Tuesday, December 21, 2010

One Day

One of the year's most successful literary offerings, One Day by David Nicholls is so much more than chick lit. The story of Emma and Dexter is hilarious, heartbreaking, poignant and inescapably honest. It also sports a truly excellent structure, dropping in on Em and Dex once a year from 1988 to 2006. The one day structure allows for an interesting ambiguity as we miss many of the big moments in their lives, dropping in, instead on July 15th every year, the anniversary of their meeting. Sometimes that day is an exceptionally important one (a wedding, a vacation, a fight, a death) and sometimes it's a boring glimpse into lives stuck in depressing limbos (Mexican restaurants, tedious social scenes, dead-end relationships). And oftentimes, it's those boring moments that tell us the most.

The story of Emma and Dexter is wonderfully complicated, a relationship too complex for easy description. They're romantic, but not always, in love, in hate, in all sorts of things, but for the most part, they're best friends. There's a point near the end of the novel when Emma says that her and Dex "grew up together", though they met when they were 22. It's a story about growing up and learning who you are and having someone to lean on.

One Day has romance, comedy, tears, laughter and everything in between but the sum is truly worth more than its parts.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

What Happens When You Venture Outside of Young Adult Fiction

One of my favorite past times is the leisurely barnes and nobles stroll. When I was younger, and unaware that true hipsters would scoff at the fact that I prefer the bright lights and corporate opulence of the chain to the dusty, dirty selection available at most independent bookstores, I imagined how deep and thoughtful I must have looked strolling the aisles of the bookstore, carefully choosing the book most likely to bring me to some deeper understanding of humanity. Never mind that I mostly choose my books based on how cool the dragon on the cover looks- I was convinced that the B&N stroll was evidence of just how deeply intellectual and unique I was.

Now, strolling through the aisles of the bookstore equivalent to Walmart is a slightly less epic affair, but it's none the less one of my favorite activities. The rows upon rows of carefully arranged books still call out to me. And I love those days when I stumble upon something in the middle of my walk that is at once surprising and overwhelming.


So was the case when earlier today I picked up a book titled The New York Regional Mormon Singles Halloween Dance. The book had no dragons on it, nor any hint that there would be vampires in the story, and I couldn't even decisively say if it would have a headstrong female protagonist, but the book did have one thing that always calls to me: the tale of a religious person dealing with the modern world.


I don't know why religion facinates me as much as it does. Maybe it's something freudian, like I never got religion as a kid so now as an adult I crave that sort of stability. Or maybe it's that after being raised on a steady diet of fantasy novels and Joss Whedon shows, I refuse to believe that there's nothing more to life than the blood pumping under my skin. Phillip Pullman would be so ashamed.


Whatever the reason, I have an odd fascination with relgious memoirs. And this one was a doozy: singleton Elna Baker finds herself a twenty-something, virgin, 250 lbs Mormon living in the middle of New York, den of sin. Throughout the course of the book she dates an atheist, loses 80 lbs, gets plastic surgery, almost dies, and thinks a lot. But none of that really captures the feeling of reading Baker's memoir.


The thing is, she's just such a refreshing voice, straight forward and straight laced, restrained yet honest. She's a mormon, a faith that most Americans put third in terms of "crazy pants" right behind Scientology and Raptorism*. It's a religion that definitely gets a bad rap, not least because of the "golden cutlery" and polygamy reputation that the Joseph Smith's flock just can't seem to shake. And Elna is very much so a person of our world, someone who's first college roommate was a lesbian who routinely left out her strap on and who has made out with a 60+ celebrity in a bar. This contrast drives the novel.


The book, and Elna herself, refuses to be pigeon holed. Mormonism is a huge part of Elna's life, and it has been throughout her life a huge source of strength and goodwill. She describes feeling at peace with God and believing in the sacraments of her faith in a way that will undoubtedly make many people uncomfortable. But the brilliance of the book, and the reason why Baker's is such a unique voice, is that it makes her uncomfortable too. She refuses to lock her faith in the closet, as it were, but she also can't stop herself from examining it in the light.


Which is to say nothing of how damn funny the book is, or how endearing Elna was, or how many parts of the story I could relate to, despite not being a young Mormon girl trying to make it in New York City. The quotes on the back of the book make it seem like some publishers wet dream, "CARRIE BRADSHAW MEETS MORMONISM!" but the truth is far less simplistic. The New York Regional Mormon Singles Halloween Dance is more David Sedaris meets Christopher Hitchens meets On The Road meets Eat Pray Love meets St. Augustine's Confessions.


In other words, the book refuses to pick a path and stay on it, and I wouldn't have it any other way.


*A religion I just made up that states that we all came from raptors, like the Koopa people in the feature length version of Super Mario Brothers with John Leguizamo and Dennis Hopper.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

The Knife of Never Letting Go

Young Adult novels are like catnip for me. I eat them up like they're about to disappear, and during the process I sink inside of them and stretch out like I'm meant to live there. Because of this, I read A LOT of young adult fiction, and even the worst of it tends to hold my attention.


Still, it's rare that a book makes me rethink what books can do. The Hunger Games series was like that. It picked me up from my daily stupor and shook me and made me rethink everything. Coming so soon after finishing that series, I've recently been reading books more with an outlook of: well, I dont have TV yet, so I might as well read something fun.


Then I picked up The Knife of Never Letting Go. And it picked me up and shook me out and left my dazed, confused, and desperate for the next book.


I'm not going to go into a lot of detail, but here's a ridiculously brief summary: The Knife of Never Letting Go tells the story of Todd, a young man living in Prentisstown on a foreign world that is western-influenced. Prentisstown is not like other towns; for one thing everyone can hear everyone else's thoughts (and all the animals can talk). Which sounds adorable, until we get to the second part: there are no women in Prentisstown, and the people there hold horrible, unfathomable secrets that they work hard to cover up. The sounds of men filter together into an overwhelming and mostly indecipherable omnipresent "noise," which in Prentisstown is a horrible mix of sound and pictures and hatred. When Todd discovers something abnormal in the swamp as he approaches his all-important 13th birthday, he has to run from Prentisstown, along the way discovering why exactly his world is so damn messed up.


That doesn't even begin to cover what The Knife of Never Letting Go is about, but half the beauty of the book is in trying to untangle the books ample metaphors and mysteries. On top of that, the unique stylistic voice of the book is constantly engaging and unique.


It starts to lose some steam near the end, and the ending isn't as satisfying as you will want it to be, but The Knife of Never Letting Go is something so much more than all that: freaking mind boggling. From the beginning to the end of the book, I was glued to the pages, and thinking the entire time (which, to be honest, is a lot to ask of me of late).


It's more than worth it, it's practically neccessary reading for fans of quality young adult ficiton.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Mockingjay

by Rachael

It's taken me just under a month to post on Mockingjay, the final installment of Suzanne Collins unparalleled trilogy, after having finished it. It wasn't for lack of passion. But although I may have consumed the novel like a cheeseburger after a Yom Kippur, I wanted to let it slowly ruminate in my mind for the past month, letting the themes and images that characterized Katniss Everdeen's final chapter run around in my head before I started expounding on it.

First, a quick summary. Katniss Everdeen, in book 1 of the Hunger Games, was caught up by her dystopian government in their ploy to keep the poor districts they controlled in line. She became a "tribute" in the Hunger Games, which required a girl and a boy from each district to compete to the death for the amusement of those in the rich Capital. She and Peeta, a young man whose fate has been entwined with hers since her father first died in a mining accident, survive together against all odds.

The second book saw Katniss Everdeen once again unable to control her fate. The spark of her survival has set off a blaze of revolution, and the Capital once again attempts to control Katniss and control the people. It doesn't work.


The first two novels in the Hunger Games series were two of the most captivating, entrenching, and fascinating books I've ever read. I took them in at lightning fast speed, and devoured every moment of the story. Katniss was a character for the ages, and Peeta was one of the most endearing nice guys ever created. On top of that, the plots were always twisty and turny, fascinating and plausible.





Despite how beloved the first two books were for me, I was unprepared for Mockingjay, a book that I actually think improves upon the previous two. Gone is the straight forward action/romance of the first two (although there's plenty of that, more on this later), replaced by a morally ambiguous, surprisingly dark look at human nature and the cost of war.

In Mockingjay, Katniss is once again seen as an object to be controlled. She and Peeta throughout this series have attempted to maintain their sense of identity in the face of unknowable power. There's a particularly strong moment in book 1 where Peeta expresses his desire to show the capital that they can't make him be someone he's not. In this last book, that idea of self is pushed to the max. Both Peeta and Katniss are used as objects, and it is in their quest to be more than the sum of their experiences or the result of actions upon them that the book finds its particular thematic resonance.

On top of that, the book reaches a sense of morality and futility that few children's books ever have encapsulated. When Katniss is rescued at the end of Book 2, and brought to the thought-dead colony of District 13, it was tempting to think of it as salvation. But Collins is not content with the story of one little girl taking on the Goliath of her own civilization. This isn't a straight-out hero story. And this takes it to an unusual place, where instead of the rise and fall, tension and climax of traditional fantasy stories, we have Katniss grappling with the inevitable tendency of power to corrupt. Although District 13 may be preferable to life under The Capital, it's a dystopian nightmare of its own. And while The Capital may make for slovenly shallow people who were content to watch children kill each other for their amusement, it also creates people capable of unfathomable beauty and kindness, and all of that is worth preserving.

In the end, Katniss and the readers are left with an indelible sense that the world is far more complex and infuriating than we can understand. Katniss suffers loss so heavy she seems incapable of moving beneath it. The readers, similarly, lose all sense of human value as we watch everything we've taken for granted get stripped away. Collins is never afraid of portraying the inevitability of death nor the fallibility of all of our beloved characters.

But the novel isn't all dark. The love story, which about halfway through Mockingjay starts to seem a bit dragged out, keeps the tone from ever getting too bleak (until the very end) and the legitimate sense of love and kindness that pervades the novel makes the depressed-but-still-hopeful ending feel deserved. As the reader, you've gone through hell along with Katniss. But Collins makes you believe in the smallness of victory of the human spirit. Power may corrupt, systems may fall, and people may die, but life goes on and has beauty.

The biggest problem for me in so many examples of Young Adult fiction is the distinct lack of consequences. In order to make an ending swallowable for a young audience, far too many writers feel the need to wrap things up neatly. I don't always mean Twilight-style, everyone is happy if wicked creepy for falling in love with a baby style endings, but it can be as simple as killing off one love interest in the hopes of making a heroin's choice for her. Or leaving her with a tangible sense of home to go back to. Katniss is not allowed these cheats; the true costs of what society and her life have come to are in full force. And this makes the story far more adult than would be easy.


In the end, the story is best summed up with a metaphor Collins herself creates for us at the end of the journey. Katniss, broken and beaten, wanted for murder and wanting for nothing, alone and hopeless, stumbles over the ruins of District 12, which was once her home. In the vast emptiness and rubble, she hears familiar footfalls. It's not Peeta, the boy who saved her life in the arena, or Gale, the childhood friend who loves her, but her sister's ugly, angry, survivor of a cat. Their whole lives together have been a battle, a battle for attention, for food, for affection. They've hated each other, hurt each other, resented each other. Yet as Katniss, the girl who was on fire, slowly nurses her burns (both physical and emotional) and gets back to health at the end of the novel, it is the love, support and protection of this embattled feline that surrounds her, and gives both her and us hope that love can survive and is worth the battle.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

By Rachael
I think there's a good subset of fans who consider Chamber of Secrets the weakest of the series. I have always been a part of this group. So it was with a mixture of determination and resolve that I approached re-reading the second book as part of my quest to re-read the whole series and record the experience.

I suppose this is where I should say, "However, on re-reading I found it was actually much better than I anticipated." To an extent I did find that, but the truth is that after re-reading Number 2, it's still my least favorite. My old stand by complaints are still there. I'm going to give them a little space here, before I move into what works.

My biggest issue in re-reading 2 is the feeling that if the whole series had been like Chamber of Secrets not only would the series have never reached the heights that it once did, it probably would have failed to even hold my interest. The action is common place, and not particularly complex. The threat isn't particularly well established (even once Hermione ends up petrified, there's not a real sense of loss. Compare that with Mr. Weasley in Book 5, and it's almost overwhelming how much better Rowling gets at upping the emotional stakes), the mystery (although mysterious) isn't that engaging, and the sense of Hogwarts, so essential to fleshing out the later books, isn't there yet. In fact, in Book 2 Harry Potter feels like any other children's fantasy book, and not like a multi-trillion dollar phenomenon totally deserving of all its hype.

In a lot of ways, Chamber just rehashes the plot structure of book one in a way that is far more formulaic than any subsequent books. Harry comes to school after fussing with the Dursleys, he settles into his life, he struggles in school, excels in Quidditch (but doesn't win), there's a threat that lurks by the edge of the action (but we're fairly certain won't appear until final exams), about halfway through half the student body turns against Harry and his friends, and in the end Dumbledore is sent away and Harry has to face the danger by himself. In fact, it's these predictable rhythms that probably helped to pull young readers in and prepare them to deal with the by-far-m0re-complicated later stories, but in re-reading it as an adult, it makes the stories feel a bit too pat.

The other problem with the book is Harry himself. In book 2, he's still a perfect, blank protagonist child. He rarely does anything for reasons other than noble ones, and although he makes mistakes, they're understandable mistakes. In other words, he doesn't feel like a real kid yet. He doesn't have his own, complicated internal thought process. He's perfectly linear. He's too one dimensional.

But... and you knew this was coming... HP 2 is also a lot better than I ever gave it credit for. It sets up plot points and themes that will only come into fruition three, four and five books later (that's right, Horcruxes, pensieves, Tom Riddle's family history, Lucius Malfoy as death eater). Rowling is already a master plotter, and the overall books' plots are already moving strong (much stronger than you could possibly know, just having read Book 2).

And even though I say that it's definitely the weakest of the books, that's not saying much. It's a lot like most children's literature, and I love children's lit. Book 2 is probably deserving of more respect than it gets, but coming before the PHENOMENAL Book 3 (my favorite, by the by) it's hard not to think of it as a stop gap before Rowling got into the good stuff.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Anticipating The Mockingjay

by Rachael

I think people who grew up when I did take for granted the idea of EVENT books. I spent most of my adolescence waiting with baited breath for one Harry Potter book or the other. Add to that the insane, giggly phenomena that is Twilight, and kids starting from the late 90s on were used to the idea that a book launch could be just as exciting as a movie premier, Jonas brother concert, or Zac Effron sighting.

But one of the major downsides (for me) of the end of Harry Potter was the end of that feeling --> to those months of build up, the endless predicting and questioning, and that desire to add a Wiki-countdown to my desktop. When Harry Potter ended, I knew I'd never again feel that so intensely.

That's still true (sorry if you thought I'd finally found a true HP replacement), but I am finding myself in anxious anticipation for a new book that I wanted to bring to everyone's attention: Mockingjay by Susan Collins.
Mockingjay is the final installment in The Hunger Games Trilogy, a book series that I have been dying to give a proper write up since we first started this book. Very, very briefly (I'll publish a full review of the first two before Mockingjay comes out on the 24th), The Hunger Games takes place in a dystopian future where North America has turned into a series of Districts (1-12) ruled fascistly by The Capital. Every year, in punishment for a rebellion 75 years ago that led to the destruction of District 13, The Capital requires each district to send a boy and a girl, ages 12-17, to The Hunger Games. The Hunger Games are battles to the death in which only one "tribute" can survive.

The books follow Katniss Everdeen, a girl who literally has no parallel for awesomeness in the world of young adult fiction (in other words, Bella Swann she's not), as she attempts to survive this world.

If none of that has hooked you, I don't blame you. It didn't hook me, and I love both young adult fiction and dystopian societies. What a description of plot can not give you is the book's sense of humor, adventure, and break neck pace, or the way that the romantic subplots (yeah, try and hold back your groaning) are actually compelling and believable, even if you don't typically swoon. The Hunger Games books are, quite simply, the best young adult fiction I've encountered since The Golden Compass, and also completely resists connections with other books. Suzanne Collins has created her own, unique, and fascinating world, and any of us would be well-put to spend the next twenty days reading the first two books in the series: The Hunger Games and Catching Fire.

Mockingjay will be out on August 24.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Harry Potter and The Sorcerer's Stone

By Rachael

Perhaps it seems redundant to you to read yet another article about Harry Potter, especially three years after the final book came out. However, one of the singular joys of being a Harry Potter fan for me has been the ability to revisit these books throughout my life and discover new and exciting things about them. I've never stopped experiencing the magical world of harry potter, even once new things stopped coming out.

Thus, when I was thinking about creating my first feature for My Bookshelf, I realized that I was already doing it: I decided this summer to (for the first time in an absurdly long time) delve back into the world JK Rowling created with a vengeance. Don't get me wrong, I've picked up the odd book or two throughout the years, but I haven't re-read them all start to finish for a long while. And in my first summer break as a teacher, I decided nothing could better fill my time.

So here's my reflections (there's no point in pretending I'm going to review these books) on Harry Potter and The Sorcerer's Stone:

For one thing, I'd forgotten how good that story is. It has an almost perfect arch, bringing Harry from clueless orphan to confused adolescent. The introductions of Ron and Hermione are surprisingly seamless as well. In fact, the most remarkable thing about the first book is realizing just how well realized this world already was. Without a single mention of either hallows or horcruxes, Rowling has effectively established the world where these life changing entities exist, but has filtered it through the severely limited understanding of the 11 year old protagonist who leads the books.

I'm not interested in recounting the plot; between the movies, books, and overall popular culture phenomenon-ness of Harry Potter, you either already know the plot or don't care. And I'm not super involved in the themes yet (those will almost certainly come up later). What I'm most amazed at in re-reading the first book is the feeling of possibility, an in feeling almost overwhelmed by how well these books turned out. Although, as I've said, I actually think the inaugural effort is very good and that retrospectively speaking its easy to see the characterization, thematic control, and plotting that would come to define Harry Potter as a series, it's also just as easy to see that this book could have been nothing. I stare at the goofy cover art, now as dear to me as a beloved childhood toy, and think, "This doesn't scream multi-billion dollars." Or I read the adorably sincere dedication from Rowling to her daughter and the other two women who helped her along the way, and I realize how tenous it all was.

It all fills me with an enormous sense of... kizmet, I guess. And in a way it all ties back into Dumbledore's final speech about how Choice, not Destiny determines our Fate. These books, in my opinion, took the right choices every step of the way.

Not every book reflection is going to be so laudatory, but the first book really just feels like this time capsule back to the moment when I first felt these books in my hands. I certainly didn't know that I was starting an obsession that would come to define some of the most important moments in my life, that would be my consolation in the tough times, and a favorite recreation during the good times. It was just a present. On my 11th birthday, I opened the front cover to a handwritten inscription that said, "Rachael- if there was ever a movie version of this, we could see you playing Hermione. Love you." And I remember being OFFENDED, while reading, to think that I could play this annoying, shrewish little girl. But much like Ronald Weasley, I came to love her, and the books that contained her, in all their poofy-haired, magical glory.

Welcome

Hello Readers (ooh, that works both ways!),

Welcome to My Bookshelf. This is the newest site to join the My Entertainment World family. We started with My TV, expanded with My Theatre and recently forayed into My Sports Stadium and My Cinema. With thousands of Facebook fans, hundreds of readers each day and a combined writing staff of eight educated enthusiasts, My Entertainment World could not be more excited to embark on the world of literature.

Stay tuned for our first article.