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Book Review: There Once Lived A Girl Who Seduced Her Sister's Husband, And He Hanged Himself: Love Stories by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya

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Set in Russia, Petrushevskaya's stories are presented in a very basic, raw story telling fashion. They rarely are told in first person, one story which was told in first person skipped back and forth between "I" and "her". Some stories hold too much cultural relevance for me to truly understand, I felt lost at times. There was beauty in the words, some touched me with an icy finger down my spine. However, these moments were few and far between. Each story, even those in the section "A Happy Ending" were incredibly dark and depressing. The living situations are awful, in the introduction the translator, Anna Summers, expresses that these are realistic conditions. The characters are dreadful. The men cads. The women hopeless. Anna also says of Petrushevskaya's writing style, "her steadfast refusal to save her characters, or her readers, from themselves."

I would not suggest this for the general reader. If you have an interest in Russia, then yes, but, to be honest, I really don't know enough about the conditions of this country to understand what is accurate in this book.

I have very mixed feelings. It was painful to read... though, I see that this author has a book of fairy tales. Russian fairy tales... now that's intriguing.

My favorite quotes:
"There once lived a girl who was beloved by her mother but no one else. "

"It was like a temporary suicide, he thought, a thing that everyone desires at some point - to step out for a while, then come back to see what happened."


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Book Review: Son by Lois Lowry

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Son is the final installment in The Giver series. The narrator is a birth mother, Claire, from the colony which Jonas came from. The opening scene is Claire giving birth. The process is strange, she is blindfolded to keep from bonding with the "product". Lowry's comment on this is haunting, "Her name was Claire. She was fourteen years old."

We then back up a bit to give Claire's character some history. She was disappointed in receiving the job that she did. Birth Mothers are not held in high esteem in the society; they birth three children then are sent to perform manual labor until they are old enough to retire. 

Claire's labor was difficult, there was a c-section performed on her, she was told that she would be assigned to a new job as she would no longer be able to give birth. Claire asked if the product was ok, she was told that he was fine. Claire knew then, that she had a son. 

I enjoy reading about the modern society which Claire and Jonas come from, more than the villages in the second and third installment of the series. For that reason, I would consider Son my second favorite out of the series.

This is not what I would have expected out of a final book in a series. I thought there would be a deeper understanding of the world around the characters. I want to know why things are the way they are in the series. How many civilizations are there? Why aren't they the same if they are so close in proximity. I would love to have understood more.


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Book Review: Messenger by Lois Lowry

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Messenger is the third installment in The Giver quartet. We are brought back into the story when Matt(y) has been living in the village with Kira's dad (also known as the Seer). Matt is 12 years old and awaiting the receipt of his true name, which coincides with the role that you play in the society. Matt desperately wants to be named "Messenger." The leader of this village, aptly named Leader, is in fact Jonas from The Giver. I love that readers finally get some closure regarding Jonas and Gabe. Matt is comfortable traveling back and forth between Village and other communities, until recently. He has noticed that the forest has become more dangerous. Most members of Village refuse to go anywhere near the forrest, due to people having been severely injured and killed attempting to leave. The Villagers have begun to change as well. Village is no longer the safe haven that it once was. Matty and Jonas must come up with a solution, before it's too late (dramatic music here). 

This book was ok, definitely not my favorite installment of this series. I didn't care for the mystical gift stuff that keeps popping up in this book. There was some degree of mysticism in book two, but not to this degree. Also, unlike book two - which can stand alone from book one - I would not suggesting reading this novel, without reading the first two installments. 


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Book Review Quickie: Sailor Twain: Or, the Mermaid on the Hudson by Mark Siegel

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Sailor Twain is a charming graphic novel. We follow a river boat captain who traverses the Hudson River. He is a hard-working, dedicated captain until he pulls a wounded mermaid out of the water and hides/nurses her to health. After which, he becomes obsessed with her. An obsession which changes him. 

I loved this book. This is a great starter graphic novels for those who are interested in the genre but don't know where to begin. The story is fun and mystical but unfortunately short. For me, this was a two-day read.

The graphics are completely in pencil. Here is once such drawing, which is a bit of a spoiler, please forgive me: 

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Audiobook Review Quickie: The Amityville Horror: A True Story by Jan Anson

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I came across this title on Audible and decided to give it a whirl. Prior to listening to this book, I wasn't sure what the whole Amityville thing was about other than there being a pig demon in the movie and an Eminem rap song of the same name - being an adolescent, white girl in the 90's, I am well-versed in Eminem. Anywho, this was a very strange audiobook. The narrator explained that the book was non-fiction and his tone was such that audiobook felt like a six-hour news story. 

The book was written in the 70's and was very dated. It begins with the Lutz family moving into 112 Ocean Avenue, the scene of a gruesome murder the year prior. The Lutz's are immediately affected by the "spirits" in the house and after 28 days of living at Ocean Avenue they escape from the home never turning back, not even to collect their belongings.  

Some parts of the story were eerie but mostly just corny. Days after listening to the audiobook, the movie adaptation was on SyFy. I love campy scary movies, but this was not campy, this was just boring (however, in all fairness, I was watching the cable version, not the unedited version).

What I find interesting about this story is the amount of controversy that surrounds its status as non-fiction. To catch up, you can read the article on Wikipedia, for what its worth. The controversy reminded me of a recent story on NPR regarding the upcoming re-release of Thirty-Eight Witnesses: The Kitty Genovese Case by A.M. Rosenthal. The book was originally released in 1946 as non-fiction. However, after several decades of fact checking court reports and witness testimonies, it has been confirmed that the "facts" in the book are not true. Now the question posed by NPR, as well as the NY Times, is does the publisher have a responsibility to re-class books that are proven to be incorrect? Now, of course I don't expect a publisher to make the call of whether or not a haunting exists but it does make you think..


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Re-read: Let's Pretend This Never Happened by Jenny Lawson

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Oh, I do enjoy Jenny Lawson. I reviewed this book around a year ago and completely adored it. I recently downloaded the audiobook from my library and found that Jenny narrates the book, which was a perfect decision by her publisher.

Here is the review from 2012:

I’m not sure what I enjoyed more about this book. The actual laughing to tears moments while reading or the actual laughing to tears moments while retelling the stories to my boyfriend (who kept mentioning that he and Victor have a lot in common). 

It says a great deal about Jenny Lawson (of blogging fame) that at 38, she was able to write a 300+ page memoir that is interesting to read. Interesting, not because she is a celebrity or has boinked a celebrity, but because she has lived a strange life and has maintained a good attitude about that life. As Lawson mentions in her prologue, “you are defined, not by life’s imperfect moments, but by your reaction to them.” This sets the tone for the book. Lawson could have written a book about her parent’s questionable child-rearing skills. She could have written a book about tearful issues with fertility. Instead, Lawson wrote a story that holds dark aspects but is told in a lighthearted manner. 

Lawson is able to play the role of an unreliable narrator with grace. I’m not sure whether she truly believes in what she says or if she says she believes as such for laughs. Either way, it works for me. 

My only disappointment was at the end of the book, when I had turned the last page. I did not want this trip into the mind of Lawson to be over, I wanted to stay in her world for just a bit more. 

Luck for us, Lawson blogs about her life so that we can have a taste to keep us happy until her next book. 

I would recommend this book … to people with a dark sense of humor who do not mind stories coming from a lady with the mouth of a trucker. Well, if a trucker and a sailor had a baby, that baby would be Jenny Lawson. 

My favorite quote … “My God, this is going to be a terrible book.”

Abandoned Read: Flight Behavior by Barbara Kingsolver

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The characters were interesting; however, not so interestring that I could really care about the plot. 

The language is strong and beautiful  so much so that I may consider a dip into Kingsolver's previous works.

Book Review: Me Before You by Jojo Moyes

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Me Before You takes place in a suburb of a suburb of London. Louisa Clark (Lou for short) has recently been laid off from the Buttered Bun, a small restaurant in town, where she has been a waitress for her adult life. She has little ambition in life. She still lives at home at age 27, and she is in a seven year relationship with no advancement in sight. However, she is happy. 

After being laid-off, Lou is sent on a plethora of job interviews of which she is unable to find a good match. Her recruiter then sends her on an interview to be a caregiver for a quadriplegic man. With no experience, Lou does not believe that she will receive the job. However, the mother of the disabled man quickly offers her the position. She explains that Will needs companionship, not a medical caregiver. She explains, the contract is only for six months. Will makes it quite hard for Lou: he's quiet, rude and irritable. 

Slowly, Lou and Will cultivate a relationship. All is progressing well until Lou hears a conversation between Will's mother and his sister which causes her to reconsider her employment.

This is such a brave story. Well written. Characters are well developed. Not a traditional love story at all. There is a slow development of a relationship which can be overlooked in books. 

The author does not belittle Will's condition. We are provided with uncomfortable truths of his situation. It's not glorious. Will will not be healed, no amount of true love will get him out of the chair. 

In my opinion, this is a perfect book. It has great character, keeps you completely enveloped in the story and does not pander to the audiences wishes, it is brave and strong. I have tears in my eyes from simply writing this review.

Favorite Quotes: 

"I can tell you the exact day I stopped being fearless."

"Knowing you still have possibilities is a luxury."

"And then, just like that, my heart broke."


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Book Review Quickie: Gathering Blue by Lois Lowry

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This is the second book in the Giver series. After reading The Giver, I read a short interview with the author, Lois Lowry. She explained that The Giver was a  futuristic world, dependent on technology and advancement, while Gathering Blue is a world devoid of technology. In some ways, The Giver is a utopian novel, while Gathering Blue is dystopian. 

Our proganonist is Kira, at the time of the novel's opening, she is sitting and watching her mother's lifeless body give up it's spirit. After four days of watching, she leaves the body to travel back to her cot (which I assume is like a teepee). She finds that the cot was burnt to the ground.

Kira is not well liked by the village, due to a birth defect which causes her to limp. Her mother, Katrina, had begged the elders of her community to allow Kira to live after her birth. Kira's father was killed before she was born by "beasts". The women of Kira's village want her land for themselves and they take her to the Elder's to ask that they let her go in the wilderness. However, Kira has an artistic gift which the Elder's want to use. They grant her leave to stay with the community but she will move into the large government building and she will use her gift for their needs. In the government building, Kira meets a boy named Thomas who was brought to the building under similar circumstances. 

Similar to The Giver, Kira's mind is opening while performing her work for the community and she begins to question things that in the past have been understand as simply being so. 

The next installment of the Giver series is Messenger, which seems to follow Matt, a friend of Kira's. The Giver and Gathering Blue do not overlap, so a continuation in the tale will be interesting. 


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Book Review: The Giver by Lois Lowry

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I wasn't a big reader as a child. I barely read school assignments, I tended to pass based on my ability to BS a book report. I went to a small Christian school, so the books that I did have access to were so incredibly dull. Pilgrim's Progress, anyone? No, thank you!

I think that's why I love kids books so much, I never read them as a child myself. The Giver is a book that I've heard mentioned over and over again. I started reading on a flight from Tampa to Baltimore one night around 6pm and finished the next afternoon. I would have finished sooner had there not been the need for food or sleep.

I adore dystopia novels. The Giver takes place in a small, commune-style community in an undisclosed location. We are led to believe that this is one community amongst several. Households are consist of: a mother, a father, a sister and a brother. Children are applied for and assigned to a couple, as opposed to being born into a couple. Sex does not occur. Mother and Father are more like buds than spouses. The children are brought up through levels of development which, for the most part, coincide with their age (Ones, Twos, Threes, up to Twelves).

Our protagonist is Jonas who is an Eleven, going on Twelve. Twelve being the stage in which jobs are assigned. In the Twelve ceremony, Jonas is assigned the job of "The Receiver", a position of great honor in the community. Jonas meets with the current Receiver who from this point on is referred to as "The Giver". The Giver explains that the job of The Receiver is to hold the memories of the community. Memories are transferred from the The Giver to The Receiver by touch, which brings a fantastical aspect to an otherwise plausible story. Jonas must bear the weight and pain of the history of his world, which is known only to himself and The Giver. 

I thoroughly enjoyed The Giver. It was lovely, heartwarming, and at times heart-wrenching. I could not pull myself away from this story. The ending is ambiguous which is something that I tend to find displeasing, however, I know in my heart how it ended. 

The Giver is similar in bits to The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood (one of my favorites - side note, did you know that Claire Danes narrates The Handmaid's Tale for Audible --- i know, right?) and I also felt a similarity to This Perfect Day by Ira Levin. 

This is my first experience with Lois Lowry, but not my last, I will spend a bit of time on her backlist.

My favorite quote ... "Memories are forever."


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