Thursday, December 27, 2018

Inspiring Indies, Madison Books Opens Pop Up Store, Little Free Tree Library, I'd Rather Be Reading by Anne Bogel, Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng, and Once Upon a River by Diane Setterfield


I've always know this to be true, I've gotten a lifetime of inspiration from places like Island Books on Mercer Island and Powells in Portland, Oregon.

Indie Bookshops Are 'Inspiring Places to Be'

"I visit an awful lot of bookshops for work and I've done an awful lot
of events at independent bookshops, and they're just inspiring places to
be. With each one of them, there is always a story. I love to talk to
independent bookstore owners about their shop and when and how they
bought it; every single shop owner has a completely different,
fascinating backstory. It's the amount of love that goes into creating a
beautiful shop in the first place, making it look so nice, and then all
the work that goes into hosting events and creating that community
atmosphere that makes people want to come into the shop. I think
independent bookstores are just little gems, each and every one of
them--they're magical."

--Lisa Jewell


I am so excited that there are more bookstores opening up in Seattle after a long drought of bookstore closures. 

Madison Books Holiday Pop-Up Opens in Seattle

James Crossley at work in the Madison Books pop-up.
Madison Books http://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/uz3642037Biz39309134, a new indie bookstore scheduled to launch early in 2019 at 4118 E. Madison Street in Seattle,
Wash., has opened a "Holiday Pop-Up Shop
giving customers an early peek at the location. On Facebook, the store
posted: "This will be a great opportunity
to buy the best books of the season as presents for your loved ones--and
let's admit it, for yourself. Gift wrapped and everything! It's also a
chance to get a sneak preview of the fully outfitted bookstore that's
yet to come." The pop-up will remain open until December 29.

Tom Nissley, who also owns Seattle's Phinney Books
http://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/uz3642037Biz39309137 and first announced plans for the new bookshop earlier this year told
Madison Park Times: "We're looking forward
to getting to know our new neighbors and having a good selection of
books available for holiday shopping, with the possibility of ordering
and picking up any books we don't have in stock." Madison Books will
close again in January to complete renovation work.

In a recent interview with the Seattle Review of Books, Madison Books
manager James Crossley
discussed plans for the new venture, noting that the initial reception
has been enthusiastic: "It's been great! We've had a really hospitable
welcome--a lot of people coming in the store to buy books already, and
even more who just want to stick their heads in the door and say
'welcome to the neighborhood.' "

Asked if the pop-up shop provides an opportunity "for people who come in
to help shape the store a bit," Crossley replied: "Absolutely. One of
the first things we did was hang some butcher paper on the wall and draw
some virtual 'shelves' with an invitation for people to fill them in
with what they want to see--first of all what they want to get under the
tree this year, but more importantly what they want to see on our
shelves going forward."

The first title Madison Books sold was The Overstory by Richard Powers,
"which is one of my favorite books this year," Crossley noted. "And our
first special order has already been placed and arrived, and it was for
The Beastie Boys Book. Being able to get those in people's hands was a
good feeling. A great feeling."

This is the coolest little free library I've ever seen!

Epic Little Free (Tree) Library in Idaho
Artist Sharalee Armitage Howard has created an epic Little Free Library
inside a more than 100-year-old cottonwood tree stump outside her home
in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. KREM reported that Howard was inspired when her
family decided to remove most of the tree after branches began to fall.
The core of the tree was starting to rot, and "she felt inspired to
create one inside the stump that remained from the tree. The library
features a swinging glass door, steps, and interior and exterior
lights." A Facebook post earlier this month about the work-in-progress
has generated more than 70,000 shares.

In an update this week, Howard wrote: "Thanks so much for all of the
wonderful feedback
about our little free library! It's awesome to know that there are so
many people out there that appreciate how art (in any form) quite
simply, makes the world a cooler place to live in. There has been a lot
of requests for more pictures, so although this tree won't look amazing
until Spring when I can plant groundcover and cheerful perennials around
it, touch up the paint, and fine-tune the trimwork... I have a couple
updates: 1.) I've officially become a Little Free Library charter
member! It's my understanding, that within days... you'll see my tree on
the National map. 2.) A fun detail that didn't show up in my first
picture, is that the dental moulding above the door, is actually little,
titled, wooden books!"


I'd Rather be Reading by Anne Bogel is an amazingly juicy little hardback that packs a big punch for bibliophiles. Herein is an examination of why readers read, what books resonate and where the optimum reading spaces reside. Though the author is fairly young, (compared to me), she has a firm grasp of the passion that true book lovers have toward books and reading. I found myself putting flags (small post it notes) on a half dozen pages so I could quote Bogel's wisdom in my journal. Here's the blurb: For so many people, reading isn't just a hobby or a way to pass the time—it's a lifestyle. Our books shape us, define us, enchant us, and even sometimes infuriate us. Our books are a part of who we are as people, and we can't imagine life without them.

I'd Rather Be Reading is the perfect literary companion for everyone who feels that way. In this collection of charming and relatable reflections on the reading life, beloved blogger and author Anne Bogel leads readers to remember the book that first hooked them, the place where they first fell in love with reading, and all of the moments afterward that helped make them the reader they are today. Known as a reading tastemaker through her popular podcast What Should I Read Next?, Bogel invites book lovers into a community of like-minded people to discover new ways to approach literature, learn fascinating new things about books and publishing, and reflect on the role reading plays in their lives

The perfect gift for the bibliophile in everyone's life, I'd Rather Be Reading will command an honored place on the overstuffed bookshelves of any book lover.
The subtitle of this book,"The delights and dilemmas of the reading life" says it all, though there's only 145 pages for Bogel to say it in. Not a word is wasted, nor are there any typos to worry readers with tyranical inner editors like myself. My only problem with the book was that there weren't more chapters to revel in the wisdom of my fellow book lover. I'd give this choice volume an A, and recommend it to anyone with towering TBR piles and not enough time to make a dent in them.

Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng is the January book for my library book group. Because this book has gotten so many rave reviews and press hype (not to mention a movie deal) I was hesitant to start reading it, because usually overly hyped popular fiction sucks. Therefore it was a huge relief to discover that Ng's prose is evocative, her characters brilliant and her storytelling engrossing and emotional. I can't say that I loved all of her characters, because I loathed Izzy, who was a real b*tch for no other reason than she felt rage from birth that had nothing to do with anything, it was just intrinsic to her being. That made her either in need of medication or a good whupping by her lame parents, in my opinion. Her mother's constant censure of her didn't help, of course, but why neither one of them sat down with a therapist to get to the root of the problem I couldn't understand. Still, there are some profound scenes in this book that give readers pause in thinking about the relationship of children to their parents, and babies to their mothers, in particular. Here's the blurb: From the bestselling author of Everything I Never Told You, a riveting novel that traces the intertwined fates of the picture-perfect Richardson family and the enigmatic mother and daughter who upend their lives.

In Shaker Heights, a placid, progressive suburb of Cleveland, everything is planned – from the layout of the winding roads, to the colors of the houses, to the successful lives its residents will go on to lead. And no one embodies this spirit more than Elena Richardson, whose guiding principle is playing by the rules.

Enter Mia Warren – an enigmatic artist and single mother – who arrives in this idyllic bubble with her teenage daughter Pearl, and rents a house from the Richardsons. Soon Mia and Pearl become more than tenants: all four Richardson children are drawn to the mother-daughter pair. But Mia carries with her a mysterious past and a disregard for the status quo that threatens to upend this carefully ordered community.
When old family friends of the Richardsons attempt to adopt a Chinese-American baby, a custody battle erupts that dramatically divides the town--and puts Mia and Elena on opposing sides.  Suspicious of Mia and her motives, Elena is determined to uncover the secrets in Mia's past. But her obsession will come at unexpected and devastating costs.
Little Fires Everywhere explores the weight of secrets, the nature of art and identity, and the ferocious pull of motherhood – and the danger of believing that following the rules can avert disaster.  
SPOILERS ahead! While I lauded Mia for wanting to pursue her art, I felt that she was a really shit mother for basically stealing her daughter from the infertile couple who had provided her with sperm (and an egg? It is never made clear if Mia donates one of her eggs or if the wife uses one of hers) so that she might be a surrogate mother to their baby. One sentence from her brother, who was an idiot, about her "selling" her baby, and she immediately takes off with baby Pearl, thereby shafting the couple who had so desperately wanted a child of their own. Mia wasn't in any condition, being a homeless artist, to care for a baby, and poor Pearl moved to Shaker Heights after a lifetime of going from one place to another (and living on scraps and freebies) for her mother's photography, (but in reality they were running away so that the surrogate parents couldn't find them) believing that her mother was going to allow her to settle down there, make friends and graduate from high school. But when Elena Richardson finds out that her son is having a sexual relationship with Pearl, and she believes Pearl has aborted their baby, she forces Mia to make the choice of either leaving or being exposed to the surrogate parents and to her own disapproving parents. Mia is also a hypocrit, telling an impoverished Chinese immigrant woman who abandoned her baby at a fire station (the child was near death, starved and cold and filthy) to go to court and try and remove the little girl from her adoptive home, where she has been thriving under the care of a wealthy childless couple. I had very little sympathy for this woman who should have allowed the child to stay with the only parents she's ever known, (if you truly love your child you want them to be provided for) and where she is well fed and taken care of. The courts decided in favor of this plan, and yet we are supposed to be happy that the Chinese woman steals the one year old and flies back to Shanghai where it will be impossible to find her. She will doubtless grow up in poverty, and we're supposed to think this is somehow okay because she is now with her "real" mother. I felt tremendous sympathy for the adoptive parents, who were devastated as they'd grown to love the little girl, and they had the means to care for her. But Mia, who has stolen her daughter from her rightful biological parents, somehow thinks this is all her business, which it isn't. We are also supposed to sympathize with Izzy, who is pissed off at everyone, especially her family, her sister Lexie (who actually did have an abortion), her brother Moody (who is in love with Pearl, but she doesn't think of him as anything but a brother) and her other brother Trip (who is also in love with Pearl and is having a clandestine affair with her) as well as her usual fury at their mother, who is a rule follower but doesn't understand why her daughter seeks to break every rule and destroy everything she gets her hands on, including their home, which she burns to the ground before running after Mia and Pearl. Maybe it's because I am the same age as Elena, but  thought she should have Izzy jailed or put in an asylum somewhere, because that child was insane and needed help and enforced discipline more than she needed coddling. The last thing that made little sense to me was Pearls universal allure. Everyone loved her nearly on sight, which is weird. However, despite my dislike of some of the characters, I still found this novel very compelling, and I had to read it all in one sitting. I'd give it an A, though somewhat reluctantly, and recommend it to anyone looking for some good debate ideas.

Once Upon a River by Diane Setterfield is the third book she's written that I've read, and as usual, I found her prose silken, her plot compelling and her characters mesmerizing. I couldn't figure out whether the story was set in the 19th century or 18th, but it was certainly set at a time when communities thrived on oral history and legends and tales to pass the time in the evening after work was done. It was also a time when the inexplicable was relegated to "magic" or ghosts or the supernatural, rather than rational explanations. Here's the blurb: On a dark midwinter’s night in an ancient inn on the river Thames, an extraordinary event takes place. The regulars are telling stories to while away the dark hours, when the door bursts open on a grievously wounded stranger. In his arms is the lifeless body of a small child. Hours later, the girl stirs, takes a breath and returns to life. Is it a miracle? Is it magic? Or can science provide an explanation? These questions have many answers, some of them quite dark indeed.
Those who dwell on the river bank apply all their ingenuity to solving the puzzle of the girl who died and lived again, yet as the days pass the mystery only deepens. The child herself is mute and unable to answer the essential questions: Who is she? Where did she come from? And to whom does she belong? But answers proliferate nonetheless.

Three families are keen to claim her. A wealthy young mother knows the girl is her kidnapped daughter, missing for two years. A farming family reeling from the discovery of their son’s secret liaison, stand ready to welcome their granddaughter. The parson’s housekeeper, humble and isolated, sees in the child the image of her younger sister. But the return of a lost child is not without complications and no matter how heartbreaking the past losses, no matter how precious the child herself, this girl cannot be everyone’s. Each family has mysteries of its own, and many secrets must be revealed before the girl’s identity can be known.

Once Upon a River is a glorious tapestry of a book that combines folklore and science, magic and myth. Suspenseful, romantic, and richly atmospheric, the beginning of this novel will sweep you away on a powerful current of storytelling, transporting you through worlds both real and imagined, to the triumphant conclusion whose depths will continue to give up their treasures long after the last page is turned. 
 I enjoyed the twists and turns to the plot and that the author doesn't allow the reader to solve the mystery until the very end of the book. I also loved Rita the healer and Daunt the photographer, though I completely understood Rita's fear of death in childbirth and her wish to remain celibate and unmarried so that she'd never have to face that trauma. Though she succumbs to love and does get pregnant in the end (SPOILER) we never actually find out if Rita survives childbirth and goes on to live a long and happy life with Daunt. It is implied that they do, however, and the ending is mystical and satisfying and sweet. I'd give this book an A as well, and recommend it to anyone who enjoys a good old fashioned "tell it around the fire" story. 


Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Bezos on South Park, Kinokuniya Opens Store in Portland, Branagh's Movie, Becoming is a Phenom, Tony's Wife by Adriana Trigiani, Rattlesnake Wind and Selene by Lilith Saintcrow and Quiet Neighbors by Catriona McPherson


Though I am not a fan of South Park (crude and rude humor isn't my thing), this particular episode was pretty funny, as it dealt with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. 
Alien Bezos Stars on 'South Park'

http://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/uz3642037Biz39209640 Last week, "Jeff Bezos" made a cameo appearance
on South Park, which portrayed the Amazon founder and CEO as "a
supervillain with an enormous head who communicates telepathically,
resembling the Talosian alien race from Star Trek. He intimidates the
mayor, threatening repercussions after the town's Amazon workers go on
strike," as Business Insider put it.

In the episode, called "Unfulfilled," Butters's father works in an
Amazon warehouse and works to "Sixteen Tons," a song about working in a
coal mine made famous by Tennessee Ernie Ford in the 1950s.

Seriously, someone has to gift me a trip to this library that doubles as a hotel before I pass from this earth...it sounds like heaven!
The first position on my Bucket List is taken by this place: https://www.lonelyplanet.com/news/2016/12/19/you-can-stay-beautiful-gladstones-library-wales/

I love Kinokuniya bookstore in Uwajimaya, where I've been shopping for pens for decades in downtown Seattle, so this was great news to hear, that they're opening a store in an old theater in Portland. This gives me one more place to visit when I make my annual Powells pilgrimage in the summer.

Kinokuniya Opening Bookstore, Pop-Up Shop in Portland, Ore.
Kinokuniya's chairman and president Masashi Takai confirmed Wednesday
that the company plans to open
13th U.S. Books Kinokuniya http://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/uz3642037Biz39182941 location, in downtown Portland, Ore., in the spring of 2019. The bookstore will be
located in the former home of the historic Guild Theatre on Southwest
Ninth Avenue between Taylor and Yamhill streets. As a preview of the new
store, Kinokuniya will open a pop-up shop
http://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/uz3642037Biz39182942 at the nearby Cleaners at Ace Hotel from December 20 to 24.
 .
Noting the coincidence that both Kinokuniya Bookstore and the Guild
Theatre were founded in 1927, the company said: "We are honored to have
the opportunity to take over this historic building and open a new
store. We will respect the historic importance of the theater, and will
strive to preserve the exterior to honor it for posterity. The store
will carry carefully selected books, unique merchandise and Japanese
stationery, with a focus on art and comics from Japan, which have been
strengths in our existing stores. We will also collaborate with a
beloved local Japanese cafe to provide a space for both Portland locals
and tourists to relax and drink authentic Japanese tea."


Movies: All Is True
The first trailer has been released for Kenneth Branagh's Shakespeare
drama All Is True
the Guardian reported. Written by Ben Elton (Upstart Crow), the film
features Branagh, who also directed, as the playwright "living in
retirement with his wife Anne Hathaway (Judi Dench) and grappling with a
number of personal crises--including the death of his son Hamnet and the
destruction of the Globe theatre in a fire." All Is True will be
released in February in the U.K. and U.S.

I really want a copy of this book, since I've been watching our former FLOTUS doing interviews on late night TV and on Oprah. The lovely Mrs Obama has extended her book tour, which is great, and I wish I could go and see her in person, to tell her how much I miss her and her husband in the other Washington.

Becoming, the Book Publishing Phenomenon of 2018
  
Becoming has become the book publishing phenomenon of the year--the
bestselling book of 2018 in the month since its publication. The memoir
by Michelle Obama is No. 1 on a range of bestseller lists in the U.S. as
well as the U.K., Germany, France and elsewhere.

Yesterday, in a year-end letter to employees around the world, Penguin
Random House CEO Markus Dohle noted: "As a collaborative and shared
reward, we are thrilled that the powerful and inspiring memoir Becoming
by Michelle Obama, which has been brilliantly published and
internationally coordinated by our Crown colleagues
emerged as the bestselling book of 2018 after merely two weeks on sale.
Total copies currently in print worldwide: more than five million."
The Becoming tour was originally scheduled to end soon, but has now been
extended into May of next year. It comprises 21 events, of which four
will be in Canada and six in Europe. (One appearance is in Paris, where
she was scheduled earlier this month but had to skip for the funeral of
President George H.W. Bush.)

In the announcement, Obama commented: "I couldn't be more excited to
visit even more cities across the country and around the world. I've
been so humbled by the response to the tour thus far and the
overwhelming interest we've received from so many communities we weren't
able to visit this year. That's why I'm thrilled that we're able to
expand our conversations to these new settings and wider audiences. I
can't wait to continue the discussions that have been so meaningful for
me and, I hope, for so many others."

Tony's Wife by Adriana Trigiani is the latest book by this fantastic author, whose work I've been devouring since she started publishing her Italian American tales decades ago. Here's the blurb:
Set in the lush Big Band era of the 1940s and World War II, this spellbinding saga from beloved New York Times bestselling author Adriana Trigiani tells the story of two talented working class kids who marry and become a successful singing act, until time, temptation, and the responsibilities of home and family derail their dreams.
Shortly before World War II, Chi Chi Donatelli and Saverio Armandonada meet one summer on the Jersey shore and fall in love. Both are talented and ambitious, and both share the dream of becoming singers for the legendary orchestras of the time: Glenn Miller, Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman. They’re soon married, and it isn’t long before Chiara and Tony find that their careers are on the way up as they navigate the glamorous worlds of night clubs, radio, and television. All goes well until it becomes clear that they must make a choice: Which of them will put their ambitions aside to raise a family and which will pursue a career? And how will they cope with the impact that decision has on their lives and their marriage?
From the Jersey shore to Las Vegas to Hollywood, and all the dance halls in between, this multi-layered story is vivid with historical color and steeped in the popular music that serves as its score. Tony’s Wife is a magnificent epic of life in a traditional Italian family undergoing seismic change in a fast paced, modern world. Filled with vivid, funny, and unforgettable characters, this richly human story showcases Adriana Trigiani’s gifts as a storyteller and her deep understanding of family, love, and the pursuit of the American dream.
As usual, Adriana's storytelling abilities are off the charts wonderful, and her prose is gold. Her plots never flag and you can almost hear and see her characters, they're so realistic. That said, the only person I liked in this book was the protagonist, Chi Chi, because she was a smart and talented artist and a savvy business woman, whose only downfall was that snake Saverio, or Tony, as he's known on stage and screen. He's a philandering creep who is also immature and stupid throughout his life. He can't seem to keep it in his pants, though he still expects his ex-wife Chi Chi to look after him, even after they're divorced, because he can't manage money or his libido at all. He, like a lot of other philandering men (my father included) moans and groans about how he "can't be alone" because his ego is so fragile he needs a woman to prop him up both physically and mentally. I just couldn't understand why women kept falling for Tony, especially Chi Chi, when she knew from traveling with him and creating a show for him that he was a lying dog who would cheat on any woman he was involved with the moment something "better" came along. Even after they had children, which is what he supposedly wanted, he couldn't stay faithful and Chi Chi never tells her children the real story of what an asshat their father is, so of course they blame his lack in their lives on her. He never really apologizes to the mother of his children, nor does he appreciate all that she does for him, keeping him out of financial trouble even after his show is essentially over. Apparently, Saverio's father was a really nasty piece of work who hated his son and was cruel and disapproving of him and his profession, so this lead Sav/Tony to have low self esteem, which we are supposed to believe is why he can never commit to one woman. My father also had a very cruel and abusive father, so I guess I am supposed to be okay with all his affairs and marriages and the terrible way he treated the mother of his children, my mother, because he had low self esteem due to my evil grandfather. I call BS on this, and I don't think men deserve a pass for shitty behavior, when there are millions of other people who have been abused who manage to have strong marriages and a good family life where they don't keep the cycle of abuse going at all. So I loathed Tony throughout the book, and I had no sympathy for him at all as he became an aging cliche, marrying younger women only interested in what they could get from him (Just like my father did). I also thought it was horrible that Chi Chi's family looked the other way, and no one called Tony on his BS, nor did they seem to appreciate how smart and competent Chi Chi was in the face of the sexism and misogyny that she encountered both in the entertainment business and at home. Still, I loved the descriptions of NYC and California during the 40s and 50s, and I loved all the food descriptions, which made my mouth water. I'd give this book a B+, and recommend it to anyone who wants to read a good slice of life story of a woman in the entertainment business during the 40s and 50s and beyond. 

If you didn't know that Rattlesnake Wind and Selene by Lilith Saintcrow were written by the same woman, you'd never know it by reading them. Rattlesnake Wind is a coming of age story about a young girl who has what some would consider 'earth' magic in her ability to mend things (and people) and Selene is a vile mixture of the Twilight novels and the 50 Shades of Gray books with a bit of Lost Girl (TV show about a succubus) and a teeny tiny slice of the first Underworld movie with the magnificent Kate Beckinsale in the title role as the vampire Selene (who kicks ass and is nothing like the Selene in this horrible book) thrown in. I loved Rattlesnake Wind, but I loathed Selene, because the female protagonists in each were polar opposites. Here's the blurb, via Publisher's Weekly, for Rattlesnake Wind:This coming-of-age tale from Saintcrow (the Bannon and Clare series) mixes daring magic with teenage romance. Sixteen-year-old Desiree Thompson and her family have moved to the deserts of Wyoming, eager to build a new life after the death of Desiree’s father. She befriends a lonely old woman who teaches her the art of seeing visions, and falls into a complicated romance with the local school’s heartthrob. This Midwestern idyll is thwarted when an otherworldly man, whose presence makes Desiree ill, courts Desiree’s mother. Desiree must learn to believe in herself and overcome the horrors of her family’s past in order to stop her family from becoming prey. Saintcrow’s writing is sharp and poignant, if hampered by the occasional awkward metaphor. Desiree has enough flaws to be appealing; she struggles with her newfound powers, and her crush on Southern transplant Alex is cute and genuine. The magic provides a satisfying backdrop for the family drama that unfolds. Longtime fantasy readers will enjoy Saintcrow’s take on the magic-tinged bildungsroman. Selene:Life isn't easy for a sexwitch. Even your own body betrays you. It's bad enough that Selene is part slave to Nikolai, the Prime Power of Saint City, but she's got her brother Danny and she's got her job at the college. In the postwar wreckage of an uncertain world, it's pretty much all she's ever allowed herself to want. Then Danny ends up murdered, and Selene finds herself a pawn in a dangerous game. Indentured to a bloodsucking Nichtvren and helpless, told to stop trying to uncover the identity of her brother's killer, Selene has nowhere to turn. If she's a good girl, Nikolai will leave her a little bit of freedom. He'll take care of her, and she'll be safe--if she obeys.But Selene hasn't survived this long by being obedient to her cursed powers, or to the men who buy her time. Her brother was all she had, and now she's ready to borrow, beg, lie, steal or kill--whatever it takes to avenge him.And if Nikolai gets in the way, Selene will use every tool in her arsenal to make him regret it...This special edition also contains the prequel short story Brother's Keeper and the sequel short story Just Ask. 

What's not mentioned in the blurbs is that Dez is apprenticed to the legendary Baba Yaga, and the Whistling Man, and she learns to fix her problems instead of running away or hiding from them. She gains courage and learns to trust Alex and his family, who take her in when her idiotic mother succumbs to a demon who eats her soul and then drowns her in his pool. But Dez is able to save herself from the Badger man, though she is not able to save her cruel brother from his possession.  Meanwhile, Selene is basically a sex slave to an evil pedophile vampire (he's 1,200 years old, she's in her 20s, and he's been forcing himself on her since she was a teenager) who never listens to her when she begs him not to rape her or abuse her by being controlling and possessive (and physically harming her, too). She can't seem to understand why he's so fixated on her, and he never says that he 'loves' her, but he constantly calls her endearing names (in Russian, so she doesn't understand them) and he flat out tells her that he is going to "mark" her by drinking her blood and turning her into a vampire so she can keep him from being alone for eternity. Never mind that she has asked him, told him and begged him NOT to turn her into a "sucktooth," a creature she finds disgusting. The message is made clear throughout the book that what Selene, the protagonist wants for her life as a woman and a human being (until she is turned to a vampire against her will) is of no consequence...only powerful, wealthy males, especially evil vampire males, get what they want because they are male, and therefore more important on every level than females. Selene says, more than a few times, that she hates Nickolai, despises and loathes him, and wants him dead for all that he's done to her. Yet once she has the opportunity to actually kill the SOB, she uses the excuse that only she is allowed to kill him and take revenge on him, and she manages to rescue him twice,before he finally dies (turns out temporarily) and Selene makes her escape. Once she is free, she finds herself missing him (really? WHY? He raped and abused her! Women who have been abused that severely for that long do not yearn for their abusers, believe me). And of course, once he 'recovers' from being dead, he sends her another tracking medallion, and a note ordering her to "come home" which she listens to, and then proceeds to try and teach him about consensual sex by having sex where she doesn't allow him to do any of the work (and this punishes him how? He still gets his rocks off, of course, but now she has to work harder to feed from him) and she explains to him, as if he's a toddler, the concept of "asking" nicely for her to come back to him. This mind boggling horrible romanticizing of rape and sex slavery and abuse turned my stomach and filled me with rage as a rape survivor. I know from my own experience and from a majority of women I've spoken to and heard from online that no one feels romantic or falls in love with their rapist/abuser, especially if that person is a skeevy pedophile who has been abusing them for years (and, in this case, is also the cause of her brother's death). Though I am not the type of person who burns books, I really wanted to light Selene on fire and watch it crumble to ash. Shame on Saintcrow for publishing this kind of misogynistic garbage. While I'd give Rattlesnake Wind a B-, I'd give Selene an F, and I can't imagine recommending it to anyone, ever. There should be a trigger warning emblazoned on this piece of crap book, as a propagates the ridiculous, false myths about womens sexuality that can only lead to more men raping and abusing women/girls.

Quiet Neighbors by Catriona McPherson is an intense bookish thriller that reads like a dream. Though written in a UK manner about a small village in Scotland, I could still empathize and understand everything that the protagonist, Jude, is going through, as she escapes a bad situation with her ex husband, only to wind up in the middle of another mystery in the tiny bookshop she wanders into. Here's the blurb:
Jude found the rambling old bookshop when she visited last summer, the high point of a miserable vacation. Now, in the depths of winter, Lowell's store is a warm, safe place.
Jude needs a bolt-hole, Lowell needs an assistant, and when an affordable rental is thrown in, life begins to look up. The gravedigger's cottage isn't perfect for a woman alone, but at least she has quiet neighbors.
Quiet, but not silent. The long dead and the books they left behind have tales to tell, and the bookshop is not the haven it seems to be. Lowell's past and Jude's present are a dangerous blend of secrets and lies, and someone is coming to light the taper that could destroy everything. Publisher's Weekly: In this outstanding standalone from Edgar-finalist McPherson (The Child Garden), Lowell Glen’s house cum bookstore, Lowland Glen Books, in Wigtown, Scotland, becomes a haven first for Jude, a librarian who has run away from her personal problems in London; and then for pregnant 19-year-old Eddy Preston, who shows up from Ireland and claims that Lowell is her dad from a casual affair. Nosy, dotty Marion Hewston, who lives in the bungalow at the bottom of Lowell’s garden, tells of the period 20 years earlier when Lowell kept an open house for frequent visitors, as background to her version of Eddy’s birth. Meanwhile, Jude moves into the cottage of the late Todd Jolly, whose library contains books with insightful jottings hinting at a darker mystery and suspicious deaths in Wigtown’s past. Jude’s probing questions lead to threats, then actions that will change all their lives. McPherson’s literary observations are delightful, her quirky collection of characters intriguing, and the unfolding mystery highly satisfying.

McPherson's prose is deliciously pungent and her plot, though twisty and turning, still marches on at a brisk pace. This is one of those page turners that will keep most readers up long past their bedtimes. I was especially fond of Jude's ability to clean up and organize every space she encountered, and to dig out from under the mountain of used books the ones owned by an older gentleman who figures out that he and his senior friends are all dying of unnatural causes and at specific intervals. Of course, SPOILER, I knew that it was the crazy bossy and mean old nurse whodunnit, but it was gratifying to see Jude put the pieces together from an old man's marginal notes and ephemera in his books. I found Lowell to also be a fascinating character, and I loved how dotty and overly polite he was...He reminded me somehow of Michael Palin from Monty Python, or Hugh Bonneville from Downton Abbey. I'd give this book an A, and recommend it to anyone who likes British TV shows and who reads cozy mysteries set in the UK. 

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Saturday, December 08, 2018

B&N's New Tablet, Watership Down on TV, Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy, Navigating the Stars by Maria V Snyder, The Dream Daughter by Diane Chamberlain and Bellewether by Susanna Kearsley


I have an old Nook, first generation, that I have not used a lot, mainly because I discovered that I don't enjoy reading off of a screen as much as I enjoy turning the pages of a real book. But this new tablet from B&N sounds pretty cool, even for those of us who are old school bibliophiles. 

B&N Introduces New Nook 7" Tablet

Barnes & Noble has introduced a new Nook 7" tablet
which has expanded storage and a $49.99 price tag. B&N said the device
offers twice the storage space as the previous model at 16GB (expandable
up to 128GB), a front and rear facing camera, Bluetooth capability, a
headphone jack, a speaker and a microphone.

Bill Wood, chief digital officer for B&N, described the tablet as "a
lightweight and affordable option for book lovers who also want the
ability to browse, send e-mails, and listen to music. We think this new
tablet will delight both current Nook users as well as introduce new
customers to this affordable Nook device."

I am looking forward to seeing this adaptation of Watership Down right before Christmas on Netflix. With the cast that they've put together, I can only imagine it will be a stellar show.

TV: Watership Down

A trailer has been released for the Netflix/BBC One co-production of
Watership Down
"gives off an almost Game of Thrones vibe as it follows the adventure,
courage and survival of a band of rabbits on their flight from the
intrusion of man and the certain destruction of their home," Deadline
reported.

The animated four-part miniseries, based on the classic book by Richard
Adams, features an A-list cast including James McAvoy, Daniel Kaluuya,
Nicholas Hoult, Ben Kingsley, John Boyega, Gemma Arterton, Rosamund
Pike, Gemma Chan, Peter Capaldi, Taron Egerton, Miles Jupp, Freddie Fox,
Mackenzie Crook, Olivia Colman, Anne-Marie Duff, Rory Kinnear, Tom
Wilkinson, Jason Watkins, Craig Parkinson, Henry Goodman, Lee Ingleby,
Charlotte Spencer and Daniel Rigby.

Watership Down was produced and directed by Noam Murro, co-directed by
Alan Short and Seamus Malone, and adapted for the screen by Tom Bidwell
(My Mad Fat Diary). It debuts on BBC One from December 22 to 23, and
will be released on Netflix December 23.

Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy is a prequel to the fantastic Canadian Anne Of Green Gables series written by Lucy Maud Montgomery and published in 1908, the year before my grandmother was born. I read all of the Anne books back when I was about 10 years old, and I loved them so much I remember rereading them when I was in college. So I was concerned about this young writer taking up the mantle of LMM, and how she'd fill those big shoes. I need not have worried, as McCoy hits a home run right from the first chapter, with its elegant and evocative prose, all the way to the fascinating ending. Marilla is a difficult woman to like in the Anne books, because she's so strict and stoic and charmless, but through this volume we begin to understand Marilla through her past tragedies and triumphs, and we see how the death of her mother during childbirth shaped her as a person. Here's the blurb:
A bold, heartfelt tale of life at Green Gables . . . before Anne: A marvelously entertaining and moving historical novel, set in rural Prince Edward Island in the nineteenth century, that imagines the young life of spinster Marilla Cuthbert, and the choices that will open her life to the possibility of heartbreak—and unimaginable greatness.
Plucky and ambitious, Marilla Cuthbert is thirteen years old when her world is turned upside down. Her beloved mother dies in childbirth, and Marilla suddenly must bear the responsibilities of a farm wife: cooking, sewing, keeping house, and overseeing the day-to-day life of Green Gables with her brother, Matthew and father, Hugh.
In Avonlea—a small, tight-knit farming town on a remote island—life holds few options for farm girls. Her one connection to the wider world is Aunt Elizabeth "Izzy" Johnson, her mother’s sister, who managed to escape from Avonlea to the bustling city of St. Catharines. An opinionated spinster, Aunt Izzy’s talent as a seamstress has allowed her to build a thriving business and make her own way in the world.
Emboldened by her aunt, Marilla dares to venture beyond the safety of Green Gables and discovers new friends and new opportunities. Joining the Ladies Aid Society, she raises funds for an orphanage run by the Sisters of Charity in nearby Nova Scotia that secretly serves as a way station for runaway slaves from America. Her budding romance with John Blythe, the charming son of a neighbor, offers her a possibility of future happiness—Marilla is in no rush to trade one farm life for another. She soon finds herself caught up in the dangerous work of politics, and abolition—jeopardizing all she cherishes, including her bond with her dearest John Blythe. Now Marilla must face a reckoning between her dreams of making a difference in the wider world and the small-town reality of life at Green Gables.
At last I was able to grasp why Marilla was so freaked out over Anne's interest in John Blythe's son, because she was thwarted in her desire for John due to her duty to her brother and the farm at Green Gables. The subplot of seeing slaves to freedom via the underground railroad was unexpected and fascinating. McCoy's excellent storytelling will keep readers turning pages into the wee hours. I certainly couldn't put it down. I'd give this wonderful story an A, and recommend it to anyone who read and loved the Anne of Green Gables series.

Navigating the Stars by Maria V Snyder is a new YA science fiction series, self published by the author of the truly delightful Poison Study series (among others). I've read everything that Snyder has written, and was thoroughly delighted and entertained with each (traditionally published) book, which I had assumed was well received by other readers as well. So I was surprised that Snyder chose to self publish this series, but I probably shouldn't be in this day and age where everyone seems to be publishing e-books and reaping the profits for themselves, instead of splitting it with agents and publishing houses. Still, I was a bit nervous, having read so many poorly written self pubbed books in the past. I need not have had a moment of fear, though, because Snyder, ever the professional, comes through with a ripping good yarn that takes place in the far future when mankind has seeded many other planets and discovered groups of Chinese terra cotta warrior statues on a number of them, for reasons no one can discern. Here's the blurb:
“The answer is no, Lyra,” my mother utters her favorite—I swear—phrase.
No means I have to travel with them to another planet—again.
No means leaving all my friends fifty years in the past. Thanks, Einstein.
Seventeen-year-old Lyra Daniels can’t truly blame Einstein or her parents for their impending move across the Milky Way Galaxy. It’s all due to the invention of the Q-net, which made traveling the vast distances in space possible—with one big caveat: the time dilation. But that never stopped Lyra's ancestors from exploring the Milky Way, searching for resources and exoplanets to colonize. What they didn’t expect to find is life-sized terracotta Warriors buried on twenty-one different exoplanets.
... Make that twenty-two.
As the Galaxy’s leading experts on the Warriors, Lyra's parents are thrilled by the new discovery, sending them—and her—fifty years into the future. Her social life in ruins, she fills her lonely days by illegally worming into the Q-net. The only person close to her age is the annoyingly irresistible security officer who threatens to throw her into the brig.
After the planet they just left goes silent—meaning no communications from them at all—security has bigger problems to deal with than Lyra, especially when vital data files go missing. But that's just the beginning, because they’re not as alone as they thought on their new planet... and suddenly time isn't the only thing working against them.
The space adventure and battles against aliens are measured against the romantic thread running through the fast moving plot, which still manages to give the protagonists plenty of room to grow as characters. I especially loved Lyra's stubborn refusal to give up on the warrior project and on "worming" even when she faced detention and censure and the disapproval of her parents and the officers in charge of security. I love gutsy female protagonists, and Snyder specializes in making her heroines tough but relatable. I'd give this novel an A, and recommend it to anyone looking for a zingy space adventure. One small caveat, when the characters "text" one another, it's in italics that always lack the letter "D." There is no explanation given for this bizarre typographic anomaly, but I felt I should warn nitpicking readers that it is there, and it can be annoying.

The Dream Daughter by Diane Chamberlain is a sort of hybrid science fiction romance with literary pretentions, similar to The Time Traveler's Wife. The idea of a young woman pregnant woman discovering that her fetus has a heart condition that will kill it once it's born is nothing new, but Chamberlain posits what could happen if the brother in law of this woman is a time traveler from 2018 who knows that her fetus could get surgery in utero in the future that would save it's life and the life of the mother, who believes the father of her child is dead (he was a soldier in the unpopular Vietnam War). Of course Hunter, the time traveler, feels that he must help Carly, the pregnant gal, get out of 1970 and into 2001, when fetal surgery is new, but survivable, yet time travel is an inexact science, or a delicate one, and one small problem can send the traveler to a different time than they'd expected, which is, of course, what happens. Here's the blurb:
When Carly Sears, a young woman widowed by the Vietnam war, receives the news that her unborn baby girl has a heart defect, she is devastated. It is 1970, and she is told that nothing can be done to help her child. But her brother-in-law, a physicist with a mysterious past, tells her that perhaps there is a way to save her baby. What he suggests is something that will shatter every preconceived notion that Carly has. Something that will require a kind of strength and courage she never knew existed. Something that will mean an unimaginable leap of faith on Carly's part.
And all for the love of her unborn child.
The Dream Daughter is a rich, genre-spanning, breathtaking novel about one mother's quest to save her child, unite her family, and believe in the unbelievable. Diane Chamberlain pushes the boundaries of faith and science to deliver a novel that you will never forget. Publisher's Weekly:Chamberlain’s exciting and heartfelt novel (after The Stolen Marriage) follows one woman who risks everything to travel through time and save the life of her unborn child. In 1970, after the death of her husband in the Vietnam War, pregnant Carly Sears moves in with her sister, Patti, and brother-in-law, Hunter, at their beach home in Nags Head, N.C. There, Carly finds that tragedy has followed her: she discovers that her unborn child has a fatal heart defect. It’s at this point that Hunter reveals to Carly that he is a time traveler from the future and offers Carly a solution: she can time travel to 2001, where her child can receive life-saving fetal surgery. Carly finally believes Hunter’s claims about time travel when his predictions about the tragic events at Kent State come true days later. After time traveling to 2001, Carly and her unborn child undergo an experimental surgery, remaining in New York City near the hospital prior to and after her daughter Joanna’s birth. But Carly’s plan to return to 1970 with Joanna is derailed when her daughter becomes ill and must remain hospitalized. Chamberlain expertly blends the time-travel elements with the wonderful story of a mother’s love and the depths of sacrifice she makes for her child. This is a page-turning crowd-pleaser.
Though I did enjoy the gripping plot and the precise, clean prose, I had a few problems with the characters, namely Patti, whose vitriol for her husband turns on and off like a spigot depending on whether or not she is reassured of the return of Carly from the future (and she gets pretty ugly with her sister for needing to return to the future again to pick up her daughter and bring her back to 1970's North Carolina), and I found Carly's obsession with her teenage daughter to be almost pathological, when she realizes that Joanna has a family who love and care for her well, and that she would not be happy back in 1970 with no technology or medical help for her ongoing heart issues. If Carly really was as good of a mother as she yearns to be, she'd realize the best and most loving thing to do for her child is to leave her alone to grow up in 2013. But Carly only goes back to the 70s when she discovers that her husband isn't dead, but was actually a POW who needs her when he returns home, broken and unbowed. So she tells her daughter the truth, at the last moment, and that sets up a somewhat sentimental, soppy ending for what was a fairly decent book, marred by overly melodramatic characters. I'd give it a B, and recommend it to those who like a good weeper with speculative fictional elements.

Bellewether by Susanna Kearsley is a historical romantic paranormal fiction mashup that starts slow, but builds to a solid conclusion. This is one of those books that requires a bit of patience to get into, about 75 pages worth, but once you've gotten the lay of the land and the rhythm of the characters, the plot starts to march along at a steady and satisfying pace. Here's the blurb:
"The house, when I first saw it, seemed intent on guarding what it knew; but we all learned, by the end of it, that secrets aren't such easy things to keep."
It's late summer, war is raging, and families are torn apart by divided loyalties and deadly secrets. In this complex and dangerous time, a young French Canadian lieutenant is captured and billeted with a Long Island family, an unwilling and unwelcome guest. As he begins to pitch in with the never-ending household tasks and farm chores, Jean-Philippe de Sabran finds himself drawn to the daughter of the house. Slowly, Lydia Wilde comes to lean on Jean-Philippe, true soldier and gentleman, until their lives become inextricably intertwined. Legend has it that the forbidden love between Jean-Philippe and Lydia ended tragically, but centuries later, the clues they left behind slowly unveil the true story. Library Journal:"RITA Award—winning author Kearsley (The Firebird) pens a captivating tale of a Long Island family caught up in the tumultuous events of the French and Indian War (1754—63) that culminated in the fall of French Canada to the British. Kearsley skillfully creates an atmosphere of parallel times between past and present by connecting a random object from the end of each of Charley's present-day chapters to a like object at the start of the succeeding chapter belonging to Lydia or Jean-Philippe. This magical feeling is enhanced by the ghostly presence that Charley encounters at the museum site and the legends she learns about the ill-fated lovers. VERDICT Rich characterizations and vivid historical flavor will keep readers enthralled in both past and present story lines. Highly recommended for Kearsley's many admirers and fans of romantic dual-time historical fiction."
I was certain that I knew who the ghost was, but I was wrong, and it turned out that the ghost was someone I'd never suspected throughout the novel (I won't spoil it for you.) It took me awhile to warm up to Charley, who is the woman running the museum in the current day, but once I got beyond her somewhat chilly exterior, I found her more palatable as a character. Meanwhile, however, the French Canadian Jean Phillipe and Lydia Wilde are fascinating, and their life on a Long Island farm is fascinating. I wish that the author had added more about their life together, but despite that yearning, I still enjoyed the excellent storytelling and lush prose. A heartfelt B+ for this inspiring novel full of memorable characters. 
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