Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Short Reviews: September 2013. Princess of Mars

Princess of Mars, Edgar Rice Burroughs, ISBN: 978-1598531657 (Library of America hc reprint) 
Re-read September 18, 2013

I love John Carter so much.  
Only noticed two typos in this edition, one instance of "I" leading off a sentence instead of "is," and one where "throat" was "thoat" (which second mistake I'm much more forgiving of in this particular story where "thoat" is a valid wordchoice of itself.


I only wish there were better hc options for the rest of the series.  I hate having mismatched sets, but this one was so pretty I couldn't pass it up, especially since it had a lovely Tarzan reprint as it's buddy.  I think I'll probably re-read that one this week.  I'm apparently on a Burroughs kick.   

Short Reviews: August 2013. The Amaranth Enchantment, A Beautiful Friendship, Fire Season, The Whole-Brain Child

The Whole-Brain Child, Daniel J. Siegel (M.D.) & Tina Payne Bryson (Ph.D.).  ISBN: 9780553807912
Read August 15, 2013
Nonfiction: parenting, CBT/mindfulness, neuroscience.

Slight (149 pages, with comic strips, illustrations, and boxed text) and overly-optimistic volume on using mindfulness and awareness of brain development to guide child mental development and to simultaneously manage their behavior by using age-appropriate and helpful interventions and tools to build their self-awareness, self-control, empathy, and mental/emotional vocabulary.  The ideas are good and proven, but the authors do tend to give the impression that using these techniques will instantly result in a cooperative and pliant child through their cartoon before-and-after comparisons and their choices in real-life examples.  I'm not so optimistic, but I'm not knocking the techniques, just the presentation.  The subtitle is: Revolutionary Strategies to Nurture Your Child's Developing Mind, and I don't know that these ideas and techniques are quite so revolutionary as all that, but I admit that is a good title key-word to throw out to get attention in a glutted parenting-technique bookshelf.  Nifty for a reminder on how to help use stressful situations as "teachable moments" instead, but not worth purchasing. 

A Beautiful Friendship & Fire Season, David Weber & Jane Lindskold.
(re-read) August 11 & 12, 2013
Introducing these to my husband, who is working his way through the main Honor storyline and needed a break before the story splits into three branches.  I figured now is the best time to start the short stories to introduce all of the supporting cast that's been promoted to heading whole books, and he was wanting treecats, so I gave him the short stories A Beautiful Friendship (from More than Honor) and The Stray (from Worlds of Honor) to fill out the background.  He's on Beautiful Friendship the YA book today, and will probably get to Fire Season later this week.  I think after that I'll go with What Price Dreams (also in Worlds of Honor) immediately afterwards, and give him Treecat Wars when it comes out in October (after I finish devouring it myself, of course).  He reads a lot slower than me, so while he was working through the shorts, I of course had to re-read these two again since it had been a few months since Fire Season came out.  God I love treecats.

The Amaranth Enchantment, Julie Berry.  ISBN: 1599903342
(re-read)  August 8, 2013
YA (really JUV) fairy-tale-ish.  Lucinda's terrible life with her meanspirited Aunt and dishwater Uncle fractures almost instantly when the Lady Beryl, the Amaranth Witch, walks into Uncle's goldsmith shop.  Lucinda is a cipher of a character, and all of the fairy-tale tropes are followed to a T, including the "fairy" godmother, instant falling in love with the handsome prince, and a thief who isn't who he seems.  A strange and unexplained goat with dog-like characteristics is a puzzle, but that's the only odd note out of a story where every event (and person) is tied together into an intricate net of coincidences and interrelationships and causalities.  Pleasant enough while reading, the whole mess devolves into a multitude of thorny and irritating questions when thought about afterwards (where was the villain's guardian this whole time?)  (what is up with the goat?)  (why does the whole kingdom not know about a missing prince?) (why is everyone in the "other world" so damn selfish that poor Beryl has to get the shaft AGAIN?).  Pretty, but rather frustrating.

Short Reviews: July 2013. Last Days of an Immortal, Rocketeer Adventures, The Dance, Chloe and the Lion

Chloe and the Lion, Mac Barnett, illus Adam Rex.  ISBN: 9781423113348
July 25, 2013
Picture Book:  An interesting fourth-wall-demolishing foray into the conflicts and challenges in the picture book author vs illustrator relationship.  The story of Chloe and the lion that attacks her takes a backseat to the developing interpersonal drama between Mac and Adam when Adam decides that lions aren't impressive enough, and illustrates a dragon instead.  Mac tries to do without, but quickly realizes his talents do not lie in the drawing department.  Chloe assists, as does the lion, and everything ends happily ever after.

The Dance, Garry Smalley & Dan Walsh.  ISBN: 978-0800721480
July 10, 2013
Christian relationship-repair manual thinly disguised as fiction.  :)  The heroine has been trying to get her self-absorbed pompous insufferable husband to pay attention to her (and the kids) for their entire marriage.  Finally she gives up, and hopes that if she leaves home it will be the clue-by-four that he needs upside the head.  She takes dance lessons to feel happy, and he gets relationship counseling from an elderly lady, and everything's hunky-dory in about 150 pages and less than half-a-year.  

Rocketeer Adventures, Vol 1 and Vol 2, (various authors, various illustrators) IDW Publishing.
ISBN: 978-1613770344 & 978-1613774014
July 9, 2013
Graphic Novel.  Collected stand-alone tribute stories in the Rocketeer universe (which I'm ashamed to admit I didn't know was a popular and loved comic series before the movie (which I'm also somewhat ashamed to admit that I really do like) came out in 1991) after the passing of the creator Dave Stevens.  I liked the first volume better than the second, mainly due to the artwork.  The second, while populated with "big names" had a lot of really odd stylistic choices, and I find my preferred art to be really representational and as realistic as possible.  Personal choice.  Not having read the original comics, I can't say anything regarding the quality of the stories, but they were all fun, and all pulpy, and all independent of each other.

Last Days of an Immortal, Gwen De Bonneval & Fabian Vehlmann (translated from the French by Edward Gauvin).  ISBN: 978-1936393442
July 5, 2013
Graphic Novel.  If it wasn't for the clothing-optional human society, and the graphic (no pun intended) sex scenes (which didn't really have anything to do with the plot) I would have thought this was intended for younger readers.  It is VERY reminiscent of Asimov and early "philosophical" science-fiction.  I have to admit, I got more than a little confused by all of the "echoes" and wasn't entirely sure who was who at any given time, but that really didn't matter that much.  Weird but mentally stimulating.

Short Reviews: July 2013. Pirate Diary, Queen Victoria's Book of Spells, Dark Crystal Creation Myths

The Dark Crystal creation Myths, Vol 1 & Vol 2 (Vol 3 TBA), Brian Froud.
ISBN: 978-1936393008 & 978-1936393800
July 3, 2013
I love The Dark Crystal.  I know that makse me such a stereotypical child of the '80s, but I can't help it.  These two gorgeous hardcover books of graphic novelized "prequel" story are delightful reminders of the mystery and mystique of that strange world populated by such odd and entrancing creatures.  Can't find a release date for Volume 3 yet, and that makes me sad.  These are beautiful physical artifacts. 

Queen Victoria's Book of Spells, anthology collected by Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling.  ISBN: 978-0765332271
July 2, 2013
Collection of 18 "gaslamp fantasies" set in Victoriana.
Authors: Dale Baile, Elizabeth Bear, James P. Blaylock, Jeffrey Ford, Theodora Goss, Leanna Renee Hieber, Kathe Koja, Ellen Kushner & Caroline Stevermer, Tanith Lee, Gregory Maguire, Maureen McHugh, Veronica Schanoes, Delia Sherman, Catherynne M. Valente, Genevieve Valentine, Kaaron Warren, Elizabeth Wein, Jane Yolen.
Highlights: Dale Bailey's Mr Splitfoot is about the sisters who popularized the spiritualist movement - very creepy.  Gregory Macguire's A Few Twigs He Left Behind is a sweet coda to the story of Mr Scrooge.  Ellen Kushner & Caroline Stevermer's The Importance of the Superficial is written entirely in letters, which was interesting and delightful to read.  Theodora Goss' Estella Saves the Village is a sweet excercise in recognizing and matching characters from actual Victorian and Edwardian literature (including Mr Holmes, who is MARRIED!).

Pirate Diary: The Journal of Jake Carpenter, Richard Platt (illus Chris Riddell).  ISBN: 0763608483
July 1, 2013
Illustrated oversize juv fiction.  Set in early 1700s, boy sets sail from Charleston, gets conscripted as a pirate (and has a better time as a pirate than as a sailor) and returns safely home again due to the Grace of King George.  Lashings, maroonings, amputations, and death, but no gore due to careful composition angles.  

Short Reviews: June 2013. Zita the Spacegirl, Hereville: Mirka, Garden Princess

Zita the Spacegirl: Far from Home (Book 1), &
Legends of Zita the Spacegirl (Book 2), Ben Hatke (author & illustrator)
ISBN: 978-1596436954 & ISBN: 978-1596438064
Summer 2011 & June 27, 2013
Juv Graphic Novel:  In the first installment, Zita jumps into a space portal to save her best friend from being sacrificed on a far-away world as a prophecy fortold, picking up a crew of random down-and-out lifeforms along the way.  In the second, a holographic recorder-bot sees a poster for the now-famous Zita, and impersonates her, while Zita gets branded a criminal in her attempts to rectify the situation.  BOTH EXELLENT, although book 2 gives short shrift to the backup characters from book 1, and sets Zita up to head off alone, so we may not get much of them in book 3 either, which is sad.

Hereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword (vol 1) and
How Mirka Met a Meteorite (vol 2), Barry Deutsch. 
ISBN: 978-0810984226, 978-1419703980
Spring 2011, June 26, 2013.
Juvenile Graphic Novel:  Odd little fairy-style stories with a kick-ass heroine that reminds me strongly of the Hale's Rapunzel's Revenge.  Orthodox Judaism does feature strongly, but it's less religious and more cultural.

Garden Princess, Kristin Kladstrup.  ISBN: 978-0763656850
June 26, 2013
Juvenile fantasy, "ordinary princess" style.  Adela isn't beautiful, and doesn't like to be "princessy" - she'd rather garden.  But when her very handsome friend and her equally beautiful step-sister get invited to a garden party by mysterious Lady Hortensia, Adela just has to come along to see the garden.  Hortensia is a HORRIBLE name, the story isn't too original, but - turning a thieving guest into a magpie and an "ordinary" princess into a dandelion is delicious, and the scenes of lovestruck courtiers failing miserably at housekeeping were hysterical. 

Short Reviews: June 2013. Unnatural Creatures, Movement of Stars, Dragonswood, Written in Red

Written in Red, Anne Bishop.  ISBN: 978-0451464965
June 25, 2013
Author is very lucky for Charles de Lint's blurb on the back, otherwise the cover and inital "Brief History of the World" would NOT have interested me enough to pick it up.  Oddly light in tone for the subject matter, only a few described scenes of torture/gore - everything else is insinuated.  Very little background on the main character and her past.  Interesting world, plot is standard "bunch of strong characters (mostly men) feel obligated to protect a persecuted innocent (usually a woman) to the death, despite cultural/historical/prejudical indications otherwise."  Characters engaging despite the plot.  Loved Winter, loved Grandfather, loved the ponies.

Dragonswood, Janet Lee Carey.  ISBN: 0803735049 (no ISBN13)
June 24, 2013
"Sequel" to Dragon's Keep, with very few characters in common.  (I have NOT read Dragon's Keep)  Tess regularly flees her abusive homelife into the forbidden forests; home to dragons, feykin, and witches.  She's eventually condemned as a witch, tortured, and flees with her friends into a fairly cliched story of huntsmen-cum-princes living in the woods, wise elder dragons, scheming fae, conniving "Prince John" councilors, and of course the requisite misunderstood prophecy.  Enjoyed the fleeing and huntsmen-hiding more than the climax, sadly.

The Movement of Stars, Amy Brill.  ISBN: 978-1594487446
June 16-22, 2013
Interesting fictionalized version of Maria Mitchell.  I was very interested in the Quaker trappings and the adherance to "Discipline" but wasn't able to find more information on that subject easily.  The love story was sweet, but very much out of place for those characters in that time-period, and that was jarring.  Very feminist, almost strident.  Good, but not exceedingly engaging.

Unnatural Creatures, (collected by) Neil Gaiman.  ISBN: 978-0062236296
June 16-22, 2013
Short stories (very old and very new) collected and introduced individually by Gaiman.  Exceedingly nice little collection, and very happy to see some older and lesser-known gems in the mix.  Can't pick a favorite, but Sunbird has stuck in my mind for over a week now.

Short Reviews: June 2013. Women of the Silk, Steadfast, One and Only, Bird King



The Bird King: an artist's notebook, Shaun Tan.  ISBN: 978-0545465137
June 16-22, 2013
A lovely little bound sketchbook of Tan's ideas and drawn ruminations and early/preliminary sketches from his other published works.  The man has a thing for people with bird heads, and his sceneries remind me of Bosch at times; creepy but really enthralling.  Makes me ache that I can't draw.

One and Only: The Freedom of Having an Only Child, and the Joy of Being One, Lauren Sandler.  ISBN: 978-1451626957
June 10-15, 2013
Nonfiction: Debunks bad press re: onlies, but admits that human perceptions reinforce stereotypes even if false.  Also notes that people tend to blame hardship on whatever differentiates themselves from others, so onlies blame their social or relationship problems on their only-child status.  Interesting read.

Steadfast, Mercedes Lackey.  ISBN: 978-0756408015
June 10-15, 2013
Elemental Masters (but just Magicians here) story, based on Steadfast Tin Soldier.  Overall Meh.  Pleasant read, no peril, no problems.  Nice dragon.

Women of the Silk, Gail Tsukiyama.  ISBN: 978-0312099435
June 3-7, 2013
Oddly flat, affectless telling of "extra" daughters in China sent into the silk factories on the eve of the Japanese invasion.  Despite the title, the silk factories not actually necessary to, or highlighted in the plot.  Read for possible research/background for my "mill girls" story.

Short Reviews: May 2013. Libriomancer & Disaster Diaries

Libriomancer, Jim C. Hines.  ISBN: 978-0756407391
May 2013
Urban fantasy.  Excellent story (I didn't even mind the fire-spider!) with an intriguing magical system based on the creative spark of fiction writers, and the power of the written (typed/inked/tattooed) word available to practitioners.  Awaiting a sequel (Codex Born)

The Disaster Diaries, Sam Sheridan.  ISBN - 9781594205279

May 2013
Funny trip through various unlikely apocalypsae, especially considered that they're all strung together into one single narrative, beginning with a mega-quake, proceeding through into a zombie infestation, escape from totalitarian government, into a desert wasteland road-warrior phase, then a Postman-like scenario, and finally into a nuclear winter.  The fictional narratives are fun and engaging, but they don't always point directly to the real-world lessons that the author learns or experiences.  I'm sure that trapping and tanning is important, but perhaps more so is orienteering, no?  Good companion to such books as the Zombie Survival Guide, but a bit hefty to make it into the Bug-Out Bag.  

Short Reviews: April 2013. The Vine Basket, Josanne La Valley

The Vine Basket, Josanne La Valley.  ISBN: 978-0547848013
April 2013
Interesting but emotionally flat tale of an ethnic-minority Chinese girl in northwestern China attempting to balance loyalty to the Party, the traditions of her own people, and the limitations on what daughters are good for.  Plot and characters alike could have been MUCH better with a stronger author.

Short Reviews: March 2013: Ashton Place Series, Pretty-Girl 13, Orleans, Freaks

Freaks, Kieran Larwood.  ISBN: 978-0545474245March 2013
Sheba is a wolf-girl raised as a side-show freak, and bought to join a troupe in London, joining a Strongman, a women with a strange connection to her rats, a monkey boy, and a mysterious ninja girl with cat eyes.  When a mudlark sneaks into the show, Sheba realizes life could always be worse.  Then the mudlark vanishes, and the poor desparate parents turn to the Freaks for help, or vengeance.  Set around the Great Exhibition.  Creepy villainess. 

Orleans, Sherri L. Smith.  ISBN: 978-0399252945
March 2013
YA virus/illness dystopia.  Fen lives in the quarantined former American states of Louisiana, Texas, and Florida.  She, like most other residents, suffers from an unspecified Fever that impacts different blood types differently.  Mainly an extended chase-escape narrative as Fen tries desperately to rescue an infant (an amazingly durable infant) from the hell she calls home.

Pretty Girl-13, Liz Coley.  ISBN: 978-0062127372
March 2013
YA psychological thriller.  Angie is kidnapped at age 13, and blocks the whole multi-year experience.  Relies heavily on psychobabble about DID/multiple personality syndrome.  Overly simplistic and lighthearted for a very complicated and traumatic real-life subject matter.

The Incorrigible Childern of Ashton Place, Maryrose Wood (series in progress)
The Mysterious Howling (ISBN: 978-0061791055) read 2010
The Hidden Gallery (ISBN: 978-0061791123) read 2011
The Unseen Guest (ISBN: 978-0061791185) read Spring 2013
Juv "manners" fiction, leaning fantastical.  Brilliant.  For everyone who likes the wordplay of Snicket but needs something a little less depressing.  Werewolves and feral children and governesses with copper hair and mysterious pasts.  Did I mention it was brilliant?

Short Reviews: February 2013. Scarlet, City of a Thousand Dolls

Scarlet (Lunar Chronicals 2), Marissa Meyer.  ISBN: 978-0312642969 
Feb. 2013 Love the covers on these books.  Sequel to Cinder, with lunar werewolves and a fiesty new girl to root for.  While I liked the lunar weres, having read Cinder, their "mystery" was a little on the obvious side.  The deviations from the standard fairy tale were stronger here, and I felt that the story was a little more adult (torture and death onscreen rather than off).  I'm not overly immersed in the characters, but I am VERY curious about the world.  


City of a Thousand Dolls, Miriam Forster.  ISBN: 978-0062121301 Feb. 2013 Juv fantasy set in a "magical" China-analogue.  Really wanted to like this, but severe flaws in plotting and tone just killed it right off.

Short Reviews: January 2013. Ironskin, Tina Connolly

Ironskin, Tina Connolly.  ISBN: 9780765330598
January 2013
YA: This book reminded me very strongly of Jenna Starborn, in that it really does quite simply take Jane Eyre, mess around with the setting, and let it fly again.  I enjoyed Jenna Starborn, and I did enjoy Ironskin also, but I do think that the world-building in the former was a little more realized.  There were some implications in this endeavor that weren't fully dealt with, and several others which were just left to hang unresolved.  

However!  While the setting in Jenna Starborn is pretty ho-hum Victoriana in space, THIS setting is really very interesting.  I would have LOVED to see an original story set in this world, rather than a re-hash of a classic.  I got the impression that a lot of thought had gone into creating an interesting concept for a world, and then when it came time to write a story - they choked up.  I totally understand that; I'm a worldbuilder, and a character writer myself, not a plotter.  But I do feel somewhat cheated that this really very interesting scenery and background was wasted on a watered down YA edition of Jane Eyre.  

A world in the twilight of an Empire powered by the stolen life-energy of the fae really deserves something a bit more original.

ETA: apparently there is now a sequel: Copperhead.

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Masks, E. C. Blake

Masks, E. C. Blake
ISBN: 9780756407599
Read December 22, 2013

Fantasy: A pampered child of the magical aristocracy is shocked and challenged when her rite of passage goes horribly wrong, branding her a traitor and a threat to her magical, god-like ruler.

I like stories where magical implements (collars, masks, gloves, brands, diadems) are used as indicators of caste, class, or magical/mundane ability/profession.  Apparently, lots of other people do also, because they turn up all over the place.

In this iteration, the Masks are required in public for everyone over the age of 15, and they denote profession and magical talent through color, tint, and design.  Mara's father is a high-ranking Masker, and as his daughter, she's expected to inherit both his magical ability and his court position in due time.  Instead, the Masking goes horribly wrong, and Mara is thrown free of her society and the implied magical caste system it enforces.

I knew going in that this was going to be a series, and I hesitated, because first books often suffer from cliffhanger syndrome, but I read it anyway, and I'm glad I did.

I'm very fond of the worldbuilding so far, I'm deeply impressed with the thought taken in handling the implications of magic and Masking, and I finish the book finding myself not trusting anyone, not even Mara.  Pretty nifty.

The only real downside is that Mara is fast on the way to being a stereotypical "super magic girl" and while that doesn't HAVE to be badly done, it very rarely escapes that fate.  I'm hoping something will help ground her out or provide a magical counterbalance in the next book.

I do have to also say that while I do think that most authors ignore the necessary bodily functions in their epic fantasy quest narratives, the number and amount of mentions given to attending to the necessaries was a little amusing, but I don't think it was meant to be.




Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Portraits of Little Women (set 1 of 3), Susan Beth Pfeffer

Portraits of Little Women: Set 1: 
Meg's Story: ISBN:0385325207
Jo's Story: ISBN: 0385325231
Beth's Story: ISBN: 0385325266
Amy's Story: ISBN: 0385325290
Susan Beth Pfeffer
Read December 15-18

Fiction: Pfeffer has written a set of "prequels" to Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott.  This is a set of three series, each comprising four books featuring each of the four sisters of the March family when they are 10 years old.   This set of Portraits is the first.  The second set of Portraits are Meg/Jo/Beth/Amy Makes a Friend, and I'm gathering them together for a read now.   After that, I'll find and read the final set: A Gift for Meg/Jo/Beth/Amy.  These books are so far very similar in design to the American Girl books, but seem to be a bit shorter.

Meg is invited to a picnic hosted by a wealthy (and somewhat snobbish) neighbor, but when a family emergency calls the housekeeper away, Meg has to babysit her younger siblings - instead of going to the picnic.  Always levelheaded, Meg contrives to watch the girls AND go to the picnic, and learns a few lessons about pride and kindness.

Jo overhears her Aunt March offering to adopt one of the March girls and keep her as a companion, to relieve some of the financial strain on their parents.  In a fit of filial duty, Jo prepares for the theatrical role of a lifetime; a womanly, submissive, and patient companion to her irascible aunt.

Beth is treated to the trip of a lifetime, going to New York with her parents.  There the shy Beth blossoms, surrounded by culture and beauty.  She also meets a quite famous personage, but when she returns home, even her sisters disbelieve her adventures.

Amy is delighted when a photographer sets up shop in town.  A real photograph, to forever immortalize her beauty, is just what she's always wanted.  But photography is expensive, and Father's just been called away to support the Union Army as a Chaplain.  Will Amy's good heart win out over her superficially selfish nature?

Nothing earth-shattering here, but excellent "clean reads" especially useful for a precocious reader, and fun little tidbits to build anticipation of reading Little Women itself, either solo or as a bedtime serial.

Monday, December 23, 2013

On Writing, Stephen King

On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
Stephen King
ISBN: 0684853523
Read December 15, 2013

Nonfiction: personal and professional memoir of author Stephen King.

I have had this book on my To-Read list forever it seems, and finally decided to pick it up.  I don't know that I feel the same way about plot (he doesn't like the idea of plotting) and I'm not sure that I'm right there with him on "excavating" existing story ideas, like revealing the David hidden inside the marble.  However, those two little personal approaches aside, he has presented an excellent and compulsively readable treatise.

He's also presented a fairly intimate portrait of himself, and I was a bit shocked at the forthright nature of his confessions of drug and alcohol abuse.  Him including a biography of sorts wasn't necessary to the theme, and I thought it was very brave and open of him to do so, in the hopes that background information would help to make the advice ring more true.

When I put a book to the side for a long time, especially if it's one that I have expectations about, I'm often disappointed when I finally get round to it.  This time, I wasn't let down in the least, and instead, I'm heading into the holidays with a more determined attitude towards my own creative outlets and my commitments to them.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Stand Straight Ella Kate, Kate and M. Sarah Klise

Stand Straight, Ella Kate: The True Story of a Real Giant, Kate and M. Sarah Klise
ISBN: 9780803734043
Read December 2, 2013

Picture Book (SC Picture Book Award Winner for 2012-2013)

Ella Kate was perfectly normal, until she turned seven.  After that, she grew at an astonishing rate, eventually topping out at 8'4" with size 24 shoes.

Beginning at age 17, she took her unusual height and used it to make a profit, working for a Chicago museum of oddities and making $1000 in a single month (which is an INSANE amount of money for anyone in 1890, let alone a 17 year old girl).

She got a taste of the wide world outside her small-town plains homestead, and continued touring for almost 20 years before her death at age 40.

The illustrations by Sarah Klise are deceptively simple - the expressions on the faces are spot-on and the body language is likewise quite deft for the otherwise flat "naive" illustrations.  Perhaps the most interesting part of the book is the endpapers, where various factoids about Ella Kate are illustrated and recorded - everything from a full-size recreation of a glove, to her shoe-size, to the height of her dresser.

The story is told straightforwardly, with no extra sentimentality or excess, which I think well-suits what we're shown of Ella Kate's actual character.  The story wisely ends with her on tour, planning to see as much of the world as possible, leaving it to the nonfiction coda (complete with an actual photograph) to tell about the end of her life.

Excellent for storytime, or for kids interested in "larger than life" folklore heroes or fairy-tale giants.




Friday, December 6, 2013

Curtsies & Conspiracies, Gail Carriger

Curtsies & Conspiracies, Gail Carriger
ISBN: 9780316190114
Read November 6, 2013

YA Fantasy: Finishing School Book 2 (After Etiquette & Espionage) related to the Soulless series.

Excellent installment, and even better than the first (which I thought was a bit weak, compared to Soulless).  Sophronia is finishing up her second term of her debut year at the dirigible-housed mock-Finishing School for young ladies of espionage.  Her mid-term grades are excellent, but she's been shunned by the entire student body because of them.  No worries - she's got plenty to keep her occupied: the Sooties (especially Soap), the invasion of a deployment of Apprentice Evil Genusi from their opposing school (especially Felix, Lord Mersey, he of the unfortunate cut during the climactic dance in E&E), and the interesting question of the crystal relay that Veive is working on in secret, and several of the professors are involved in - even more secretly!

Wheels upon wheels turn rapidly, and there are many more parties involved in the action this time around, which makes for occasional confusions.  However all is forgiven by the appearance of a certain foppish rove vampire who shall remain nameless for the purposes of avoiding unnecessary spoilers.  

Needless to say, this series is delightful, and I'm glad that Carriger has upped her game so nicely for the YA set.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Still Star-Crossed, Melinda Taub

Still Star-Crossed, Melinda Taub
ISBN: 9780385743501
Read November 24, 2013

YA: "sequel" to Romeo and Juliet, in Shakespearean English, in the style of Much Ado About Nothing.

Confession time: I didn't ever get to be a typical teenager.  Crap went down in my life starting around age 10, and pretty much that whole next decade was a total write-off.  So I have to admit that I've always been slightly amused and bemused by Romeo and Juliet - I never got to have that sort of experience in my own life, and I couldn't understand how they could be so stupid and so passionate while they were so young and naive.  Even now, having had boyfriends and a husband, I still don't understand that very particular type of passionate teen crush.  Because of that, Romeo and Juliet is one of my least-favorite plays.  Now, that said, I love Shakespeare with a passion, so even my least-favorite play isn't bad, I just never really sympathized with the protagonists.

So I was a bit trepidatious when this one came across my desk.  "Oh God," I thought, "it wasn't messy and passionate and stupid enough, here's round two!"  But, reader, I was WRONG.

Oh yeah, it is a sequel, and it does deal with Benvolio and Rosaline, Montague and Capulet, but it's much more a comedy of errors than a tragedy.  Now, don't get me wrong, people are going to die, but that's pretty much a given in a Shakespeare play anyway.

It's written in novel form, in beautiful formal English (soooo wonderful to see in a YA book, you can't even imagine) and the characters are perfectly matched against each other.  There's madness and ambition and love and snarky comebacks and it really is pretty much perfect.  Very Princess Bride.  Almost enough to make me like Romeo and Juliet itself just a little bit more.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Cat Sense, John Bradshaw

Cat Sense: How the New Feline Science Can Make You a Better Friend to Your Pet, John Bradshaw
ISBN: 9780465031016
Read November 23, 2013

Nonfiction: Cat behavior.

The author has a particular point to make, and he's not shy about making it over and over and over again - cats have done really well so far to keep up with changing expectations, but we're moving too fast for them to keep up without us beginning to purposefully breed for behavior and attitude, like we do with dogs.

Whether his point will make an impact on the larger cat-breeding societies, who knows, but I for one think that he's right.

Besides his overall axe, he does present some really good studies (footnoted and bibliographied) showing cat ancestry, the history of wild cats, the archaeological evidence for cat-human interactions (scanty though it is) and then on into modern cat genetics.

There was also a decent section discussing training cats (yes it can be done) and talking about the variations in personality that have been noted in different breeds, and for different coat-colors.  He uses that of course as a springboard back to his grinding, but again, it's a solid point, and if the spay/neuter/indoor cat movement catches on worldwide, the cat population will be solidly in the hands of cat breeders, who right now seem much more interested in splashy coats and "wild" ancestry (the wild-domestic blends that are causing so many owners havoc now because they aren't tame cats) than in producing cats that can live indoors, in small habitats (apartment-sized) shared with other pets, especially other cats.

Right now, that's something the cat isn't really great at - it's up to us to help them make it as a modern pet.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

The Truesight Trilogy, David Stahler Jr.

Truesight Trilogy, David Stahler Jr.
1) Truesight: ISBN: 0060522852
2) The Seer: ISBN: 9780060522889
3) Otherspace: ISBN: 9780060522919

Juv/YA science fiction: a boy escapes from a repressive society where sight is blamed for the ills of humanity.

I'm glad that I'm reviewing these as a whole, because I have to say that the first is the weakest of the bunch, and as a standalone, you're really just better off re-reading The Giver again.  However, because it sets up the next two, which are much more interesting, it does become worth it.

In Truesight, Jacob's friend Delaney is a rebel.  Their society is made up of blind people - most genetically altered, but some voluntarily blinding themselves to join.  Her father is the head of their isolated, communal society, but she isn't happy there.  She wants more - she wants to SEE.  Jacob doesn't care about any of that, he's just worried what the community will assign him as his career.  Until the headaches that he has been getting regularly are joined by a dull grey blur, which slowly resolves into true sight.  While he's hiding this horrific secret, Delaney finally pushes her father too far, and she's reported as a suicide.  Jacob is the last to (literally) see her beforehand, but he doesn't have time to worry about that - his secret is too hot to keep, and now his community is demanding that he go under the knife to lose his sight.  Suddenly, Jacob has to make a very hard choice between the life he always thought he knew, and the life he now knows is real, because he's seen it with his own eyes.

In The Seer, provincial community is left far behind as both Jacob and Delaney navigate the world of the seeing, trying to figure out a place where they fit in, and where they won't be exploited or returned home.  Delaney especially has a rough time of it, as her musical aptitude make her the perfect target for unscrupulous media moguls.  Jacob pledged to help her, but he's being more and more distracted by headaches, visions, and a strange choral voice in his head, pleading with him to come and find them.  Is Jacob's sight a blessing or a curse?

In Otherspace, Jacob is off on his own, finally trying to solve the mystery of the voices in his head.  He partners with a space captain, and tries to hide from an enigmatic and threatening stranger who seems to be stalking him, meeting up with witches and seers, and facing both unexpected betrayal and the promise of a new home after all hope is lost.

None of these books truly stand alone as decent reads, but together they make a nice little space-age fable about acceptance, understanding, friendship, and finding your own path in the world.

A solid "middle grade" read, this set would also be quite good for younger adept readers who have mastered The Giver or The House of Stairs, and want more mental/psychological puzzles to occupy themselves.

  

Monday, December 2, 2013

Wednesdays at the Castle, Jessica Day George

Wednesdays at the Castle, Jessica Day George
ISBN: 9781599906454
Read November 21, 2013
Juv: Sequel to Tuesdays at the Castle

Argh!  Cliffhangers!

Also griffins, which mollifies me a bit.  But really?  After such a beautiful first self-contained book, a cliffhanger?  Hmph.>

Attempting to put that aside, I still love everyone, from Celie herself, her lovely family, to Prince Lulath (he's so delightful, he reminds me of Lord Akeldama from Carriger's Parasol Protectorate and Finishing School series.  LOVE them both) and the oddly-proportioned visiting Wizard.  Characterization remains a really strong point for this writer.

The Castle is acting hinky all of a sudden, but Celie's up to her eyebrows with a new responsibility that the Castle is determined should be kept VERY SECRET.  Those two seemingly disparate events of course are symptoms of a greater problem, but there we get back to my distress at the CLIFFHANGER ENDING.

The next in line, Thursdays... is planned for spring of 2014, so hopefully not too long a wait.  Still, a bit of a peeve for me.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Mister Seahorse, Eric Carle

Mister Seahorse, Eric Carle
ISBN: 0399242694Read November 20, 2013

Picture Book: nonfiction-esque meet-and-greet following Mr Seahorse as he encounters other daddy sea creatures while he parents his own offspring.


I really like this book.  Not as much as his classics like The Grouchy Ladybug, but this one is really nice.  Why?  It focuses on FATHERS.  Do you know how hard it is to find a good fatherhood book that isn't maudlin or sappy or trite or tired or actually an "issues" book in disguise (meaning "this book is about fatherhood BUT REALLY it's about divorce and adjusting to a single parent household" or "this book is about fatherhood BUT REALLY it's about the importance of fathers even if they are currently in jail" type books).

This one is just what it purports to be: a seahorse father, and a whole passel of other sea creature fathers, all keeping their children (mostly in egg form) in various odd ways.

One niggle: one of the fishies refers to watching over his own children as "babysitting" which is really a hot button phrase these days, so if that bugs you, either avoid or expect to rephrase.  

For themed use (read: Storytimes) I'm going to pair this one up with Teri Sloat's I'm a Duck! which avoids being trite or maudlin through beautiful expressive use of language, and sweet but not too cutesy rough-edged illustrations that follow the life-cycle of a mallard from hatching to parenthood.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, Jane Yolen

Curse of the Thirteenth Fey, Jane Yolen
ISBN: 9780399256646
Read November 20, 2013

YA: Sleeping Beauty re-tell from the perspective of the fairy "godmothers" although the sleeper is a fae also...

Weird.  I think that I would have enjoyed it more if I had been allowed to come to the realization that this was a Sleeping Beauty re-telling more gradually and naturally over the course of the story, instead of having it plastered on the cover.

Because to be quite honest, it ISN'T the story of Sleeping Beauty. Unless you accept that the story of Sleeping Beauty that we all know was mangled all out of shape and smushed into a container that didn't quite fit it all, and then dumped out somewhere quite different and mixed up with some extra bits from who-knows-where.

To that end, I have a hard time reviewing this.  Is it a good re-work of Sleeping Beauty?  For me, nope.  It was weird, focused on the fae end of things, didn't really have that mystical fairy-tale feel, and too many of the classic elements were missing or occluded.

Was it a good story of itself?  Actually, yes.  I liked Gorse, I liked the mythology of their strange Appalachian-seeming hippie-fae family, I liked all the sibling interactions, and I really really liked the bits in the dark with the Grey and the Prince.  Those bits strongly reminded me of The Perilous Gard (Elizabeth Marie Pope) which I read a while back.  I really like creepity fae that take advantage of darkness and odd motivations.

So I'm not sure about it.  My suggestion?  Try not to think about classic fairy-tales when you read it, and just enjoy a strange, somewhat nigglingly-familiar story about a clumsy and unlucky 13th child of the fae, and what happened a long time ago, when she was a child.

Friday, November 29, 2013

The Witness Wore Red, Rebecca Musser & M. Bridget Cook

The Witness Wore Red: The 19th Wife Who Brought Polygamous Cult Leaders to Justice.
Rebecca Musser & M. Bridget Cook
ISBN: 9781455527854
Read November 18, 2013

Nonfiction: Memoir of Rebecca Musser's escape from the FLDS and subsequent assistance with the Yearning for Zion Ranch raid, and the trials of the pedophilia and child abuse of the church leaders.  Includes short black and white picture segment.

Powerful addition to the stories of other women who daringly escaped from the FLDS as Warren Jeffs took his father's death as the opportunity to plunge the already secretive and enabling FLDS society further into abuses and illegal behaviors.

Also a powerful reminder of the ability of humans to contort, manipulate, and "train" young, gullible, or needy people into doing things that otherwise would seem impossible breaches of basic social contracts.  Brainwashing may not be the correct term any more, but it's alive and well in communities like that.  Manipulative actions aren't limited to charismatic sociopathic child abusers, and woe betide us all if we don't learn our lessons while we can, and spot abusers before they can harm so many others around them.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

The Unicorn's Secret Series, Kathleen Duey, Omar Rayyan

The Unicorn's Secret Series, Kathleen, Duey, illustrated by Omar Rayyan
1) Moonsilver, ISBN: 0689842694
2) The Silver Thread, ISBN: 0689842708
3) The SIlver Bracelet, ISBN: 0689850581
4) The Mountains of the Moon, ISBN: 0689851375
5) The Sunset Gates, ISBN: 0689853475
6) True Heart, ISBN: 0689853718
7) Castle Avamir, ISBN: 0689853734
8) The Journey Home, ISBN: 0689853750
Read November 15, 2013
 

This is the third series of beginner-chapter horse books I've read from this author, and like the other two, the books are entirely unsuited to reading as stand-alone works.  However, that is about the only serious criticism I have of them.  (Other than the name of the character (Heart) which does cause some uncontrolled eye-rolling.)

Minor criticisms I have a-plenty: pacing issues (caused by the serial nature, mostly unavoidable, but still a bit irritating), characters appearing and disappearing from the story or being introduced and then left as plot-movers or ciphers, unrealistic story elements (our girl, somewhere between 6 and 10 years old, it isn't specified, is often shown girding or ungirding heavy equine plate and barding onto the yearling unicorn "in minutes," which is a little eyebrow-raising in more ways than one... ) and a bland overarching protagonist who is often shown as physically menacing, but his actual evil actions (burning books, killing unicorns, starving and jailing his serfs) are left mostly alluded to in the background of the story - despite being an important motivating factor to the heroine!

However, all of those are minor niggles, and for mass-market serial books, these are pretty close to solid gold.  The girl is strong and smart and brave and persistent.  There are older women who are kind and helpful, and secondary male characters who are also friends or allies.  Like in the Mustang series, a bully is given a chance to redeem himself and find a better place in life (in actual fact, those two characters and story arcs are so similar as to be identical except for the choice of vocation at the end).

Unreservedly recommended for anyone horse (or unicorn) mad; just make sure you have all of them on-hand before you get started, because there's no good place to pause the story until the very end.  Also excellent for younger ears as bedtime or regular storytime to be read to them, even before they're able to read it on their own. 

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic, Jennifer Trafton, Brett Helquist

The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic, Jennifer Trafton, illus. by Brett Helquist
ISBN: 9780803733756
Read November 15, 2013

Juv: quirky quest adventure.

Very similar in nature and tone to Tuesdays at the Castle, and very nearly as good. 

Persimmony Smudge is the exact opposite of her dutiful drudge of a sister Prunella (LOVE the names); she is a dreamer, an adventurer, a thinker.  

She is, in other words, the perfect person for an Adventure.  But somehow in all of her ten years, she's never had one, even though her father (missing for nearly those entire ten years) was a noted adventurer himself.  Her mother and sister are decidedly anti-adventure, but that only spurs Persimmony on to higher reaches of imagination.

Her imagination fails to match reality when she gets lost in the woods and overhears the feared underground Leafeaters plotting against the king.  Now she and fellow adventurers Worvil (the worried) and Theodore (the wise creater of magical pots) have to save the kingdom, despite the niggling fact that the twelve-year-old king is more than a little bit of a brat, and perhaps not actually worth saving after all.

Also, there's a very lovely big giant, who reminded me strongly and beautifully of the giant Time, fast asleep under Narnia, waiting for the end of the world.   

Great characters, madcap plotting, somewhat uneven pacing.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

A Street Cat Named Bob, James Bowen

A Street Cat Named Bob, James Bowen.
ISBN: 978-1250029461
Read November 13, 2013.
 
Nonfiction: Cat-lover and drug-recovery memoir.
 
A sweet, slight story about how Bob the cat adopted Mr Bowen and helped him make the transition from drug-addled street-bum to productive and responsible cat person.  The narrative voice was engaging, yet blunt about his own shortcomings, as well as those of others he encounters.  Bonus for ending BEFORE the cat dies, and for Mr Bowen's straighforwardness about the difficulties of getting his life back on track without becoming maudlin or bitter. 
 
I would have enjoyed seeing snapshots of Bob or the duo working their beat.

Monday, November 25, 2013

The Thinking Woman's Guide to Real Magic, Emily Croy Barker

The Thinking Woman's Guide to Real Magic, Emily Croy Barker
ISBN: 9780670023660
Read November 11, 2013

Fantasy.

If this is a Guide, then it's one of those Guides that leads by negative example.  The beginning of the story is fairly bland, very wordy, very slow, (very much after the example of Harkness's Shadow of Night set) and frankly, kind of off-putting.  Nora is a real wallflower, with no character attributes to speak of, and she's certainly not a heavy thinker.  

Her shallow and passive acceptance of life takes a turn for the worse when she steps through (actually, even worse, dismisses the gate guardian of) a portal between worlds, finding herself magically back in a 1960s-inspired fantasy world of the rich and famous.

You guys, she LITERALLY DRINKS THE KOOL-AID.  Literally.  Like clockwork, all of the tropes of being taken by the fae occur (you can tick them off as they very obviously happen) and poor little Nora hasn't got even the foggiest glimpse of a clue.  

This is irritating, to say the very least.

Finally, Nora's clue-bat to the head appears in the daylight appearance of her half-dragon (maybe?) husband!! (yes, really) who attacks her because she gets jealous of his attentions.  She's rescued by a deus ex magician, a crusty old fellow, and then it rapidly degenerates into Pride and Prejudice, Now with Extra Magic Flavor! (tm)

Please don't get me wrong - it's at least as readable as the Shadow of Night sets, but there's just so much a girl can take of a clueless lead, and Nora really does her best to hit all the low notes.  

Finally, there's the interesting matter of the magic, which falls squarely into what I consider my anime-addicted husband's realm of things: unrestricted, unexplained, and unstoppable.  Need something?  Magic will fix it!  What's the cost?  Eh... *handwaves*  No good.  I prefer my magic to fall in with the Sanderson Rules - limited, expensive (or difficult) and explicated.  

The ending leaves the ONLY TWO other interesting female characters dead, and Nora safely back with her family in our own world (who think she was abducted by Norwegian hippies) while she pines for her magical love, having realized her feelings too late.  

Regardless of pique, I'll probably pick up the second, in hopes that we find out what happens with the crazy mouse-man from the very beginning.  Sadly, no one else is nearly as interesting. 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

The Ghost Prison, Joseph Delaney, Scott Fischer

The Ghost Prison, Joseph Delaney, illus. by Scott Fischer.
ISBN: 978-1402293184
Read November 6, 2013

YA: illustrated medieval ghost story (set in same universe as The Last Apprentice, but not necessary)

Nicely illustrated short creepy about Billy's stint as a night watchman for the haunted castle dungeons.  Loved the excellent characterizations tucked into the short pages and haunting expressive pen-scribble illustrations. 

Only possible downside is the length - this one is VERY short - It's almost as tiny as a paperback book, and clocks in around 95 pages, with a fair number of those being full page illustrations.  Still, the story is fun, the creep factor is high, and it's perfect for a reluctant reader or a short car trip.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

The Big Disconnect, Catherine Steiner-Adair

The Big Disconnect, Catherine Steiner-Adair
ISBN: 9780062082428
Read November 7, 2013

Nonfiction: scary stories about kids of various ages misusing tech and social media.

Hoped this would be more of an advice-giver, rather than a scary-story collection, but you win some and you lose some.  The subtitle is "Protecting Childhood and Family in the Digital Age" and the takeaway seems to be that it's pretty darn hard to do unless you are a Luddite or convert to Amish until your kid is about 30.  

There are some bits of advice, but sadly, the majority of the book really does just cover horrible events where kids are kids, do something stupid, and the nature of tech and media means that now they'll never live it down.
Harsh lessons, but no real advice or steps to follow to mediate or alter the potential.  Leaves this on the "interesting but not really worthwhile" reading list.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Expecting Better, Emily Oster

Expecting Better, Emily Oster
ISBN: 9781594204753
Read November 5, 2013

Nonfiction: statistics and hard numbers about fertility, pregnancy, and childbirth. 

I'm going to keep this short, lest I gush too hard; this is an EXCELLENT resource, and I am so grateful to Dr Oster for putting it together.  She has my eternal gratitude, and this book has a prominent place on my bookshelf.

If you're satisfied that "Doctor knows best" then this won't be much use.  If, on the other hand, you're a paranoid overthinker who plans and plots and researches anything possible, this book is a wonderful assist.  

Here's hoping she does a sequel on infant care and the mommy wars.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Treecat Wars, David Weber & Jane Lindskold

Treecat Wars, David Weber & Jane Lindskold
ISBN: 9781451639339
Read November 4, 2013

YA SF: Star Kingdom Novel #3, Treecats!  Stephanie Harrington!

I was in fine form for this one, as I had just gotten back from the very first Honorcon, in Greenville SC the previous day (it was great fun, lots of really awesome staff, volunteers, vendors, publishers, and authors, as well as a vibrant and happy audience).

Treecat Wars picks us right up after Fire Season left off, with Stephanie and Anders' beginning romance interrupted by the political and academic fallout of Anders' dad's stubborn and illegal activity.  All is not lost, as Anders is simply sent to Manticore - ONLY an hour's delay by com.  The two lovebirds work out their long-distance relationship, even when he gets to come back to Spinx, just as she's getting sent to Manticore herself for a plum assignment.

So Stephanie and Karl (and Lionheart) are off studying and trying to be ambassadors for Treecat Rights, Anders and Jessica are on Spinx, trying to run herd on a new crew of anthropologists, and to figure out what could be causing the treecat deaths and injuries they're finding on the edges of the burned-out forest.  

I seriously love these books.  They're a bit formulaic, and they are YA, but the themes (long distance relationships, falling out of love, being with someone who you know loves you more than you love them) are treated respectfully and thoughtfully.  The only real downside is one that's shared by the larger Honorverse - the good guys are really really good, and the bad guys are really really bad.  Rarely is there a conflicted character, and even if a good character is on the "wrong" side, it's still clear that they're a good guy.

Finally, I'd like to give a shout-out to the covers for these books - Daniel Dos Santos has done a great job with this one, as he has done for the previous two.  Really fantastic work with expressions (facial and body) and with overall color tones.  

I'm hoping that this isn't the last of these books.  I would very much love to keep following Stephanie and Lionheart (and all the others - especially Jessica and Dirt Grubber!) on their adventures. 

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Saving Thanehaven, Catherine Jinks

Saving Thanehaven, Catherine Jinks.
ISBN: 9781606842744
Read November 4, 2013

Juv-YA: TRON-like world of programs come to life inside computers.

Noble is a knight, sworn to save the princess from the evil wizard, but he's never really thought much further than that. When he meets Rufus on the way in, he's introduced to the concept of free will, and from that moment on, he's pretty much screwed.

Readers will catch on to Rufus much more quickly than the programs will, but even knowing what he's up to - he's pretty impressive. Like a human sociopath, Rufus changes his tone and watches what he says and pretends to care, before moving on to the next target.

Speaking of that, the title and bookends are a little misleading - the beginning of the story is set in Thanehaven, and Noble is very much a man, er, program, of his time, er, game. The action doesn't stay there very long, however, and in no time flat, we've moved through a couple more games, and been introduced to the weird world of visualized computing hardware and software.

If you watched the TRON reboot and wondered what the other programs did in their daily lives, this one is for you. If you got a little huffy about how there could be a world inside of programs and algorithms, I would suggest you steer clear. As far as I could tell, the analogies are apt, and the information is correct, but I can easily see computer-geeks getting very bent out of shape by the implications of the locations as they are envisioned.

My major quibble surrounds the lives in the real world - naturally we aren't able to see much, but the real Rufus in particular seems unaware that bricking his friend's computer for a perceived slight is a smidge of an overreaction. I would have liked to have a bit more attention given to that situation.

Overall, an enjoyable short read that is surprisingly funny, with a metaphysical twist at the end for a punchy garnish.
(also published on Amazon.com)

Monday, November 18, 2013

Eight Million Gods, Wen Spencer

Eight Million Gods, Wen Spencer
ISBN: 9781451638981
Read October 22, 2013

Fantasy: Modern-Mythic Japan via hypographic expat American.

Eh... I really wanted to like this, and the ideas were awesome, but the second half just completely fell apart.  There was a real sense that it was rushed to printing, with no chance to look into even basic things like plotholes, dropped characters, and logical progression of abilities.

Nikki is in Japan after having narrowly escaped her mother, who is hell-bent on putting her into an institution due to her hypographia, which manifests as writing horrible graphic death scenes for characters which pop into her head fully-formed.  

The world turns out to be more complex than she imagined, as she enters a world of Kami and yokai, and learns that instead of having a mental disorder, she's really a Seer - and all those horrible deaths she's written?  Totally true, actually happening to real people.  Ugh.

Here's where things get interesting, and also fall apart.  Characters appear and then vanish for a time, intentions are set up and then left stagnant, and even important character developments (TRUE LOVE!!!1!!) happen in the space of a paragraph.  
 
That's not even counting the actual climax of the book, where everything established so far gets tossed aside for an ending that is not only confusing, but seems totally implausible in the world as given to us so far.  An unreliable narrator will only get you so far with this, and the overly chipper finale just made the entire journey seem even more unrealistic.

Specific disgruntlements:
WTF happened with Atsumori?  Dropped like a hot rock, no closure whatsoever, and he was my favorite character.  

When you name a character "Scary Cat Dude" you need to have him be a scary cat dude in an ACTION SCENE - not just locked in a cage.

Power-creep progression.  Nikki begins the story not able to handle stress without uncontrollable, unfocused writing, sometimes for hours.  Then she can handle stress without writing by frantically clicking a pen, and getting to the writing ASAP.  Next she can handle stress without writing at all, then or later.  Not satisfied with that, then she moves into handling stress just fine, and can guide the "uncontrollable" writing to focus on a specific person.  Next?  Guiding the writing to specify time or scene desired.  Still not enough, as then we're told that she can write multiple options for reality and then choose the best.  Seems that's not quite enough, so then she writes in blood and causes the writing to manifest.  Finally, not happy with the already earthshattering graphically-based powers laid onto the heroine, Nikki finishes up by IMAGINING a scene, and causes the imagined scene to manifest, therefore wiping a main character entirely out existence in the modern world.  Well then.  That settles that.  Makes all of her stress and worry and panic from previously in the book (as well as previously in life) seem a bit silly.  

Sadly not a keeper, and not really a recommended title either.  Which is a shame, because Atsumori and Inari really deserve better.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

The Cavendish Home for Boys and Girls, Claire Legrand

The Cavendish Home for Boys and Girls, Claire Legrand.
ISBN: 9781442442917
YA: Ghost Story
Read October 21, 2013

Creepy as hell, and buggy to boot.  Needs to be made into an animated version by the Coraline crew, or the Nightmare Before Christmas people in charge of Oogie Boogie, or whoever from Anastasia did the excellently nasty sequence celebrating Rasputin.

Victoria is the perfect child, and is very aware of her perfection - works for it.  Strives for it.  Her only imperfection is Lawrence, who is decidedly imperfect, but she's decided that he's permissible as a "project," until he goes missing.  

Victoria's town is likewise perfect, the streets, the people, the school.  Until she begins hearing rumors of vanishings, and notices that so many people have the same nervous tics, or odd looks in their eyes, or weird personality changes.

Victoria's departures from perfection stem from her independent mind, and her stubborn streak.  She is about to discover that those two qualities may get her into a lot more trouble than her perfectionist streak ever prepared her to handle.  She's going to have to learn more about friendship and loyalty in order to make it out alive.

This book was DAMN CREEPY.  There are some seriously disturbing things in there - several children are turned into misshapen poppet-like creatures with just a few limbs and features remaining to them, who, (if that isn't bad enough) are cannibalized unknowingly (and then later knowingly) by the other children, and the tortures and punishments are inventive and horrid.  Also, if you don't deal well with bugs, maybe this one isn't your best bet.

However, it never QUITE goes too far over the gruesome line - just far enough to really make the reader sweat - will Victoria and Lawrence make it out?  The ending is terrific, but in true ghost-story fashion, the epilogue will bring those terrors right back for another round, and make the reader wonder if all that anguish and effort really accomplished anything after all.

Recommended for DAYTIME reading.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Katie and the Mustang Series, Kathleen Duey

Katie and the Mustang Series, Kathleen Duey
(individual books are untitled)
Book 1: ISBN: 9780142400906
Book 2: ISBN: 0525472738
Book 3: ISBN: 0142400920
Book 4: ISBN: 0142400939
Read October 14-18, 2013

This is the second series of early-chapter horse books I've read by Kathleen Duey.  I have to say that I like the Irish set more than these.  For some reason, the main character in this story struck me as less active and more emotionally fragile than in the previous set.  As the "girl power" themes are part of why I liked the others as much as I did, I found the lack here to be disconcerting.

I also thought that the themes and main ideas here were a little more mature and harder to grasp - Katie is escaping from an abusive home and traveling ALONE on the Oregon trail with a farm-hand she barely knows (problematic by itself), and then as the series progresses, there are issues of "ladylike behavior" and the existence of ignored or persecuted Mormon pioneers, and the presence of a traveling circus (deemed to be dangerously not respectable people).  Further, and more pertinent to the horse-mad reader, Katie refuses to attempt to tame the mustang, despite the hardships of the Oregon Trail, meaning that there are no thrilling instances of the horse being ridden, and the bond between them remains fragile and tenuous, despite the author's best intentions.  This will likely frustrate the seriously horse-crazed, and the postscript of incoming foals who aren't even included in the book will do little alleviate that frustration.

However - because I didn't find them as good as the others, doesn't mean that they're all bad.  I do think that I would prefer to read the other set aloud, and let a horse-mad reader discover these on their own.   If I had to recommend a set from this author, I'd go with the original Irish Hoofbeats Series, or perhaps the Unicorn's Secret Series, which I'll be working through shortly. 

Friday, October 25, 2013

Thematic Battle: Understood Betsy vs Eight Cousins

Understood Betsy, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, illus Kimberly Bulken Root.
ISBN: 0805060731
Read October 9, 2013

Eight Cousins, Louisa May Alcott, illus Ruth Ives.
ISBN: Nelson-Doubleday Hardcover 1958 (MCMLVIII).
Re-read October 9, 2013

I never thought I'd say this, but I actually like Fisher's book better than Alcott's. Weird.

To be clear, Eight Cousins is a long-time favorite, and I've read it at least 5 times, maybe as many as 10 times over.  (I don't like Rose in Bloom, the sequel, as well as I do Eight Cousins, but that's another post.)

In contrast, this is the first time I have read Understood Betsy.  

I really like it.  I don't know if it's the deft touch with the moralizing, or the very carefully developed tongue-firmly-in-cheek descriptions of the "delicate" little child creating more trauma to satisfy the delicate aunt's fearmongering, or the only somewhat obviously shoehorned-in Montessori principles, but it really is a very clever, very well-written, very straightforward read.  

Sadly, the more I read Alcott, the more it starts to feel Elsie Dinsmore-ish, or (horrors) Uncle Arthur's Bedtime Stories-ish.  She's just so moralistic, and the preaching tone is starting to grate on me as I get older (and to be perfectly honest, less interested in having God show up in everything just as a matter of course or culture).

So in a total shock to myself as much as anyone else, I found Understood Betsy to be more readable and more modern, where Eight Cousins is more melodramatic and ostentatious.  On the other hand, they both are better than a lot of what's out there.  I would be interested to read them both in sequence (it works well because Betsy is around 8 to 10, and then Rose is a pre-teen) and see how it goes.  I do have to admit that the action is more present and prevalent in Eight Cousins, where Understood Betsy is fairly straightforward and only has a few discrete adventures.

I think for an upcoming post I'll compare and contrast Rose in Bloom (which I read immediately following Eight Cousins, and it grated me something fierce) and Jo's Boys.  Both are roughly the same book, but for some reason, Jo's Boys always struck me as being much more progressive and modern (read less sexist and less preachy) than Rose in Bloom.  I find that interesting. 

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Hoofbeats: Lara Series, Kathleen Duey

Hoofbeats: Lara Series, Kathleen Duey
Lara and the Gray Mare.  ISBN: 0525473327
Lara and the Moon-Colored Filly.  ISBN: 0525473335
Lara at Athenry Castle.  ISBN: 0525473408
Lara and the Silent Place.  ISBN: 0142402338
Juv Historic Fiction: Irish 10 year old girl must fend for herself and her filly against the rest of the world.

I had fun reading these, but the very last one had significant typo and editing problems, which hampered my enjoyment at the last.  I also felt that the plotting of the last one was weak, and the telegraphing of the final solution felt both last-minute and heavy-handed.

Short summaries:
Gray Mare: Larach lives in a poor tuath (holding) where her father is the ri (lord) and her aunt is 15, unwed, unbetrothed, and unhappy.  After a raid, the girls are sent to care for the sheep and cows in the upland, and Lara finds the stolen pregnant mare giving birth.  The book ends with both Lara and her aunt being abducted along with the days-old filly.

Moon-Colored Filly: Lara is at a much richer holding, in the care of the lord that took her and her Aunt.  While the Aunt falls in love with the enemy, Lara continues to scheme to get her own freedom and that of the filly.  She learns of the filly's heritage, and finds her own enemy to begin having feelings for.

Athenry Castle: Lara's filly was taken from her, and now she's in disguise in the "city" around the castle as a boy, and working in the stables.  She's been training the filly to run with her, and that may be key to winning her - if she can keep her identity hidden, and manage to win the upcoming race.

Silent Place: Lara's on the run with the filly, in a different disguise, from the disgrace and chaos of Athenry.  She meets with a party of nuns, but decides to leave them to minimize their chances of being harmed through association with a horse-thief.  Her father captures her on the road unknowing (in disguise) so even though she didn't want to bring the filly (and the danger) back to her home, she is stuck following her father.  Her independence is too much for his traditionalism, and her peace-loving desires don't mesh with his need to war.  It all comes to nothing when Lara and her father are caught and returned to Athenry, where Lara manages to save the day with ancient knowledge.  Afterwards, Lara realizes she can't live at home, and she slips off to return to the nuns. 

I only wish that some of the male characters weren't horrid people.  The only ones worth anything are the men from Moon-Colored Filly, one boy at Athenry, and one man from Lara's hometown.  Nearly ALL of the women are portrayed positively, so that was a slight let-down.  It's possible (and better) to have girl power without slandering the guys.

Otherwise, nice quick moral-but-not-Christian set of books for the adventuresome horse-mad reader. 

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The World Above, Cameron Dokey

The World Above, Cameron Dokey. ISBN: 9781442403376
Read Oct 5, 2013
YA - fairy-tale retelling (part of a retelling-series called "Once Upon a Time" by Simon Pulse, most by Dokey)

Jack and the Beanstalk meets Robin Hood and the Golden Arrow meets the evil usurper medieval Duke.  A bit of a smush, and the choice to use solid, practical, feet-on-the-ground Gen as the POV character is odd considering the fanciful and fairy-tale nature of the story, most of which even takes place in a country above the clouds (in true fairy-tale fashion, NO time is wasted dealing with how that even would work out). 

Characters appear and then vanish (some do get dealt with in the epilogue, but not all) and insta-love makes quite a few appearances.  A weak bad guy with no real visible impact on the kingdom doesn't help matters seem more serious.  There's no doubt from the start that everything will work out, just a question of how pat the solution will be (answer: very pat).

Not terrible, but doesn't make me want to rush out and see what she does with other fairy-tales either.  

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Peppermints Duology, Barbara Brooks Wallace

Peppermints in the Parlor.  ISBN: 068930790X
The Perils of Peppermints.  ISBN: 0689850433
Barbara Brooks Wallace
Read October 2 & 3, 2013

Juv Gothic Dickensian mysteries.

Oh the joys of juvenile gothic tales.  Shades of The Little Princess meets Wolves of Willoughby Chase and Series of Unfortunate Events.  Dear spunky Emily is our guide through the perils of childhood when surrounded by adults who are either dimwitted, gullible, or criminal.  

In Peppermints, Emily's pampered childhood is over - her parents dead within the first page of the first volume, and she's off to her Aunt and Uncle Twice (siblings on both parents' sides, of course) to live in their own fabulously wealthy mansion.  

On arrival, things are unexpectedly dismal - Aunt Twice is wan and haggard, and Uncle Twice is nowhere to be seen.  Even worse, the beloved memory of the mansion is betrayed by a decrepit old pile housing even more decrepit old people - all left there by their families to molder away.  The architect of this horror is Mrs Theodosia Sly Meeching, grim of countenance, and heavy of hand.  She lavishes punishments upon servants (Emily and Auntie, as well as the sullen Tilly, a fellow "orphing" girl) and oldsters alike, for the smallest of infractions - including (as per the title) taking peppermints from the parlor.

How Emily perseveres through hardship and prevails over her sinister foe is totally unrealistic, but very satisfying.

In Perils, Aunt and Uncle Twice once again prove their utter inability to function as reasonable rational adults, and squander their fortune, sell their mansion, and pack off to India - all on the advice of a fortuitiously-met lawer named Mr Josiah Slyde (I love these names, they're seriously epic).  Small children aren't allowed in India (obviously), so Emily must stay in America, at an equally fortuitously-known school which is of such high character that there is an actual ROYAL PRINCESS in residence.  

Sadly, things once again go sour from the beginning, and Emily is once again reduced to penury and servitude.  Again, no resemblances to reality were harmed in the writing of this epistle, but it's awfully good fun in the reading.  The adults (with the exception of the fishmongers, on whose gingered heads rest my whole fading hope for adult humanity) are hopeless until the very end, whereupon they are altogether much too cocky and thrilled with themselves after Emily's done all the work and suffered through all the hardships and worry.

Earthshaking literary worth?  Not a chance.  Great fun and a light (relatively peril-free) gothic adventure?  You bet!  If this set's a hit, move on to The Little Princess, Wolves of Willoughby Chase, Series of Unfortunate Events, and The Secret Garden.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Gratefully Yours, Jane Buchanan

Gratefully Yours, Jane Buchanan. ISBN: 0374327750
Juv Orphan-Train-setting.

Hattie is sick of everyone telling her she should be "grateful" that she didn't die in the fire like the rest of her family, "grateful" that she's healthy enough to go on the Orphan Trains, "grateful" for the charity of the church poor-box for her clothes, and "grateful" that Henry and Elizabeth have taken her in, even though Elizabeth didn't even want a child after her own losses.

What Hattie is grateful for is that Emily, her roommate and friend from the orphanage has been placed in the same town (but with a shrew who treats her like a servant and even changes her name!) and that Cloud the cat offers unconditional love and doesn't think she's a sinner or a freak because she's an orphan (even though he's just a cat, and she's kept busy with chores and school).  

Over a slim 177 pages, Hattie settles in, Elizabeth thaws, Henry shows his mettle as a great father, and eventually, Hattie realizes that despite her righteous indignation over well-meaning people and their "grateful" admonishments, it is possible to be somewhat grateful, even after tragedies.

Spoiler Alert: The cat kicks it during the climax.  If I had read this as a child, I would have been devastated.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Molly Bannaky, Alice McGill, Chris K. Soentpiet

Molly Bannaky, Alice McGill, illus Chris K. Soentpiet.  ISBN: 039572287X
Read Oct 4, 2013

Oversized picture book - oil paintings.

The illustrations in this book deserve a better-told story than what they are currently paired with.  McGill gives us the bare-bones, "just the facts, ma'am" with no feelings or interpretation or evocation of mood - leaving all that for the illustrations to carry.  And they do a great job, considering they've got to handle a slave-purchase, illegal marriage and kids, and then death, all within the space of three or four page-spreads.  

The cover painting is arresting, and the interior work does not disappoint, but the flat writing really does the story and the artist a disservice.  A short biographical and historical note at the end does more to liven up the tale than the actual text does!

I'd love to see these paintings re-purposed into a short chapter-book rendition of the story of these Americans, similar to the classic illustrated Robin Hood or Robinson Crusoe.  I think that the extra time and space to TELL the story in a more full and rich manner will then make the occasional beautiful artworks pop out even more.  As it is, it's beautiful, but not very interesting, which is impressive, given the subjects.

Big Jabe, Jerdine Nolen, Kadir Nelson

Big Jabe, Jerdine Nolen, illus by Kadir Nelson.  ISBN: 0688136621
Read Oct 2, 2013

Picture Book: Plantation South slaves are delighted with Big Jabe, a tall-tale man who does all their work for them, and might have something to do with mysteriously spiriting them away when they're tormented by the overseer.

Abby loves to fish, but she never thought she'd fish a great big boy out of the river!  Big Jabe grows fast - from one day to the next he's a grown man!  The pear tree he plants likewise grows quick - before a full season is gone, it's full-grown and heavy with fruit.  He can pick the entire cotton harvest in one morning, and the plantation itself seems blessed with enormous yields.

But woe betide them all if someone gets beaten - tornadoes swirl down, and torrential rain falls; and afterwards, someone's always gone missing!  No scent to follow, no trace of them anywhere, and Big Jabe's always around, working hard and helping everyone out. 

By the end, Addy herself is suspected of magic, and both her and Big Jabe vanish like the mist - on to another place to help out and rescue the unfortunate. 

Kadir Nelson is an amazing illustrator, and this story has all the tone and cadence of a sermon, without the preachy parts.  Nice to pair with John Henry for another great black folk figure, or with the original story of Moses.

Nicholas Pipe, Robert D. San Souci, David Shannon

Nicholas Pipe, Robert D. San Souci, illus David Shannon.
ISBN: 0803717644
Read Oct 2, 2013

No signs of No, David! here.  Nicholas Pipe has some strange trousers, but that's the only unrealistic element in illustrations that deal with land-loving mermen, homicidal merwomen, and a daughter who loves the one man her dad can't stand.  Isn't that always the way it goes?

Margaret and her father Marius disagree on Nicholas, but they're eye to eye on everything else.  Nicholas is known to be a merman by the whole town, but he warns them of high tides and storms, and so is tolerated - until Margaret falls in love.  Unable to bear it, Marius heads to the king to announce the arrival of a rarity, an oddity, a strange sea-man.  Soldiers fetch the poor merman in chains, but Nicholas doesn't bother to tell them his limitations - if he doesn't touch the sea once per day, he's dead.

Margaret alone knows his secret, and she's off to the rescue with skins of salt-water.  She can't quite manage it alone, but Marius comes to his senses before too late, and makes amends as best as he's able.  

The original courtly love story had a tragic ending (of course) but here everything works out in the end a la Beauty and the Beast, although there is no transformation necessary.

Interesting fairy-tale look at the power of love to overcome differences and obstacles. 

The Matchbox Diary, Paul Fleischman, Bagram Ibatoulline

The Matchbox Diary, Paul Fleischman, illus by Bagram Ibatoulline.
ISBN: 9780763646011
Read Oct 2, 2013

A stunningly illustrated book, and a clever conceit.  The frame story has full-colored illustrations of a grandfather and granddaughter in a room full of mementos, collectables, and books.  The girl wants a story, and picks a cigar-box full of tiny little ancient matchboxes.

Now we're into the heart of the story, and the illustrations really shine.  Very like Shaun Tam's The Arrival, these are sepia-toned vignettes based on the "diary entries" found inside of each matchbox.  A dried husk of an olive pit tells of a childhood in rural Italy, marked by hunger and lack of work.  A bejewelled hatpin shines with the hope spurring a harsh trip across the ocean to a land of gold and plenty, while cracked sunflower seeds mark the number of days it took to make the crossing.  Later on, a cracked tooth shows the reality of racist America, a hunk of coal indicates continued aspirations for literacy, and a ticket stub memorializes a first-ever baseball game.

The boxes all opened, the frame returns with color again to finish out the visit to grandfather, and show the girl beginning her own collection, in an emptied box of chocolates.

Truly, absolutely, stunning.  Pair with The Arrival, or Molly's Pilgrim

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Street Child, Berlie Doherty

Street Child, Berlie Doherty.  ISBN: 0531068641
Read Oct 1, 2013

Juv Dickensian street-urchin story, based on an actual urchin.

Jim's had a rough life - his father passed away so they're kicked out of their country cottage home, his mother gets sick and can't work, so they're kicked out of their tenement, and then his sisters get essentially given away into domestic servitude to allow them warmth, sleeping places, and food to eat.  Jim and ma are on their own, but then even ma dies, and Jim is left to the tender mercies of the workhouse.  

After abuses and restrictions get too much, Jim runs away to the streets, only to find that freedom isn't any better, and might actually be worse.  A stint selling cockles by the wharves is cut short when he's kidnapped into service aboard ship, and then when he's injured, he's back to the streets as a beggar.

Finally, desperation leads him to the Beggar School, where the headmaster makes the despondent realization that there are armies of little vagabonds, and begins the work of housing and feeding them to keep them off the streets and rooftops.  

Depressing, but realistic view of what life was (and is in many places still) like for the truly poor children of the world.  

Pair with Wolves of Willoughby Chase or the first book of the Mary Quinn Mysteries, so you can really feel what they're escaping from.   

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The Samurai's Daughter, Robert D. San Souci & Stephen T. Johnson

The Samurai's Daughter, Robert D. San Souci, illus Stephen T. Johnson.
ISBN: 0803711352
Re-Read Oct 1, 2013

Picture Book: Kamakura Japanese folk-tale.

The story is straightforward - Samurai has a daughter and trains her as a Samurai, and then as a lady, but she prefers the active life and fishes with the women deep-sea divers off the coast.  Samurai is banished due to ruler's "mental instability" to a faraway island.  Daughter gets tired of being alone, and determines to head off to banishment with him, facing typical quest-narrative difficulties in the process.  Once on the island, she's distracted by a girl getting sacrificed to the sea, volunteers for the assignment, fights a sea-serpent, and rescues a drowned statue. Conveniently enough, the statue is that of the ruler, who is now healed of his mental problems, and summons the  Samurai and his daughter back home to Japan in full glory and honor.

I'm used to seeing Pinkney's drawings with San Souci's words, so the illustrations were not quite as lavish and textural as I expected.  Johnson did a lovely job, and some of the panels are very beautiful, but there's a flat quality to them that heightens the flat nature of the narrative.  Sadly, older folktales aren't always the best at varied story-craft, so the tale itself is example after example of Daughter breezily conquering challenges with no real difficulty or peril.  That, combined with the pat fairy-tale ending, is a bit distancing.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Wagon Wheels, Barbara Brenner & Don Bolognese

Wagon Wheels, Barbara Brenner, illus Don Bolognese.  ISBN: 9780064440523
Read Sept 30, 2013

Juv "I Can Read" book, African-American pioneers, Native Americans

Really excellent summary of the adventures of the Muldie boys, who moved to Nicodemus, Kansas (a black settlement) as pioneers, and then lived alone at ages 11, 8, and 3 while their father staked out a claim about 150 miles further west.  Then, as the kicker, they're summoned by post with short directions, and travel the entire way themselves to get to their new home!!

A sub-plot near the beginning focuses on the kindness of the Native Americans to the settlement when they were starving during a harsh winter.  Another deals with prairie fires.  

Very short and direct (for beginning readers) but interesting plot and good pacing.  Compare with the Little House books or the (expurgated) Sadie Rose books.

Monday, October 14, 2013

The Courage of Sarah Noble, Alice Dalgliesh

The Courage of Sarah Noble, Alice Dalgliesh.  ISBN: 0684188309
Read Sept 30, 2013.

Juv easy reader: pioneer life and Native Americans

Sarah's father has staked a claim in the high north of the frontier, and he's taken Sarah (aged 7) along with him to be his cook and housekeeper.  The other sisters aren't interested, and Mama can't come because the baby is too young.  Father and Sarah are to start the house, and when everything is ready, then Mama and the siblings will join them.

Sarah repeatedly reminds herself of her bravery, which is a nice note.  Her and her father also build strong relationships with the local tribe of Native Americans, so much so that when Father needs to head back east to fetch the family, he asks Sarah to stay with the neighbors (the Native Americans) while he's gone.  

Excellent story, small bit of Christianity (reading from the Bible, praying before bedtime for the Indians) excellent counterpoint to stories where the Indians are the perilous unknown.

Friday, October 11, 2013

Fantastic Mistakes, Neil Gaiman & Chip Kidd

Fantastic Mistakes, Neil Gaiman's "Make Good Art" Speech, Neil Gaiman, book art and text design by Chip Kidd.  ISBN: 9780062266767.
Read Sept 26, 2013.

I've read this speech several times, and listened to it online at least twice.  This edition I feel doesn't quite do justice to the simultaneous levity and solemnity of the subject and the speaker.  Gaiman was being quite serious about all that he said - making good art, not taking yourself seriously, being open to the joys and experiences of the present, doing work because it inspires you.  However, at the same time, he was presenting it in a conversation, casual, almost confessional manner - nothing like a sturm-und-drang bombast or fire and brimstone preacher.  Just a nice conversation, with a wise friend.

This version makes the serious parts seem like a business-conference pep-talk motivational-speaker powerpoint, and the casual friendly conversational style seem trite and limited in scope.  The expanses of white space with various linear elements in blue or red only makes the speech seem much less robust than it actually was - many spreads make the language seem puny and unfinished, rather than powerful and spare.

I will say that I liked the composition of several individual pages: the "list of things I wanted to do" page spread, the "universe kicks me hard" page, and the "This is really great.  You should enjoy it." page.  Otherwise, I just felt the graphic elements and design competed with the message, rather than complemented it.  I was also driven nearly furious by the "1irst of all"  "2econdly"  "3hirdly" (yes, he really did, yes, all the way through the numbers, yes, I died a little inside.)  

However, it's art, it was published (way to go!) and it's personal - other people may find it beautiful and breathtaking.  For me, I'll just continue to listen to the recording and read the boring black-and-white text version.  I just don't seem to need funky typesetting or overtyped words or color-changing sentences to get the idea.  

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Mary Quinn "Agency" Mysteries, Y.S. Lee

1) A Spy in the House.  ISBN: 9780763640675
2) The Body at the Tower.  ISBN: 9780763649685
3) The Traitor in the Tunnel.  ISBN: 9780763653163
All by Y. S. Lee.
Re-read 1&2, Read 3 September 27, 2013

YA historical mysteries, half-Chinese female protagonist, light romance.

These are enjoyable, but there are a lot of mysteries left in the stories.

Particularly, the role and scope of the Agency is puzzlingly unclear, as is their reach.  Mary herself is a puzzle - able to pass as an elderly lady AND a 12-year old "penniless lord" working boy (within the same day, mind).  There are also some liberties taken with the Royals in the palace in the last book - I don't care how dissolute poor Bertie was, or how pretty he thought her, there's no way that the prince of the realm would act that way around a servant.  Likewise the enemies of the second and third book are left puzzlingly un-motivated.  I don't know why the blackmailer kept asking for more, and got violent when he failed.  I don't know why the traitor decided that he needed to PERSONALLY handle guncotton.  Even the first villain's aims are unclear - there are reasons to suspect the motivation, but the problem isn't exactly solved.

And speaking of solving problems, I find myself increasingly irritated at how the heritage situation has been resolved (or if there are future works, at least how it has been dealt with thus far).  It seems upon reflection that the author simply didn't wish to deal with the complications she introduced in the first book, and so they were made to vanish in awfully convenient ways.  First by unnecessary housefire and death (and when there is a fire, people put their lives in danger by fetching what they most love - I find it very hard to accept that a certain item was simply left behind after the rescue was completed.)  Then, another unnecessary death (with the attendant inability to convey any information at all) ties the whole thing off quite nicely. 

I think that's taking the easy way out, and I would very much like to have seen Mary handling her heritage, instead of having it conveniently whisked away from her to leave her burden-free to head into the future.   

Other than those quibbles, they are quippy, quick, fun, well-set, and enjoyable, even on a second read.  I've been unable to determine if they are a trilogy, or if there are other books forthcoming.  I do hope for the latter, and if so, I hope that the heritage question is brought up again, because that is the real sticking point of dislike for me so far.