Sunday, January 14, 2007

book 6

little children, tom perrotta
rating:


here's another recommendation that i've been avoiding, thinking that it was actually about little kids. it's really about this suburban town, and what happens there one summer. sarah, a bored stay-at-home mom, starts to experience marriage problems when she finds herself attracted to stay-at-home dad todd, nicknamed "prom king" by the ladies in town. meanwhile, her older husband is distant, negligent and obsessed with his fantasy life. most if it is about sarah and todd, but other characters fill in, as does a backstory involving a convicted child molester who moves back to town to live with his aging mother after a stint in prison. the whole thing had a nice, suspenseful feel, and i kept trying to pace myself better so that i wouldn't finish it all at once, but i really wanted to know what happens. it's going to be a movie, though it looks like the movie might take a different turn than the book does. the book, at least, i'd highly recommend.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

book 5

a family daughter, maile meloy
rating:


awesome, awesome book. i'm so glad i stopped in the middle to read the earlier one, though. so, this book is also about the santerre family, but the REAL santerre family. a young member of the family, abby, decides to write a novel based on her family's history. the novel that she writes is meloy's liars and saints. confusing? it doesn't really seem like it when you're reading. it was interesting to find out what was "true" about the santerres, and what was "fiction." as someone who has written fiction and memoir, i found this to be particularly interesting, though it really made me a little sad that i don't have time to hunker down and work on writing that novel i've put on hold since last year. but maybe someday. also, maybe i'll be like abby and name all of the characters in my novel after my real family members and really throw them for a loop.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

book 4

liars and saints, maile meloy
rating:


look at me, plugging along! the semester starts tomorrow, so i've got to pack in my last-minute vacation reading. this book was pretty great. alicia had it on her faves list from last year, along with a family daughter, meloy's most recent novel, and after reading a few reviews, i was intrigued. it's all about the santerres, a family living (mostly) in california. the multi-generational story leaves plenty of room for interesting family drama. it was a little strange to read this, because i was already halfway through a family daughter, which deals with the same family, when i decided i needed to read this one before finishing. so now i know a little more background and it's hard to know what i'd think of this one if i didn't know that. but i'm sure i'd still like it. i only knocked off that robot's head b/c things felt a bit rushed for me at the end.

Sunday, January 07, 2007

book 3

digging to america, anne tyler
rating:


people have been recommending anne tyler to me for years. people i know, people i trust. but i sometimes vehemently resist book recommendations, for no apparent reason. i get very "pffft. as if you could possibly know what i would like!" just out of nowhere sometimes.

now i just feel dumb, because this was a really solid book. two youngish baltimore couples adopt babies from korea at the same time, in 1997. they meet at the airport and then things happen from there. really, it's less about the little girls and more about the two families. it sounds simple, but i found it really hard to put down. really good, but in a quiet way. nothing flashy, just good writing and an interesting story. i didn't really want to finish it, because i have a feeling that what i read next won't be as impressive. but who knows? maybe i just need to have more faith.

Saturday, January 06, 2007

2007, books 1 and 2

running with scissors, augusten burroughs
rating:


why do people love this book so much? i found it unfunny and completely disturbing. and i don't mean in a quirky way, in an "oh how funny this dysfunctional family is?" kind of way, as the trailer for the movie seems to spin things. burroughs is clearly a good writer and there were a few funny details about things like his polyester pants. but. ugh.
anyway. apparently the family depicted in the book is suing him or something along those lines. but i only heard that from my mom, and haven't been invested enough to actually confirm.

the thirteenth tale, diane setterfield
rating:


this was an enjoyable read. a well-known but enigmatic british writer, vida winters, requests that amateur biographer margaret lea write the true story of her life. very consciously gothic, with the moors as a backdrop and a strange story full of twists and turns. i'm even still a bit confused by a few of those twists. i'm somewhat surprised that this was a best-seller, but it was definitely worth reading.


now if i could just get my hands on a copy of vendela vida's new book, i'd be set. i honestly don't even remember what happened in her last book (and now you can go), but i know it was on my best of 2003 list.