Wednesday, July 25, 2012

11/22/63, by Stephen King

If you're looking for a compelling read, 11/22/63 won't disappoint. I was hooked within the first five pages and, even though this was a long book, finished within a few days. Without giving away too much, our main character, Jake Epping, teaches high school English in a small Maine town, recently divorced, no kids, and satisfied with helping GED students on the side when the owner of his favorite hamburger joint asks him for a favor. It's the last wish of a dying man. His wish is simple: go through the rabbit hole in his pantry, which always takes you back to Semptember 9, 1958, hang out for five years, and save JFK's life.

It turns out to be not so simple.

Poor Jake. I can't begin to tell you all the shit he goes through trying to make this happen, not to mention the ethical dilemma of killing a man who has not yet committed a crime. To make matters worse, he falls in love, and--you guessed it--must choose between the love of his life and saving the president's life.

I won't tell you the ending, though I will say I was hoping for something different from the yellow card man. Read it yourself. You'll love it.

Monday, July 9, 2012

The Chaperone, by Laura Moriarty

When Cora Carlisle, an empty-nester in Witchita, Kansas in the 1920's, agrees to chaperone fifteen-year-old Louise Brooks to New York City for the summer, she's looking for change. Cora's life does change--dramatically--but not in the way she expects.

A product of the orphan trains that ran from New York to the Midwest in the late 1800's, Cora wants to accompany the improper, irreverent teen because she hopes to learn more about her history. Cora's respect for social norms and her feelings of obligation to morally instruct her clearly neglected charge cause constant tension between the two females while they travel and set up home in their small New York apartment.

Although Louise becomes the famous flapper star of silent and talking motion pictures and broadway stages, the real star of this novel is Cora. Her transformation from an unfulfilled but loyal housewife to an openminded, passionate woman was deliciously engaging. The novel does a wonderful job of celebrating the liberal social mores of today by going back in time and liberating a handful of characters whose lives would have been tragic had Cora not abandoned her stuffy, narrow views.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Before Versailles, by Karleen Koen

Karleen Koen is to King Louis XIV what Philippa Gregory is to King Henry VIII. I found Koen to be a masterful storyteller, equal in all ways to Gregory, from her compelling plot full of twists and dark secrets, to the realistic characters that break your heart.

We meet Louis at age twenty-two, his young wife, a Spanish princess, newly pregnant with his future heir, both of them pure-hearted and not yet tarnished with scandal. During the four months depicted in the novel, Louis is tested at every front by his family, his friends, his enemies, and his heart. Among those at court, Louise is the lady of the king's brother's wife, and unlike most others, lacks ambition. Discarded by her family and with nothing but tender memories of her father teaching her to ride horseback, she has a talent for helping animals and hurt children. She unwittingly beguiles the king when, unsure of what else to do, she tells him of having stumbled upon, while out riding, a boy in an iron mask hidden away by monks who call the boy "your highness."

As I read the novel, I longed to be the goodhearted and beautiful Louise who attracts the King's heart and helps him uncover the mystery of the masked boy at a time when his kingdom is in great peril. I'm so sad the story is over and can't wait to read another book by this author!

I highly recommend this novel.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail, by Cheryl Strayed

Inspired by Oprah's book club, I recently read this beautiful memoir by Cheryl Strayed about finding herself after the unexpected death of her mother and the crumbling apart of her family by turning to the wilderness. Armed with a "monster" of a bacpkack (weighing more than half of her own body weight) and with a naive understanding of what it would mean to take on such a journey, Cheryl bravely--in a "remotely vertical position"--stepped forward, one foot after the other, for three months along the Pacific Crest Trail.

Parts of the story made me laugh out loud, especially the self-deprecating passages that were so honest and so human. Among these was the moment a Texas longhorn charges her, and in a state of shock, Cheryl shouts, "Moose! Moose!" Other parts of the story made me weep with gut-wrenching, body-quavering sobs. One such moment occurred when Cheryl describes the approach of a fox, and without any intention of doing it, she cries, "Mom! Mom!"

Along with the soul-finding experiences of living and breathing the land and its elements, going weeks without showers and anything but dehydrated food and filtered lake water, the book also demonstrates the spectrum of human interactions. The majority of these are warm and hospitable, reminding readers of the prevailing love and compassion people have for their fellow beings. We also see the sensual, earthy, heady kind of interactions and the ominous, threatening, predator kind.

In spite of the scary and painful parts, the book makes me long to connect with the wilderness. I fantasize about getting book club women from all over the country together to follow in Cheryl's footsteps--maybe not for three whole months (we can't all be Cheryl), but perhaps for one month, if our husbands can manage that long without us.

I highly recommend this book.



Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides

Although a synopsis somewhere on a website told me Middlesex was about a hermaphrodite's journey beginning as a girl and then, from age fourteen on, as a male, I found it to be about much more.

The narrator, Cal, is indeed a hermaphrodite, born with ambiguous genitalia, with a vagina and undescended testicles and an elongated clitoris (or short penis) he fondly calls his crocus; however, the gender and sexual issues are not as prominent, in my opinion as the panoramic view of American history throughout the twentieth century. The narrator explains that his story really begins with his Greek grandparents, a brother and sister, who immigrate to America in the early 1920's to Detroit after their village is burned down by the Turks and the British do nothing to help them and the other refugees floundering toward the sea. We follow the incestuous couple through immigration and American assimilation, through the speakeasies and ragtime roaring twenties, through the depression and post-prohibition. We see the birth of his parents, second cousins, who fall in love despite the grandmother's best effort to keep them apart. We witness the impact of WWII, the aftermath, the cold war. We see Detroit rise and fall. At the same time, we catch glimpses of the cinema and music industry, the books and the fashion, and the evolution of the Cadillac. Popular culture abounds through the decades, including the changes in language, religious attitudes, the roles of women, and views on sexual orietnation.

Calliope is born in the sixties and by the time she reaches puberty in the early seventies realizes she is attracted to girls. The narrative oscillates between that transformation in the seventies and Cal's first attempt to reveal himself to a woman with whom he is falling in love in present time. This and Calliope's transformation into Cal comprise a small percentage of the actual narrative.

The novel made me laugh and cry multiple times. I highly recommend it.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Fifty Shades Darker and Fifty Shades Freed, by E.L. James

I finished the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy and must admit I loved it. Yes, I was curious to read more about what Ana calls "kinky fuckery," silver balls and all, but what was most compelling was the character of Christian Grey and the many layers of his personality E.L. James so deftly--yes, deftly--crafts.

So what if she uses the same phrases over and over. I suppose I stopped whincing after the millionth time she used the phrase "his mouth pressed into a hard line" because I was enamored with her characters. Language may not be this woman's forte, but character building certainly is. While these characters may have originated from fan fiction inspired by Bella and Edward from Stephenie Meyer's Twilight saga, they grow into different individuals entirely, individuals I come to care for deeply.

The trilogy begins with a sex slavemaster hoping to subdue an innocent, smart-mouthed college girl into his next submissive and becomes, instead, a story of how the young college girl subdues the beast in him--the beast created by his dark, troubled past with a crack-whore mother and then later a pedophiliac dominatrix Ana calls "Mrs. Robinson." It's empowering to vicariously experience the power Ana ultimately wields over this hot, wealthy, troubled, emotionally bereft man through her compassion and through her ability to stand up for herself and for him when he can't. I admire Ana's courage, delight in her ecstasy, and long to understand what makes Christian Grey tick. E.L. James doesn't disappoint.

I highly recommend this trilogy, and so does my husband, who has benefited immensely from my reading it.

Friday, May 4, 2012

The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver

I wish everyone would read this novel about a missionary family moving to the Congo back in the early sixties and the effect it had on both the family and the natives. Maybe people would be less eager to push their beliefs onto others and be more more willing to accept and appreciate cultural differences. I loved learning new things about Africa--its history and culture and language. I especially loved the four sisters and mother, who took turns narrating the story, and others, like Anatol and his intricately carved facial tatooes and Mama Lawanza. I didn't love all the characters. I wanted to jump into the book and strangle Nathan Price, the missionary bent on baptizing Congolese babies in the shallow, crocodile-infested river and neglecting his own babies and their suffering.

I will encourage my children to read this novel, because it is full of so many good things.

I highly recommend this novel.