Posts tagged ‘sara gruen’

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.

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.)

June 28, 2011

News and coming soon!

Good evening, Memoirites! The following post comes to you packed full of news and things that are coming soon from the girls at The Book Memoirs

Reviews

Elle has started her major A Song of Ice and Fire reread (now on A Clash of Kings!) in anticipation of A Dance With Dragons being released and she has not one post but two coming up shortly on the first book and the overall series. Meanwhile, Kate has finished Water for Elephants (the first book completed from her Summery Intentions) and she’ll have the review up soon. Lastly, the girls will do a joint review of Perfect Chemistry and Rules of Attraction in anticipation of Chain Reaction‘s release in August.

Theme Weeks

The 4th of July draws nearer and so does Guest Blogger Week! We’ll be hosting guest posts from some of your favourite bloggers talking about three of their favourite books. Every day, we’ll be running a 24 hour competition to win the book of your choice from that day’s post and we’ll be finishing with a mystery grand prize which we’ll announce near the end, so keep your eyes peeled for that one…!

We’re also pleased to announce that we’ll be running a Writers’ Workshop Week very soon, featuring interviews from authors about their writing techniques and habits. We’re thrilled to be featuring interviews from Ellen Hopkins, Zoë Marriott, EC Sheedy, Michelle Harrison and Gayle Lemmon. Look out for dates coming up!

Guest Posts

Elle will be guest posting in two places in the coming weeks! The first will be over at Serendipity Reviews where she’ll be sharing her love of stationary on a grander scale in Vivienne’s Life As We Know It feature.

Secondly, Elle will be over at Stiletto Storytime participating in Courtney’s Georgette Heyer’s Gems of August month on the 24th August. We’ll remind you about that one closer to the time.

Cool Stuff

Check out April at Good Books and Good Wine’s Seal of Approval feature! We were spotlighted this week and are delighted by it.

The Book Smugglers have an LGBT month must read post up that really stands the tried and tested vote! Go have a look and add to your To Be Read pile.

The Awfully Big Blog Adventure is running an online lit festival soon. The program looks awesome!

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

May 23, 2011

Kate’s Summery Intentions

Plan B: Further Thoughts on Faith by Anne Lamott

With her trademark humor, wisdom, and honesty, Lamott tells us stories of daily life – shopping at the supermarket on her birthday and winning a free ham she doesn’t want; skiing with a dying friend who teaches her to fall; celebrating Thanksgiving with Sam and his dad; attending protest rallies. She watches the seasons come and go, and shares with us the comfort and insights that she draws from life around her even as she continues to panic and despair – and also to struggle, as all of us must, to make the world a safer, and more loving, place to live.

My junior year of college, in my Composition Theory and Practice course, we read Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird, a collection of essays about the trials and tribulations of being a writer, and I fell in love. Lamott’s writing is accessible, honest, funny, and imbued with a really real sense of reflection. She’s not just telling funny stories; she makes points. She works to understand aspects of her life – of family, of loss, and of what she does for a living.

I bought Traveling Mercies and Plan B, her two books on faith (though she now has a third) for a colleague when I worked in Arizona, and I’m pretty sure she didn’t appreciate them because Lamott is light years away from a Bible-thumping, classical Christian that makes most reasonable people want to cross themselves. She’s reasonable and thoughtful and really works to reconcile life with what she believes, and I’m excited to read more of her.

Paper Towns by John Green

Quentin Jacobsen has spent a lifetime loving the magnificently adventurous Margo Roth Spiegelman from afar. So when she cracks open a window and climbs back into his life – dressed like a ninja and summoning him for an ingenious campaign of revenge – he follows. After their all-nighter ends and a new day breaks, Q arrives at school to discover that Margo, always an enigma, has now become a mystery. But Q soon learns that there are clues – and they’re for him. Urged down a disconnected path, the closer he gets, the less Q sees of the girl he thought he knew.

I read Looking for Alaska years ago, before Elle even knew who John Green was, and was absolutely taken away by how engrossing his story and characters were. When his second book, An Abundance of Katherines, came out, I looked it over and decided it really didn’t sound as interesting as Looking for Alaska. I decided to pass it by, and then sort of lost track of John Green.

But Paper Towns is lauded by fans of his (and I think Green himself) as his best book. I read the sample on my Kindle and was incredibly impressed by it. Needless to say, this is high on my list of summer reads.

I Am The Messenger by Markus Zusak

Meet Ed Kennedy—underage cabdriver, pathetic cardplayer, and useless at romance. He lives in a shack with his coffee-addicted dog, the Doorman, and he’s hopelessly in love with his best friend, Audrey. His life is one of peaceful routine and incompetence, until he inadvertently stops a bank robbery. That’s when the first Ace arrives. That’s when Ed becomes the messenger. . .

I mentioned this in a recent Book Babble of mine, but The Book Thief blew my mind and I have heard many of its fans say that I am the Messenger is an even better book. Despite this – and despite having owned a copy for years – I have never actually gotten around to reading it.

But the plot sounds incredibly interesting (mysterious, sort of conspiracy-theory-esque, or, like my mom called it, “almost like a superhero”) and I find Zusak to be an incredibly gifted storyteller, so I’m excited to dive into this book and see what it’s all about.

Red Seas Under Red Skies by Scott Lynch

In his highly acclaimed novel The Lies of Locke Lamora, Scott Lynch took us on an adrenaline-fueled adventure with a band of daring thieves led by con artist extraordinaire Locke Lamora. Now Lynch brings back his outrageous hero for a caper so death-defying, nothing short of a miracle will pull it off.

The first book in Lynch’s series, The Lies of Locke Lamora, is probably one of my favorite fantasy books of all time. I’d almost entirely stopped reading fantasy when Elle suggested I read Locke Lamora, and after I finished, I wondered why I’d ever stopped. Lynch creates a world that is one part Ocean’s Eleven and one part high fantasy, and I couldn’t put the first brick of a book down.

Because Lynch keeps delaying his next Locke Lamora book, I keep delaying reading Red Seas Under Red Skies. It’s like eating the last candy in a packet or using the last bit of toilet paper: once you do that, you’re out. But every time I see this book, sitting on my shelves, I just want to take it and read it cover to cover. I think it’s just time, now.

Dead in a Prairie House by William R. Drennan

In response to the scandal generated by his open affair with the proto-feminist and free love advocate Mamah Borthwick Cheney, Frank Lloyd Wright had begun to build Taliesin as a refuge and “love cottage” for himself and his mistress (both married at the time to others).

Conceived as the apotheosis of Wright’s prairie house style, the original Taliesin would stand in all its isolated glory for only a few months before the bloody slayings that rocked the nation and reduced the structure itself to a smoking hull.

While I lived in Arizona, I went on a tour of Taliesin West, Frank Lloyd Wright’s home and school in Scottsdale, Arizona. My mother, who adores Wright and in fact has visited dozens of his houses over the years, forced us to spend a shameful amount of time in the gift shop, where I spotted this book. I’ve always been a bit of a true-crime junkie, and there is something especially interesting knowing that this topic has been mostly ignored over the years. Whether this will be an engaging piece of non-fiction or the kind of dull, sandpapery true-crime that will make my head explode, I’m not sure yet, but I’m willing to give it a try.

Heist Society by Ally Carter

When Katarina Bishop was three, her parents took her to the Louvre…to case it. For her seventh birthday, Katarina and her Uncle Eddie traveled to Austria…to steal the crown jewels. When Kat turned fifteen, she planned a con of her own—scamming her way into the best boarding school in the country, determined to leave the family business behind. Unfortunately, leaving “the life” for a normal life proves harder than she’d expected.

I like heist stories. Movies, books, TV shows, you name it: if it involves professional thieves doing what they do best, I am completely sucked in. Elle found the second book in this series by mostly-accident and having read the sample? I was hooked.

It feels to me like a summer read, too. Funny, airy, the kind of thing you want to read on your porch while your neighbor grills and you sip a drink with a little umbrella in it. Which is my goal, because I don’t spend enough time on my porch.

I am a Genius of Unspeakable Evil and I Want to Be  Your Class President by Josh Lieb

Twelve-year-old Oliver Watson’s got the IQ of a grilled cheese sandwich. Or so everyone in Omaha thinks. In reality, Oliver’s a mad evil genius on his way to world domination, and he’s used his great brain to make himself the third-richest person on earth! Then Oliver’s father—and archnemesis—makes a crack about the upcoming middle school election, and Oliver takes it as a personal challenge. He’ll run, and he’ll win! Turns out, though, that overthrowing foreign dictators is actually way easier than getting kids to like you. . . Can this evil genius win the class presidency and keep his true identity a secret, all in time to impress his dad?

My methodology for picking up this book involved going to Barnes & Nobles to pick up something else (I don’t even remember what, anymore), seeing it on the shelf, and knowing that I had to have it. It was blurbed by Jon Stewart. Of The Daily Show. How could I not pick it up and buy it?

It’s wickedly funny. I am not sure I even care about the plot, if only because the first three or four pages were actively hilarious. And maybe that makes me shallow, but sometimes, I need a laugh. Or several, which this book promises.

Eve Green by Susan Fletcher

Pregnant with her first child, Eve Green recalls her mother’s death when she was eight years old and her struggle to make sense of her parents’ mysterious romantic past. Eve is sent to live with her grandparents in rural Wales, where she finds comfort in friendships with Daniel, a quiet farmhand, and Billy, a disabled, reclusive friend of her mother’s. When a ravishing local girl disappears, one of Eve’s friends comes under suspicion. Eve will do everything she can to protect him, but at the risk of complicity in a matter she barely understands. This is a timeless and beautifully told story about family secrets and unresolved liaisons.

Once upon a time (and I don’t think Elle even knows this), I had a thing for Wales. So I went to the Tempe Public Library, searched for fiction about Wales, and brought home a massive stack of books to read. One of them was Eve Green, and clearly, I never read it.

Years passed, and since then, Elle has been on me to read Eve Green. I checked it out from the Topeka Public Library last summer – and returned it without reading it. I want to read it, I intend to read it, but I am a bit of an ADHD reader who, when she checks out a book, ends up reading something entirely different from what she checked out. So once again, I will add Eve Green to my summer reading plans – and hopefully actually read it this time around.

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

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.

This is Elle’s doing. Despite the fact I bought this book years ago when asking for suggestions (yes, this is a pattern), I’ve never read it. It sits on my shelf, being pretty, and taking up space.

But Elle and I made a deal that if she read The Westing Game, I would read Water for Elephants. Thus, Water for Elephants is on my summer reading list and will get read, come hell or high water.

May 5, 2011

Book Babble: Coming soon and Non-Fiction Week!

In which Elle imparts the following information:

    • Elle and Kate are sitting their finals so we beg you to be patient with us in terms of content right now; we’ll be back up to speed very soon and have lots of goodies coming!
    • The Book Memoirs is going to be hosting a Non-Fiction Week and we hope that other bloggers and authors will get involved and join us! There will be some prizes and hopefully lots of sharing of great undiscovered non-fiction.
    • Summer Reads Blogstravaganza will be coming up after Kate and Elle finish sitting their finals and will feature lots of summery themed reads; look out for an Amazon/Book Depository gift certificate!
    • Elle will be doing a guest post on Vivienne’s lovely blog, Serendipity 101 most likely nex week so look out for that one!
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