Fantasy: “Graceling” and “Fire”, both by Kristin Cashore

I absolutely loved these books; they sucked me right into their world and I didn’t really ever want to leave. (A third book is being written…. Wahoo.)

A world where people have “talents” or “graces.”

Graceling: a novel of growing up, of standing one’s ground, of discovering the hidden layers, of coming to know oneself.

Fire: a different sort of animal, a story of someone already grown but not always allowed to grow, already knowing oneself, but coming to better know others.

Lyrically written, they both made me cry at points. They both made me yearn.

Note: Fire is a prequel but I’d say DEFINITELY read it second as it gives away something that you want to figure out more slowly as you read Graceling.

À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for November.

Bought:

  • Magic in the Shadows, by Devon Monk*
  • Graceling, by Kristin Cashore*
  • The Gathering Storm, by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson*
  • Hold Still, by Nina LaCour*
  • Fire, by Kristin Cashore†
  • Prophecy of the Sisters, by Michelle Zink
  • The English American, by Alison Larkin
  • The Traveler, by John Twelve Hawks

Read:
  • Toast, by Nigel Slater
  • Magic in the Shadows, by Devon Monk
  • Graceling, by Kristin Cashore
  • Fire, by Kristin Cashore
  • Catching Fire, by Suzanne Collins
  • The English American, by Alison Larkin
  • Normal People Don’t Live Like This, by Dylan Landis
  • The Traveler, by John Twelve Hawks
  • Is Belief in God Good, Bad or Irrelevant?, by Preston Jones and Greg Graffin

*Bought via 20% off coupon on National Bookstore Day!!
†30% off coupon

À la Nick Hornby, books in/books out for October.

Bought:

  • The five books I bought in Iowa!
  • The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest, by Stieg Larsson (book 3!!!)
  • Toast, by Nigel Slater

Read:
  • Sweep 12: Eclipse, by Cate Tiernan (cathy’s)
  • Sweep 13: Reckoning, by Cate Tiernan (library)
  • Sweep 14: Full Circle, by Cate Tiernan (cathy’s)
  • Midnighters 2: Touching Darkness, by Scott Westerfeld (library)
  • Sweep 15: Night’s Child, by Cate Tiernan (library)
  • The White Darkness, by Geraldine McCaughrean
  • Midnighters 3: Blue Noon, by Scott Westerfeld (library)
  • Liar, by Justine Larbalestier
  • Even Money, by Dick Francis (and Felix Francis) (iphone/kindle)
  • Ravens, by George Dawes Green (library)
  • Mother of Storms, by John Barnes (anne’s)
  • The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest, by Stieg Larsson

Best of July

The best movie I saw in July was Hurt Locker. I’ve seen it three times so far. I would love to see it again.

The best book I read in July was “The Death of Sweet Mister” by Daniel Woodrell. It really took my breath away.

The best gig I went to in July was EMPTY ORCHESTRA. They are great and I highly recommend you buy tickets if they come through your town.

My favorite tunes in July were (you guessed it) all from Empty Orchestra. And Ryan Auffenberg singing “Sellout” live. I would like to see him live.

Seduced by Prairie Lights.

You may have heard about a wee lil roadtrip to Iowa we took on Friday. One of just several reasons (PIE SHAKES. PIE. IN A SHAKE.) to go to Iowa City was to hit up this great bookstore, Prairie Lights, recommended by one of my professors. I haven’t been buying books at all in my unemployed state (borrowing! from various friends AND the library!) so I had given myself a $100 budget for the event. (I actually came out $10 under! Yay me! Aren’t you proud of me for being so restrained?!?!)

  • “The Flying Troutmans”, by Miriam Toews – the first cople pages sucked me in. You may remember me reading another book by her a couple years ago.
  • “The Turtle Catcher” by Nicole Helget – another writer I’ve read before (you can search for Helget on this old page) and a Minnesotan. I’m interested to see what her fiction is like.
  • “Speak” by Laurie Halse Anderson – a YA selection. First few pages seem very intense. On a side note: I don’t think it’s a great decision to house the YA downstairs in what primarily looks like a (tiny, little wee) kids’ playroom. I would have liked to see this section upstairs, maybe near the fantasy/sci fi section would be a good spot.
  • “Normal People Don’t Live Like This” Dylan Landis – a short story collection about young girls. Thanks again to Betsy Crane for getting me on the short story bandwagon these last few years. So pleasing sometimes to just be able to read a story and not have to set your book down and come back to it.
  • “College Girl” by Patricia Weitz – Read a few pages. Seems a bit like Frankie Landau-Banks and a bit chic-lit-y and I really think I’m going to like it.

I can’t wait to get readin’! After I finish some homework, that is…

Best of June

The best movie I saw in June was probably “Moon” but my favorite movie in June was “Away We Go”.

The best book I read in June was “Motherless Brooklyn” by Jonathan Lethem. Fantastic! I also really liked the short story collection “Emerald City” by Jennifer Egan.

The best gig I went to in June had to be a tie between Metric and Telekinesis!!! Being that I haven’t been going to shows much at all this year, I wish I could remember more about those evenings! But hello June was a long time ago. I know we were standing at the back of the Metro for Metric and it was hot and sweaty but the sounds were great. Oddly I can’t even remember who I went to Telekinesis with. Maybe I was drunk.

My favorite tunes in June were from “Back & Fourth” Pete Yorn‘s awesome, outstanding, lovely latest album. Gee, I guess I liked it.

Fiction: The Death of Sweet Mister, by Daniel Woodrell

Woodrell’s later book “Winter’s Bone” was one of my very favorite books read in 2007 and I’ve finally gotten around to reading one of his earlier works.

This novel has a similar focus on a downtrodden, lonely teen in a harsh poverty-struck landscape. But this book is a LOT creepier than Winter’s Bone and you are not (at all) left with the same sense of hope. That’s not a denigration / more of a gentle warning.

Lovely lyrical rhythm to his writing. But woah to come to that end…

Nonfiction: In Defense of Food; An Eater’s Manifesto, by Michael Pollan

Some of this book is entertaining, some of it’s really impassioned about things I have a hard time feeling much oomph about, and overall it just really, REALLY made me want to eat a crapload of sugar. Which was not the authorial intent. 🙂

It was interesting and thoughtful, on one hand. On the other, isn’t it a little sickening how intensely we insist on (over)analyzing each and every choice we make in every aspect of our lives these days? Sometimes a girl’s just gotta LIVE, ya know.

Fiction: Vanity Fair, by William Makepeace Thackeray

Our challenge book for July and what a behemoth it was. As DadReaction described it: “Some gremlin keeps adding chapters to this sucker, so no matter how much I read there’s still more to go. and more, and more, and more…”

It’s weird how what we all remember / socially think / this book to be about is Becky Sharp yet in fact she disappears for chapters at a time, as sometimes do Dobbin and Amelia as well. (You could easily abridge about several hundred pages out of this thing and lose nothing of the main plot lines.) There are passages about which members of society are at a party that read as thrillingly as the genealogical sections of the bible.

GirlReaction: The problem with most of the older (in terms of when they were published!) books we’ve read this year is insipid heroines. I just get bored by the helpless female (Amelia) and the crafty female (Becky) is just as one-dimensional in her own way (although a bit more entertaining). I sometimes feel that as you read “old classics” you can pick out a bit of WHY they were so renowned in their time (or shortly afterward) but it seems very old hat now (i.e., the things that were original about them don’t seem original if you happen to have read their (many, and later) imitators first).

DadReaction: Reminded of what Samuel Johnson said of Paradise Lost: everyone can see its value, but no one ever wished it longer. Amen. Becky, the one live wire, keeps vanishing–didn’t you think it would be more about her? And the old men–Sedley and Osborne–are just monsters!! It’s like suddenly you’re in a Eugene O’Neil play. Very much an 18th century feel to the book, though. More like Tom Jones than, say, Great Expectations. Names too are tres 18th siecle: e.g., Castlemouldy. Dobbin’s a complete idiot.