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Book Review: Handling the Undead by John Ajvide Lindqvist

Handling the UndeadHandling the Undead by John Ajvide Lindqvist

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Having read "Let Me In" by Lindqvist, I knew that the undead in "Handling the Undead" would exist outside of the modern idea of the zombie. Once again, Lindqvist has created an exceptionally original monster. The "reliving" do not chase down humans wanting flesh and brains, they attack at a psychic level. This is not book that will make you scream, it is a book that will make you think.



Lindqvist creates a realistic tale of what could occur during an awakening and the reaction of the society in which it occurs. From scientific reactions, government reactions and religious reactions (making a connection to Revelations... the dead will rise from their graves...).



We follow several sets of main characters, there are time markers that each set of characters experience. I found all of the main characters captivating, however, two stick with me the most. Flora, a goth teenager who has "the power," she is an empath, connected deeply with the emotion of those around her, sometimes picking up on the thoughts of others. She reminds me of what I imagined Death from Neil Gaiman's "Sandman" to be before she accepted her burden of being death. And David, whose wife dies in a terrible accident and is awakened shortly after her death. While Flora provides a supernatural point of view, David provides an emotional point of view. "[His wife] was not dead, he could not grieve. [His wife] was not alive, he could not hope."



Lindqvist has an depth in his work that one would not expect from a horror writer. He tells an amazing story about experiencing life and death and the glimpse of what happens next.



"I believe...

There is a place where happiness exists. A place, and a time."



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Books to Read: Shadow of Night by Deborah Harkness

The release date is set for 7/10/12. I am very excited. I tend to be the one who finds out about trilogies after they are completed. The first book in this trilogy was Discovery of Witches, which received mixed reviewed. I devoured the book and eagerly wait for the next release.

Book Review: Shopgirl by Steve Martin

ShopgirlShopgirl by Steve Martin

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

"It's pain that changes our lives."

Steve Martin's book Shopgirl is a quick, engaging read. It is insightful and charming. I would have preferred to have the characters develop over time as opposed to Martin's in depth digressions on the character.

I'm not sure if I would have enjoyed the book as much as I did, had I not watched the movie first. The three main characters had distinct voices but I didn't feel that way for the supporting characters.

Other interesting quotes:

"She has learned that her body is precious and it mustn't be offered carelessly ever again, as it holds a direct connections to her heart."

"As Jeremy offers her more of his heart, she offers equal parts of herself in return."

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Book Review: 72 Hour Hold by Bebe Moore Campbell

72 Hour Hold72 Hour Hold by Bebe Moore Campbell

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

When this book was chosen by my book club in 2010, I skipped the meeting. I tend to lean toward happier subjects, or fantastical subjects. Then, I joined Audible and kept seeing the title pop up in my browsing.

I'm not sure that this would have held my interest had I read it. The narrator performed her role, as opposed to simply reading the words. Her accents were awful but the depth of the main character made up the difference. I found myself sad when I had to take my earbuds off each day.

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Book Review: Damned by Chuck Palahniuk

DamnedDamned by Chuck Palahniuk

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

"The only thing that makes earth feel like hell, or hell feel like hell, is our expectation that it ought to feel like Heaven."

Well worth the read and the wait for release.

This is unlike any other Chuck P book. We follow Madison Spencer, a 13 year old girl, who finds her self dead and damned. The book is written as an incredibly disturbing Judy Blume novel. "Are you there Satan, it's me Madison?"

The story is interesting. There is a mix of truth, absurdities, and of course, the obscene.

Chuck comments on our expectations of life and death and the limitations of the single story. "In hell, it's our attachments to a fixed identity that torture us."

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Book Review: Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie

Peter PanPeter Pan by J.M. Barrie

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

"All children, except one, grow up."

This sent tingles down my spine as I began J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan. I did not develop a passion for reading until High School, therefore, I did not grow up reading books such as Peter Pan. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed this book. It is whimsical and clever.

Never land is the creation of our childhood dreams. The Darlings went eagerly with Peter as they already knew him, when they touched Never land it was familiar ground. "We too have been there; we can still hear the sound of the surf, though we still land no more."

The character of Peter is not the hero that I had assumed he would be. He is a child. He is "gay, young and heartless." He refuses to grow up but takes on the role of an adult. He demands to be the leader of the lost boys (later to also be called "father"), yet he shirks the responsibilities of adulthood. He can never be a friend, he can never give the love that his followers yearn for. He will never be what others want or need him to be, he can only be exactly as he is at the moment. He doesn't have the mental capability of understanding what he does and how his actions effect others. He is a consciousness that never grows, never develops, never retains. He isn't free, he is stunted.


He often doesn't see beyond himself. On the route to Never land, Peter forgets who Wendy and at the end of the tale he even forgets Tinker Bell. The fairy who was his constant companion, who tried to kill (Wendy) for him, who drank poison to save him. When Wendy tries to remind Peter of Tinker Bell, he nonchalantly replies that fairies live short lives and she probably died. In the words of Tinker Bell, "stupid ass."

It's not clear to me how Hook is able to step on the island. I can understand that the Indians are a creation of the imaginations of the children; however, Hook is apparently a well known British gentleman which Barrie introduced in the novelization as a satirical charter and villain (as there was none in the play -- besides possibly Peter).

I must agree with the narrator, I do think that Mrs Darling is my favorite. She is intelligent, graceful, cunning, and loving.

In a way, it is such a sad story. The boy who missed out. The boy who thought he was free. "Like slaves to a fixed idea, [he] was a stupid beast."

While we watch the Darlings reunited and accepting the lost boys as members of the family. We are reminded that this is not for Peter, "He had had ecstasies innumerable that other children can never know; but he was looking through the window at the one joy from which he must for ever barred. "

Peter Pan is magical and wonderful. Frustrating and sad. And maybe that is what our innocence was, magical and wonderful and frustrating and sad. We cannot live fully within it, and we cannot live fully without it.

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Spoken Word Review: Peter Meinke

Peter Meinke read a selection of his poems and short stories at the Inaugural Friends of Mirror Lake Library (of which I am a member) event. I seem to be unable to appreciate poetry in its written form. Listening to poetry being read completely captivates me.

The following is my favorite poem from the night.

The Bookshelf by Peter Meinke (The Contracted World)

Lying flat on the floor because I'm old
and it's good for my back
counting coins of dust in the twilight
and squinting at the books huddled above me
like immigrants in ragged overcoats
guarding their family secrets
I think You have cost me everything:
stoopshouldered nearsighted soft and white
as a silverfish caught in the binding

of The Complete Works of Henry James
from hours days decades spent bent
over your pages when I could have been
pruning azaleas or hitting tennis balls with real people

Now I've been down so long

I'm too stiff to get up or even reach for a book

so I call for help not expecting an answer
but from the stern and shadowed shelves
Emma and Anna and all the lost inaccessible
women above my cry out with their special accents
words I understand only from their rhythm and inflection
O sorrow they say all of them over and over
Carrie and Carol and Cora and Julia sorrow o sorrow Catherine and Scarlet
and Sonja and Daisy o sorrow sorrow
Molly o sorrow Wendy sorrow Dora Maud Helen Hester
and I like any man who has blindly loved
understand too late as unhappy endings pour down
just sentences on their weeping and guilty prisoner
pinned to the floor by threads
of vanishing light

Book Review: The Leftovers by Tom Perrotta

The LeftoversThe Leftovers by Tom Perrotta

"That's why we get involved with other people, right? Not just for their bodies, but for everything else, too -- their dreams and their scars and their stories."

Interesting read. I appreciate that this "what if" of the end-times was not about hellfire and torment but more of what would happen if a unexplained event changed the course of your life. What if you lost your family? What if everyone lost their families? Would you be able to mourn or would you be expected to heal in time with the world?

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Inspiration: Caroline Casey - Ted Talk

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyBk55G7Keo]

Excellent Ted Talk by Caroline Casey regarding accepting yourself completely. She does ramble a bit; however, it is worth the listen.

Caroline talks about how difficult asking for help can be. In not only asking but accepting that you need help, as though it was a flaw.

Eventually Caroline was forced by worsening eye sight to ask for help from her HR department. She was sent to a doctor who asked, "Why are you fighting so hard to not be yourself? What do you want to be? Do something different."

It is one hurdle to listen to the advice of others, it is another to accept it.

After quitting her high paying consulting job and riding an elephant across India, Caroline was able to accept herself, "wonky eyes and all."