Posts tagged ‘contemporary literature’

October 17, 2011

Writer Workshop Week: Ellen Hopkins

Writer Workshop Week

Day 1 – Ellen Hopkins

Writer Workshop Week is a week of guest interviews with well-known authors who Elle and Kate have asked to share a little bit of their writing process for aspiring novelists and readers alike!

 

Hello, everybody! Today, we’d like to welcome author Ellen Hopkins to Writers’ Workshop Week here on The Book Memoirs. Ellen is the author of eight young adult books, including the Crank trilogy (consisting of Crank, Glass, and Fallout) and the soon-to-be-released Perfect. All of her novels are New York Times best sellers. Formerly a non-fiction author, Ellen was inspired to write her first novel, Crank, after real-life events surrounding one of her daughters.

 

Kate: Hi Ellen, it’s lovely to have you here! As most people have heard, your début novel, Crank, was inspired in part by your daughter’s drug addiction. What was that experience like, in terms of taking painful reality and transposing it to fiction? It seems too obvious to ask if it was a difficult experience.

Ellen: It was cathartic. Something I had to do, really. For me, if not for an audience. I truly didn’t start the book expecting, or even considering, publication. But through the writing process, it became clear that the story was important, not only to me, but to anyone who has been touched by addiction. The book, in fact, sold with only 75 pages complete because the editor who first saw it realized how powerful the story would be.

Elle: Speaking of real life and real situations making it into your fiction, on your website under the section for budding writers you mention always keeping a writer’s notebook for “when the muse strikes” – just how much of your day-to-day observations of people and places do you think makes it into your novels?

Ellen: Quite a lot, really. Writers must be observers. I can’t stress that enough. Creating realistic, multi-layered characters requires voyeurism, something I practice with zeal.

Kate: When I taught, your books were easily the most stolen from the English department’s classroom libraries, a massive compliment to any author! What most helps you keep writing authentic situations that teenagers are drawn to?

Ellen: Respect for the generation. It was never easy to be a teen, despite what some adults might think. Just because your years don’t number many doesn’t mean your problems don’t. Navigating school, relating to others, falling in and out of love, dealing with the adults in your life… these are the easy things. Toss in major choices like whether or not to have sex, drink, use, etc., the waters become choppy. Add things you cannot control—abuse, desertion, rape, etc., you have a tsunami. Survival is everything. I want to help them survive.

Elle: You mention critique groups on your website. Many writers advocate a group of fellow writers, others show friends and family, and others seem to keep their manuscript solely for their editor. Who is your first audience and how important would you say that their opinion is to you in terms of revisions?

Ellen: I used to have an amazing critique group, but over the years it dissolved. People moved. People got frustrated and quit writing. Toward the end, I had published a couple of books and my group became a bit too deferential. Now, I have a select group of writing friends, all published, whose opinions I totally respect. We do retreats together, and this is where they might serve as beta readers. Truthfully, though, at this point in my career, I don’t have time for rounds of revision. Rather, I self-edit heavily as I write, so my first draft is largely my last draft.

Kate: You used to write nonfiction books for children. I think the number was somewhere in the 50s! How was your writing process when you were writing nonfiction books different from your process now that you’re writing fiction?

Ellen: I wrote the nonfiction much faster. But it still had voice, which is why the editors loved it. I could also write more than one nonfiction book at a time. Can’t do that with fiction. I need to stay vested in the characters I’m writing. And, even though fiction pays better, it feels less like a job. This is fun!

Elle: I’m interested in the locations that you write in. Do you only take notes in your notebook or do you ever flesh out full scenes? Do you prefer quiet or activity? Coffee shop or office? All of your notes and/or storyboard with you or writing-free, so to speak?

Ellen: I am now writing two books a year—one young adult and one adult. I don’t have time to write scenes in a notebook, then transpose. And my note taking is, too often, on scratch paper. I have stacks to sort through. Also, because the verse-novel formatting is so specific, I actually write to trim size, so that the word placement is exactly how I want it. I write at home in my office, or on the road on my laptop (sometimes on airplanes, often in hotel rooms). I need quiet and focus.

Kate: What do you find distracts you the most from writing? Do you find you suffer from writer’s block? Writing yourself into corners? “Delete everything I wrote yesterday” syndrome?

Ellen: My family. I do travel a lot for promotion, so I understand they want my attention when I’m home, and I do my best to spend quality time with them. But that is also my best writing time, so it can become an issue. I don’t block on story, but do sometimes on scenes. When that happens, I work my body somehow—walk or garden or play with my dogs. Physical movement lets my subconscious kick into gear and gets me where I need to go. I don’t write myself into corners and if I have ever deleted everything I wrote the day before it was totally by accident, and completely maddening.

Elle: Linear or scene-by-scene? Do you think that it detracts from your writing if you don’t write in order or do you think it packs more of an emotional punch to craft the scene you’re most in the mood for?

Ellen: Straight ahead. I have to, because each page flows very specifically into the next, and every single word counts. I might, in fact, stress for a half-hour over the exact word or sentence or stanza and get that right before I move forward.

Kate: Your books are written in a very poetic, free-flowing style. Was this a conscious decision you made when starting to write Crank, or just something that came more naturally to you?

Ellen: I started Crank in prose, but the voice was all wrong. Put the book away and went to a writer’s conference, where I saw Sonya Sones (another verse novelist) speak. I’ve written poetry most of my life and decided to try combining verse and story. It worked.

Elle: Most authors seemed to be asked which fellow author is their biggest influence. Instead, I’d like to ask you if you have any particular books which have influenced the way in which you write or have changed the way you view the writing process.

Ellen: Sometimes a Great Notion, by Ken Kesey. Four very different voices, and unique writing styles for each. Complicated viewpoints. It’s a hard book to read, but brilliant, and totally character driven. That one spoke loudly to me.

Keep an eye out for out Writer Workshop Week giveaway 22/23 October!

Tomorrow on the blog: Zoë Marriott!

October 2, 2011

Book Babble: In My Mailbox the Long Awaited Edition

In My Mailbox (IMM) is a weekly feature organised by The Story Siren. IMM is a post where you can show which books entered your house and it also gives you a chance to say thank you to the people that kindly sent them. To find out more about how you can join in click here.

Books I mentioned in this IMM:
City of Bones by Cassandra Clare | Goodreads
Sing Me to Sleep by Angela Morrison | Goodreads
Heist Society by Ally Carter | Goodreads
Blood Bound by Rachel Vincent | Goodreads
Working Stiff by Rachel Caine | Goodreads | US cover | UK cover
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern | Goodreads
The Jewel and the Key by Louise Spiegler | Goodreads
I Love You, Goodbye by Cynthia Rogerson | Goodreads
Saints and Sinners by Paul Cuddihy | Goodreads
The Good Mayor by Andrew Nicoll | Goodreads

People I mentioned in this IMM:
Rosie @ The Review Diaries
Daphne @ Loving Books

Books I didn’t mention in this IMM:
A Scots Quair by Lewis Grassic Gibbons | Goodreads
A History of Scotland by Neil Oliver | Goodreads
Broadmoor Revealed: Victorian Crime and the Lunatic Asylum by Mark Stevens | Goodreads

August 19, 2011

Book Babble: Kate’s Top 5 Irrepressible Sidekicks

Sometimes, you can’t rely on the protagonist in a book to carry the day. Or, if you can, you run into a minor character who steals the show. For example, when I was a little girl, I couldn’t stand The Little Mermaid‘s Ariel but Sebastian? I would’ve paid money to see Sebastian: The Movie, even though I was too young to really understand the concept of money as a whole. And in a book, a good sidekick character is worth his (or her) weight in pure, unblemished gold.

So submitted for your approval, Memiorites, here are my top five irrepressible sidekicks.

Boomer, Dash & Lily’s Book of Dares

Ordinarily, a character I’d essentially just met wouldn’t even place on a list like this, but I am in love with Dash’s best friend Boomer. Not in a creepy way, but in an I-wanna-squish-him way.

One of the things that works best about Dash is his sardonic, cynical outlook on life in general. I think Levithan and Cohn captured the essence of teenage boy perfectly when they wrote Dash. He’s sarcastic, snide, a little broken, and a lot resentful of what the world expects from people, especially teenaged boy-type people. But the best part about Dash, for me, is Boomer.

Boomer is the classic foil. He’s clueless almost to the point of you wondering if he has a bit of a developmental problem; he loves kids’ movies; he’s almost cavity-inducing in his earnestness and sincerity; he’s incredibly kind. He serves as a window into Dash’s world, too, because when you start the book, you think to yourself, “Dash probably hangs out with people just like himself. An army of little Dashes, snarking at the universe.” And then, you meet Boomer.

I would’ve like Dash & Lily if Boomer hadn’t been there, make no mistake, but he was that little push I needed to stop liking the book and start loving it. He’s a little something extra-special in an already really great book.

Helen Walsh, Anybody Out There?

In a lot of ways, I think Anybody Out There? is one of Marian Keyes’ heavier books. It deals with a lot in a short span of time and it’s almost suffocating in the veins of pain that run through it – and in how absolutely brilliantly it’s done. But more than the actual plot of the book, which I can’t really say anything about without spoiling it, I loved the secondary, mirror plot belonging to main-character Anna’s youngest sister, Helen.

Helen, of the five Walsh sisters, is the irresponsible, lackadaisical, drifts-from-job-to-job-and-drives-her-parents-mental one, but in this book she is absolutely the perfect relief the whole damn time. Her mother recounts most of her exploits as she works as a private eye investigating an infidelity case (which, as it usually goes with the Walsh sisters, spirals entirely out of her control), and oh my stars and garters, it is hilarious. Literally laugh-out-loud-until-you-hurt (LOLUYH?) funny.

And Keyes is brilliant, as an author, in that she places the Helen sections perfectly amid all of Anna’s struggles. Just when you think you literally cannot take another step in Anna’s journey without your heart falling on the floor, there’s Helen, putting herself in mortal peril when all she was supposed to do was take a few photographs. Her mother’s dramatic retellings are even better. It’s absolutely perfect.

I’ll admit that of all the sisters, I was least sold on Helen for a long time, if only because I didn’t feel like I knew her as well as I knew Rachel or the others, but Anybody Out There? had me changing my mind. She’s the one sister who doesn’t have her own book, too, but I don’t think I want one. I think I love Helen as the comic relief, the secondary plot, and the mirror to her sisters’ worlds. Plus, I don’t think anything could top her role in Anybody Out There? No, seriously, I don’t.

Jean Tannen, The Lies of Locke Lamora

I’m not sure if Jean is technically a sidekick. I mean, that’s like saying Brad Pitt’s character in Ocean’s Eleven is a sidekick, and I’m not sure I fully agree with that. But clearly, The Lies of Locke Lamora is entirely focused on Locke as the protagonist, lives-eats-sleeps-and-breathes Locke, and leaves me no choice but to address Jean as a sidekick. Which is okay, because it gives me a chance to talk about Jean, or, as I like to refer to him, my literary boyfriend.

Jean is a thousand things rolled into one, a bit of a high fantasy Hank McCoy but with less fur. He’s a brilliant fighter with an unconventional weapon of choice (seriously, they’re hatchets, how cool is that?), he reads poetry and thinks deep thoughts, he’s unfailingly loyal, and he’s absolutely brilliant. I knew from the very first moment that he appeared in The Lies of Locke Lamora that he would be my favorite character, and I was absolutely right.

But don’t be fooled by my simplistic description of Jean; he’s not just a throwaway loyal henchman with cool weaponry but a fully-developed character. One of the book’s greatest strengths is the fact that every character has a past, a hook, and a real personality, and Jean is no exception. The sequences about his past made my heart ache and sing at the same time. And that’s part of the magic of The Lies of Locke Lamora: it’s not just high fantasy meets con-artistry, a sort of pseudo-medieval Leverage, but rather a tale of well-developed people that fits together like the pieces of an expensive puzzle.

And seriously. Can Jean please be real? I will even take the killing people and the being a con-man if I can have a guy like him in reality. No actual person even comes close.

Rosie, Water for Elephants; Mogget and the Disreputable Dog, Sabriel, Lirael, and Abhorsen; Koko and YumYum, The Cat Who… series; the Death of Rats, Reaper Man; Ghost, Summer, Grey Wind, Nymeria, Shaggy Dog and Lady, A Game of Thrones

I just cheated, but I have a good reason for it.

Animals in books – animals who matter in books – are one of my all-time favorite things. I think if you incorporate an animal and do it well, as an author, you have done something special. I’m not just talking about “And Frank had a black cat who slept with him at night” animal-inclusion, either, but ones that actually become characters. Animals that are so intertwined into the actual narrative that you can’t imagine the story without them, those are the animals I love.

As I was trying to decide who my final sidekick was going to be, I was incredibly torn. I thought first of Mogget, from Sabriel, the cat-who-isn’t that makes Sabriel’s journey so engaging and absolutely blows your mind by the end of the book, but to talk about Mogget without mentioning the Disreputable Dog seemed wrong. Then I considered ignoring both of them and talking about Ghost, from A Game of Thrones, but you can’t talk about Ghost without talking about the other direwolves and I wasn’t going to put all five of them into a single sidekick entry! (Plus, sorry Elle, I think Summer might be my favorite of the wolves, not Ghost.) And then I thought of the Death of Rats, who made me happy throughout Reaper Man, and I realize there was no way to just pick one animal. Not unless I wanted to pick all of them.

To go completely into why I love each of the eleven (eleven!) pets-slash-companions-slash-friends I just listed would make this painfully long. I mean, I could write a thesis-length treatise on why Water for Elephants wouldn’t be the same without Rosie, or why Koko and YumYum have instilled in me a desperate need for a Siamese cat, but I think those of you who have read books with integral animals know exactly what I mean. The world would be a far sadder place without direwolves howling in the night and YumYum licking photographs, or without Rosie’s irrepressible spirit and the Disreputable Dog’s running commentary, and I think that’s the essential function of a sidekick. It’s not whether you could live without them, because after all, Batman is Batman even without Robin, but whether the book would be as good without them. And in every case listed above, the answer is an unequivocal no.

Tasslehoff Burrfoot, Dragonlance: Chronicles

Tasslehoff – Tas to his friends – was the first fantasy character I ever fell readily and truly in love with. It’s funny, because I read Chronicles at the same time as a female friend of mine, and while she was drooling after Tanis Half-Elven from page ten onward, there was no character I adored more than Tas. Chronicles consists of the first trilogy of books in what is now a sprawling universe of stories I can barely untangle anymore, but the rest of the books almost don’t matter because they don’t feature my Tas.

Tas is a kender, which is the Dragonlance answer to a halfling, and is a four-foot-tall mini-human with a ridiculous top-knot of which he is very proud. He’s a kleptomaniac but with the best of intentions (and usually he doesn’t mean it anyway), he’s sometimes a bit naïve, and he often throws himself into horrible situations without realizing that he’s about to encounter a dragon or any other number of potentially horrible ways to die. And that’s why I adore Tas in ways I can’t fully describe to you: you just can’t keep him down.

But don’t be fooled by my recounting his madcap adventures (there is seriously one of the spin-off books about him helping to solve a murder! It’s like the Dragonlance Santa Claus brought me my favorite things!). Tas also has a hidden depth. He is a character who made me cry on more than one occasion – and I am not a book-crier. There is a scene with Flint Fireforge, the dwarf who is to Tas what Gimli is to Legolas, that I can’t think about without my heart feeling weak. And I think that’s really testimony to what a good sidekick should be: a little funny, a little serious, a lot unforgettable.

August 17, 2011

The Passage Readalong + Giveaway and Some News!

Good evening, fellow Memoirites! We have goodies and goodies and newsies and goodies for you today!

First of all, you have no doubt glimpsed our loverly new side banner. We are pleased to announce…

The Passage – The Readalong

Cohosted by Serendipity Reviews & The Book Memoirs

What is a Readalong? A Readalong of Justin Cronin’s The Passage. On Wednesday of every week hosted alternatively, Vivienne from Serendipity Reviews and Elle and Kate from The Book Memoirs will post a five chapter synopsis and their thoughts on each segment.

Why a Readalong? Can we join in? The Passage is a chunky tome and we think it would be better if we all read it together! We encourage participation and discussion in the comments and in posts on your own blog! If you’d like to join in, why not grab our banner and use it on your site? Note: header banner coming before the Readalong starts! You’ll find the schedule below – each week, Elle will link up the post on The Passage Readalong page on our blog so that you can reach our thoughts and discussions.

The Schedule

24/08/11 The Book Memoirs Ch 1 – 5 End on pg 119
31/08/11 Serendipity Reviews   Ch 6 – 11    End on pg 212
07/09/11 The Book Memoirs Ch 12 – 18 End on pg 331
14/09/11 Serendipity Reviews Ch 19 – 22 End on pg 418
21/09/11 The Book Memoirs   Ch 23 – 29 End on pg 517
28/09/11 Serendipity Reviews  Ch 30 – 41 End on pg 620
05/10/11 The Book Memoirs Ch 42 – 53 End on pg 728
12/10/11 Serendipity Reviews  Ch 54 – 60 End on pg 815
19/10/11 The Book Memoirs   Ch 61 – 69 End on pg 908
26/10/11 Serendipity Reviews  Ch 70 – END End on last page.

Giveaway – The Passage Readalong

To celebrate our Readalong, we’re giving away two copies of the book – one UK only and one INTERNATIONAL – and you can find the giveaway link here. If you can’t access the link, check our Viv’s information post here instead. Don’t miss out!

And some news…

Normally we wouldn’t post such messages here on the blog but since The Book Memoirs was founded, we’ve found a little group of lovely fellow bloggers who have been a source of inspiration and constant friendship to us and Daphne over at Loving Books is one of our constants! She’s holding an awesome Birthday Bash Extravaganza over at her blog from 15th – 21st to celebrate her birthday so do head on over and look!

And that’s all from us! We’ll see you soon!

August 14, 2011

Book Babble: IMM the FINALLY Edition!

Books I mentioned in this IMM:
Hooked by Catherine Greenman | Goodreads
What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty | Goodreads
Rosemary and Rue Seanan McGuire | Goodreads
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs | Goodreads
Dear Mr Potter, compiled and edited by Lily Zalon | Goodreads
Silent in the Sanctuary by Deanna Raybourne| Goodreads
More from the cut-off portion of IMM next week… sigh, YouTube!

Books I didn’t mention in this IMM:
Who’s Afraid of Mr Wolfe? by Hazel Osmond | Goodreads

People I mentioned:
Rosy from The Review Diaries
Ana and Thea from The Book Smugglers
Angie from Angieville

Note: Does everyone notice that Mr Fred, the arm brace, is absent? Thanks to everyone who asked how I’m doing! I’m now able to have breaks of a couple of hours without Fred when I’m sitting around in the house. He has rapidly reduced the spells of numbness in my finger, making getting around (and typing!) easier all around.

August 1, 2011

Book Babble: On a World Without Borders

The news of Borders Books & Music’s impending liquidation has been all over business news lately, but without much talk of the bookish repercussions. Today, Kate discusses the possible consequences of Borders closing and tries to find the silver lining in the bleak, Borders-less future.

July 25, 2011

Review: Lucy in the Sky by Paige Toon

Lucy in the Sky by Paige Toon

Review by Elle

Publication Information: Pocket Books / 19 Apr 2007 / 400 pages

Where I heard about it: Lucy in the Sky popped up several times on my Goodreads list in one of those instances of Person A adds it and Persons B, C, D and E are like, “OH! Shiny! Gimme!” and then they add it, too and you’re just compelled to click and check it out because you’ll feel left out if you don’t. (In other words: it was peer pressure, I tell you!)

Spoilers: De nada.

Review:

A lawyer. A surfer. A 24-hour flight.

The frequent liar points are clocking up and Lucy’s got choices to make…

It,s been nine years since Lucy left Australia. Nine years since she’s seen her best friend Molly, and Sam, the one-time love of her life. Now her two friends are getting married. To each other. And Lucy is on her way to Sydney for their wedding. Life for Lucy has moved on. She’s happily living in London with James, her hunky lawyer boyfriend, and has a glamorous job in PR. She’s looking forward to a nice relaxing two-week holiday in Sydney. But just before take-off, Lucy receives a text from James’s mobile. She can’t resist taking a look — and, in one push of a button, her perfect world falls apart…

Contrary to popular belief, I love chick-lit. A lot. I am, however, justifiably very hard on chick-lit as a whole. There are numerous examples out there of well-written, high-quality books in the genre (Rachel’s Holiday! Unsticky!) but it is so difficult right now to find the gems in amongst all of the thigh-high piles of dross-laden plotlines, purple prose and earth-shattering moments of insta-love. Somewhere in the past five years or so, I feel like contemporary chick-lit as a whole has lost its way a little, following blindly in the path of Cecilia Ahern and her magical realism (except in order to suspend disbelief in the face of this magical realism, one would have to stand on one’s head whilst reading the book upside down and simultaneously making time turn backwards).

What a treat it was, then, to discover Paige Toon! There is a blurb on the inside cover of Lucy in the Sky from Lisa Jewell (and though I had never heard of Lisa, it transpires that she is apparently the author of several chick-lit novels of her own) which heralded the novel as, “Real old-school chick-lit, like they used to make in the good old days!” – Lisa Jewell couldn’t have been more right and I am so glad that I took the chance on picking this one up.

The nasty fluorescent light in the bathroom flickers on. I clock my diamond earrings in my reflection and seriously consider tearing them from my ears and flushing them down the toilet. Ha! Knowing how the bastard lied through his teeth to me, they’re probably not even real. Lucy in the sky with cubic fucking zirconia. That’d be about right.

There are too many things I could squee about in this novel and none of them would necessarily be very coherent, however, there are two very important things which make this story the kind of spectacular tour de force which will make me press-gang Kate into reading it and have me giving a copy to everybody I know: 1) the witty, vulnerable, and blithely sarcastic narrative voice and 2) the way that Paige Toon absolutely defies convention and refuses to shy away from the emotional body punches of the situation even when they don’t make Lucy particularly sympathetic.

Lucy is a twenty-something and her voice rings completely true as someone newly entering adulthood, still young enough to remember bitterly the disappointment of teenage unrequited love and only just in her first serious relationship (and desperate not to lose it at any cost). She has these wonderful moments of realising that all is not quite right with her boyfriend, James, but being too emotionally immature and inexperienced to deal with it and so she becomes moody and seemingly irrationally tetchy – she is able to articulate to the reader why she feels the way she feels and yet she is powerless to change her actions. I loved that Lucy was not emotionally perfect or spectacularly pretty and neither was she an over-achiever, or ridiculously intelligent. She is quite simply an average person like the rest of us, armed with serious self-esteem issues which are buried just far enough under the surface so as to cause problems but not so pressing so as to make her a whiny ball of angst (I’m looking at you, paranormal romance).

The next morning when I wake up again just in time to catch the sunrise, I allow myself half an hour of thinking about Nathan, wondering what he’s doing, what could have been. I’m lost in my sad thought as the sun grows bigger and brighter in the sky, but when James appears from the bedroom I tell myself that’s it for the day. I try to keep my daydreaming to a minimum on the way to work, and the next morning, I allow myself just ten minutes of feeling lonely and depressed before I force myself to buck up.

Love triangles are something which I used to love as they were ever-so-slightly taboo, however, they are the oil to the gears of chick-lit these days (and every other genre right now – I’m still looking at you, paranormal romance) so it was an absolute delight to me to see a love triangle which is emotionally honest and which concludes in a way that shocked me, troubled me and made me think. It’s impossible for me to tell you exactly how things work out without spoiling the plot but sufficed to say, Paige Toon doesn’t back off from making Lucy take responsibility for the choices she makes, both the good, the bad and the utterly selfish ones. I was taken aback by the final choice Lucy made and I return again to the phrase emotional honesty because it isn’t the easy choice and it isn’t the one that makes Lucy come up smelling of roses.

Another one of the things that I enjoyed about the book was that all of the characters in the novel are fleshed out properly. I felt like I knew them all, like this was a book in a series where every character got a look in at the action. James, Lucy’s boyfriend, is perfectly rendered as both black and white and Nathan, the other man, is not faultless and beautiful but attractive and flawed. Lucy’s friends were not all yes-men, nor were they always there when she needed them, and past relationships were not skimmed over. I particularly enjoyed Lucy’s relationship with her mother, who is beautifully portrayed as someone who loves Lucy and yet someone who is selfish enough to encourage Lucy to do the things which will give her an easy life, things which are not always to Lucy’s benefit.

I think again, not for the first time, about leaving James. But what then? Where on earth would I go? What would I do? I do love him. He made an effort to bring me over here to be with him this weekend and I know he loves me too. I adore our flat. My job is brilliant. […] I look down at my phone again. But I miss you, I think. And I miss Sam and Molly, my oldest friends. And Sydney with its crystalline waters, jagged skyline and sunsets so beautiful that they make your heart sing.

I’ve never felt so torn.

It would be remiss of me not to tell you the one thing which I think could have been better in the novel and that is that it could be about fifty pages shorter. Toon portrays a wonderfully portrait of painful real life but this portrait also includes one too many workplace events (Lucy works for a mid-list public relations firm) and one too many trips to other locales (such as visiting her mother and going on day trips around London). While these things are a blisteringly real (and frustratingly genuine) portrayal of the ways in which life denies you instant gratification, it made me a little grumpy as reader to get to page 300 and find that there were still another 80 pages to go waiting for Lucy to decide. I don’t think they were badly written pages, just that they were a little superfluous to the plot.

It was really difficult for me to rate this one (especially as two of Toon’s other novels appeared on my doorstep this morning) and it was initially going to be a 7 but the more I think about it, the more fond I grow of it, and the less able I am to give it anything less than an 8.

8 frosted doughnuts: If it’s a series, you want more, if its a stand-alone, you’re sad it stood alone!

(For more rating information see here.)

July 19, 2011

Review: Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

Review by Kate

Publication information: Algonquin Books / 9 April 2007 / 335 pages

Genre: Literary fiction

Where I heard about it: In 2007, after nearly a year of reading literally nothing, I asked friends for book recommendations as I wanted to start reading again. Elle claims she was the first to recommend Water for Elephants, but as I thought someone else did, I will say it had multiple good reviews from friends. And then it sat on my shelf. For four years.

Spoilers: Nothing to write home about.

Review:

Though he may not speak of them, the memories still dwell inside Jacob Jankowski’s ninety-something-year-old mind. Memories of himself as a young man, tossed by fate onto a rickety train that was home to the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth. Memories of a world filled with freaks and clowns, with wonder and pain and anger and passion; a world with its own narrow, irrational rules, its own way of life, and its own way of death. The world of the circus: to Jacob it was both salvation and a living hell.

I’ve never been “into” the circus. My godmother happily retells the story of taking me along with her three daughters to the circus when I was about four. While they ate peanuts and cheered at feats of daring, I fell asleep for almost the entire show. Maybe that’s part of why it took me so long to read Water for Elephants, because on paper it should be a book I adore: the story of down-on-his-luck Jacob who, nowhere else to go, ends up the vet for a circus, all of it told by Jacob as an old man when the circus comes to town. I wish I’d had the sense to read the prologue about four years ago, because the excitement and mystery that is set up on those first few pages is a vein carried through the whole book. Gruen’s prose is beautiful and addicting. Jacob, even more so.

Uncle Al is a buzzard, a vulture, an eater of carrion. Fifteen years ago he was the manager of a mud show: a ragtag group of pellagra-riddled performers dragged from town to town by miserable thrust-hoofed horses.

In August 1928, through no fault of Wall Street, the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth collapsed. They simply ran out of money and couldn’t make the jump to the next town, never mind back to winter quarters. The general manager caught a train out of town and left everything behind – people, equipment, and animals.

Uncle Al had the good fortune to be in the vicinity.

It’s hard for me to really sort out how I feel about this book. It almost feels like a good ensemble drama, told specifically through the eyes of just one of the players: through Jacob we learn about Uncle Al, the manager who maybe is only out for himself; August, the charismatic but dangerous ringmaster; Kinko, the performing dwarf with a Jack Russel named Queenie; Marlena, the beautiful equestrian performer; Camel and the other men who do the grunt work. Circus life isn’t glorified in the way we’re set up to think of when we tell kids they can run off and join the circus if they don’t want to brush their teeth or eat their brussel sprouts. Everything Jacob experiences is shared through the lens of someone who never expected this life, and you get to feel the horror: in animal abuse, in the mistreatment of other workers, in the bombastic and oftentimes unconscionable ways the circus is run. Jacob is a compassionate lens through which to see some of the least compassionate characters I’ve ever read – and an honest lens.

An honest lens to an extent. Jacob is the sort of unreliable narrator who you trust the entire way through. He’s not really lying, as much as he’s leaving things out. Hinting at things without saying them. Ensuring that you never really know what’s going to happen next, even when you think you do. Gruen perfectly constructs Jacob so you never know if the obvious answer, the one you’d guess from the line of the narrative, is actually the right one. But you trust him, and you believe in him – and you aren’t really disappointed by him, either.

And what started slowly, as a tale about life in the circus that was interesting but not riveting, turned quickly into a story about love and trust and humanity in a way that I can’t really spell out without spoiling the whole book – and writing an ode to Rosie, the most compelling character of all.

Age is a terrible thief. Just when you’re getting the hang of life, it knocks your legs out from under you and stoops your back. It makes you ache and muddies your head and silently spreads cancer throughout your spouse.

Metastatic, the doctor said. A matter of weeks or months. But my darling was as frail as a bird. She died nine days later. After sixty-one years together, she simply clutched my hand and exhaled.

It seems a misnomer to call Water for Elephants a love story, though every review and blurb I’ve read is dead-set on pinning the label through every page. Water for Elephants is a life story. There’s a love element in it, sure, but that’s because there’s love in life. But there’s hurt and fear, danger and despair, all beautifully told in a way that gave me that heart-sick feeling when I finished it, the one where I wished there was more. But on the other hand, I think more would’ve been wrong. I think it stays as everything Jacob needed to say and have understood about his life. And it ended up being exquisite.

9 strawberry shortcakes: A stunner. Well-executed.

(For more rating information see here.)

July 17, 2011

Book Babble: In My Mailbox, the one with A Dance with Dragons

In My Mailbox (IMM) is a weekly feature organised by The Story Siren. IMM is a post where you can show which books entered your house and it also gives you a chance to say thank you to the people that kindly sent them. To find out more about how you can join in click here.

Books I showed in this IMM:
A Dance with Dragons by George R. R. Martin | Goodreads
Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver | Goodsreads
The Day Before Lisa Schroeder | Goodreads
Rules of Civility: A Novel by Amor Towles | Goodreads
Cracked Up To Be by Courtney Summers | Goodreads
Some Girls Are by Courtney Summers | Goodreads
You Against Me by Jenny Downham | Goodreads
Ship Breaker by Paulo Bacigalupi | Goodreads
This Gorgeous Game by Donna Freitas | Goodreads | Angie @ Angieville’s review
Amy & Roger’s Epic Detour by Morgan Matson | Goodreads | Morgan’s stop @ The Book Smugglers on the book tour
Jessie <3 NYC | Goodreads
Texas Gothic by Rosemary Clement Moore | Goodreads
The Swan Kingdom by Zoë Marriott | Goodreads
Daughter of the Flames by Zoë Marriott | Goodreads
Shadows on the Moon by Zoë Marriott | Goodreads

Books I didn’t show in this IMM:
Lucy in the Sky by Paige Toon | Goodreads | Didn’t show because it’s used and the book is ruined.
Life: An Exploded Diagram by Mal Peet | Goodreads | Kindle
Starcrossed by Josephine Angelini | Goodreads | Kindle

Bloggers I mentioned in this IMM:
Ana @ The Book Smugglers
Angie @ Angieville
Daphne @ Loving Books

Don’t forget – you can still enter our 7 book giveaway! One day left!

Click here to enter.

July 6, 2011

Guest Blogger Week: Day 3 – Vivienne from Serendipity Reviews

Welcome to Day 3 of Guest Blogger Week!

Today we welcome Vivienne from Serendipity 101, an ex-teacher turned rogue-blogger with eclectic tastes in her arsenal…

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When Elle asked me to write a post about my three favourite books I actually started hyperventilating and found myself in desperate need of a brown paper bag. You think I am exaggerating, but I can assure you I am not. The thought of only picking three favourite books out of all the wonderful and exciting books that I have read threw me into a tornado of indecision.

After a lot of angst moments which involved my three books constantly changing, I decided to tweak Elle’s original request and actually tell you about my three favourite books that changed my life.

So please allow me to present my three favourite life changing reads.

The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield

My husband actually read this book before I did on the aeroplane when we flew to Florida many years ago before we were married. He was blown away by the book and insisted that I read it too. Normally I would avoid his choices as the books he loves are not usually my taste. However, something about this book really intrigued me, so I decided to read it and it blew my mind.

The Celestine Prophecy is a fictional account of an adventure and discovery whilst in search of an ancient Peruvian manuscript. However, that isn’t all it is. It is also a guidebook that has the power to crystalize your perceptions of why you are where you are in life – and to direct your steps with a new energy and optimism as you head into tomorrow.

The book was accompanied by a guidebook and on reading that too I discovered that by using your positive mental energy and actually listening to the world around you, you could bring about the things you desired. I swear on my life that this w

orks. I have walked into every job I have ever wanted with ease and I am positive it is the lessons I learnt with this book that helped. Now I imagine you all think I am crazy, so if you don’t believe me, try it for yourself.

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone

By JK Rowling

I would imagine this book being on a lot of people’s lists as one of their favourite books. I also think everyone must know the story by now so I won’t go in to detail. The reason I chose it as one of my favourite books is because this book made me actually believe that it was possible to realise my dream of writing for a living. I found JK Rowling’s journey to publication extremely inspirational and it showed me that dreams can really come true. From this book, my belief in my writing was reignited and hopefully one day soon I will be able to see my name on a book cover too.

Twilight by Stephanie Meyer

can hear you all gasping at my eclectic book choices for this post. However Stephanie Meyer’s Twilight series got me reading again after quite a long reading slump. I found the series really addictive and actually read all four books in a week. This was my first taste of Young Adult fiction and since reading them I have never looked back. I love Young Adult books with a passion.

So there you have my three favourite books that actually changed something about me. I know they seem an odd mixture but I love them.

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Giveaway

To win a copy of one of one of Vivienne’s favourite books, simply leave a comment below!

* The giveaway is, as always, international but please make sure either The Book Depository or Amazon ships to your country before entering.

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Be sure to pop back tomorrow when we’ll welcome Marc from Fantasy Faction!

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