Friday, October 27, 2023

don't be derivative

The Fairytale Life of Dorothy Gale by Virginia Kantra
Genre: fiction
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Review: My loyal readers will know that I'm typically wary of any book that takes an old favorite and attempts to transpose it on the modern-day.  However, I trusted Virginia Kantra with Meg & Jo, and was not disappointed, so I opted to take the plunge with her again as she takes on the fruits of L. Frank Baum's imagination.

This time, my own failure to read the publisher's description closely got me into trouble.  The Fairytale Life of Dorothy Gale is not described as a "modern retelling" of anything, but I assume that it was (perhaps not unfairly), and was therefore disappointed that, aside from the fact that Dorothy lived in Kansas with her Auntie Em and Uncle Henry, and some cleverly punny character names, there really isn't much relation between this book and either Baum's book, or the movie based on it.

That being the case, I wish Kantra hadn't tied her book to Oz at all.  This is an excellent book on it's own, and doesn't need to be propped up by allusions to anyone else's work.  Change the names of the characters, and Kantra has given us something original and well-written.  Tied to such a cultural touchstone, however, fans are bound to be disappointed.

ps. Oz devotees who haven't read Finding Dorothy must do so, as soon as possible.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

if i could turn back time

Cassandra in Reverse by Holly Smale
Genre: fiction
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: An interesting take on the time travel/live your life again trope, with Cassandra discovering the ability to rewind parts of her life to do again.  Cassandra is a great character, and I immediately sympathized with her and rooted for her.  But, I had a couple of issues with this book:
  1. The title is misleading.  Cassandra is not actually living her life in reverse.  Rather, she has the ability to turn back time and relive certain parts of her life.  Cassandra Rewinds might have been a better choice.
  2. Are we seriously expected to believe that no-one in Cassandra's life understood that she's on the autism spectrum?  It's books like this that make me wish I were an editor.  If I'd seen the manuscript, I would have suggested some seriously reworking of this point.  To be clear, I'm not objecting to Cassandra being on the autism spectrum, but rather that a major piece of the plot seems to hinge on neither she nor anyone in her life recognizing it.  I would have advised making it part of the plot from the beginning, rather than a mystery that has to be solved for Cassandra's life to make sense.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Monday, July 17, 2023

posthumously outed

If We're Being Honest by Cat Shook
Genre: fiction
Rating: 3.5 stars (out of 5)
Review: Cat Shook gives us a different take on "coming out" as a beloved grandfather is outed at his funeral by his best friend and long-term lover.  Here, we don't learn about the grandfather's struggle or how his relationships with his family change after the revelation, but how his wife, children, and grandchildren process the news, and how it makes them reflect on their own lives.  A well-done picture of grief and the celebration of a life, even one that wasn't what everyone thought.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

good on its own

The Circus Train by Amita Parikh
Genre: historical fiction
Rating: 3.5 stars (out of 5)
Review: This book has been hailed as a cross between The Night Circus and Water for Elephants, but I have to say, aside from all being about circuses, they don't have that much in common.  The Circus Train has much to offer, but I can't say it's in the same league as either of the two books to which it is compared.

Considering this book on its own merits, though, is much more flattering.  Beginning before WWII, Parikh weaves a story of a circus that might or might include actual magic, and the illusionist (Theo) and his daughter (Lena), who had polio as a baby and now uses a wheelchair.  There's a lot of build-up and character establishing, but tensions build as WWII heats up, and the story really gets going when things explode between Theo and the circus owner.  Theo and his protégé (Alexandre) are sent to Theresienstadt and forced to perform for the Nazi guards in their guests.  Meanwhile, Lena, believing both to be dead, makes her way to England in the hopes of finding her former governess, at which point the real question becomes, will Lena and her father and Alexandre ever be reunited?

Parikh draws her characters well, and her protagonists will all be found sympathetic and writing brings the setting vividly to life.  And yet, I still felt let-down by the marketing hype.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Wednesday, May 3, 2023

a fitting end

Somebody's Fool by Richard Russo
Genre: fiction
Rating: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
Review: Donald "Sully" Sullivan may have died in the 2nd book of the North Bath trilogy, but he proves that he was always larger than life by remaining the driving force in the lives of those he left behind.  However, his death does allow several characters who were on the sidelines before to take center stage, including: Sully's loyal sidekick, Rub; the chief of police, Doug Raymer; Sully's longtime paramour, Ruth, and her daughter and granddaughter; and especially Sully's son, Peter.  Russo writes his characters with warmth, bringing to life their struggles and successes as they navigate a changing world and ultimately find hope as they learn to rely on and help each other.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

his side

Spare by Prince Harry
Genre: memoir
Rating: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
Review: If Prince Harry had to boil this book down into one sentence, I expect it would be, "I will remain devoted to my mother forever, and I despise the paparazzi to the very core of my being."  That would be an accurate description of this book, but it does leave a lot out.

Harry talks about his education (not distinguished), his relationship with his brother and father (alternately loving and heartbreakingly cruel), his time in the military (action-packed), his time spent in Africa and hte charitable work it led to (inspiring), his relationship with his grandmother (close), and much more.

As much as Diana and the paparazzi dominate the book, the writing really comes alive when Harry departs from these topics.  One example is when he talks about the military.  The part that really shines is less his descriptions of his time in war zones, and more his thoughts about what being in the military mean to him, and his frustration that his title prevented him from seeing much action.  The narrative also comes alive when Harry describes meeting and falling in love with Meghan, who, of course, becomes another major theme in the latter half of the book.

But surrounding all that is Harry's loathing of the paparazzi, and he doesn't mince words about it.  He details story after story that come out in the British tabloids (and even some more reputable news outlets) that are just plain lies, recounts his battles with the palace about how to respond to them, and suggests more than once that certain people within the palace are feeing information to the press.  The palace's unwavering police of not responding, even to the tabloid stories that were clearly untrue, and his suspictions about a leak in the inner circle, led to a major breach between Harry and Charles and William.

Of course, we have only Harry's side of the story here, and as Goethe tells us, "One man's word is no man's word; we should quietly hear both sides."  But the palace continues its policy of silence, and it's unlikely that any further developments will happen quietly.  So we have to take Harry's word for it, for now, which is very easy to do after reading this candid memoir.

Thursday, February 23, 2023

stand still

Beyond That, the Sea by Laura Spence-Ash
Genre: historical fiction
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Review: Children who were sent to the British countryside during the Blitz were able to come when it seemed like the nightly airstrikes were over.  Children who were sent to America may have had to stay for the duration of the war.  Some were lucky, like Beatrix, who became a true part of the Gregory family for the five years she lived with them.  This section of the book is engaging and heartwarming.

Unfortunately, once Bea leaves the Gregory family, though, the narrative falters.  Instead of being continuous, the story leaps through the next 30 years, landing only in 1951, 1960-1965, and, in an Epilogue, 1977.  Although this satisfies a reader's desire to find out what happen's next in the life of a good character (which Bea is), the jumping around causes us to lose our connection with Bea.

Still, Spence-Ash's writing is solid and the foundation that is set up in the first part of the book is strong enough to carry us through to a satisfying, if not altogether unexpected ending.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Tuesday, February 7, 2023

stick to the fictional

Up With the Sun by Thomas Mallon
Rating: 3 stars (out of 5)
Genre: historical fiction
Review: Mallon, author of such previous gems as Bandbox and Dewey Defeats Truman, seems to be confusing writing with name-dropping lately.  In his loosely connected Republican Apologist trilogy, the names are members of the Nixon, Reagan, and Bush 43 administrations.  Here, the names are from show business in the 1950s-1970s.  And while I appreciate that one of the names he drops is that of my own cousin, The Last of the Red Hot Mamas, Sophie Tucker, I know that most people these days have never heard of her, nor of many of the other players who come and go through this book.

The story centers around the life and murder of Dick Kallman, a never-star of stage and screen, who most people have also never heard of, and, harsh as it sounds to say this, probably won't care much about.  Mallon portrays him as a shallow, callow, unethical, and more to the point for the main character of a novel, uninteresting.

The more interesting character is the purely fictional Matt Liannetto, who knew Dick sporadically through his acting career, and who was one of the last people to see him alive.  Through him, we see the both the law and the order aspect of bringing Dick's killers to justice, which is somewhat compelling, in a macabre way.  Matt himself is just a more interesting character, and I wish Mallon had just written a book about him, and made Dick Kallman a footnote to his story.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.

Saturday, January 21, 2023

everyone needs a helping tentacle sometimes

Remarkably Bright Creatures
 by Shelby Van Pelt
Rating: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
Genre: fiction
Review: As is the case in most small towns, everybody who lives in Sowell Bay, Washington knows at least a little about everyone else who lives in town.  And everybody knows that Tova Sullivan's son, Erik, died when he was 18, but nobody quite knows how or why, except that he was on his boat, and many suspect that he took his own life.  Tova never believed that, though, and 30 years later, she has no more answers than she did the day he died.

Marcellus knows a little bit about what happened to Erik, or at least where his body is.  But Marcellus is a Giant Pacific Octopus, and can't exactly share that information.  He is, as the label by his tank reads, a remarkably bright creature, and prone to escaping from his tank.  When Tova finds him stuck in a tangle of electrical cords, she helps him back in his tank, and a friendship is formed.

Cameron has never had good luck.  His mother abandoned him when he was nine, and although his aunt gave him a loving home, he's never been able to live up to his potential.  When a class ring and a photo suggest that wealthy real estate developer Simon Brinks is his father, he heads to Sowell Bay to find out. 

Chapters go back and forth among these three characters (and yes, Marcellus is obviously the best narrator).  Cameron's arrival in town sets off a chain of events that will connect the three characters, and provide some closure for all of them.  The way their stories come together will not be a surprise for most readers, but the journey with these characters is so pleasurable, that no-one will mind the predictable ending.  Readers will be rooting for each character to find their own kind of happiness, and will appreciate the way they do.

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

viven las niñas

The Night Travelers by Armando Lucas Correa
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: historical fiction
Review: Usually, when I put a book down and pick it up and put it down and pick it up, it means that I'm struggling to get through it.  That was not the case here.  Rather, it meant that I wanted to sit with each few chapters before moving on.  The book somewhat lends itself to this approach, as each chapter is a vignette in a character's life, before jumping several months or years in time.  Most often, we jump forward, but in the first section, the narrative jumps both forward and back to tell the story of a romance and its consequences.  Time moves non-linearly in the last section as well, but in that case, it serves to dish up a few big reveals, and so makes sense.  I couldn't quite figure out the reasoning behind the jumping around in the first section.

This is a compelling story, exploring the bond between mothers and daughters, the sacrifices a mother might make to save her daughter, and a daughter coming to understand those sacrifices as an adult.  Though the writing is uneven in some places, overall the story flows from mother to daughter, from one year to the next, connecting generations through time and space.

FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.