Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts

Friday, October 4, 2024

What Was Left of Her A Story of Ghosts by Victoria Hattersley; Whirl of Birds Short Stories by Liana Vraijitoru Andreasen

 What Was Left of Her A Story of Ghosts by Victoria Hattersley; Whirl of Birds Short Stories by Liana Vraijitoru Andreasen 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews


What Was Left of Her A Story of Ghosts by Victoria Hattersley 

This is a summary of my review. The full review is on LitPick.

What Was Left of Her is very reminiscent of the old Gothic novels like Jane Eyre or Rebecca. It explores the outer atmosphere built on suspenseful austerity and the inner psychology of the troubled people within.

Two sisters, Cassie and Alex reunite after the death of their Aunt Lucie. While going through her house, the two recount their troubled and disturbed childhood with the loving but haunted aunt who raised them and their developmentally disabled potentially sociopathic cousin, Bella. While they remain in Lucie’s coastal home, strange things start happening. Cassie sees someone out of the corner of their eye, hears whispers, and things are mislaid. She is beginning to wonder if maybe Bella who was believed to have disappeared might still be alive. 

The characters inside are troubled miserable souls notably Cassie and Bella. Cassie is a recovering alcoholic with a fragmented memory. It’s hard to tell whether the ghosts are real and surround her or whether they are in her mind. 

Even though Bella is absent through most of the book, she is still very much in the family’s mind and consciousness. She was a seriously troubled woman who may not have been physically capable of controlling herself but also may have been and did not care. The description of her could go either way and is only provided by third person accounts from Cassie and Alex. 

The cousins' personalities and actions merge until it’s hard to tell how much of Cassie’s memories are accurate, whether they were things that Bella did or whether Cassie was projecting and who was haunting who.


Whirl of Birds: Short Stories by Liana Vraijitoru Andreasen 

This review is also on Reedsy Discovery.

Liana Vraijitoru Andreasen’s anthology Whirl of Birds Short Stories is an extremely difficult book that reveals complex narratives and themes.

It captures the abstract, the allegorical, the symbolic, and the metaphorical and turns them into understandable commentaries on the characters themselves and the societies in which they and the Reader inhabit. It's a book that isn't always easy to understand but it's impossible to get out of your mind.

The best stories are: 

“The Puppet Show”-This is a very creepy story that takes the whole “we are mere puppets on a string” metaphor literally. Kids enjoy a puppet show particularly the ongoing adventures of Princess Gina who gets in various cliffhangers that put her in peril. 

This is a very surreal short story that implies a theme of possessing someone's talent and soul. It's not a coincidence that Gina the Puppet shares the same name as Gina, who works for the puppet show and narrates the adventures. In the Puppeteer’s eyes, both Ginas are one and the same and he believes that in owning one, he has control of the other.

He controls Gina who is a brilliant performer and storyteller and tries to manipulate circumstances around her. He invites various male performers to play the character, Radu, to join them almost as though to test her fidelity. Each time they commit transgressions, the men disappear leaving Gina more isolated and dependent on the Puppeteer. 

Significantly, there are three men therefore three tests. Three is a magical number that appears often in fairy tales, like the kind of stories that the Ginas star in. The Puppeteer is writing his own story and controlling the narrative of Gina's life. He treats the human Gina like a character that does whatever he wants them to. She has no story beyond the one that he created for her.

The final pages show both the end of the Puppet Show and Gina's relationship with the Puppeteer. It depicts that the puppeteer can't control everything, that he is as much a pawn, a puppet, in larger games and larger stories that surround him. He can't control changing tastes, that children are always looking for the next big thing and once they find it, they throw out the old thing. He can't control when people get lives of their own and move on and away from him, in effect changing the plot. 

He especially can't control the outside world, when revolutions and violence can occur. Instead, he is left alone with his incomplete story and no one that cares or is even interested enough to listen to it.

“Stolen Light”-This story uses an ominous natural phenomenon as a metaphor for the family observing it. Jose Angel, a young boy, sees a mysterious cloud approaching Las Vegas. Terrified, many have theories but the boy has only certain things in mind. If the world is ending, he wants to get some nagging questions answered about his missing father.

What is particularly compelling and frustrating is the lack of answers that this story provides leaving events ambiguous. There are no definite answers to what the cloud is. In fact the characters' speculations say more about themselves than they do about the phenomena itself. 

Some say the cloud is a government experiment and it's a conspiracy. Others say that it's an impending alien invasion. Still others think that it's the Biblical End of Days. They act how most people would in such a situation. They make their own conclusions in the face of no answers or ones that they disagree with.

Jose Angel is like many teens. He wants his own life. He wants to satisfy those urges that he has for companionship and belonging. He is less concerned with the thing in the sky than he is with the things that are troubling his mind.

Among those questions are those about his father. He asked his mother about him and she gave non-answers which left him as confused as everyone else is about the cloud. Then conveniently an encounter might provide a solution but it only raises more questions and potentially puts Jose Angel in danger.

This story demonstrates how our thoughts can become cloudy with our own questions and speculation. We might get an answer but it may not be what we expected or liked. Sometimes it leads to more questions and makes things even cloudier.

“Whirl of Birds”-Birds usually represent color, flight, independence, and freedom. But sometimes they can also represent dread, violence, scavengers, predators, and death. This is what happens as Bianca is on a drive and is pursued by a very persistent flock of birds that keep following her towards an unpleasant encounter. 

The story is reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds and Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven” as the birds hover around her. Bianca isn’t frightened of the birds. In fact she is enchanted by them and her own thoughts. She wonders where they come from and where they are going. She sees meaning in the sky but can’t yet articulate what it is. 

Her thoughts also drift towards various names like “Steve,” “Andy,” and “Sam.” We are not told of her specific relationships with these men though we can make inferences based on a phone call with Andy and that Sam enters her mind the most but dissipates upon encountering a car crash. These names suggest connections but quite possibly long gone ones of people who were once important to her but now no longer are. They flew away from her mind as she was driving down the road watching birds fly towards her. 

While the birds and Bianca’s thoughts suggest a liberating experience, there is something else that is at play. They could just as easily be symbolic of something more sinister. The birds are vultures, carrion eaters, usually associated with death. They circle over her car like they are waiting for something. Bianca, whose name by the way means “white” or “pale,” drives along with them, almost feeling spiritual and emotionally connected with them. It could very well be that she is symbolic of “Death on a Pale Horse” and it doesn’t care who the people around them are. They are just names that will come to an end soon, not people with experiences, stories. Her history with them doesn’t matter because it will end as all things do.

There is an eerie climactic encounter with an unnamed woman where once again we are told very little about which also parallels “Bianca and the birds as death” symbol. There is no personal connection and they are uncertain and afraid of each other. Bianca’s appearance frightens the woman but the story seems to apply that she is who Bianca is there for. She may resist but she will face Bianca, the birds, and death no matter what. 

“Mahogany”-This story is almost a modern day adaptation of the Greek myth, “Pygmalion and Galatea” in which a sculptor falls in love with his creation but this puts some commentary of modern life to the tale. 

Al, a woodcarver, is not a lonely bachelor like his ancient counterpart. In fact he has a nagging wife and disinterested kids. He has a life that Pygmalion might have envied of people surrounding him and he may have at one time loved. But life got in the way, voices were raised, comments were ridiculed, and arguments broke out. A family that might have been close once is disconnected from each other. They share a last name and a roof over their heads but that’s it. There is nothing but noise, misery, and despair. Al can only find silence and acceptance through his art.

Despite his assurances that he is not having an affair, Al is clearly in love: with his own creation. He carves a beautiful woman out of mahogany. This is someone who will not belittle, or disagree with him, will treat him well, and that can look, act, and say anything he wants. Like the puppeteer with Princess Gina, he has complete ownership of her. She is a fantasy, a story and it’s one in which he can create. 

However unlike the Puppeteer and Pygmalion, it’s a story that he would rather keep for himself. The Mahogany Figure represents the ultimate beauty represented in art. She can never be captured or possessed and certainly never be owned. In Al’s mind, he doesn’t want his carving to come to life, grow old, and become shrill, cold, and unloving. He wants to preserve her as she is, forever young, forever beautiful, forever innocent. 

“Driving With Sara”-This is a haunting story about age and loneliness and how desperate people sometimes do desperate things to make connections. The Narrator is an old woman who is irritated with her pestering daughter and diminishing life so she makes a connection with a stranger named Sara.

The Narrator realizes that her life is not what it was. It is breaking apart piece by piece from interests, to people that she once knew, to pets. She is seeing parts of her identity move away one by one. What is particularly sad and memorable about it, is that it is not from an illness like Alzheimer’s. These actions are caused by a daughter who thinks that she knows best and infantilizes her mother. The attention only seeks to isolate her and make her feel lonely. 

The Narrator’s connection to Sara is one of mutual strangers but she thinks that it gives her the love and support that she is looking for from her daughter. This woman is delusional but her mind is so troubled and traumatized that she can’t tell the difference between what is true and what she imagines about Sara.

The irony of Sara’s appearance is a grotesque and dark comic one that seems to put a fatalistic punch line to this poor woman’s life. In being unable to truly bond with her daughter, the Narrator seeks another very unhealthy and troubling bond with someone who is also rejecting her in her own way. Rather than acknowledging that, the Narrator would rather remain in this state than admit what is painfully true. 

“The Return”-Loneliness is also the culprit in this story of a father communicating with his daughter by phone. Unlike The Narrator and her mother who live a stifling isolating experience which leaves the mother longing for a connection that makes her feel less confined and lonely, Melvin’s relationship with his daughter, Ella, is already isolated. 

Melvin projects an image of a kind and efficient worker, but he is starting to slow down. His work is less noticeable and he is distracted. He slowly loses confidence and eventually his placement at work. As long as he had a role at the office, he was known but as it diminishes, he is made redundant, faceless, someone easily discarded. The job has deprived him of his humanity and left him alone and disenchanted with the outside world.

His home life is equally isolated. His wife is dead and he is separated from his daughter by distance. They only communicate by phone which Melvin hates. The results are that Melvin is desensitized and disconnected from the life around him. He is physically cut off from others, so mentally is as well.

He becomes involved with an experiment involving rats. This experiment is foreshadowed when he tells a disturbed Ella a story about rats committing violent actions out of love and respect. In his loneliness, he is personifying human interaction with animals. The things that he wants: love, respect, understanding, empathy are things that he believes that he sees in rodents. This isolation, unmet longing, and the desperate need to have those longings met cause him to go to extreme means to get them. Those means present a horrible lasting impression on Ella and the Reader.

“What Lingers”-This story personalizes one of the most historic tragedies by giving us two characters who experienced it and share an intuitive connection because of it. 

At first we aren’t told where Alex and Katya  are and what disaster has befallen them. There are hints with words like “radiation,” and references to the odd sky color and opening valves. The clues start piling up until proper names like “Pripyat” and “Three Mile Island” enter. Then it becomes more apparent what is going on and what the characters are experiencing. It’s a universal thing. No matter what the tragedy is, people who are associated with such an event will always feel connected to it.

Besides giving clues for the Reader to guess where they are, this approach demonstrates the humanity that such tragedies bring. It doesn’t matter when or where they are, but those who have been through them will share a bond of mutual survivors. It creates links of kinship that go beyond friends and family. 

Alex and Katya’s link is explored in an intuitive and possibly psychic manner. They are brought together by this tragedy and their relationship. Even though they are in another place, they recognize each other as someone who understands and has been through the ordeal. They reach beyond that memory and are able to connect on a more personal level. 

“Valley of the Horse”-This story presents an ominous energy found in nature and how it parallels grief. Zak is haunted by his various interactions with a judge and a dying horse on his way to and from work. 

Judge Ivy and the horse seem to be cut off from the edge of the world. Zak pities the horse who is clearly suffering and Ivy who can do nothing but watch her die. Their interactions run the gamut between casual, revulsion, indifferent, sympathy, anger, depression, defiance, and ultimately acceptance. Ivy is a man who wants to believe that he is doing his best for his horse and wants to be with her during his painful experience. He doesn’t want to hasten it, but suffer through it with her.

Zak is drawn to this man because he recently suffered the loss of his partner, April. Even though he is with someone else, his thoughts of April never diminished. Ivy and the horse are constant reminders of the person that he lost and the guilt that he felt for things that he did and didn’t do with April. In some ways, Zak is reliving his own experiences including the life that he didn’t have with her. Zak and Ivy are parallels in loss and the emotions that are associated with it.

One of the most telling moments is when Zak rages at Ivy and a crowd gathered around the horse. Since Ivy is a judge, Zak is calling him out on his treatment of the horse and how he can let her suffer. It’s a bit heavy handed, but he is also comparing Ivy to God, who is often described as a judge on why April died as well. He wants to know why she died and why Zak didn’t recognize the signs to help her until it was too late. He wants to know why he, like Ivy, just watched her suffer instead of helping her. 

“Exorcism”-The title suggests one thing but the text of this story tells something else. At first it appears that Mrs. Mitchell is the titular exorcist and she is there to extract a demon from Tony Reyes, a young man. That is not what happens. 

What we are given instead is a character study of a young boy through the perspectives of his father and his English teacher. They both share memories of Tony as they knew him. Mrs. Mitchell saw a bright, polite student who answered questions and had a deep understanding of literature. His father saw his son who was a happy jokester but became troubled, quiet, and withdrawn as though he were possessed. 

Senor Reyes’ descriptions of Tony’s subsequent behavior are eerie as it details a teenager who might be losing his grip with reality and sanity. He is troubled by voices and destructive thoughts. It’s a traumatic nightmare told from the point of view of an anguished parent wanting to take the pain away from his child but who is helpless with not knowing what it was.

It’s left purposely ambiguous whether or not Tony was possessed, showing signs of schizophrenia or depression, or was just simply acting out as a troubled teen. All that is known is that he is gone, was not the same person that he was before, and has left behind two authority figures who bonded with him but could not understand what he was going through. They had a limited frame of reference based on their own associations and experiences and were unable to communicate with Tony or find helpful solutions that may have saved him. Instead, they are left wondering why. 

“At Taft Point”-This story is reminiscent of Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” in that it demonstrates the futility of blind obedience and never questioning what one knows isn’t right.

A group of tourists visit Taft Point. At first it seems like a pleasant visit to nature. It’s beautiful and imposing. There is a deep spiritual connection as the visitors feel God’s presence in the view around them. It's almost a meditative but disconcerting experience. 

There are hints that not is as it seems within the group. The women are dressed alike with long skirts and braids. There are a lot of children. They speak often of God and their leader gives a speech filled with metaphor and generalities but no specifics about the group or their motives. It’s not outright scary but it may put the Reader at a distinct unease that there is something that is off about these people. 

As the characters talk to each other, their reason for being there and motivation becomes clear. It is a terrifying experience not just because of what is being done but the willingness of the people to do it. There is a slight bait and switch as one of the group tries to disobey and one expects that those closest to them would rally to their side. Instead, they ally with the rest of the group, not the outsider leaving them to their fate as a final decision is made. These people are so driven by their leader’s view that they lost their free will and are willing to follow him to commit atrocities. 

This blind obedience is so prevalent in society today whether it’s through religion, politics, nationalism, philosophy, and any group that provides thought and identity. If one is so drawn to the group, they will surrender everything: friends, families, beliefs, faith, laws, work, country, relationship, money, intelligence, standards, morals, ethics, common sense, and finally their own lives just to be a part of it. The less they question and research only the sources that they are told to, the more likely they will surrender everything to someone who will profit off of them and end their lives rather than be seen as anything less than a deity. 

“Rabbit in the Hat”-One thing that this anthology has is an ongoing theme of people using their art to make their voices heard. This is particularly scene in this story of Bill Morris, who has worked in a museum for over 40 years and has shown artistic talent himself. His closest friends and colleagues attend an exhibition of his work. 

Many of the people use their frames of reference on how they see Morris: as a quiet unassuming single man that had been just there in their lives, faded into the background. They didn’t know him. They only knew what they saw in him. His real self is explained through his art.

Morris’ art covers three rooms. The first two are more ordinary, landscapes, still life. They represent the exterior. A man who quietly observed everything around them and was able to capture it. The words that no one heard, the man that no one saw showed them the outside world that he saw.

The third room explores a darker more subterranean consciousness inside Morris, one that is honest, naked, violent, sexy, and more real than what they had previously known. They are forced to confront their own secrets, inner lives, thoughts, and insecurities and lay them bare. It is a joke, maybe, but it is also a chance for Morris and the other characters to face their inner truths and authentic selves. 

“Sound Waves”-Another ongoing theme in this anthology is whether forms of communication brings us together or drives us apart. This one explores the power of changing technology as seen through radio. A spooky night at a radio program. DJ Charlie Tainter receives a mysterious phone call that causes his colleagues to question the man and where he comes from.

The entire setting is in the radio station during the program so it’s  a compact and limiting environment. Charlie and his co-workers can only go by the voice on the radio, the Internet, and Charlie himself to piece together what they are given. Charlie says one thing. The caller says another. The Internet says yet another. The accounts don’t tell a complete story instead it’s all accusation, denial, and information that is later discredited. It’s hard to tell what the truth really is and if the characters don’t know, the Reader certainly doesn’t. We are left to our own conclusions.

 It seems that this device, radio, like other technological marvels is created to be a source of communication. Unfortunately, it can only communicate so much. Fittingly, another form of communication is used, the Internet. Both can create and distort sound and images. Both can tell you what’s considered good or bad, right or wrong and shape views. They provide information as it is given not necessarily what is true but what people want to believe. Because of that, we don’t know what to believe.

A possibility is presented in the final pages, one that transcends space and time and relies more on imagination than information. It calls for the characters and Readers to think beyond what is laid out in front of them and look for possibilities that are beyond what they are told. Words, news, voices, information can be altered and subjected to reinterpretation. When faced with that information, a person should weigh their own options and look inward for what they perceive and believe. 





Sunday, May 28, 2023

New Book Alert: Arabesque by Amy Shomshak; Tres Magnifique Story of Friendship and Dance in Paris

 

New Book Alert: Arabesque by Amy Shomshak; Tres Magnifique Story of Friendship and Dance in Paris

By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: Of all the subjects that I thought that I would read this year, I did not expect one of them to be ballet. This month, I am reviewing not one but two books about ballet and they couldn't be more different. The first, Music Boxes, is a YA Fantasy in which a young girl gets involved with an enchanted dancing school and its powerful magical headmistress who hypnotizes and transforms her students. 
The second book, Arabesque by Amy Shomshak, is a more realistic book about the art of dancing but just as good in its own way.

Gina's best friend Tina is currently studying ballet in Paris while Gina remains in New York. Gina is tired of the dance classes that are far from the Russian training that she is used to and the mean girls who play pranks on her and shove her into the corps. She is also becoming aware that her relationship with her boyfriend Charlie, a stand up comedian, is not getting better. Her only constant is her uncle Gene who raised her and encouraged her love of dancing and her letters from Tina telling her how great her life is now that she is a lead dancer. Once Gina learns that Tina's life isn't as rosy as she portrays and Gina's depression worsens, Gene invites her to accompany him to Paris and reunite with her best friend.

In some ways, Arabesque reminds me of Melissa Muldoon's books about Italy like Dreaming Sophia, Eternally Artemisia, and Waking Isabella. It is an imaginary trip to Paris written by someone who loves the city, recognizes every street, every cafe, every location. Shomshak recognizes the beauty, marvel, and history of the city. She clearly loves the location and wants her readers to love it too. It is a perfect summer reading for those who need an imaginary vacation.

When Gina, Tina, and their friends go clubbing and dine at a cafe, you know it's a place that is real or at least made real by Shomshak's sensory images and attention to detail. Readers can smell the coffee brewing, hear the side chatter, and see the people talking and laughing. Even common tourist spots like the Louvre, Left Bank, and the Eiffel Tower are made unique by the characters' encounters with them. Paris is alive in this book.

In a touch very similar to Muldoon's work, there are brief scenes in the afterlife where Gina's late mother, Lili is following her daughter and encouraging her on a path. She's not alone, Lili engages in conversations with the likes of Marie Antoinette, Vaslav Nijinsky, Zelda Fitzgerald, and other members of Paris' past. Similar to Muldoon's Italy books in which artists, patrons, film stars, and other notables encourage their protagonists, here Paris' Finest does the same for Shomshak's. When a setting fits the character, it seems that everyone, past and present, conspire to make it feel like home, the place where they belong.

The Parisian setting isn't the only thing that comes to life in this book. The characters shine as well, particularly Gina and Tina. They have a very close sisterly friendship that fills empty voids in their lives. Like many strong friendships, they work better together than they do apart. Separately, they are going nowhere in their ballet studies. They are at most bit players when they have enough talent to get bigger roles. Together, however, they decide to take their talents into their own hands. 

Gina and Tina perform a series of dances in outdoor venues throughout the city wearing elaborate costumes and masks that Madame Destinee from Music Boxes would envy. They do their own choreography and tell their own stories, sometimes original and sometimes variations of known fairy tales. These dances not only make them famous, if anonymously, but they give them artistic freedom and the ability to express themselves creatively. 
A favorite performance is when the duo dance and communicate entirely with fans. They use gestures with their fans to reveal a conversation between characters and wear monochromatic black and white gowns and masks. It's a simple yet evocative dance piece.

Gina and Tina also open a wider circle of friends and family. They meet some female friends who help them with their outdoor dance. They also receive boyfriends who are supportive and interested in their pursuits, even revealing talents of their own. Gene also has a romance going with Josette, a married woman with a brilliant son. They clearly love each other but are playing things slowly because of Josette's marriage. Gina and Tina's circle of friends and family bring out the best in them and everyone else around them.

Music Boxes has plenty of magic, true. But Arabesque is a realistic story with plenty of magic of its own: the magic of friendship, the magic of the arts, and the magic of a place that tells you that you are home. When you find that magic, well c'est magnifique.





Friday, May 27, 2022

New Book Alert: Psychonautic by Darren Frey; Deep Psychological Vampire Dark Romance

 




New Book Alert: Psychonautic by Darren Frey; Deep Psychological Vampire Dark Romance

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews

Spoilers: Alright, I give. I surrender. I used to hate Vampire Romances. Since high school, the very names of Dracula, Lestat, Buffy Summers, and Angel made me roll my eyes long before Edward and Bella had their first sparkle. I thought the Dracula movie starring Gary Oldman, Anne Rice's The Vampire Chronicles and Buffy The Vampire Slayer were some of the most overrated pieces of entertainment ever. If I ever saw another romance starring a dark brooding Byronic vampire antihero, it would be too soon. I often joked that the only vampire that I ever liked was C.D. Bitesky from Mel Gilden's Fifth Grade Monsters.

Well, I am willing to admit when I am wrong. I found that there is room in the saturated vampire subgenre to intrigue and impress me. I found that out twice this year. First, with The Genius of Our Wiles by Blythe Gryphon. It was a historical fiction about a vampire falling in love with the woman that he transforms. The two spend the changing centuries studying the history of vampires, including looking for the original vampire.

 The second book that changed my perspective is Psychonautic by Darren Frey. In contrast to The Genius of Our Wiles, Psychonautic is a modern psychological drama about a damaged human who is accepted into a coven of vampires and feels the love of family, friendship, and romance that had long eluded him.

The human who becomes closely encountered with the undead is Julian Frost. He has a coffin full of problems. He was a child of abandonment and abuse having been left by his father and abused by his mother, her boyfriend, and his grandfather. The only family member that he felt close to was his loving grandmother and other relatives kept her death from him out of spite. He just ended a long term relationship when he caught his ex in bed with another man, and not just any man but her brother. Not only that but he has Retina Pigmentosa (RP) and is therefore legally blind. Many, including relatives and his ex have used his disability against him and mocked him.

Julian is trying to put his life together. He spent time with a shaman and took Ayahuasca, hallucinogenic drugs, to deal with his pain. He also got as far away from his Virginia home as possible to attend college courses in Las Vegas. Why, he even has a new potential love interest in classmate, Violet Trouton. 

Things are starting to look up.Okay, Violet panics and retreats into a bathroom when the sun rises. But she is gorgeous. Sure, she can read his mind and knows a lot about his dreams. But she's so sweet and understanding about Julian's past. And okay, she can float in the air and fly, but nobody's perfect.

 It takes a while, almost a comically long time, for Julian comes to terms with the truth that his new potential girlfriend is really a vampire. Oh yeah and Violet takes him to New York (flying on her back, instantly in less than an hour) to meet her vampire family. There they get involved in a civil war with other vampire clans and vengeance seeking humans who are out for blood, vampire blood.

A psychonaut is described as someone who explores an altered state of consciousness, especially through hallucinatory drugs and that is what Frey's book excels at. Yes, of course there are times where Julian takes hallucinogenic drugs to deal with his troubled past. But what really stands out is the exploration of Julian's mind. In some ways, vampirism becomes a metaphor for this exploration and how Julian emerges as a stronger person who challenges his past.

Julian suffered tremendously from the abuse, abandonment, and betrayal in his past. He became closed off and rejected close intimacy. He has been clearly scarred and is unable to move forward with such baggage behind him.

His taking of drugs allows him to open his mind and recognize those issues. It identified the problem, but his friendship with Violet and her family allows him to take action.

Naturally, when he discovers that Violet is a vampire, he is a little concerned and terrified. After all, can he be sure that she doesn't want a snack or will attack him? He even has nightmares about her mocking him, like his ex did, before attacking him. 

This is before he gets to know Violet and realizes what a sweet kind person she is. She also has many difficulties from her past including an abusive childhood and the betrayal from one human friend who turned on her and her family.She just happens to have a penchant for blood and sleeps during the day. 

Julian also develops a kinder more empathetic personality in his relationship with Violet and the vampire world. He meets Xavier, the vampire who transformed Violet and whom she calls "Dad," and various others in their clan. He develops a surrogate father-son relationship with Xavier as his love for Violet increases. He finds in them the family that had long eluded him. 

Because of this familial connection, Julian is able to confront his past. When vengeance seeking humans threaten the vampires in their club, Julian defends them then takes it upon himself to hide his new family in his aunt's house in Virginia. He is now in close proximity to members of his birth family, including his abusive grandfather and neglectful aunt and uncle. Strengthened by his new family's love and support, in one of the best passages, he confronts his relatives with all of the hurt that they caused him over the years. 

Many of Julian's experiences in seeing the world through the vampire's perspectives are some of the highlights. For example when they fly to New York from Las Vegas, it is a psychedelic experience as Julian feels his third eye open. He feels like they broke barriers in sound and his own self, his ego, is being melted away. It's clearly an exhilarating experience.

The transformation of becoming a vampire is described throughout the book. It begins with death, as though the old self were dying to make way for a newer higher plane of existence. Next is an intense thirst, a heightening of the senses, and an increased awareness of all that is around the newly made vampire. It's a beautiful description and shows that depth of the inner journey into the subconscious and the higher being that could emerge.

Frey excels at writing a psychological drama and exploration of the subconscious of an individual who sees a new higher perspective in the world around him. There are hints of a more action oriented tone if he continues this series. The vampire hating humans seem like many hate groups, formed because they fear what they don't understand. Also, the conflicts between various clans suggest that just because someone becomes a vampire doesn't mean that their problems are over. They will still be surrounded by hatred, prejudice, and some who would use these heightened gifts for revenge or to satisfy their sadistic pleasure.

For people like Julian however, vampirism allows him to explore deeper meaning, getting rid of the old frightened Julian to become a stronger person.

Psychonautic is a great book. That being said, I still find Gary Old man's Dracula, Buffy Summers, and Lestat intensely overrated.



Thursday, February 24, 2022

New Book Alert: Born For The Game by Mike DeLucia; Check This Book Out About The Ball Game

 


New Book Alert: Born For The Game by Mike DeLucia; Check This Book Out About The Ball Game

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Once again, we have a book that ends up mirroring real life perfectly. As I am writing my review for Mike DeLucia's Born for The Game, the Winter Olympics has ended. Every time the Olympics or any major sports event airs, we are made consciously aware of the intense scrutiny and pressure that athletes are put through. We glamorize them when they succeed and vilify them when they fail or do something outside of what we consider appropriate behavior.

During this past Olympics, much of the spotlight was put on Russian figure skater, Kamila Valieva, who tested positive for an illegal substance for heart medication. The Olympics Committee faced much criticism by allowing her to perform.

 She, the ROC, and the Olympics Committee, faced verbal attacks, criticism, and threats because of this decision. Despite the intense controversy, Valieva performed superbly during the short program. But the pressure obviously got to her and she did not do as well during the long. 

The criticism that she received, particularly from commentators Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir, was beyond abusive and hypocritical on Lipinski and Weir's part. Lipinski was herself a teenage figure skater and should understand her situation and Weir had an accusation of domestic violence that could have ended in his dismissal from the figure skating world. Regardless of whether it was true, he should understand what negative publicity can do to a career.

 The camera following the ROC team before the medal ceremony in which not only  Valieva but her colleague, Silver medalist, Alexandra Trusova  were left in tears making what should have been a private moment public was ghoulish and voyeuristic. What is forgotten in all of this is that Kamila Valieva and her fellow skaters are not only world class athletes, but they are also young. In her case, she is fifteen years old. Teenagers are emotional, unpredictable, not always far thinking or even in charge of their own decisions, and the intense pressure would break anyone but especially one who is not old, experienced, or in many cases mature enough to handle such stressful scrutiny.


This pressure can double when an athlete is the first of their kind to enter the sport. Think about the threats and abuse that Jackie Robinson received when he became the first African American baseball player in Major League baseball or that Hank Aaron received when he dared to break Babe Ruth's home run record. All eyes are on that athlete, waiting for them to succeed and break that barrier to welcome others or waiting for them to fail as proof that their "kind" can't do the sport. 

In Born For The Game, we have a fictional situation that hopefully will one day be real: the first woman to play for Major League baseball. (Since the All American Girls Professional Baseball League during WWII, forever immortalized by the Penny Marshall directed film, A League of Their Own.)


In this eye opening look at what it takes to break such athletic barriers this woman is Ryan Stone, pitcher for the fictitious L.A. Greyhounds. She is 19 years old and is a coach and manager's dream. She can throw a knuckleball at 50, a fastball at 88, and curves, sliders, and screwballs at different release points. In contrast to the whole "pitchers make lousy batters" myth, she strikes out most of the other players during spring tryouts. As for intelligence, well she graduated from high school at age 8, was tutored by Harvard Law professors, and has an IQ of 197. She is probably the prototype of what many consider the perfect baseball player.


While her impressive career can be attributed to plenty of talent and practice, there is a darker side to Ryan's past and her ambitions to become not only a great baseball player or the first female but to become the best. She was groomed long before her birth to become the perfect baseball player. Multimillionaire Phineas Stone, former player and manager Baxter "Rollie" Rollins, and martial artist and head of the L.A. Japanese Cultural Center, Ito Hatchi conspired to create and raise the perfect player.

 They arrange her conception by bringing together two world class athletes, Dakota Swiftwater, a Hall of Fame pitcher and Valentina Fermi, an Italian gold medalist in both Summer and Winter Olympics to conceive and give birth to their future prodigy. That she turned out to be a girl instead of the hoped for boy didn't bother them. In fact they consider her debut more noteworthy for that reason.

Besides arranging Ryan's conception, she is raised by Ito, trained by Rollie, and overseen by Phineas through a combination of visual impressions, subliminal messages, drilling and training for the goal of becoming the best baseball player.


Ryan is well developed as a character. She is clearly living someone else's dream and being programmed even before birth to succeed. Her background is meant to be secret but plays a large part in her acceptance into the baseball world. While this constant pressure and programming have led her to this place, she also shows enough natural talent and study in the sport itself to allow the dream to be hers.


However, the unspoken thought and unanswered question throughout this book is what if Ryan hadn't had this background of these men creating her to be the perfect baseball player. If she had just been an average woman with an amazing gift from an impoverished background but a killer pitching arm would she even be considered for the Majors? How many women have considered a career in professional major league baseball and even told "if you were a guy, we would sign you up" but because they weren't men they have been denied or didn't even bother to try? Do women have to be super successful and have something extra  before they can break into a boy's club or can they get in through the traditional way through hard work and perseverance?

 While Phineas and Co.'s training and programming of her, particularly putting her parents together, are untoward are they really any different from the real life "Coach Dads" and "Stage Moms" who micromanage and pressure their kids to succeed, feed them drugs to enhance their performance, and even fight with judges, directors, and other personnel when they don't? 

At least Ryan actually loves baseball and wants to succeed just as much for herself and not just because she is driven to.


Some of the best moments in the book occur when Ryan breaks her programming and shows despite Phineas, Rollie, and Ito's influence, she is still a person and a young person at that. Right before she gets accepted for the Greyhounds, she mouths off to the manager showing her legalese and business savvy to get a decent contract to join the team. She has an affair with a fan and argues with her adopted fathers when they find out. She sincerely mourns the death of one guardian and feels caught in the middle of a power struggle between the remaining father figures. Then when rumors fly about her background, she is often at an emotional crossroads that impacts not only her career but her mental health and self worth. 


While fictional and possibly extreme in the attempts to create the perfect athlete, Born For The Game takes an insider look at the pressure, the highs, and lows of what it really means to be a groundbreaking athlete. As a book, it looks like it could be, yes it is a home run!





Sunday, January 23, 2022

New Book Alert: Ela Green and The Kingdom of Abud by Sylvia Greif; Slow Start To YA Fantasy But Magical Kingdom Shines And Leaves Readers Wanting More

 


New Book Alert: Ela Green and The Kingdom of Abud by Sylvia Greif; Slow Start To YA Fantasy But Magical Kingdom Shines And Leaves Readers Wanting More

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Could this year's frequent theme/genre be YA Fantasy? Maybe, between Bekah Harris's The Thorn Princess and now Sylvia Greif has Ela Green and The Kingdom of Abud, it's entirely possible. They are similar in many ways. Both deal with high school age boarding school girls who come upon unique powers that are revealed by older relatives. Both take trips into beautiful magical lands that are feasts for the eyes to read and the mind to imagine. Both no sooner have their young protagonists get their feet wet in the new worlds than the books end on a cliffhanger to prepare the Reader for Part Two.


What is different about the two worlds is tone and inspiration. The Thorn Princess is a modern fairy tale that takes its roots from Celtic and Teutonic fairy lore. Ela Green's source is more reminiscent of 19th century Adventure novels. While magic is a central feature of Ela Green, the focus seems to be more on exploring this new landscape and investigating it for magical treasure than learning about the monarchy and political structure and ruling over it. Ivy Hawthorne, The Thorn Princess, is a part of her magical landscape, ultimately the heart of it. Ela Green is just visiting for now but also has a huge part to play in this alternate world and maybe the physical world as well.


The book begins in media res on the night of the full moon when Eleanor "Ela" Green is enchanted by a bracelet that she found. She recites the words of a spell on a scroll included with the bracelet. She suddenly finds herself no longer in her boarding school room but instead in a mysterious forest and standing face to uh, bark with a giant evergreen that reaches the sky. 

Most of the book takes place before and after this strange trip. Before Ela was an over imaginative girl arguing with her mother, becoming the bane of the existence of the headmistress, and bonding with her Uncle Archie whose adventurous and imaginative spirit rivals hers. Then she finds the bracelet and travels to the Enchanted Kingdom of Abud where the giant tree, Yggdrasill tells her that because of her "magical miraculousheart" she might be the Unikone. As the Unikone, she must find The Book of Names. Meanwhile, her Uncle Archie has a family tie to this weirdness and there is the scheming Count Sigismund who just bought Ela's school and also has his sights set on her bracelet and its power.


The book is clearly the start of the series and because of that, it only takes two trips into Abud, one where Ela goes alone and then a subsequent one that she takes with Archie once everything is explained. That's rather unfortunate because the book cuts off right when it's getting good. I know I know cliffhangers, Authors want to leave the Reader hanging. But Abud is such a beautiful setting that it is a shame to not read more of it.


There are wonderful little touches like talking trees that hang upside down and crystals that change color and play musical notes as a visitor steps on them. Of course there are portions of the landscape that will defend itself from the selfish, greedy, and sometimes overly curious, which is why it's very important that it is able to share an empathetic connection with Ela and sees her good heart. She is able to be welcome when others with harmful intentions would not. 

These chapters set in Abud are the highlight of the book as they make the Reader want to see more of this world and the unique characters that inhabit it. The Abud portions should definitely be longer.


It's not that the rest of the book is bad, it just takes a long time to really get invested in the Abud setting before the book abruptly cuts off. 


There is a long expository section where Archie explains the family's link to this magical kingdom. It's an interesting story and it captures how avarice and greed can destroy one's soul and make one lose sight of their real purpose.

It definitely takes its cue from old Adventure novels like the works of Jules Verne, H. Rider Haggard, and Robert Louis Stevenson where there is treasure to be found and a strange land to explore it. The backstory also reveals what's in the heart of the explorers and what compels them to go on this journey, both in the past and present.

It also shows why Abud waited so long for the Unikone to arrive and why many were found wanting. The journey is a test and when the visitors reveal their selfishness and avarice, the way is closed to them.


 I'm also glad that the back story is in the first volume instead of potentially inserted into later books and interrupts the flow of action once Ela and Archie are in Abud. It's always good to get exposition out of the way. However, the build up to Abud itself with this exposition only makes the Reader want to see more of it. It's not asking too much to include a couple more chapters to explore this landscape that has had such a build up.


There are some issues with the pacing of this book as well. An important character is introduced as a potential antagonist only to reach a very anticlimactic ending. Also other characters' motives are somewhat unclear but I suppose need more time for them to be revealed. 


Ela seems like a decent enough protagonist, kind to all living things with just a bit of a sardonic bite so she can stand up for herself. At times, she can be a bit flat in characterization but that could be attributed to this being her first adventure. We may get more nuances to her character in subsequent volumes. 


Archie seems to be an alright character, adventurous, intelligent, understanding towards Ela which her mother is not. There are a couple of times where this Reader wonders if his journeys to Abud are just to protect Ela or to fill some greedy or curious desire himself. Again it will be interesting to see how his character develops in multiple volumes.


Because of the extended build up, Ela Green and The Kingdom of Abud has a very slow start. Once it reaches Abud, it is truly enchanting and leaves the Reader breathless with its description and in fervent anticipation.


Saturday, June 12, 2021

Weekly Reader: In A Town Called Paradox by Miriam Murcutt and Richard Starks; Feel Good Romance and Family Drama Reads Like A Hollywood Film

 


Weekly Reader: In A Town Called Paradox by Miriam Murcutt and Richard Starks; Feel Good Romance and Family Drama Reads Like A Hollywood Film

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Miriam Murcutt and Richard Starks's novel In A Town Called Paradox seems like a Hollywood film. That might be intentional since we are told that the town of Paradox, Utah is the location for shooting several films.  The townspeople of Paradox get a taste of Hollywood glamor as people like Rock Hudson and Marilyn Monroe work and congregate in this town during filming. It is an interesting experience but a short lived one as most of the time, the residents of Paradox go about their daily lives. 


One of those residents is Corin Dunbar. Her first taste of the magic of filmmaking came when Marilyn Monroe shared her favorite lipstick with her. For Corin, this connection helped give her a bit of glamor and escapism from her troubled past. Her mother died and her father abandoned her so she moved from her New York home to live with her Aunt Jessie in this strange Utah town. It takes some time, but Corin begins to adjust to living in this town. She enjoys riding horses,running the ranch, and hanging out with her friend, Dorothy who gains a loose reputation as she grows. Corin grows to love Paradox and its residents including her tough and tender hearted Aunt Jessie, Carter Williams, the showboat mayor and his star struck wife who was responsible for bringing the film industry to Paradox, and Cal Parker, the latest in a long line of law enforcement officers in his family.


There is a nice mixture of the fantasy provided by Hollywood and the reality of living in a town like Paradox. Many of the townspeople are thrilled to be extras and walk-ons in various film projects. Some like Dorothy are star struck and want to eventually break out into movies. Some like Corin just hold it in stride while going about their daily business. Some people are drawn to Paradox because of the allure and fantasy like Noah "Ark" Stevenson, a British astronomy student and movie fan who moves to Paradox where his favorite Western films are made. He moves to Paradox partly because of the setting but also the view so he can go stargazing. Eventually, he and Corin fall in love.


Ark and Corin's romance is even played like something in a dramatic film with romantic comedy elements. Ark is more philosophical and esoteric. Corin is earthier and more of a realist. They are an attraction of opposites that are drawn to each other despite a local who is also in love with Corin but doesn't have a chance. Corin and Ark's romance is played out under the desert landscape and panoramic view of the stars.


Sometimes the Hollywood elements of the book veer towards cheese. A prison escapee arrives to make things complicated for the characters. A family secret appears at the end almost too late to make any real impact on the plot so the book could have done without it. There are also the typical tear jerking moments when one of the pair is at the point of death as though to remind us that some of the most memorable love stories are often the saddest.


In A Town Called Paradox is the type of book that puts illusion and reality side by side and shows that both can tell an interesting tale.




Sunday, January 31, 2021

Classics Corner: Anne of Green Gables (The Anne Shirley Blythe Series Book One) by Lucy Maud Montgomery; The First and Best Book of Montgomery's Series About The Lovable Imaginative Red Haired Canadian Orphan

 


Classics Corner: Anne of Green Gables (The Anne Shirley Blythe Series Book One) by Lucy Maud Montgomery; The First and Best Book of Montgomery's Series About The Lovable Imaginative Red Haired Canadian Orphan

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Well there are plans and there are disrupted plans. My Reading goal last year was to read and review the books on the PopSugar Reading Challenge for 2020. While I finished reading them in 2020, I hadn't finished writing the reviews. I blame the flu in October and Covid in November for getting me behind schedule (that's bad) and the glut of requested reviews that I had to do first (that's good). But here finally are the final three: The first book that you touch with your eyes closed (Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery), A book with 20 or more books in the series (The Nancy Drew Mysteries 1-10 by Carolyn Keene) and a book from a previous category-A book you started but haven't finished (The Collected Stories of Franz Kafka). I could give up on them, but when it comes to reading goals, I'm not a quitter!


Well self-pity is over on with the review:

In the book KidLit by Tom Durwood, Durwood found adult themes and analyses in children's literature. One of the examples that he cited was Anne of Green Gables. He saw it as a search for one's identity and belonging and I would have to agree. This book is about Anne Shirley, a young orphan who had been neglected and unloved, though packed with identifiable flaws, and slowly becomes accepted into a family and her community of Avonlea.


I first became acquainted with Anne in the late-'80's during "Anne-mania" when Kevin Sullivan produced two lush, beautiful, and lovely miniseries on the Anne books for CBC (since I'm an American, I saw them on the Disney Channel.) that starred Megan Follows, Colleen Dewhurst, Richard Farnsworth, Jonathan Crombie, and Schuyler Grant. Follows was just lovely as Anne in the role that made her a star.

The first miniseries was based on the first book, Anne of Green Gables and was almost a word for word adaptation. The second miniseries, Anne of Avonlea, was a composite of three subsequent books, Anne of Avonlea, Anne of the Island, and Anne of Windy Poplars.

 I also enjoyed the spin-off series, Road to Avonlea starring rich girl, Sara Stanley (Sarah Polley) and her rural family, The Kings headed by her prickly schoolteacher aunt Hetty (Jackie Burroughs). Road to Avonlea was based on Montgomery's anthologies, The Story Girl, The Golden Road, Chronicles of Avonlea, and Further Chronicles of Avonlea. (The first two were not related to Avonlea in book form but were adapted into that universe on television.) 

Many Readers and viewers, myself included, were drawn to the beautiful Prince Edward Island, its charming characters, and its almost idyllic dream like portrayal of Canada's past.


When it comes to the book series, the first Anne of Green Gables is the best. Anne of Avonlea and Anne of the Island are also good, though in some cases spend more time developing new characters at the expense of older ones. The later three aren't as well written as though Montgomery grew tired of the series and wanted it to end or lost her knack for writing Anne in favor of her children. However one thing the entire series gets right is how it develops Anne from a young girl into a woman.

The first book does a brilliant job of introducing us to Anne and the world in which she inhabits. Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert, an elderly unmarried brother and sister, are getting on in years. They need some young blood to help them run the farm at their family home of Green Gables in the town of Avonlea. So they decide to adopt a boy from the orphan asylum in Nova Scotia. 

 In the first three chapters which are titled "(Insert character name) is surprised," local town busybody, Rachel Lynde is, well, surprised. She is miffed that the Cuthberts did not ask her because nothing goes on without her say so. Don't we all know someone like that? That is Montgomery's secret: creating characters that we instantly know and recognize in our own lives, just simply living in 1900's Canada.

Rachel cites gruesome stories about orphan boys setting a house on fire, on purpose and another orphan putting strychnine in a well. "Only it was a girl this time," Rachel said.

"Well we're not getting a girl," says the sharp tongued and severe Marilla. ("as though poisoning a well was purely feminine accomplishment and not to be dreamt of by a boy," Montgomery wryly tells us.) 

Cut to the next chapter where, of course, Anne Shirley (always spelled with an e, never without), an 11-year-old orphan girl, sits at the train station waiting for Matthew Cuthbert to arrive and take her to Green Gables. (There was a mix up at the orphanage since the request was sent secondhand, via correspondence).


There are many things that draw the Reader into these books and marks it as a beloved classic. One of those is the description in setting. Nearly every road, stream, or house is described in a lovely enchanting way that turns Avonlea into an almost fairy land, a distant past that is lovely to dream about. In once chapter, Matthew drives his buggy along a road. "It was a pretty road, running along between snug farmsteads, with now and again a bit of balsamy fir wood to drive through or a hollow where wild plums hung out of their filmy bloom," Montgomery wrote, "The air was sweet with the breath of many apple orchards and the meadows sloped away in the distance to horizon mists of pearl and purple; while 'The little birds sang as if it were/The one day of summer in all the year.'"

This is a contrast to other children's classics, say Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House books, that want to zero in on how hard frontier life was in the past. Montgomery wanted to draw her Readers into this world as much as she wanted Anne to be drawn in. 

Instead, it is Anne's old life that is described in muted browns and grays. Her past being raised solely to bring up other people's young children including "twins three times in succession", being abused by adults particularly one foster mother's "drunken husband", and her move to the overcrowded orphanage, are empty and devoid of color. It's a hard world. Anne's only "bosom friends" are her reflection in a glass case, that she dubs Katie Maurice, and her echo in a valley, that she names Violetta.

Green Gables, Avonlea, and Prince Edward Island are constantly described in ways that feel like home. That's the point. It's a place meant to make Anne feel welcome as soon as she arrives and in turn welcome the Readers. It's not a surprise that these books are solely responsible for the increase in tourism to Prince Edward Island. Who wouldn't want to visit these beautiful landscapes at least once?


Besides the attention to detail in setting, what makes Montgomery's books stands out is her lead character, Anne. From the moment that she first appears and greets Matthew at the train station, she makes an undeniable impression. Anne is already introduced as a talkative outspoken imaginative young girl. One of her first monologues takes about a page and a half in which she rhapsodizes about how a tree resembles a bride, then how she imagines that she wears pretty clothes (even though she wears the plain wincey asylum dress) as well as her desire for fashionable clothes, highlights of her boat trip to the island, the questions that she asked her chaperone, Mrs. Spencer on the way over, and her first impressions of the island and its red roads. 

This is not a surly argumentative rebellious kid. Instead she is a girl who has a firm hold on her imagination and optimism, as she dreams and hopes for better days.Anne is the type of character that takes delight in the simplest things, like giving objects names (She calls a nearby pond The Lake of Shining Waters), her first taste of ice cream, wearing a dress with puffed sleeves, and finding kindred spirits.


Anne's instantly lovable personality allows her to find kindered spirits everywhere even in the most unlikely of people. She instantly finds one in Matthew during the first ride home when the shy man is amused during her long conversations and realizes that he kind of "likes her chatter." She finds one in Rachel Lynde when after she explodes when Rachel mocks her looks, she makes a melodramatic heartfelt apology which amuses the busybody. 

She finds not only a kindred spirit, but a "bosom friend" in Diana Barry, a somewhat wealthy girl who is quieter but willing to go along with Anne's imaginative escapades. She also finds one in Diana's strict mother. Anne accidentally gets Diana drunk when she mistakes currant wine for raspberry cordial and Mrs. Barry orders the two best friends to be separated. She eventually apologizes and becomes another kindred spirit, when Anne's experience with children and quick thinking results in Diana's younger sister from being cured from the croup.

 It takes a very long, long time in admitting that Anne finds a kindred spirit in Gilbert Blythe, a boy who pesters her about her looks and earns her long-lived ire. They become academic rivals as the two brightest students in the one-room Avonlea schoolhouse. Later their relationship develops into a friendship and, in subsequent books, a romance and eventual happy marriage. 

While Marilla takes some time in admitting it, she becomes another kindred spirit when after she hears about Anne's past, she refuses to surrender Anne to a hardened taskmaster who would also abuse her. Through the book, Marilla goes from feeling sympathy for her charge, to liking her despite and sometimes because of her flaws, to growing fond of her, to considering Anne "dearer to her more than anyone on earth." Anne awakens maternal instincts that Marilla didn't even know that she had. 


Part of Anne discovering her own identity and belonging is intertwined in her development and maturity. The majority of the book consists of various scrapes that Anne gets involved in usually concerning follies in hers or other's behavior. One of the first involves a missing amethyst brooch that was a family heirloom of Marilla's. Marilla believing that Anne took it, orders her to stay in her room until she confesses. Taking that punishment literally, Anne creates a confession from her own imagination on which she dropped the brooch into the water below. When Marilla finds her brooch safe and snug on her shawl, they both learn something: Anne not to take things that don't belong to her and Marilla not to jump to hasty conclusions and to believe Anne.

Another lesson cures Anne of her vanity. One of the "crosses that (Anne) bears" throughout her life is her bright red hair. Anyone, like Gilbert or Rachel, makes the mistake of mentioning it will surely receive the the sharp angry end of Anne's mouth. Anne has long wanted to have raven black hair like Diana's (She can't even imagine herself with any other color hair. She can imagine anything else, except her hair is always red.) So she buys hair dye from a shifty peddler which turns her hair green. Humorously, she learns that there are worse things than red hair and eventually grows to accept her hair when it grows to a handsome darker auburn.

 However, she never loses her desire for pretty clothes so that later when Matthew, tired of Marilla dressing Anne in the plain clothes that she makes herself, buys fancier fabric and commissions Rachel to make a dress with puffed sleeves. Anne not only cherishes the dress because it's a long sought for dream come true, but recognizes it as a gift of love from Matthew towards the young woman that he always thought of as "(his) girl."

Sometimes Anne's over developed imagination gets her in trouble. One incident, her creation of a haunted wood causes her to fear walking through the woods at night, terrified of the ghosts that she created. Anne is "contented with commonplace places after this". (However, this incident creates long term repercussions with Diana whose imagination becomes underdeveloped because of her fear.) Another incident results in Anne getting lost adrift in a boat while pretending to be the Lady of Shallot. She is rescued by Gilbert (which though she doesn't realize it, leads to her forgiveness for his long ago taunting), but believed that this incident which left her cold, drenched, and embarrassed cured her of her desire for romance. However, her imagination and romance never dies as throughout the series, as she develops a talent for writing and finding beauty, adventure, and more kindred spirits in the most comnon of places and situations.


Anne is a girl who is looking for a place to belong and she finds that in Green Gables. Before she considered herself "Anne from nowhere and belonging to nobody." She accept being a part of a family and her life as "Anne of Green Gables" ("which is better than being Anne from nowhere".) At first, she is seen as an outsider, a strange girl with a bad temper who goes on weird tangents. Then her circle grows wider as she becomes a schoolgirl and church member  with many friends her own age. 

Though she thinks the pastor's sermons are too long and boring and doesn't like the first teacher Mr. Phillips, who makes eyes at one of the older students, Prissy Andrews. She later bonds with the new minister and his wife, the Rev. and Mrs. Allen, as well as the schoolteacher, Miss Stacey. The Allens and Miss Stacey become guides that help Anne on her path.

As Anne matures, she hones her interest in literature, composition, and imaginative situations into academic success. She becomes an honor student and gets accepted into Queen's College winning a scholarship for Arts students. Despite great tragedy in her family, she is able to forge ahead on her path and become an important member of her community.

Later she becomes a schoolteacher, a member of the Avonlea Improvement Society, a student at Redmond University, a high school principal, a wife to Dr. Gilbert Blythe, a mother of five, and eventually a writer of short stories and novels, first of romantic love stories then more realistic ones that depict fictionalized versions of her childhood experiences.


Symbolic of Anne's growing influence as a fulfilled woman who is aware of her personal identity and involvement in her growing communities is the change in titles throughout the series. Anne of Green Gables depicts her family home and close friends and family. Anne of Avonlea causes the circle to spread throughout the town as we see her as a schoolteacher and townsperson, getting to know her pupils, their families, and other townspeople and neighbors. Then it grows even wider to Anne of the Island (as in Prince Edward Island) as Anne explores university life with her fellow classmates, gets involved in romance with Gilbert and another man, and even in one of the best chapters visits the home in which she was born and reads love letters between her deceased birth parents. Eventually, Anne leaves the island to settle in towns like Windy Poplars and Ingleside, creating an even larger connection that extends throughout Canada. 


It's clear that in the 112 years since she was first created, Anne Shirley has found kindred spirits in many of her Readers. Far from unloved or unaccepted, she is "Anne of Everywhere."