Sunday, August 27, 2006

books 54, 55, 56, 57, 58

the fruits of my last hurrah before the semester began.

king dork, frank portman


one of my favorite books so far this year. a smart and funny look at high school, with a 'mystery' threaded through it. apparently this author is some sort of big shot musician, but, as you may know about me, if it's not sleater-kinney or something sleazy and electronic, i'm unlikely to know about it. anyway. i recommend this book! the main character is tom henderson, who's kind of an outcast, and who stumbles upon his late father's books from high school while trying to find a copy of catcher in the rye to read for school. and it's about a lot of other things, too. it's categorized as "young adult," because the narrator's fifteen, but there's really not much else that's young adult about it.

pretties, scott westerfeld


i felt a little bit more eh about this, the second book in the uglies trilogy, than i did about the first. extreme overuse of the word "bogus." but still, a nice, fast-paced read. tally got the surgery and became a "pretty" so that a scientist she met back in uglies can try out a "cure" on her. these books are like sci-fi-lite. sci-fi for teenaged girls. with pretty covers. honestly i read this over a week ago so i forget whatever it is that i meant to say about it.

the keep, jennifer egan


okay, so here's the book i've been waiting for all summer. i really liked most of it, but i'm in absolute agreement with bookslut about the ending. it's about two cousins, who had a bad experience when they were teenagers, and who reunite as adults to help renovate this mysterious eastern european castle. and it's about a guy in prison, writing a manuscript in a writing seminar. and it all comes together. it's so creepy and nicely layered but then there's just this piece at the end that seemed tacked on, like maybe the publisher was afraid people wouldn't "get it" or something. anyway, still worth reading, as are all of egan's books.

kiffe kiffe tomorrow, faiza guene


i've been pretty consistenly impressed by salon's fiction recommendations lately, and this was no exception. the narrator is a fifteen year old girl named doria living in the projects outside of paris, the daughter of north african immigrants. her father went back to morocco when doria was younger to marry a peasant woman so that he could have a son. and now doria and her mother are struggling, trying to exist on welfare and the crappy pay from the mother's housekeeping job at a hotel. sometimes depressing but with some optimistic notes that managed to be non-cheesy. i absolutely hate the author because she wrote this in college and is now a big famous international book-star. but at least she grew up in the housing projects outside of paris as well, so she's not posturing too much.

memoirs of a muse, lara vapnyar


eh. a russian girl who learns about dostoevsky's muses early on decides that her goal in life is to be a muse for a great author. she moves from russia to new york city, meets an accomplished american author, moves in with him, and quits her job to become a muse. well-written, but a little slow for my current taste. also, i guess i thought there would be more about dostoevsky than there was.

Saturday, August 12, 2006

books 50, 51, 52, 53?

ahem. i am behind. i actually can't even really remember for sure if these are all the books i've read since my last post.

milk and honey, faye kellerman


my sister warned me that these just got worse, and she was right. i actually don't even remember anything about this. i think there were beekeepers in it.

uglies, scott westerfeld


i'm almost positive that i read something else between the kellerman and this one, but i can't remember it. oh well! anyway, this book was very good. it's the first in westerfeld's super-popular young adult trilogy of the same name. basically, it's set in a future where you have plastic surgery on your sixteenth birthday and you become flawlessly beautiful. tally, the protagonist, is pretty seriously pumped about turning "pretty," but her friend shay is a rebel, and wants to hide out in a seemingly mythical place called "the smoke" to avoid getting the surgery. fast and really engrossing.

miss american pie: a diary of love, secrets, and growing up in the 1970s, margaret sartor


this memoir rocked that one little robot's head off. i mean it. margaret sartor, who teaches at duke, put this together from diaries, notes, and letters she wrote between the ages of 12 and 17. her diary entries had me laughing out loud on more than one occasion. lots of one line entries -- e.g. "i'm so depressed" and "the haircut is not working out" and "i'm really in love this time." the younger margaret is really hopelessly naive, and i like that the older margaret isn't afraid to show that. a few times i got a little bogged down in her frequent religious crises, but all in all, this is a great read.

pale blue eye, louis bayard


whoa! three four 'bots in a row books! unheard of! anyhow, i read about this book in salon's summer reading thing that they did a little while back, and i finally got my hands on it. this is a great mystery that takes place at west point in 1830, where a soldier who appears to have committed suicide has his corpse stolen and someone totally cuts out his heart. CREE-PY! so this retired detecive guy is hired to quietly solve the crime, and he hooks up with a rebellious cadet named edgar allan poe. serious twist at the end that i didn't see coming AT ALL. very nice. now i want to read bayard's last novel, mr. timothy, another historical thriller starring timothy cratchit, better known to most of us as charles dickens' tiny tim.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

attn: sleater-kinney fans

the greatest band (soon to be ex-band) in the world is currently broadcasting a live show on npr's all songs considered. go listen!

edit: actually they are not playing right now. they seem to be broadcasting the pre-show PA songs, though.