Friday, July 13, 2012

Opening Night Of The Dead …and a brief comment about ebooks.


I just finished reading Opening Night of the Dead by Blake M. Petit.  Before I get into the book, which was kindly sent to me by the author for an honest review, I want to say something about the way in which I read it.  Opening Night of the Dead was the first novel I have entirely read on my Kindle App.  I found it a different experience than reading an actual book.  I've read other things with my different reading apps, but they were either read concurrently with the hard copy or not fiction.  I find reading on a tablet (my iPad) distracting, yet oddly convenient.  If I suddenly wondered about something, whether in the actual story or just my mind wandering, I had the quick ability to stop and look it up.  Does it speak to the quality of the story?  Maybe.  But I also had this problem when I read Dracula (iBook and real book at the same time).  Yet, I found it convenient.  I could just pull it out and read it where ever I was; it’s so portable!  I could grab a quick page while cooking or in the car.  If I was watching television and there was a boring part on, I could just whip out my iPad without getting up to get an actual book (or sometimes not getting up at all and flipping channels; this speaks to my lazy side).  In the end, I still like reading actual books better.

Opening Night of the Dead was a fun foray in to zombie fiction.  There was a lot of action and some interesting characters.  There were, in fact, a lot of characters.   Which is fine, but I found having back story on so many of them made the beginning of the story a little slow for me.  For the first part of the book, I kept itching for it to get to the good stuff.  Part of what slowed me down was the formatting of the book.  There were odd breaks in the middle of paragraphs and dialogue.  It was a bit annoying in the dialogue, pulling me out of the story, because I couldn't always tell who was speaking until I re-read it.  I received the "reviewers copy" of the book, so maybe (hopefully) this isn't an issue with the actual Kindle version or with the print copy.  Bad formatting/typesetting with a book always bothers me.

The first two characters who really appealed to me were Tim and Casey.  I liked their back story, every piece of information about them; I enjoyed it when these dead/undead cops were the focus.  Even in a book that’s all about zombies, I want good characters.  I want them to accomplish something.  I want them to learn and grow, like the other main group, Max, Brie and Marissa.  I liked Josh too, once I realized why I was getting so much information on him.  

The action was great.  Petit knows how to write about a zombie being shot in the head.  It made it easy to get into the flow of the book.  Once the zombies started roaming and the escaping needed to happen, it got very exciting.  Petit made the mobs of people and the guards realistic.  There were the selfish ones, the ones who denied they were bit and became a danger and there were the ones who did the right thing.

I also liked the clues that Petit kept dropping throughout the novel.  The characters kept talking about the “Curtain”.  Tim and Casey had been dead long enough that they didn’t know what that was.  When they learned about it, so did the reader.  That’s why there was an “expert” on the movie set.  It wasn’t just a B.S. expert; it was an actual zombie hunter.  

I also hated Marissa for most of the novel.  It was only at the end that I actually liked her, but she was necessary.  She was supposed to have that sort of attitude to make the conclusion the way it was.  I actually wondered for a minute if Max was going to end up with Marissa.  Kind of awful, but kind of right too.

For a lot of the story, the women didn’t seem to be doing much.  Max saved them, then the zombie hunter, then Tim and Casey.  As a woman, for a while I was wondering if these ladies were in the story just to fight with each other.  They never swung a bat or shot a gun.  Was it because the men just happened to be the ones with the weapons?  Did it just fit with their characters?  One was a make-up artist and the other was a gossip reporter.  In the end though, they used their brains and their skills.  Brie actually used make-up and Marissa used her website.  They had world-saving ideas.  How do I feel about the idea that the men were brawny and the women were brainy?  I don’t know.  Once the women became more active in their own survival, I started enjoying the story even more.

Opening Night of the Dead was a fun, entertaining and quick read.  The ending also invites the possibility of some kind of sequel.  It is a good book for any zombie fiction fan.  

(One final comment on Opening Night of the Dead: Why isn’t this book on Goodreads?  The author is, along with all his other books.  But not this one?  It was released on June 20th!  I know I only joined Goodreads a few months ago, but I really like the updating of my status and posting reviews there, but alas, no Goodreads this time.)

Thursday, July 12, 2012

A Quick Question...

What should I read next?

Divergent, by Veronica Roth
City of Ashes, by Cassandra Clare
The Magician's Nephew, by C.S. Lewis
The Thousand Orcs, by R.A. Salvatore

All genre. Only one "grown-up" book. What do you think?

Wednesday, July 04, 2012

City of Bones (The Mortal Instruments #1)



I just finished devouring City of Bones.  Cassandra Clare’s first book in her The Mortal Instruments series was addictive.  City of Bones gave me just the distraction I needed.  It was easy to get lost in the world of Clary, Jace and the Shadowhunters.
(Some vague spoilers.) 

At first, I thought the book was going to be predictable.  I saw the love triangle/square coming.  I figured out who Clary’s real father was as soon as his name was mentioned.  I knew what Hodge was going to do.  This was all in the first third to half of the book.  The writing was still engaging and I was enjoying the novel, I just had most of it worked out in my head.

There were some things I didn’t predict.  I kept trying to figure out Jace’s parental situation, thinking, no way is Clare going to do THAT.  I didn’t guess about Alec either.  I actually really liked that part of the story.  It was refreshing and unique in the Young Adult novels I’ve read.  The second half of the book really took the story above my expectations.

Unlike most people I’ve talked to, the book cover of City of Bones threw me off.  I’m not a huge fan of naked body parts on book covers.  It seems cheesy to me.  It had all this glowy stuff around who I assume is Jace.  Plus all the hype around the book and people just swooning and the quote on the cover, all served to make me want to skip The Mortal Instruments series.  I finally decided it was worth my time when a friend described it to me as a sort of cross between Buffy and Harry Potter.  Well, what could be better?  It’s true (though the writing styles are widely different).  There are demon hunters and regular humans who don’t see the magical world around them.

I kind of hope the comments get some spoilers because I want to know what people think of the whole Jace/Clary thing.  I’m thinking something changes in the next book, right?  Wait, I don’t want to know.

I’m glad that I have The Mortal Instruments too provide me with escape at a time when I need it.  It was an exciting fun book and it thankfully lived up to the hype, going farther than my expectations.



Saturday, June 30, 2012

Canada



Canada, by Richard Ford is my first Goodreads First-Reads win!  (And my first ARC.)  It made me very excited to read the book... Besides the fact that the novel had one of the best opening lines I've read in a long time.

"First, I'll tell about the robbery our parents committed. Then about the murders, which happened later."

Even if I didn't win the book, how could I resist a line like that?  (Right after I found out I won it, I saw it on a huge display table while out shopping.  It made me so happy.)

Canada was a deep, thought-provoking novel.  It was brilliantly, artistically written.  Canada is the story of Dell Parsons’ fifteenth year.  It was the most important year of his life, given that’s when the robbery and murders happened.  

I spent the first half of the book wanting to know what happened to Dell’s parents.  I spent the second half hoping Dell doesn’t have a hand in the murders.  I was so eager to read about how Dell’s parents ended up committing a robbery.  There was so much build-up.  I started to feel like Ford was taking a long time to get to the robbery.  He described every scene in vivid detail.  He described the complexities of fifteen-year-old Dell’s emotions.  It was beautifully written, but I felt it was too long, especially since we knew the outcome – the robbery.

The second half was more interesting.  There was still a lot of description, but I felt that because we didn’t know for certain who was going to be murdered and exactly who was going to be the murderer, there was more of a mystery.  Though, this is not a mystery novel.  I’ve seen it categorized as such, but when you find out the ending at the beginning, there isn’t much of a mystery.

(Minor Spoilers) One problem I had with the novel was the title.  I expected more Canada to be in, Canada.  The first half of the novel takes place in Montana.  Canada is only mentioned twice in passing.  Each time I got a little excited, but then nothing.  It’s not until Part Two that the story finally shifts to Canada, specifically Saskatchewan.  Maybe the book should have been titled “Saskatchewan,” but I don’t think it would sell as well.  Canada, its differences from America and its role as a destination of escape is important by the end of the book.  I suppose the title had me expecting something different.  If the author was actually Canadian (he lives in Maine), it might have had more of what I had expected.  Now that I write this, you know what?  The title was fine.  It was just me. (End Spoilers)

Richard Ford managed to create a character that felt like a real person.  You could believe that Dell Parsons was a teacher, with a big secret.  He could be anyone.  He could have been your high school teacher or your next door neighbour.  Dell's voice was thoughtful and introspective, like someone really looking back at their life.  It almost felt like you were reading a memoir.  I really enjoyed the tone and the feeling it gives you.  It invites the reader to really connect with Dell.  If you like deep, thought-provoking, literary fiction with a twist, then pick up Richard Ford’s Canada.  I’m glad I had the opportunity to read it.

Friday, June 29, 2012

I Am Without Job


I’m on maternity leave.  It ends today.  When did I find out about losing my job?  Officially, yesterday.  Yup.  That’s right.  They day before my maternity leave ends, I find out I’ve lost my job.  Well, that’s not entirely true.  Tuesday is when my supervisor called me to come in on Thursday (yesterday) so we could “discuss” my job situation.  We talked for a minute and he basically said that they were “restructuring,” making cuts and one of those cuts would be me.

So, I will be actively looking for a job with no money coming in.  They did give me my severance and I have unused vacation time to be paid out.  So, it’s not like I’ll have no money, but once that’s gone, it’s done.  I better find a job before it runs out.  The longest you can be on Employment Insurance is one year.  That’s how long maternity leave is and EI is what pays that.  I don’t qualify for anymore because I haven’t worked in a year.

I’m not getting laid off because I was on maternity leave.  If I thought that, I would be way more angry and calling the Ministry of Labour.  I know that it’s a legitimate lay-off, one of many that they’re doing at the company.  Honestly, while it is extremely upsetting to be laid-off in general and specifically now, I don’t want to disparage the company I was working for.  I especially don’t want to say anything bad about the individuals I worked for and with.  I have some great co-workers.  I had some great supervisors.  I felt that they were unhappy about letting me go and having to let other people go too.

What is making me crazy is the fact that I won’t get any EI money.  I mean, I was on mat leave!  I wasn’t unemployed for a year.  I went on mat leave expecting to have a job when it was done.  If I knew they were going to lay me off, I would have looked for a new job, but I didn’t know.  According to them, they didn’t know either.  But it doesn’t matter, because the money maxes out at one year, no matter the circumstances.  Even though I expected to go back to work in just a handful of days, and now I’m not.  Now, I have to scramble to find something to pay the bills.  I know that there are rules, but my “good-bye letter” states the date of my termination as after the end of my Maternity leave.  Again, that doesn’t matter.

So if I’m stressed out, unable to concentrate on anything, this is why.  I finished my last book days ago, I had even started writing the review, but I haven’t been able to focus enough to finish it.  I haven’t read anything, watched a movie or really done anything fun.  I’m trying to be my normal self for the children, but I think they can tell something is wrong.  I’m just trying not to freak out.  I’m trying not to get overly emotional.  I’m trying to hold myself together and figure out what to do.  I know what to do, find a job ASAP!  Am I going to be able to?  I don’t know.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

It’s Hot Out Here: Part 2


Another heated top ten from The Broke and The Bookish.  Last week was a list of our Top Ten Beach Reads.  This week we look at the Top Ten Books On My Summer List.  In no particular order (mostly because I can’t decide if I should read number 1 next or number 6).

1. City of Bones (Mortal Instruments 1), by Cassandra Clare
2. City of Ashes(Mortal Instruments 2), by Cassandra Clare
3. City of Glass (Mortal Instruments 3), by Cassandra Clare
4. City of Fallen Angels (Mortal Instruments 4), by Cassandra Clare
5. City of Lost Souls (Mortal Instruments 5), by Cassandra Clare
6. Divergent (Divergent 1), by Veronica Roth
7. Insurgent (Divergent 2), by Veronica Roth
Side note: Don't judge.  I saw all these books on sale and couldn't resist.  I keep hearing amazing things about them. So, the price was right and I bought them (not all at the same time).
8. Everything's Eventual, by Stephen King - I know it's been on my short list forever, and I keep meaning to get to it.  I don't know what my problem is.
9. The Chronicles of Narnia:  The Magician's Nephew, by C.S. Lewis
10. Bodily Harm, by Margaret Atwood
11. The Hunter's Blade Trilogy 1: The Thousand Orcs, by R.A. Salvatore
12. Fool, by Christopher Moore

We will see if this list works out better than the last.  I also know it’s more than ten books, but from what I've heard, those books on the first two-thirds of my list are quick reads.

What will you be reading this summer?

Also, should I read 1 or 6 next?  (Currently, I’m reading Canada, by Richard Ford.)

Sunday, June 17, 2012

I Love You Stinky Face

I Love You Stinky Face is a super cute children's book written by Lisa McCourt and illustrated by Cyd Moore.  It is silly and sweet.  It is all about a mother telling her child how absolutely unconditionally she loves him (or her).  The child asks, Mama, would you still love me if... And gives a different situation, a skunk, a meat-eating dinosaur, a swamp creature, a one-eyed monster, to just name a few.  Nothing the child comes up with can stop the mother's love.

To me, the child is drawn androgynously, so it could be a boy or a girl.  However, Hubby disagrees.  He says it's a boy.  The only other "problem" I had with the story was that I felt it was a little too long.  I keep feeling that it should end one "What if" sooner.  But, I have no idea which one I'd take out.

I Love You Stinky Face is a story with an attention grabbing title, great art and a wonderful message.  It leaves you with a happy feeling.  It's a great addition to any children's library.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

I Wonder What The Canadian Stats Are: The Mommies Network: Breastfeeding in America


I only recently stopped breastfeeding.  I'm going back to work.  Breastmilk is so much healthier for your child, I don't know why someone would choose not to do it.  I understand that there are circumstances in which a mother is unable.  However, if you are able, then do it.

Do I talk about breastfeeding too much?

Source:
The Mommies Network: Breastfeeding in America: Learn more about the benefits of breastfeeding . Breast is best, but we know all moms for various reasons can't breastfeed and that's...

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Boys Are Tough, Girls Are Catty?


I first saw this over at Feminist Philosophers.  It makes me unhappy.  Couldn't they just have one book with everything in it?  I feel like equality keeps taking steps backwards.

Here are the contents for each book:


BOYS ONLY: How to Survive Anything!
Table of Contents:
How to Survive a shark attack
How to Survive in a Forest
How to Survive Frostbite
How to Survive a Plane Crash
How to Survive in the Desert
How to Survive a Polar Bear Attack
How to Survive a Flash Flood
How to Survive a Broken Leg
How to Survive an Earthquake
How to Survive a Forest Fire
How to Survive in a Whiteout
How to Survive a Zombie Invasion
How to Survive a Snakebite
How to Survive if Your Parachute Fails
How to Survive a Croc Attack
How to Survive a Lightning Strike
How to Survive a T-Rex
How to Survive Whitewater Rapids
How to Survive a Sinking Ship
How to Survive a Vampire Attack
How to Survive an Avalanche
How to Survive a Tornado
How to Survive Quicksand
How to Survive a Fall
How to Survive a Swarm of Bees
How to Survive in Space

 vs


GIRLS ONLY: How to Survive Anything!
Table of Contents:
How to survive a BFF Fight
How to Survive Soccer Tryouts
How to Survive a Breakout
How to Show You’re Sorry
How to Have the Best Sleepover Ever
How to Take the Perfect School Photo
How to Survive Brothers
Scary Survival Dos and Don’ts
How to Handle Becoming Rich
How to Keep Stuff Secret
How to Survive Tests
How to Survive Shyness
How to Handle Sudden Stardom
More Stardom Survival Tips
How to Survive a Camping Trip
(“fresh air is excellent for the skin”)
How to Survive a Fashion Disaster
How to Teach Your Cat to Sit
(are you #$&^%*@ kidding me?)
How to Turn a No Into a Yes
Top Tips for Speechmaking
How to Survive Embarrassment
How to Be a Mind Reader
How to Survive a Crush
Seaside Survival
How to Soothe Sunburn
How to Pick Perfect Sunglasses
Surviving a Zombie Attack
How to Spot a Frenemy
Brilliant Boredom Busters
How to Survive Truth or Dare
How to Beat Bullies
How to be an Amazing Babysitter

Source for contents:

http://ryannorth.tumblr.com/post/24675908508/boys-only-how-to-survive-anything-table-of

Here is what Scholastic has to say.  Not really an apology, but maybe an oops?


Tuesday, June 12, 2012

It’s Hot Out Here!


It’s been a while since I participated in a Top Ten Tuesday, from the Broke and The Bookish, but I saw this week’s topic, Top Ten Beach Reads and started listing off books in my head.  There are more than ten here.  Most of the books I’ve listed are actually series.  They are in no particular order.

1. The Hunger Games series, by Suzanne Collins
2. The Harry Potter series, by J.K. Rowling
3. Twilight series, by Stephenie Meyer
4. The Southern Vampire/Sookie Stackhouse series, by Charlaine Harris
5. The Undead series, by MaryJanice Davidson
6. Wither and Fever, by Lauren DeStefano
7. The Legend of Drizzt series, by R.A. Salvatore
8. World War Z, by Max Brooks
9. Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, by Gregory Maguire
10. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series, by Douglas Adams

What will you be reading at the beach?

Thursday, June 07, 2012

The Maladjusted


The first thing that caught my eye about Derek Hayes' short story collection, The Maladjusted, was the cover.  If I had seen this in a bookstore, I definitely would have picked it off the shelf/display and given it a look.  I didn’t see in the bookstore, however.  The Maladjusted was kindly sent to me by the author for an honest review.  Even after the craziness with my last short fiction collection, I still wrote a bit about each of the stories.  It was a good collection and the stories definitely had me thinking.

Feel for America

A great opening story.  For an in depth review, please see my post for Short Story Monday.

The Maladjusted

The Maladjusted is a great, interesting story.  The unnamed narrator is engaging and makes you think, not just about him, but how people react to him.

That's Very Observant Of You

Melanie is potentially crazy.  I wasn't sure how I should feel for her.  I wasn’t sure what was real and what was in her head.  It was a good, mental, story.

In The Low Post

I didn't really like the story.  I found James, the main character unsympathetic and self-indulgent.  I was waiting for the story to get to the point and I guess it made one about being nice to others or something, but by the end of the story, I didn't care and was already looking to the next one.  I almost didn't bother writing anything about it.

A Good Decision

What if the one who got away wasn't really?  What of you saw them forty years later and realized that you were the one who got away. But it didn't matter to your life, because you are happy and you had/have a great life?  This was a great story.

Green Jerseys

A good story, but one that left me angry by the end.  I don't know if anyone was making good decisions.

Maybe You Should Get Back Here

Max is depressing and confused and self-conscious.  I couldn't like him.  He was driving me crazy.  He was another character stuck in the past.  Is this a theme for Hayes?

A Tank of Gas

I liked this story better than the last.  I really enjoyed the character growth.  It is about teachers in a foreign land again.  This has to be something that Hayes once did.

The Runner

This one connected with me more than some of the others.  It probably has to do with main character's issue with his girlfriend,

A Wonderful Holiday

At first seems like it might be an annoying story about a self-centered man, but by the end, it was really nice.

Tom and Wilkie

This was a depressing story.  It was as well written as all the others, it just left me with a need to read something else, so I didn’t dwell on the negative emotions.  Also, the story kind of disparaged Toronto.  Was that on purpose?

The Revisionist

I felt a disconnect with this story.  I kind of hated the main character. How many stories leaving you feeling sorry for the bully?


Shallowness

Jean is so mean!  She really hasn't adjusted to having a pretty, fun, young co-worker.  Samantha's one line of dialogue shows she is intelligent.  Jean seems to only like people who are like her.  This is another protagonist that I didn't like.  In the end, I wanted to give Samantha a hug.

Inertia

Finally a main character who goes through some kind of change for the better.  Thank goodness for Joseph.

My Horoscope

Does Hayes actually believe in horoscopes?

This story took me back to my university days.  Stewart's personality is a bit high school-ish, but since they are first-year students, that isn't surprising.  Stewart and his roommate, Cam, are having trouble adjusting to university life.  It's an interesting glimpse at that period.

The Lover

The main character is creepy and weird.  It was another story where I didn't like the main character.  However, I found the overall story really interesting and engaging.  I really wanted to see how he and the patients we going to end up.

In Conclusion.....

The Maladjusted was a well-written, engaging short story collection.  Being a teacher is a theme throughout many of the stories.  We also see foreigners in strange lands.  I guess there has to be some kind of adjustment to be made if the characters are going to have the opportunity to be “maladjusted”.

The collection starts off strong.  Each story makes you want to read the next.  I just wish the collection ended on a less creepy note.  With Inertia, maybe?  I don't need happily-ever-after, I just need to shut a book and not be thinking of weirdos.  Overall, if you're a fan of short stories and good writing, Derek Hayes' collection is worth picking up.

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

The Tent


What was I thinking?  Recently, I decided that with collections of short stories, I would write at least a few sentences about each story.  Margaret Atwood’s The Tent is short, but so is each "short fiction".  The Tent was great, but I will definitely need to re-read it at some point.  I think by stopping to write a sentence or two about each piece, I may have lost part of the feeling of the collection as a whole.  Also, I have no idea what some of my own notes mean right now, but I’m still including them.  They were important enough for me to write down at the time.

Life Stories

Can be interpreted two ways, I think.  Either the narrator is hiding from her life or she is letting go of the past.  I do get the impression that she is disgusted (is that too strong a word?) with her life though.  Maybe it's others life's she's disgusted with.

Clothing Dreams

Super short, like flash fiction.  Another narrator lost in the past, lost in a life that doesn't belong to them.  If these aren't your clothes, then this isn't or shouldn't be your life.

Bottle

Is the narrator trapped in the bottle?  This dialogue also seems to deal with identity.  I liked the surprising god/in my head/nothing angle the story took.

Impenetrable Forest

A character who is lost, doesn’t know what path to take.  Even an “angel” (who doesn’t look so angelic up close) can’t help when you don’t know what you want.  Also, I really like the drawing.

Encouraging the Young

Is this an old person’s rant?

Voice

With her death so recent, this piece reminds me of Whitney Houston.  This person is inexorably tied to their talent.

No More Photos

Weird.  Caught between a poem and a rant.

Orphan Stories

Orphan Stories is depressing.  It takes orphan stereotypes and turns them on their head (whatever that means).   It’s like looking at the stereotypes and seeing the truth through sarcasm.

Gateway

Gateway is interesting.  It is told in the second person.  I’m not sure I like that.  It makes the story seem as though the main character (or you) are being told about your life.  Unless that’s the point, to create that sort of connection with the reader.  The narrative is asking you, I think, where are you going and do you know where you have been.

Bottle II

Does the person who takes the cork out of the bottle of sand deserve the voice who tells them all they need to know?  I want to know more about this voice.

Winter’s Tales

Do the old tell the young stories to scare them?

It’s Not Easy Being Half-Divine

This piece has felt most like a short story so far.  It has a beginning, middle and end.  The note the narrator uses puts Helen’s story in a certain light, whereas, if it were told with a more favourable tone, it would sound more caring or positive.

Salome Was a Dancer

Another story where the tone of the narrator affects your feelings toward the main character.

Plots for Exotics

Is this a commentary on the white-washing of main characters (if it’s set in the West)?  What do exotics have to do to be the main character?  Can an exotic be a main character if the book is set in (for example) Utah or Nova Scotia?

This also gets me thinking about some of the books I’ve read lately.  Would they be as popular if the main character wasn’t white?  …Atwood makes me think too much…

Resources of the Ikarians

What do a people do when they have no resources and are also not very nice?  Atwood again has created a narrator that negates any sympathy you might build up reading the story, yet still makes the story engaging.

Our Cat Enters Heaven

This is an odd, funny story that I thoroughly enjoyed.  I think it might be a favourite among the bunch.  There are nice twists along the way.

Chicken Little Goes Too Far

The sky is falling isn’t just a conspiracy theory; it’s either ignored or covered up!  Poor Chicken Little never had a chance.  Chicken Little Goes Too Far is a great take on an old story.  Another favourite.

Thylacine Ragout

Really weird.  I don’t know what Atwood was thinking.  A social commentary on capitalism, searching in the past and science.

The Animals Reject Their Names and Things Return to Their Origins

There is no light.  This is an amazing poem/story (a poem that tells a story.)

Three Novels I Won’t Write Soon

But she doesn’t say never.  I want to know what happens to Chris and Amanda.

Take Charge

Take Charge is like an absurd comedy.  I can imagine two people having these conversations on stage and the audience laughing their butts off.

Post-Colonial

Seems like a short essay on what the colonials did to the natives.  I don't know if I understood what she was trying to say.

Heritage House

Does Heritage House combine forgetting the past with a commentary on a lack of government funding for the arts?

Bring Back Mom:  An Invocation

A feminist poem aimed at the right wing, I think.  It takes the image of the perfect Mom (from the 50s perhaps) and peels back the layers.  It reveals what was happening to women behind the mother mask.

Horatio's Version

An interesting take on Horatio's personality.  Mostly I think it's a rant against the war and violence in our world - an interesting well-formed rant.

King Log In Exile

A unique story.  Enjoyable, but I don’t know what to say about it.

Faster

A commentary on our increasing need for new, better, faster technology.  The new gadgets get consumed, but what do they really do for us?  (Of course, I'm using my iPad to write some of this...)

Eating the Birds

A commentary on consumption?  Another weird one.

Something Has Happened

Like an introduction to a crazy dystopian novel (or longer short story).

Nightingale

So far, most like a short story.  It is beautifully written and I like the drawing.  It's so sad.  It sums up what could be a whole novel.  The emotional tone reminds me of A Thousand Splendid Suns.

Warlords

Seems most out-of-place.  It's Atwood's tone and style, but warriors and warlords aren't usually her style.

The Tent

The Tent is desperation.  The title story is filled with need, urgency and fear.  The writer is trying to be a protector of knowledge, but the predators are coming to destroy it.  It is an allegory. The Tent is filled with so much; I'll have to re-read it.

Time Folds

Time Folds has an almost sweet, romantic tone.  It was nice after the previous story's tension

Tree Baby

Tree Baby is more like a poem.  It's about hope.  It left me with a good feeling and a smile.

But It Could Be Still

Is this about faith?  Faith in a happily-ever-after.  I like to believe in happily-ever-after, but I'm a prepare-for-the-worse person most of the time.  Is it about the reader?  Is it the hope a reader gets from a story?  I don't know.  I'm confused.  The tulip bulbs aren't part of the story and neither are you (to paraphrase).  Is it about being on the outside looking in?  I felt hope until the last three sentences.

In conclusion...

This was a great little collection.  Potentially, it could be read in one sitting.  I was feeling like I needed more Atwood and The Tent was it.  It left me wanting to read another one of her books.

Monday, May 21, 2012

The World Over, by Lauren DeStefano


The World Over Makes me want to cry.  It is so short and so full of emotion.  I have really enjoyed the first two books in Lauren DeStefano’s Chemical Garden trilogy.  I’m eagerly anticipating the third book.  So, when I saw that she had a few short stories on her website, I decided to read one.  I plan on reading all of them now.


What if you were the last couple on Earth?  What if you knew that both of you would die, no matter what you did and how much you loved each other?  I wonder how they got to this place.  I wonder what happened to the planet. 


You want to have hope as the story progresses, the characters are developed.  You root for them.  It was a short story that packed a lot of punch.  


Short Story Monday is hosted by John Mutford at The Book Mine Set.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Deadlocked


I’m so glad that Charlaine Harris brought the mystery back to Deadlocked, the twelfth book in the Southern Vampires/Sookie Stackhouse series.  Though, it did take a lot of pages before we got to the finding of the dead body; there was a lot of Sookie’s life, the in-between bits, that were included in this story.  I liked the book, a definite improvement on Dead Reckoning.  However, I felt like it was too long.  There were a lot of Sookie-thinking moments; it could have been maybe fifty pages shorter.  I wonder it there’s a sort of page count they aim for with these types of books.  All the Sookie books are about the same length.

I digress.  I liked it.  I’m happy I liked it.  I liked the mystery.  I liked the solution to the mystery.  I’ve gotten to really like Dermot.  I also wonder about Claude’s motivations.  I wonder if he somehow blames Niall for his sisters’ deaths.  I’m glad for Jason and Tara and all of Sookie’s friends.  I’m hoping that Sookie and Amelia mend their relationship before the end of the final book.  I always really liked Amelia and though she’s too impulsive, I think she might have been the most understanding friend Sookie ever had (except for Sam). 

Why is it always Bill or Eric?  I'm sure there are readers, who think Sookie would be better off with a non-vampire, like Sam.  I love Sam.  Sookie deserves better than what Eric has been giving her.  Bill didn’t do much better.  I do have to question Sam’s choices in women.  The next book is the last.  I hope that it tells us who Sookie will end up with, but I’d have to understand it Charlaine Harris left it a bit open.  After all, Sookie is only… 27?  I know lots of people who were/are unmarried/single at that age.

Deadlocked brought me back to loving the series.  Though not my favourite book of the series, it was an enjoyable read and has left me eager for the thirteenth and final book. 

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Wisdom, The Midway Albatross

I almost cried reading Wisdom: The Midway Albatross.  I'm going to partly blame it on the hormones.  I'm also going to blame it on this touching story of survival. (Did I really just call something a "touching story"?). This story is a non-fiction picture book.  The writing and art are great.  Darcy Pattison and Kitty Harvill tell the story of Wisdom, an albatross that is over 60 years old!  Wisdom survives fishing lines, earthquakes and tsunamis, include the one that devastated Japan last year.  It was emotional and beautifully brought to life by Pattison and Harvill.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

The Garden Party and Other Stories


The Garden Party and Other Stories is Katherine Mansfield’s most famous work.  I had heard so many good things about these stories that once I had a copy of the collection, I really had to read them (thank you Project Gutenberg, though the book nerd in me still wants a hard copy).  In general, I thought these were great stories.  I found the characters very believeable.  I wrote a few sentences (or more) on each story.

At The Bay

At The Bay is a good story, but I didn’t see the point.  It was well written and there were definite parts I found interesting, but I didn't feel any real connection to the characters.  I also felt it was very long.
See the full review I wrote for Short Story Monday.

The Garden Party

The Garden Party immediately reminded me of Mrs. Dalloway, though it's been so long since I read that book, I wonder why.

The Garden Party is a great story and deserving of being the title of the collection.  It was easily my favourite. I expected some kind of high society tale. I expected the characters to be more shallow, which many of them were. Laura was different.  Though in the story only for a couple moments, I found her brother Laurie to be different too. They had other dimensions, other facets besides society life. I really enjoyed how Laura grows. She goes from naive girl to a young woman with some new life experience. The end was so unexpected. The entire story was fantastic. 

The Daughters of the Late Colonel

They are the forgotten sisters. It was a well written story, with a pair of very interesting characters, but it was so sad. I didn’t want to end my reading for the day here. I hope Josephine and Constantia find happiness now that they are out from under their oppressive father.

Mr. and Mrs. Dove

This is another sad story, but not in the same way. It's like the opposite of the underdog love story. The poor-ish young man goes to ask the beautiful, wealthy woman to marry him and she says, no. However, she still wants him to be happy. She wants him not to be upset by her answer. She doesn't want them to be like the doves. Then, why does she call him back as he tries to walk away, with what I think is with a last shred of dignity. Why does she call him Mr. Dove? Why does he go back to her when called? Has she changed her mind? I don't know. This is another great story in the collection.

The Young Girl

She's a snobby teenager, who finally gets a moment to be herself. She spends the rest of the time putting on airs.  

See the full review I wrote for Short Story Monday.

Life of Ma Parker

Life of Ma Parker is an utterly depressing story. Mansfield wrote about the saddest life she could conceive of, I think. At least the rain came so she could have her cry.

Marriage a la Mode

Is it terrible that I've read this story and what I'm thinking is: why can't she be a better wife?

The Voyage

A good story, but I'm not sure what to make of it. It's like a life lesson for Fenella. She learns her grandma is more than what she thought. It's also seems to be a glimpse of her traveling, from an old life to a new one.

Miss Brill

She's treating her fur like a pet! She is a weird lady.  The young couple is so mean!  They make fun of the woman and her fur. She puts the fur away, and she continues to talk to and about it like a pet.  She thinks she hears it crying. Another well-written, though also depressing story.

Her First Ball

Are these the same characters from The Garden Party?

This story was only depressing for a moment, when "the fat man" took her for a dance. Really, Leila's first ball is full of hope and nerves and fun. I hope she gets many more.

The Singing Lesson

It's a miracle she's engaged at thirty! Hahaha! Definitely written a long time ago. Though women today are still so affected by men's changes in emotions, but I suppose it is natural when it's the person you love.  Though after her fiancĂ©’s behaviour, I’d have second thoughts about marrying him, even if I was thirty.

The Stranger

Another poor, sad, depressing story. He just wants his wife to be as happy as he is that they are together after her long trip. She can't be. Now he feels like she'll be a stranger forever. Why not a happy reunion? Come on, Katherine Mansfield! Give me a happy (or at least somewhat positive) ending!  It was such a good story, why couldn’t their reunion bring her back to the woman she was?

Bank Holiday

Not a totally depressing story. It's a fun and exciting day outdoors. There is music and all sorts of people. But what's the point? And that's just what Mansfield asks at the end.

An Ideal Family

Another man unsure of his wife... and family. He worked so hard for them, do they take advantage of him? Do they appreciate what he's done? Is it his own fault his son isn't more reliable? I wish this family could have a happy ending too.

The Lady's Maid

Is the lady's maid crazy? How could she give up a happy marriage to stay, no matter how she cared for her lady? It's such a sad story. I wish I could know what was wrong with her.

In conclusion...

The Garden Party is the best story of whole collection. It is the least sad.  I found it very vibrant, especially compared to the rest of the collection.  I really enjoyed The Young Girl and Her First Ball too.  I found most of the other stories depressing.  Well written and engaging, just sad.  They give us a really good look at life at the time.  There are just not a lot of "happily-ever-afters".  Katherine Mansfield tells the stories of many different types of people. Men and women, young and old.  After Mansfield's death, Virginia Woolf wrote in her diary that the only writer she was ever jealous of was Katherine Mansfield.  I can see why.  While maybe not as famous as Woolf, her writing is very readable, even ninety years later.

I know I complained a lot about the depressing and sad feelings prevalent in a lot of the stories, but don't let that be a deterrent.  The Garden Party and Other Stories is an excellent collection.  I think it has more to do with my own reading choices of late.  I need to find a story that I think will have a happy ending....  If you’re a fan of Woolf or of good narratives, The Garden Party and Other Stories is for you.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Behated


Be.hate.d, n. - something hated deep within the heart.  Opposite of beloved.  Examples:  Peter Pan is beloved, Captain Hook is behated.  Sleeping Beauty is beloved, Maleficent is behated.
     - My behated enemy

I think that's the clearest way to explain my new favourite word, behated.  My hubby used it today.  My hubby is a teacher.  He is participating in a fundraiser where the students buy tickets for a draw.  The winner of the draw will get to throw a pie at my husband tomorrow.  More than one teacher is participating.  My hubby has the most tickets in his bowl.  He said that either means he is beloved or behated.  Then we talked about whether behated is a word.  We were pleased with ourselves.  It is not a real word, but it should be.    (Wiktionary was the only place we could find an entry.  I don't think that counts.)  I may start using it in future posts.

Feel For America, by Derek Hayes


Feel For America is the first story in Derek Hayes' collection, The Maladjusted, which I received for review.  Conveniently, Feel For America is available to read on his website.  So I though it would be a good story for this week's Short Story Monday.

I'm not sure what I thought of the story.  It was well written, easy to read with good/interesting character development.  The narrator, John is one of three ex-patriots teaching at an English school in Taiwan.  John is from Toronto, his a-hole roommate and "Academic Director", Adam, is from England and new arrival Samuel is from America.  Mr. Hou, the school's owner, likes John and equates him and Samuel.  He doesn't like the teachers he gets from England.

The story is about the three men and how they react to and interact with each other.  Adam sets out to have conflict.  John is a bit of a pushover and strives to be a peacekeeper.  He also really likes his job.  Samuel is full of ideas as to what this experience is supposed to be like.  I just wanted to yell at him when he was speaking gibberish to that poor man on the street.  There were better ways to deal with it.  I don't know if overseas is where these men belong.  Of course the collection is called, The Maladjusted, so we will just have to see if strange people in strange situations is a theme.

Adam asks Samuel for a Feel For America.  What we end up with is a drunken football player, essentially.  More than that, he's a man who is far from home and I think he misses it.  Feel For America is a good story and I hope the rest of the collection is as interesting.


Short Story Monday is hosted by John Mutford at The Book Mine Set.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

The Sookie Stackhouse Companion


I don’t usually buy “companion” books.  Sometimes I think they’re a money grab.  Sometimes I think they’ll just be filled with fan-loved favourites without really giving us anything new to think about.  I couldn’t resist The Sookie Stackhouse Companion though, for one simple reason, I wanted to read the novella.  

Small Town Wedding is a great story.  I love Sam.  I was so glad to see him return to the forefront.  I enjoyed learning about Sam’s family.  They are loving, wonderful people (not to be confused with Sam’s terrible family on True Blood).  Sam’s brother is getting married and even though he’s not a shifter, people protest.  Much of the trouble is caused by a nasty neighbour and a long lost “friend”, of Sookie’s, Sarah Newlin.  It’s nice to find out what happened to her.  Quinn even makes an appearance.  Small Town Wedding brought me back to what I love about the series, especially after a disappointing Dead Reckoning.  

Small Town Wedding takes place before Dead Reckoning and it had a publication date that put it before Dead Reckoning’s release, so why was it pushed back?  The only thing I could think of was the interview with Alan Ball about True Blood.  It was not a feature I remember seeing in the book originally, so I’m guessing it was a late addition.  It’s a good interview, just like the one with series author, Charlaine Harris.  Part of me wishes I had the chance to read the stories in the right order, but another part of me is okay that I read it after, since I was disappointed with the last book.  I also appreciate that the interviews with Alan Ball and Charlaine Harris distinguish the television series and the book series as two separate worlds.  Ball used Harris’s books as source material, but has taken many of the characters (for example, Tara) in different directions. 

This book is definitely a “companion”, it’s really only for fans of the series.  There are some things I didn’t really need, like a summary of the entire series, though it was nice to be reminded of some of the good things and corrected on a couple of things I remembered differently.  I didn’t really like the quiz, mostly because I didn’t know any of the answers.  (I wonder if anyone could get a pass on those questions.)  There are a lot fun things in the book.  I like the character list.  I think it’ll be helpful in a series this long.  I also really like the recipes.  Not that I’ve tried any of them yet, but I enjoy cooking and I’d like to try out some of Bon Temps’s favourites.  The Sookie Stackhouse Companion is a welcome addition to the series.

Side Note:  I know that the next two books will be the end of the series.  On one hand, I’m sad to see it go; I’ve really enjoyed the Southern Vampires.  On the other hand, Dead Reckoning was not that great.  Dead in the Family was better, but I’m in the minority on that opinion.  I have hopes for Deadlocked.  However, if it is on the same level as Dead Reckoning I’m glad that Harris will be ending the series soon.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Roots Day 9: The Finale


The last Roots of Empathy visit was really nice.  The kids were sweet, excited and a little sad that it would be the last visit with the baby.  We talked about how he’s grown and changed.  Since my son has started walking while holding my fingers (parents know what I’m talking about), I walked him around the circle of children instead of carrying him like I usually do.  They got a big kick out of that.  We even put a small chair in the middle of the circle so he could stand and hold himself up and move around.

We got a goodie bag from the class too.  They gave me a little album with a few pictures from each visit.  I got a copy of one of Mary Gordon’s books, Daniel’s Day.  (I haven’t read it yet, but I’m sure I’ll let everyone know what I think.)  The class also made us two books.  One book is full of wishes for my son as he gets older, with drawings of those wishes.  The other book is of wishes for themselves, also with drawings.  We also got a certificate from the official Roots of Empathy office for our participation.  I don’t know what I’m going to do with that.  Put it in some sort of scrapbook?  The other thing I have no idea what I’m going to do with is the giant card the kids made.  It has a photo of all of us from the first day and all the kids signed their name.  Again, it’s really nice and sweet, but where am I going to put it?  It’s huge!

I’ve been going to this class since October.  It’s been nice to see the children smile as we walk in.  I hope that they really have gained something from this experience.

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

Blockade Billy


Blockade Billy actually consists of two stories.  Blockade Billy is the first and takes up two thirds of the short book and Morality is the “bonus story” that makes up the final third.

Blockade Billy was a great story.  I enjoyed the narrator, Granny.  He was the third base coach of the Titans and he’s the one who tells the story of Blockade Billy Blakely to Mr. King (Stephen King putting himself in another of his works).  Granny is an excellent narrator, he tells the story (with an amazing memory) and keeps his voice.  He gives us the opportunity to feel sympathy, shock and awe as he felt it while telling Blockade Billy’s story.

Blockade Billy is one of the stories King tells which focuses on the horror of individuals rather than the horror of the supernatural.  Though I enjoy these types of stories, they disturb me on a different level.  Of course, I’m reading Stephen King, so what else do I expect?  [Vague allusions to spoilers, but I won’t be specific.]  While I like the actions that constituted the end of the story, I didn’t like the reason for it all.  It left me a little disappointed.  Billy talked to himself.  More than once, he is referred to as a “black hole” for luck, meaning that he sucks away the good luck of those around him.  In the description of the book, it says that he is erased from the game; the entire first half of the Titan’s season is erased.  These sorts of descriptions led me to believe that the reason for Billy’s behaviour and amazing ability would be more… complex.  The reason for it all just seemed too mundane for the build-up.  That being said, I still really liked the story, maybe my expectations were just too high.

Morality is another utterly messed up story from Stephen King.  Morality is another tale that is about the horror of people.  Would you agree to do something awful (and get away with it) for the right price?

I don't really have much more to say on the short piece.  It kept the King creepy vibe going after Blockade Billy.  It was difficult to put down.  I had to be careful when reading though, this story could give me nightmares.

Two great stories, nicely paired.

Monday, May 07, 2012

At The Bay, by Katherine Mansfield


At The Bay is a good story, but I didn’t see the point.  It was well written and there were definitely parts I found interesting, but I didn't feel any real connection to the characters.  I also felt it was very long.

I could do an analysis of the duality of the characters.  The women and children are one person when the man of the house is home and another when he leaves. Even he has his own duality.  I could comment on family life at the time Katherine Mansfield wrote this.  I could discuss gender differences.  I could even talk about the possibility of the mother having post-partum depression and that here is a glimmer of hope of her coming out of it.  All these interesting topics are present within the story. But I don't feel like talking about them.

Does At The Bay have more of a point than the first Mansfield story I read, The Young Girl?  No, I don't think so.  Maybe then, it's the length plus the enigmatic characters. I don't know.  It just left me feeling a bit meh...


Short Story Monday is hosted by The Book Mine Set.

Saturday, May 05, 2012

Avengers


I loved The Avengers.  My husband called it outstanding and he’s not one for exaggeration.  I don't even think this will count as a review since I only have good things to say.  The actors brought to life some of my favourite superheroes.  The actions scenes were fluid and amazing.  There was a lot of CG, but it blended well with the real people.  I loved the humour.  Joss Whedon fans can really appreciate his sense of humour.  (Is it bad that in my head I'm comparing some of the movie dialogue to Buffy?)

So, I want to list all the things/scenes/moments I loved, but there are two problems with that.  One, that would be an entire list of spoilers.  Two, it would be a long list.  Let's just say, that I already want to see it again.  (I probably won't though.  The logistics of going out with my hubby to see a movie drives me nuts sometimes.  I'll just highly anticipate the DVD.)

Whatever you do, don't leave the theatre before the credits are completely over.  Three-quarters of the theatre were out, but we and the other geeks waited until the final names rolled by for one last scene with the team.

I don't know if I could have asked for more.

I couldn't resist adding the Lego poster too. They all look so angry