyed, although it felt terribly familiar, what with the wisecraking heroine slaying demons, etc, but well written and cute. Super PG though- for younger teens maybe? 8 Quality + 6 Popularity = 14 Overall YA

Happy Kid by Gail Gauthier

Happy Kid by Gail Gauthier
Fun, sweet and quick read. Definitely middle school, maybe younger. Not sure about the 'power' of the book and all that, but it was cute and harmless. Dreadful cover- I don't know who would pick it up.

7 Quality + 6 Popularity = 13 Overall YA