Friday, February 28, 2020
March's Reading List
March's Reading List
February started out well, but ended up not filling as many reviews as I would like. I got sick in the middle of the month. I also have a secret project to do which took up a lot of time but is very fulfilling.(Thank you for the opportunity, You Know Who You Are.)
This month, I am moving some of my intended reads to this month. Hopefully, I will be caught up by the end of the month.
New Book Alert: Murder in the Multiverse by R.E. McLean
Weekly Reader: Spite Fences by Trudy Krischer
Classics Corner: The Women's Room by Marilyn French (A book published the month of your birthday)
Weekly Reader: The Source of Self-Regard Selected Essays Speeches and Meditations by Toni Morrison (A book with more than 20 letters in the title)
Weekly Reader: The Lazy Bachelor by Catherine Dove
New Book Alert: The Girl Who Found The Sun by Matthew Cox
Weekly Reader: The Witches Are Coming by Lindy West (A book about or involving social media)
Weekly Reader:Hedy's Folly: The Life and Brilliant Inventions of Hedy Lamarr by Richard Rhodes (A book by or about a woman involved in STEM)
Classics Corner Birthday Book: One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez (A book published in the 20th Century)
Weekly Reader: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout (A book that passes the Bechdel Test)
New Book Alert: Song For A Lost Kingdom by Steve Moretti
Weekly Reader: The Other Queen (The Plantangenet and Tudor Court Series Vol. XV) by Philippa Gregory
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Weekly Reader: The Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler; Cute Romantic, but Fluffy Love Letter to Austen's Work
Weekly Reader: The Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler; Cute Romantic, but Fluffy Love Letter to Austen's Work
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book about a book club
Spoilers: Okay, I admit it. I am not by any means a fan of Jane Austen
At best, I find her books light fluffy romance, but nowhere near as well-written as other writers of her time like Charlotte Bronte or George Eliot. At worst, I find her overrated and her books and characters repetitive and borderline aggravating.
My personal experience with Austen's works are as follows: I find Emma humorous with a flawed but adorable and at times purposely annoying protagonist. Northanger Abbey is a lot of fun with its parody of Gothic literature. Sense and Sensibility, is okay but mostly average. Pride and Prejudice is overrated with two annoying protagonists that are more annoying in their omnipresence (though more tolerable than those in Wuthering Heights). I am undecided on Mansfield Park and Persuasion since I have not read either. I have yet to read one of her books that I liked beyond.. .well just okay and many authors that I like better.
However, Jane Austen in February cannot be avoided. It's like cat videos and Top Ten lists on YouTube or Laura Brannigan's "Gloria" on St. Louis radio stations during hockey season. It's inevitable that Jane Austen and romance go together, so instead of ignoring it, might as well suck it up and enjoy it and read either one of her books or a book about her books.
In this case, I read The Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler. While I still am not a Jane Austen fan, I will always recommend any book that celebrates the importance of reading and where characters identity themselves with the situations that are found in books. On that level, I could not recommend The Jane Austen Book Club enough.
It is a fun cute lighter-than-fluff book that explores the troubled love lives of the members of the eponymous club. While it can be read and appreciated by any fans of romance, chick lit, or books about books, it will be best loved by fans of Jane Austen who will catch and enjoy the parallels between the characters and their literary counterparts.
The Book Club is started by best friends 40-somethings Jocelyn and Sylvia. Besides them the antendees are 28-year-old French teacher Prudie, Sylvia's lesbian thrill-seeker daughter, Allegra, Bernadette, a 50ish woman with multiple marriages to her credit, and Grigg, the lone male member. The six members are required to read all six of Austen's novels and one member has to lead the discussion and host the group at her or his house all while dealing with their own romances and problems.
The club members are a charming relatable bunch that play off each other very well. Many Readers will recognize the characters's personalities and quirks as people they may know or are. There is Jocelyn who loves to walk her Rhodesian Ridgebacks and is something of a control freak who likes to micromanage her friend's lives while ignoring her own lonely unmarried status. Sylvia is a recently divorced single mother who has been burned by love and is not eager to open herself up to the possibilities of another love.
Grigg prefers to live in the worlds of his favorite science fiction novels and conventions and often has trouble being the sole male among his three sisters and his new female friends, which causes him to be permanently friend zoned.
Bernadette loves to regale her friends with her colorful stories about her stage parents and her various flawed husbands with humor to disguise how lonely and troubled her life was. Allegra lives for exciting pastimes like skydiving and mountain climbing and being with women who give her an exciting hard time. Prudie is married, but can't ignore the advances that her students make towards her, nor her and her husband's many disagreements and annoying characteristics.
Fowler parallels each character with a specific Austen novel and the novel helps guide the character through their love lives. Jocelyn is compared to Emma with her desire to make matches with her friends. Like Emma Wodehouse, she sets her friend up with someone with whom she falls in love. She invites Grigg to the group to set him up with Sylvia, but realizes that she has fallen for him herself.
Meanwhile Grigg's interest in science fiction is much like Catherine Moreland's obsession with Gothic Romance novels in Northanger Abbey. Both use their preferred genres as means of escapism from complacent and conflicting reality. Grigg also uses his science fiction novels as means of communication, such as recommending Ursula K. LeGuin's novels to Jocelyn.
Allegra's literary counterparts is Marianne Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility. Like Marianne, Allegra is a woman of deep emotion who lives for new experiences. She doesn't always listen to the advice provided by her more sensible mother, especially when it comes to her relationship with her latest girlfriend, Corine. She suffers a near emotional breakdown when she learns that Corrine stole parts of her life for her writing inspiration. Even when she is in a new relationship in the end, there is much discussion whether this relationship will last.
Like Fanny Price of Mansfield Park, Prudie has to learn to face life on her own with the death of her mother. She also is permanently confused by the open flirtations around her while maintaining a deeper more loving connection with her husband.
Bernadette's story is like that of Elizabeth Bennett in Pride and Prejudice. As a child, she was used by her mother to achieve child stardom like Mrs. Bennett uses her daughters to find wealthy husbands. She also recognizes the stubborn pride and arrogant assumptions that filled her previous marriages. She is always ready with a quick word and witty comment like many of the most loquacious of Austen's characters.
Finally, Sylvia is compared to Anne Elliot of Persuasion, the oldest and final of Austen's protagonists. She too had been left alone and deserted by a former love. When she and her ex meet again, they have to consider how much they have changed and whether they want to sever all ties or get back together.
The book has the usual formulaic ending where characters are paired up and learn lessons. Some relationships are a bit abrupt and one might make modern Readers cringe more than it would have in Austen's day. But still it's a cute book, one that is good reading for Valentine's Day or for anyone who wants to read a book that celebrates a love of reading.
Like any good book about reading, the characters recognize themselves within the books. Jane Austen's novels provide escape and friendship as they discuss the plots, characters, and themes. They also provide their own answers towards their own lives and loves.
Weekly Reader: The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead; Follow-Up To The Underground Railroad Surpasses Expectations
Weekly Reader: The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead; Follow-Up To The Underground Railroad Surpasses Expectations
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book that won an award in 2019 (Time Magazine Best Books of the Decade)
Spoilers: When a book becomes such a monster hit, there is much speculation and anticipation whether the author's follow-up will be just as well regarded as the previous hit. Take Colson Whitehead for example. His 2016 novel, The Underground Railroad was everywhere. The ciritcal and commercial success hit multiple best seller lists and won various awards including the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and National Book Award for Fiction.
Naturally, when Whitehead's novel, The Nickel Boys was published in 2019, there were concerns whether it could compete against Railroad. Could Colson Whitehead top himself?
Fortunately, Whitehead proves that the successor can more than meet the standards set by the predecessor. The Nickel Boys is just as much a hit as The Underground Railroad. Time Magazine listed it as one of the Best Books of the Decade. It is a finalist for the National Book Award.
As for writing, The Nickel Boys not only meets The Underground Railroad in terms of style, it surpasses it in terms of characterization, theme, and quality.
The Nickel Boys takes place in the Nickel Academy, the fictional equivalent to the real-life Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys in Mariana, Florida. The Dozier School ran from 1900-2011 and gained a reputation for abuse, beatings, torture and murder of the boys by staff. In 2009, the school underwent a full investigation after the school failed a state investigation. The investigation included exploring the various unmarked graves on the site which told of various boys who were tortured and beaten to death or shot while trying to escape. The authorities identified 55 burials and nearly 100 deaths at the school.
Whitehead took the inspiration of this sad true story and created a novel that is heartbreaking, but also challenging with its themes of institutional racism and the power and control certain authority figures have towards those who are perceived as weaker than them.
This book is set in the early 1960's and focuses mostly on Elwood Curtis, a bright African-American boy from Tallahassee, Florida. Elwood works at the Richmond Hotel kitchen and reads books like classics and the Hardy Boys in his spare time. He lives with his grandmother after the disappearance of his parents who moved west to find work and never returned.
The greatest gift that Elwood ever received is a record of Martin Luther King's speeches. He plays them on an endless loop and is drawn by King's philosophies of nonviolence and loving one's enemies. In school, he is committed to his studies and social activism, the latter of which worries his grandmother.
One day, Elwood hitches a ride in a stolen car to his college classes when he and the other riders are arrested. Elwood is sentenced to The Nickel Academy, which is the closest thing to Hell on Earth to put things mildly. At The Nickel Academy, Elwood is subjected first hand to the mistreatments and punishments, including beatings, starvation, sexual assault, and torture. Not to mention the private rooms where those considered the worst offenders are sent and don't always come back out. Through it all, Elwood tries to hold fast to Martin Luther King's philosophies.
While this is going on, we peer into Elwood's current life as a New York City businessman. Even though other former inmates have reunited through social media, Elwood has not. He tries to live only in the present, though his troubled current life suggests that his past as a Nickel Boy still stays with him. He suffers from PTSD and is very uncomfortable in his current relationship. His past at the Nickel Academy isn't far behind as an investigation uncovers various unmarked graves and Elwood has to confront the Academy with all the suffering that he endured.
The Nickel Boys is the kind of book that is hard to forget. It is gripping and terrifying to read about how cruel and dehumanizing some people can be to other human beings. Much of the behavior is built upon the racist view of looking at someone as an "other", someone who they perceive as less than human. Once a certain people are dehumanized, it becomes easier for some to do deplorable things to them.
The moments between the inmates and the sadistic employees are gripping because of the abuse that the boys endure because of the racist dehumanization.
This book invokes comparisons to Native Son and Invisible Man in how it challenges not only the individual racist acts, but the institutional racism and conferred dominance that allow those acts to exist. Similar to Invisible Man's haunting Battle Royale chapter there is an early example of the systematic racism that Elwood endures. While working at the hotel, Elwood enters into an employee contest in which a fine set of encyclopedias are the prize. Elwood wins the contest, but loses in life when he learns that the encyclopedias are dummy copies and have nothing written in them. Elwood is set up to be humiliated by a society that demeans him for their own amusement.
Unlike the Narrator of Invisible Man however, Elwood's pacifism is not held up for ridicule and setting him up for constant humiliation by white society. While he is abused in Nickel, he reveals a true strength despite his captivity. He stands up for a fellow inmate who is threatened with sexual assault and gets beaten as a result. Another time, he takes King's "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" to heart and composes his own "Letter from a Nickel Academy" exposing the school and the staff for the house of horrors that it is. Even though Elwood sometimes finds it hard, he repeats the words, "Do to us what you will and we will still love you," like a mantra even when he doesn't want to.
While Elwood takes the path of nonviolence, another inmate proves to be a contrast. Elwood befriends Jack Turner, a more cynical inmate. Jack doesn't have the same ideals as Elwood. He is from a more violent criminal background. He is sharper, fiery, and prefers to make his point clear with a fist and sometimes a smart comment. He is more of a fighter and is willing to challenge his captivity and the staff through action. To Whitehead's credit, he never pushes one view over the other. Instead the book suggests that people challenge racism and their forced circumstances in different ways and that there is no one specific way that people can, or should, do it.
A plot twist opens many possibilities and causes the Reader to rethink the characters and themes. But it also says that Elwood and Jack's abilities to challenge the system around them will be remembered and in the present, put them in a situation to confront this dark past so that it can never be repeated.
The Nickel Boys is more than a successful best-selling and critically acclaimed follow-up to The Underground Railroad. With its better writing, compelling characters, and strong theme, it is the superior.
New Book Alert: The Unholy by Paul DeBlassie III; Terrifying, but Meaningful Horror Novel About Religion Vs. Spirit
New Book Alert: The Unholy by Paul DeBlassie III; Terrifying, But Meaningful Horror Novel About Religion Vs. Spirit
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: In a time where many people flaunt their religion as an excuse to justify hateful, bigoted, mysoginistic, and even criminal behavior, a genre novel like Paul DeBlassie III's The Unholy graphically and beautifully demonstrates the difference that lies between religion vs. spirit. It shows how some people extol religious values, but don't actually live according to those principles while others seek to have personal connections to spirit and the world around them.
Claire Sanchez, director of Mental Health Workers and Natural Therapeutic Services is the latest in a long line of Apache Medicine Women, descended from Lozen, warrior, medicine woman, and advisor to Geronimo. Unfortunately, a childhood tragedy in which she witnessed her mother being murdered by a mysterious man has stifled her spiritual practice. Instead, she focuses on her career in caring for the patients at Ecclesia Dei Psychiatric Hospital and butting heads with the Catholic organization that is in charge of the hospital and has a fanatical hold on their followers and everyone around them.
Unfortunately, terrible things happen which cause Claire to return to her spiritual studies. Patients are dying under mysterious circumstances. Authorities, particularly those who are affiliated with Ecclesia Dei, stonewall any investigations and questions suggesting that they have something to hide. Claire is also hit with some bloody, violent, and frightening visions and premonitions that are veered towards Ecclesia Dei. She is also being stalked and threatened by members, particularly their sinister leader, Archbishop William Anarch.
The book is filled with scary and suspenseful moments. Like any good horror novel, the scariest part is the uncertainty. Are the things the characters experience real, hallucinations, or visions from beyond? When one of Claire's patients starts raging about dark spirits and being stalked by evil forces, both Claire and the Reader wonder is she exhibiting signs of schizophrenia? She also had medicine woman training, so is she being warned by other forces? Or is she telling the truth? It's a frightening concept and it becomes even more frightening knowing that no, they aren't paranoid. People really are trying to kill them.
Claire also experiences some terrifying visions. She goes to an Ecclesia Dei service and feels complete nausea. She sees crows, birds of death, in places where Ecclesia Dei members have their rituals. While other novels would say that the visions are sent by Satan or are the threat, what Claire and the Reader learns is that they are warnings. As scary as they are, the visions are trying to protect her from the real evil, the evil that lies in the dark hearts of her fellow human beings.
Claire is a well-developed protagonist. There is a real sense of her legacy as a medicine woman being stretched through time. Hers is a calling that she realizes quickly that she can't run from, nor hide behind science. She has to face that traumatic time and in turn face the spirits that surround her, before she can face Archbishop Anarch.
The book alternates between Claire's point of view and that of Anarch and it's been awhile since I have read such a loathsome antagonist, but deBlassie's gift is in making him so hateful yet Anarch's conflict with Claire so interesting and entertaining.
Anarch is the perfect example of the religious hypocrite, one who cares more for the financial and power gain that he receives as a religious leader than he cares about saving souls. He uses his sermons as scare tactics to entice his followers to go after people that he considers unworthy. He is not shy about using a parishioner's weakness against them to get his way, especially if said parishioner is a pretty young woman with doubts about her faith that he can provide ,ahem, hands-on counseling for.
There are some psychological insights to Anarch's character, particularly in his conversations with his manipulative dying mother that provide some depth to his character. Thankfully, they don't make him sympathetic. If anything, his background makes him even more unpleasant, especially when he strikes back at those he feels responsible.
The Unholy is the perfect example of a supernatural thriller done right. It scares you then makes you think deeper.
New Book Alert: The Baron and the Enchantress (The Enchantress Book 3) by Paullett Golden; Excellent Beginning and Ending Marred By Dragging Repetitive Middle
New Book Alert: The Baron and The Enchantress (The Enchantress Book 3) by Paullett Golden; Excellent Beginning and Ending Marred By Dragging and Repetitive Middle
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: Paullett Golden's Historical Romance, The Baron and The Enchantress, is like the little girl with the curl in the middle of her forehead from the nursery rhyme. When it is good, it is very good but when it is bad, it's horrid.
Well not really horrid, just dull and repetitive.
It begins well with an interesting premise in which a working class woman learns that she is descended from a noble family and ends well with lovers united, goals met, and families grown stronger. However, the steps between conflict and resolution are marred by a long slow trip through the same situation repeated over and over with barely any change in character and plot.
Lilith Chambers is an 18th century midwife who was raised and educated in an orphanage when news breaks out that she is the long-lost sister of Sebastian Lancaster, Earl of Roddam. She was raised as Sebastian's full sister by who she believed were her birth parents. Unfortunately, after the death of her loving adopted mother, her abusive father, the former Earl, sends her to an orphanage where she learns that she is actually the illegitimate daughter of the former Earl and a servant woman. After the Earl's death, Sebastian seeks to reunite his family by drawing Lilith back into the family.
Lilith's skills as a midwife proves useful in assisting Sebastian's wife, Lizbeth through a difficult delivery. She also captures the interest of Walter Hobbs, The Baron Collingwood. Walter is capitvated by Lilith's independent fiery spirit and she is drawn by his altruistic nature. The two become romantically involved, but Lilith is concerned that the revelation of her illegitimate birth could cause problems with her new-found family and love life.
The book starts out strong with characters that defy traditional romance expectations. One of the more unique refreshing takes with Lilith's age. She's 33. When most Historical Romance female protagonists usually are in their late teens and early twenties, it's nice to read about one who is approximately the same age as her usual readership. Lilith is a woman who has had plenty of life experiences and an older woman's more cynical outlook on life.
Also, Lilith is someone who is just as interested in pursuing a career as she is in getting married. Most of the early chapters focuses on Lizbeth's pregnancy and Lilith helping her. Her interactions with Lizbeth such as purposelyt contradicting the physician's reactionary medical advice reveal that she is good at her job.
She also teaches at the orphanage in which she was raised. She aids young girls in their scholarly pursuits, particularly in Math and Science. She also wants to help unwed troubled mothers, like her own birth mother, who are alone and abandoned. Lilith is someone with a great brain and a willingness to use it to help others.
Sebastian, Walter, and their family are also nice surprises as well. One would expect a wealthy titled family to look down on their poorer relation, but they don't. Sebastian welcomes her with open arms. Lizbeth instantly treats her like a much beloved sister, even before she saves her and her baby's lives. One would expect Lizbeth's aunt and Walter's mother, Hazel, to turn her nose up at Lilith's arrival. But after giving some terrified early misgivings during Lizbeth's delivery, she recalls her own rags to riches upbringing and welcomes Lilith grandly.
Walter in particular is also an interesting romantic figure. Like Lilith, he too dreams of a life of significance. He wants to do something important with his wealth and title. When he hears about Lilith's upbringing, he decides to fund an orphanage. While Lilith questions this, he is clearly committed to the goal and wouldn't mind having the assistance of a certain attractive educator/midwife in achieving it.
It is a nice departure to see noble people in literature using their resources to help others revealing that nobility isn't always just an inherited name. Sometimes it is an adjective that describes upstanding character.
Unfortunately, Golden does too good a job of revealing their acceptance of Lilith, that there is really nowhere for the book to go. There are some stereotypical snobbish aristocrats, but they don't really develop the plot that much. There is also an opportunistic clergyman acquaintance of Lilith's who becomes too obsessed with her. This subplot hints that the clergyman could make trouble for Lilith, but apart from having a case of foot-in-mouth disease not much happens and his story is arbitrarily solved.
Instead most of the book focuses on Lilith's lack of acceptance towards her new family, not theirs toward her. She constantly makes assumptions about the wealthy that are discredited by the actions of Walter, Sebastian, et al. Even after she is proven wrong, she still thinks of them as elitist snobs. She started out as an interesting strong willed character, but quickly devolves into a judgemental reverse snob.
I know that she was raised in an orphanage, but she is allegedly a woman of great brilliance and intelligence. Surely, her experience with Sebastian's family should serve as a counterexample to her assumptions. Not to mention that she should consider that if stereotypes aren't true about her, what makes her think that they are true about them. In fact, the more that they, particularly Walter, try to welcome her, the more she resists. I suppose it's supposed to make her endearing, but honestly it makes her look like a hypocrite.
This argument between Lilith's assumptions and Walter's actions keeps coming up and is repeated as though there isn't anything else that the book has to do. The problem may be because the story takes place en media res after Lilith's identity had been revealed in the previous novel, The Earl and the Enchantress. With a strong introduction, there may not have been anywhere else for this book to go.
Thankfully, Golden does salvage the ending into a sweet resolution that works well in which lovers are not only united, but they make plans to open that orphanage and home for unwed mothers, to help the next generation.
The Baron and the Enchantress starts and ends so we'll that it is a shame that the middle could use some of the same magic to become equally as enchanting as the rest of the book.
Friday, February 21, 2020
Weekly Reader Philippa Gregory Edition: The Last Tudor (The Plantagenet and Tudor Court Series Vol. XIV) by Philippa Gregory; The Tudor Family Line Ends on an Average Note
Weekly Reader Philippa Gregory Edition: The Last Tudor (The Plantangenet and Tudor Court Series Vol. XIV) by Philippa Gregory; The Tudor Family Line Ends on An Average Note
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: It's fitting that The Last Tudor is the final book written and the penultimate chronologically in The Plantagenet and Tudor Court Series. It presents the best and worst qualities that the previous books had in one book. This book alone is a checklist of what Phillippa Gregory did right and wrong in the entire series.
This time the book focuses on Jane Grey and her sisters, Katherine and Mary. Jane was the cousin of King Edward VI whom he declared his heir after his death instead of his sisters, Mary and Elizabeth. After, Edward's death, his guardian Lord Dudley connived to have Jane and her husband, his son, Guildford, put on the throne. Jane was queen for only nine days when supporters of Mary Tudor intervened, dethroned Jane, and declared Mary queen. Jane was eventually executed along with her husband and both of their fathers.
Jane Grey probably gets a minor footnote in history if that, but her sisters get barely any mention at all. Katherine Grey married Ned Seymour, a courtier and distant cousin by marriage, despite refusal from Queen Elizabeth. She eventually got arrested and gave birth to one son while in prison. She was released, but ended up giving birth to a daughter and spending the rest of her life separated from her husband and son while under house arrest.
Mary Grey's story was even more interesting. She was a Little Person, under 4" tall. She too married without the Queen's permission to Elizabeth's sergeant porter, Thomas Keyes who stood at 6"7. Mary served as lady in waiting under Elizabeth, but eventually she too fell out of favor and both she and her husband were arrested. Keyes was reportedly confined to a cell much too small for his large body. While Mary was under house arrest, Elizabeth eventually had her released.
The Last Tudor covers many of the themes that make the Gregory novels so great. Among them is the strength and rivalry of sisterhood. Unlike the previous sisters, the Boleyns, the Nevilles, and the Tudors, the Greys don't bare any animosity towards each other. Oh, they have differences of opinion, but those are mostly confined to just conflicting personalities rather than any real attempt to steal the throne or a position from each other. It's nice to see at least one Gregory sorority act like real sisters instead of sworn enemies.
Part of the way that Gregory does this is contrasting the sisters' personalities so they bounce off each other. Jane is much more bookish and studious. She is the most spiritual as she looks upon her ascendency as a calling from God to lead the English into Protestantism. Katherine is the most easy-going and dizziest. She is also an animal lover and is usually seen with different cats, dogs, birds, and a monkey that she names Mr. Nozzle. She is swept up in her love for Ned and when they are separated longs to be a family with him. Mary is the boldest and most outspoken. She constantly cracks jokes about her height or other things. She also has a steadfast determination to survive and she does everything she can, even deny her marriage, to ensure that survival.
We also see the theme of seeing historical characters through different eyes. Just like Katherine of Aragon and the players during the War of the Roses, Elizabeth is looked on differently here than she is in the previous books. The Queen's Fool and The Virgin's Lover were aware of her flaws, but also recognized her strengths as a cunning leader, a master strategist, a learned scholar, and a courageous fighter and survivor. The Grey Sisters see her as at best a frivolous egoist who values her own happiness (such as her relationship with Robert Dudley) over anything else. At worst, they see her as a cruel and capricious tyrant who turns on people for a whim and then just as quickly pardons them.
The reasonings behind Katherine and Mary's arrests are not fully explained, as they are meant to be arbitrary. Though they more have to do with being the last in the line of Protestant Tudor heirs. (Most of the others such Mary Stuart and Margaret Douglas are Catholic). While the book goes out of it's way to show that The Grey Sisters themselves are innocent of any plots against the queen, Elizabeth's haters aren't above using them as pawns in their means to dethrone her (like Jane was).
However the Gray Sisters themselves have another theory on why Elizabeth is so hateful towards thrm. Both believe that it is because Elizabeth envies their chances for happy marriages and she feels that if she has to be miserable then so do they. They think that she doesn't want the spotlight on anyone but herself. Their views are a bit childish, but they do come from fear and uncertainty. Sometimes, you don't know the specific reason why you fell out of someone's favor, so you simplify it in your head. Gregory does a good job of translating that uncertainty.
Gregory's gift for narration also falls into play here. She wisely separates the sisters' stories into three individual parts, allowing each sister to tell her story with the appropriate beginning, middle, and end. She also does some interesting framing devices that tie the three parts together. Each husband is introduced as a minor character in the previous story, only to take center stage in the next story as the intended of his Grey sister.
Some situations play out in all three stories. For example, Katherine's monkey companion, Mr. Nozzle is a source of irritation to Jane and she constantly wants to have him removed from her sight. For Katherine, he is an exotic pet to love, spoil, and let him be admired as a pet of the lady's chamber. By the time he gets around to Mary after she is under house arrest, Mr. Nozzle becomes her last link to her sisters so she keeps him into old age. One of the more delightful images in the book is the final scene in which an older Mary, still small, is dressed in black with a red petticoat underneath and walks a now gray Mr. Nozzle wearing Tudor green.
The biggest framing devices are the letters each sister writes to the next one while she is in prison. They reveal a lot about who they are as people. Jane's letter to Katherine is very clinical and impersonal. Instead of appealing to Katherine as a family member, Jane regards her just as someone that she thinks will carry on her legacy. The words that echo throughout are "learn you to die." Jane is someone who lives her life in her own head and according to her Protestant values. She goes along with her father and the Dudley family because she feels that becoming queen is God's plan. However, when it falls apart and her supporters turn against her (most heartbreaking of all is the moment when Jane's own father turns his coat and pleads for Mary), she realizes that it was brought upon by pride and ambition, things that she thought that she was against. She realizes that she too was ambitious in her own way and that she went along with the plot not for God's glory but her own. The only thing that she can do now is die for her faith as a martyr.
By contrast, Katherine's final letters to Mary are warm and filled with emotion and love, the kind of person that she was. Rather than learning to die, Katherine is more interested in learning to live or more specifically learning to love. She is someone who has a deep love for people and animals. While she is often the central
figure in plots against Elizabeth, she is never really involved in them. In fact there are several times when she states that she would rather have a happy marriage to Ned and lots of children than the throne.
Mary of course has no letter to write and no sister to receive it. But that makes sense to her character. Unlike Jane who is acted upon by the ambitions of others and her religious views and Katherine who is acted upon by her emotions, Mary is only acted upon by herself. She is the most active of the trio. When Katherine dithers whether marrying Ned is the right decision, Mary marries Thomas. Katherine languishes in prison brokenhearted, Mary remains outside still serving under Elizabeth but secretly plotting her escape. Even in prison, she manages to make the most of her survival by reuniting with the few family members that remain such as Katherine's children and trying to send letters to Thomas.
As I mentioned before, Gregory did so much right with this book, but she also did so much wrong too. One of the biggest problems with this book is that the longest story, Katherine's, is the most boring. While the early passages of Katherine and Ned's courtship is sweet, her imprisonment is less interesting and that covers most of that part. It might have been salvageable if Katherine was able to do anything while in there, perhaps but she spends most of the time in tears unable to do anything about her situation. Yes, I know prison is tough but that's no excuse to waste over 200 pages talking about it.
Jane and Mary's stories are far more interesting, but way too short.Jane's story is the most well known and Mary's not so much. But either one could have been expanded upon. For example, we get some tell of Jane's education, but we aren't shown it particularly her friendship with Kateryn Parr. Okay, she was queen for nine days but she barely sits on the throne before getting forced off. A few more chapters, even short ones, to describe her plans for ruling could have been added. And what about Mary? We are given very little of her and Thomas together. Shouldn't we get to know them as a couple before fate and Elizabeth drive them apart from each other?
Another problem in this book calls back to Lady of the Rivers, forgoing a more interesting protagonist for a lesser interesting one who only hears about the interesting one's adventures. This time Mary and Katherine get told about Mary Queen of Scot's marriages to the Dauphin of France, Lord Darnley, and the Earl of Bothwell. We are particularly given great details about Darnley's death and hints about Mary's possible involvement in it. This Reader read that section and thought, "Why aren't we reading about that?"
I know, I know. Mary Queen of Scots has been done to death but come on this is Philippa Gregory. The Cousin's War and the Six Wives of Henry VIII aren't exactly big historical secrets. Plus, there are ways that Gregory could have told that story from a fresh perspective, perhaps from Darnley himself, or Bothwell, or even Mary's ladies in waiting (who were all named Mary incidentally). She could dip into historical mystery with "Who Killed Lord Darnley?" just as easily as she did with the mysteries of the Princes in the Tower and Amy Dudley. Instead this is a missed opportunity. (That missed opportunity continues into the next book, the chronological final volume in the series, The Other Queen. More on that later.)
Above all, this book carries a sense of lethargy throughout. I compare The Last Tudor to the last time we saw the end of a family, The King's Curse. The latter carried a sense of darkness and tragedy as though an era really was dying out. It's felt through the characters as one by one they are either executed or survive by getting with the program. In the case of The Last Tudor, that despair isn't near as emotional. Instead it is muted by several pages of inaction and dullness. At least Margaret Pole tried to fight her fate by screaming and running from the executioner. The only one who really shows any spunk to challenge her situation is Mary and at least she lives.
Instead the intrigue is more stale. The characters are more predictable. The conflicts are less interesting.
It is clear that Gregory wanted to end the series and was pretty much running on autopilot throughout. She was probably looking forward to writing the words, "The End" as much as Jane Grey was looking forward to being martyred.
The Last Tudor is not the worst way to nearly end a series, but it could be better. At most it's average. However, for a series, that is so superb that makes the average worse.
Thursday, February 20, 2020
New Book Alert: Off Telegraph: A Novel of Berkeley in the Sixties by Joseph V. Rodricks; A Long Strange Trip Into Science, Politics, Religion, and Fanaticism
New Book Alert: Off Telegraph: A Novel of Berkeley in the Sixties by Joseph V. Rodricks; A Long Strange Trip Into Science, Politics, Religion, and Fanaticism
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: Of course a novel about the late 1960's would be set at Berkeley. Where else but Hippie Central would you find so many students and professors experimenting, protesting, exploring, tuning in, turning on, and dropping out?
Joseph V Rodricks' novel Off Telegraph: A Novel of Berkeley in the Sixties explores that groovy time with a colorful cast of characters that pursue knowledge in science, religion, politics, and some get very lost in the pursuit of that knowledge.
Grad student, Will Getz is studying to make a pfaffidine synthesis for a reliable source of pffafadine. He has spent several months working on the project and has only achieved positive results once by accident. He can't replicate the feat and time is ticking with a fearsome deadline soon approaching. Rather than admit the stall, Will changes the data information. This deception haunts Will especially as his opportunistic colleagues get involved.
Meanwhile, Will's former girlfriend Gina Antinori, an anthropology student is become more involved in the sociopolitical structure of the 1960's. She considers switching her major to Law and makes a bevvy of eccentric friends including Chris, a former priest who is considering break a few of his vows with Gina, Kay, a journalist exploring lesbianism, and Schaefer, an anthropology professor whose outlook on the world heads dangerously towards fanaticism.
The book is rich with characters driven by their goals to help society in their own ways. But their goals become lost because of ego trips and narrow perspectives that cause them to commit fraud even violence to achieve those goals.
Will is particularly hit by this. As anyone who has spent time in academia knows, plagiarism and fradulent research are not looked on very favorably in that circle. (Or in any circle for that matter, nor should they be.) If caught the person is subjected to expulsion, lost funding, lost position, denial of a degree, and given a black mark towards any future hiring possibilities among other things. That's why most college courses begin with the professor lecturing their students about the penalties. It's no wonder why this deceit continues to trouble Will.
Will was fascinated by studying chemistry and biology and using pffafadine to create better treatments for cancer patients. He, as many researchers often are, is swept up in the glory of achieving an unattainable goal and the fame and prestige that goes with it. However, Will becomes consumed with guilt for changing the data. He alienates himself from close friends and is easily swayed to commit more fraud to cover up his initial fraud. He becomes depressed and agitated and starts experimenting with hallucinogens to cope with the inner stress.
Gina and her colleagues also strive to change things in different ways. They want to end the Vietnam War, achieve equal rights for all, and explore life beyond their comfort zones. Many of them experiment by exchanging lovers and discovering about themselves. Gina's relationship with Chris is one that is between two souls that want to explore the world in a larger context beyond their rigid Catholic beliefs.
Their relationship is almost a union of the body and Spirit. They seem to reject the orthodox Catholicism with their physical union. However, the relationship intensifies Gina's inner spirit and she is able to become more active within the world around her.
Violence is also explored in how people's ideals can metamorphosis into fanaticism. One intense subplot has Schaefer leading some grad students to Guatemala in the middle of a civil war. When they return things take a turn into the horrific as Schaefer takes his religious intolerance to violent disturbing levels.
In one graphic passage a former colleague of Schaefer's explains what the man's plans were when he returned to California. Schaefer is driven by his own charisma, fanatic views, and ability to lead others as a cult leader. He has the idea that only his way is the purest and that society is so flawed, that he must bring about its destruction.
Off Telegraph explores the highs and lows of the 1960's. It was a time when everything was new and just waiting to be explored, fought for, experimented upon, challenged, and questioned. It was a time of great ideals. However, under those ideals was a darkness that bred corruption, illness, violence, and death. For better and for worse we were marked by that time.
Classics Corner: Heartburn by Nora Ephron; Perfect Combination of Love and Food With Plenty of Sarcasm on the Side
Classics Corner: Heartburn by Nora Ephron; Perfect Combination of Love and Food With Plenty of Sarcasm On The Side
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book with a pink cover
Spoilers: One thing that Nora Ephron knew how to do was to make her Readers and Viewers laugh at relationships.
The Academy Award nominated screenwriter of such romantic comedies as When Harry Met Sally, Sleepless in Seattle, and Julie and Julia, Ephron was able to find the lighter situations behind the dating scene, mid-life crises, issues towards commitment, and marital strife. Many of her characters had their problems and conflicts, especially with loved ones, but they always faced them with a sharp wit that got them through their struggles. Much like their screenwriter.
By far one of her most personal works is Heartburn, a witty, dry, sometimes cynical look at the decline of a marriage. The book is based on Ephron's marriage to journalist, Carl Bernstein (of Watergate/Woodward and Bernstein/All the President's Men fame). Ephron treated her semifactual life the same way she treated her fictional: with a sarcastic wit that hid deep conflict and pain.
Rachel Samstadt is a cookbook author married to columnist, Mark Feldman. She is the mother of one child and is seven months pregnant with another. She thinks that she has a happy marriage until one day she discovers a book of kid's songs with a deeply personal, potentially romantic, message to Mark from a friend. After confronting Mark, he reveals the truth. He has been having an affair with this woman while his wife is pregnant.
This book is certainly a product of it's time when people were interested in self-reflection, when women questioned their place in work and home, and where divorce is a huge concern. Rachel still has a toe in the old world in her thoughts towards marriage. She wants to work on her marriage to Mark and is unable to accept that it's over. She spends a majority of the book writhing in agony and indecision knowing that she should let go, but unable to. When her therapist, Vera, tells her that Mark was the one who is to blame for her feelings of anger, hurt, and betrayal, Rachel disagrees. "It's my fault," she wails, "I chose him."
Besides this marriage, Rachel also recalls the early years of her and Mark's relationship, their troubled first marriages, and her parents's marriage trying to find an answer to why she turned out the way she did. Rachel's mother was a Hollywood agent who had a nervous breakdown. "We should have known my mother was crazy years before we did just because of the manical passion she brought to her lox and onions and eggs, but we didn't," Rachel said.
Her parents divorced and her mother remarried Mel, a man who literally thought he was God. Her father has an ongoing affair with Frances, who works at a paper company. "(Frances) has remained true to my father even though he keeps marrying other women and leaving her with nothing but commissions on his stationary orders," Rachel says.
She also recalls her first marriage to Charlie, who was a little too fond of hamsters and Mark's marriage to "the first Jewish Kimberly." These broken relationships contribute to Rachel's neuroses and help explain why she chooses to remain in such a toxic marriage. She doesn't want to be another unhappy marriage that ends in divorce. She wants to believe that Mark can change and that theirs will be the one happy marriage that remains.
This book is drenched with plenty of satire and sarcasm. Rachel is involved in group therapy, a trend in the '70's-'80's, where she and other members unload their neuroses and problems. During one of these sessions, a thief breaks in and robs the group members including stealing Rachel's wedding ring. When news breaks out about the robbery, Rachel's main concern is that she finally learned the other members's last names.
When she finds out about the affair, Rachel confronts Mark at his therapist only to learn that his mistress is also seeing the same therapist and is right there with him. "They were having a double session. At the family rate," Rachel fumes.
Since Rachel is a food author, Ephron inserted recipes in the text and not just as an aside in the index. Oh no, that's for amateurs. Ephron inserted the recipes into the action. Whenever, Rachel describes a particular dish, she adds the recipe on how to make it. The recipes are often in the strangest places.
In the hilarious climax, Rachel decides to make her unhappiness known with a key lime pie put, where else, in Mark's face. Right before the fatal throw, Ephron helpfully puts the recipe for key lime pie in parentheses, in case any Reader needs ammunition for their own arguments.
Besides revealing Rachel's writing style as someone who not only writes recipes but provides conversational anecdotes about how she discovered the recipes, the emphasis on cooking serves another purpose. It allows Rachel to maintain a domestic appearance.
She wants to be the perfect wife and mother who has food waiting on the table. She can control how many eggs can go into a pie and how long to stir a soup after boiling. If the recipe goes bad, she can always make something else. She realizes this as she thinks "I loved to cook, so I cooked. And then the cooking became the way of saying, I love you. And then cooking became the easy way of saying I love you. And then cooking became the only way of saying I love you."
Relationships aren't as easy as recipes. There are no simple steps to follow and no amount of mixing that will guarantee a satisfactory result. When a relationship ends, it takes a lot more than a new one to fully recover. Rachel has to learn that lesson right before she gets the pie.
Besides serving up food, Rachel serves up plenty of sarcasm. She is the type of person who is always quick with a comment or a joke trying to find something humorous in every situation. When a male friend suggests that he and Rachel should have an affair to get back at their cheating spouses, Rachel turns him down. "We would just huddle together, two little cuckolds in a storm, with nothing to hold us together but the urge to punish the two of them for breaking our hearts."
When she runs into Mark and his mistress, she isn't just irate about seeing him. She is furious because he is wearing a new blazer. She didn't realize that Mark and his new lover were in the "buying new clothes" phase. She spends the next few paragraphs meditating on the blazer rather than her marriage.
Above all, Heartburn is about self-reflection. Rachel learns that sometimes she resorts to humor and sarcasm to avoid how she really feels. She also realizes that she can't save a marriage that's doomed and that there's no shame in cutting herself off from the marriage. Learning this, allows Rachel to strengthen and adapt herself into a woman who can face life single rather than unhappily married.
Heartburn is one of Nora Ephron's best recipes for a broken heart. You take one teaspoon of infidelity. Add a dash of misery. Include two eggs worth of therapy and self-reflection. Add a dose of delicious recipes. Don't forget to mix with a hearty helping of wit and sarcasm. Preheat at 350. Let sit and savor after reading. Enjoy!
Classics Corner Birthday Book: The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan; Emotional Moving Novel About Chinese-American Mothers and Daughters
Classics Corner Birthday Book: The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan; Emotional Moving Novel About Chinese-American Mothers and Daughters
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Birthday February 19, 1952
PopSugar Reading Challenge: A book that takes place in a country that starts with "C" (China)
Spoilers: I don't know anything about Mah Jong and I don't have any children, but I do know what it means to be a daughter and to not always understand my mother and vice versa. So I completely understand and sympathize with the plight of the characters in Amy Tan's classic, The Joy Luck Club.
The book is a series of interconnected short stories of four mothers: Suyan Woo, An-Mei Hsu, Lindo Jong, and Ying-Ying St. Clair who emigrated from China and their daughters Jing Mei "June" Woo, Rose Hsu Jordan, Waverly Jong, and Lena St. Clair who are more American than their mothers. The book is a truly emotional and moving work that while focuses on many of the issues that are faced by Chinese and Chinese-American women, any recent emigre as well as any parent and adult age child can find the conflicts relatable. We have all had situations where we felt that the previous or the next generation doesn't understand us. Then when we look deeper, we learn that we had a lot more in common than we were previously aware.
The four mothers are part of a group that meets weekly to play mah jong and talk about their lives. The book begins after Suyan's death and the other three mothers convince Jing Mei to take her place as the fourth in their mah jong games. Like the game itself, the book is divided into four parts of four stories each making 16 stories total.
The first eight tells of the mothers' and daughters' childhoods. The next eight covers the problems that they receive upon entering adulthood and within their marriages and families.
One of the central themes that carries throughout the book is who the mothers left behind in China. This is particularly strongest in Suyan and Jing Mei's story. After an argument when Jing Mei is still a child, Suyan accidentally blurts out that she had been married previously in China and had fled leaving behind two daughters, neither of which were Jing Mei. Realizing that she has two half-sisters that she never knew changes Jing Mei's relationship with her mother. Jing Mei feels their presence even though they aren't there physically. She feels that her mother preferred the daughters that she missed, so the daughter that is in front of her fails in comparison.
When Jing Mei grows, Suyan pushes her to become successful piano prodigy. After a substandard performance, Jing Mei gives up the piano for good. She spends much of her life believing that her mother doesn't approve of her job, friends, and life. It is not until well into adulthood after Suyan gives her a jade pendent that she learns that she had her mother's approval all along. Late after Suyan's death, the other three Joy Luck mothers contribute money so Jing Mei can travel to China to meet her half-sisters.
Another daughter who feels pressured by her mother into success is Waverly Jong. In fact, Suyan and Lindo turned bragging about their daughters almost into a contact sport. They build up so much competition between the two daughters, that Waverly and Jing Mei become rivals. Lindo's boasts about Waverly are about her genius at chess. Waverly excells at competition to the point that her mother's boasting gets embarrassing. Waverly gets so irritated by her mother talking up her success that she gives up chess. However, she hasn't lost trying to live up to her mother's expectations as a later story testifies when she introduces her white American boyfriend to Lindo. While Lindo seems to be non-committal especially when he commits various embarrassing faux pas at the dinner table, she later tells Waverly that she likes him.
Through Lindo's point of view, we discover that her way with words proved helpful in her past. She has a humorous courtship with her husband in which their respective Cantonese and Mandarin dialects make each other difficult to understand, but Lindo manages to get their conversations steered towards the words "matrimony" and "I do."
More dramatically was an incident in Lindo's youth in which she was forced into marriage with a prepubescent boy and was abused by his cruel mother who kept forcing the young couple to produce grandsons. Lindo manages to find her way out of the situation by pretending that their ancestors are displeased with the marriage and for her husband to accept marriage to a pregnant servant girl instead. Her in-laws get the grandson they coveted, the servant girl moves up a few notches, and Lindo gets free and manages to make her way to America.
While Lindo is a more dominant presence to the point that Waverly considers her mother unbearable, Ying-Ying and Lena St. Clair are more passive and that passivity has shaped their lives in very negative ways. Their stories are among the most heartbreaking. As a child, Ying-Ying got lost from her family during a Moon Lady ceremony. She naively asks the Moon Lady (really a male actor in a costume) to find them. This little scene foreshadows the sadness that Ying-Ying and Lena encounter throughout their lives, often being manipulated and abused by the men in their lives. Ying-Ying survives a torturous first marriage with a womanizer who abandons and results in her aborting her first child. She later marries a white man who is incredibly condescending and mocking towards her. Unfortunately, she also gives birth to an anencephalic child and becomes haunted by his death. She is consumed with depression, nightmares, and hallucinations. This makes her a cypher to Lena.
Lena takes her mother's passivity to heart during her marriage to Harold. Harold is also her supervisor at work and he financially as well as verbally abuses her. Seeing her daughter suffer the same way that she did under the thumb of a dictatorial husband, Ying-Ying convinces Lena to stand up for herself.
The different stories all carry their share of triumph after heartbreak. Among the saddest but ultimately rewarding stories are those of An-Mei and Rose Hsu Jordan. An-Mei's youth was shaped by her mother who became the fourth wife of a wealthy merchant. At first, An-Mei was raised by her grandmother, but after her grandmother's death, she finally moved in with her mother. An-Mei and her mother are abused by the merchant's second wife. The Second Wife plays various manipulative games to assert her dominance in the household such as attempting to win An-Mei over by giving her glass bracelet that she says is really pearl. She yells, screams, threatens suicide to get her way, and keeps An-Mei's half-brother as an emotional hostage by claiming to be his mother. An-Mei's mother finds no escape except through her own suicide. Though, An-Mei is clever enough to warn that her mother's spirit will haunt the cruel Second Wife, silencing the older woman's abuse for good.
An-Mei's family is hit by tragedy again when her youngest son, Bing accidentally drowns during a family trip to the beach. Rose is stricken with guilt for the rest of her life because she was supposed to watch Bing. She is haunted by Bing's death and continues to be held at an emotional distance. That emotional distance continues into her marriage to Ted Jordan. Rose was abused by Ted, a guy who after his bigoted mother insulted Rose put the blame on Rose, asking why she didn't stand up for herself. He also has every intention of getting remarried after his divorce and insults Rose by saying that she will never find anyone else. Rose doesn't want to surrender to her version of the Second Wife, so she challenges him in court for the right to keep their house and commands to be treated with respect.
The Joy Luck Club is filled with beautiful and emotional stories where the mothers and daughters believe that they don't understand each other, but realize that they understand a lot more than they thought. They are similar women with loves and hurts that carried between the generations. As soon as they recognize their similarities, they no longer see themselves under the family terms of mothers and daughters. They see complex women who have been hurt and are trying to find ways to move beyond that hurt. They recognize themselves into their journies that the mothers started and the daughters completed.
The Joy Luck Club is a book that has a lot of tears, a lot of heart, and ultimately a lot of joy.
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
New Book Alert: Joshua N'Gon: Last Prince of Alkebulahn by Anthony Hewitt; Amazing Action Packed Novel About Kid Superhero
New Book Alert: Joshua N'Gon: Last Prince of Alkebulahn by Anthony Hewitt; Amazing Action Packed Novel About Kid Superhero
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: If I were to create a shared universe of recent literary superheros ala The Marvel Cinematic Universe, I couldn't do better than include in that list, Joshua N'Gon, the protagonist of Anthony Hewitt's science fiction superhero YA novel, Joshua N'Gon: Last Prince of Alkebulahn.
Joshua appears to be a normal 15 year old kid who attends private school, hangs out with his friends, and is very smart but considered an underachiever by teachers. There are a few things that make him different. #1 is the metal bracelet around his wrist that he received on his 10th birthday. He tells people that the bracelet, which he and his friends dub the RCT (Really Cool Tool), is simply a family heirloom, but in reality it is more than that. The RCT is made up of technology the way other bracelets are made of metal. The RCT sends out information in high definition that provides useful knowledge in stressful situations. He doesn't know how to access the information. It just comes.
The other thing that makes Joshua different is that he is adopted. The mystery shrouding his birth family makes him an outsider to those around him. The kids that he encounters either really like him or really hate him (no in between). His older adopted brother bullies him and even though he is loved by his adopted parents, Joshua's father was arrested while trying to protect him.
Meanwhile, some dangerous people are after Joshua and he has to use all of the knowledge that the RCT can spare to protect himself, his friends, and his family.
Like many of the science fiction superhero books that I have reviewed for this blog, this book is clearly meant to be the start of a new series and like many others, Joshua N'Gon, is a great start. We have an interesting character from a unique world. In alternating chapters, we learn not only about Joshua but the world in which he is from. We learn about his birth place of the Kingdom of Alkebulahn (the ancient name of Africa so the intro tells us) in the nation of Rumundiland. We discover that this kingdom is the world's "best kept secret." We see that the Alkebulahnites are a very scientifically and technologically advanced society and we hear hints that they may have originated from another planet. We meet Joshua's royal birth parents and learn how they brokered alliances with representatives from other nations. We also learn how they execute justice on an opportunist who tried to assassinate the royal family.
Joshua stands out as an interesting lead character by Hewitt stressing his human qualities rather than superhuman. Through the majority of the book, he is kept from the larger picture of having to face supervillains or saving the world. Instead we are given chapters that focus on his daily life as sinister forces begin to circle around him. In a previous review for A Bounty With Strings, I mentioned how entertaining it was to read about people using their superpowers for mundane things like getting out of traffic jams or going grocery shopping. That concept is at play here.
While the prologue features an attempted kidnapping by some sinister characters, the actual first chapter brings us down to reality in a fight between Joshua and another schoolboy in which Joshua defends another smaller boy. This early chapter reveals Joshua's leadership qualities, which simultaneously puts him at odds with some students and admiration from others. We also see how Joshua's RCT provides the exact information for defense and how he is able to use that information to protect himself and his bullied friend.
Joshua also shows a strong technological aptitude. This is particularly shown when he and his friends participate in a Battle Bots-like competition. He is also able to take down a rival during an intense RPG game. Of course, he is able to implement those skills when facing his pursuers.
Above all, Joshua N'Gon Last Prince of Alkebulahn shows is how difficult life can be for a person who has unexplainable talents and an unknown past. He has a hard time connecting with others on a personal level. In one of the more heartfelt passages, Joshua tells his bullying older brother that he wants to be normal like him, not someone who is a complete mystery and the target of dangerous thugs.
Joshua N'Gon Last Prince of Alkebulahn is the start of a hopefully great series. It has plenty of action and a terrific lead character. This is one hero series that is worth holding out for.
New Book Alert: The Caller: A Demon Within by Jeanie Creviston; Strong Suspenseful Beginning Cannot Make Up For Overstuffed Ending
New Book Alert: The Caller: A Demon Within by Jeanie Creviston; Strong Suspenseful Beginning Cannot Make Up For Overstuffed Ending
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: As disappointed as I get with books that start badly and stay that way, I am even more so with books that start well but have bad endings. They have so much promise going in that it becomes an even worse disappointment when they fizzle out before the words "The End" appear.
Take Jeanie Creviston's thriller The Caller: A Demon Within. It starts out as an excellent psychological thriller using points of view from the serial killer, the victim, and the law enforcement officer. Then it becomes overstuffed with demonic possession and one too many false leads that confuse the Reader and leaves the plot going in too many directions.
The book focuses on Tom Biddle, a New Jersey cop, who is one of the many police officers searching for a rapist/serial killer. They arrest a potential suspect, David Hernandez who manipulates a fight between the officers and himself. Trying to break up the fight, Tom accidentally drops a photograph of his former fiancee, Sydnie. David is instantly drawn to the woman in the photo and when he manages to get released from custody, he heads over to Indiana where Sydnie now lives with her husband and daughters.
The Caller starts strong with an intriguing chase. The alternating points of view are solid. David is a very spine tingling antagonist of the Hannibal Lector variety. He is able to control the situation with icy mind games and extraordinary persistence. In one passage, he manipulates a fellow prisoner to confessing to the murders and then committing suicide.
He also has a predatory instinct on how to circle his chosen prey before he loses control and kills them. He tracks a chiropractor by pretending to be a patient, then trails her to her place before going in for the literal kill. He is someone who believes that because of his intelligence and process in capturing his victims that he can never be caught.
Tom by contrast is not as self-assured and much more flawed. It was a mistake to leave a photograph in the presence of a potential assailant, one that he rues throughout the rest of the book. As compared to his toxic masculine father, Tom is a more sensitive sort. He is clearly protective towards the victims, particularly Sydnie. Even though, he parted ways with her, he is still in love with her and so concerned about her welfare that he crosses state lines to save her life.
The other interesting aspect to the novel is how it deals with Sydnie. She is a strong willed woman who is deeply in love with her husband, Ed, and involved in her daughter's lives. She is the type of person that you can't imagine bad things happening to. It becomes terrifying when she starts getting frightening calls from New Jersey and the calls get closer and closer to where she lives.
While Sydnie is the target, she is also very protective of her home and family. So much so that she is able to take on her stalker with assistance from friends and family and minimal help from Tom (In a refreshing twist on the whole " male cop saves female victim" trope, Tom isn't even there during the final confrontation, leaving Sydnie to move center stage as the hero in the story.)
Sydnie is also psychic which gives her the advantage to know that danger is coming. She is also able to get flashes into David's psyche to see the once abused child and learn how he became a killer.
Sydnie's psychic abilities aren't the only supernatural aspects to the novel and that's where the problems lay. What started out as a realistic psychological thriller becomes disjointed when it is revealed that a demonic presence is around. There is very little foreshadowing of that beforehand and the little that there is could have been attributed to David's unstable mind and thought process. The demonic presence ends up taking over the plot and turns what could be a tight action suspenseful climax into a supernatural battle of good vs. evil out of nowhere.
Creviston did such a good job at capturing a psychological thriller that when the book veers towards the supernatural, it becomes jarring.The Caller could have easily remained a normal psychological thriller and have been better for it or the supernatural aspects could have been a part of the story earlier on.
It's almost like Creviston had one idea then halfway through had another idea. So she went with that and combined the two rather than altering the beginning to make the idea flow more naturally.
Even Sydnie's psychic abilities could have remained on a more subtle scale in anticipating danger before it occurs and for her to learn how this criminal was made. But it cheapens all of the character development that the main characters-particularly David and Sydnie- to follow the whole demonic possession angle. Instead of understanding how the characters's choices and upbringing lead them to this behavior, we are told that they have been influenced by angelic and demonic forces and have no real control over the actions. If that was true then what was the point of all of that early character development to turn into a red herring?
Speaking of red herrings, the ending has too many implausible ones at the end. It might be understandable for there to be another stalker going after Sydnie's family, but more than likely they would be a partner or co-hort of David's rather than a separate person with their own agenda. Especially since there were no early signs that this character would do such a thing nor how they were able to come upon the scene at the exact moment when David was also stalking them. At the very least, the two could have worked together combining their plots rather than being separated.
Also, a love triangle begins to develop in the final chapters when one didn't exist beforehand. When this happens, the characters act so bizarrely and uncharacteristically childish that this Reader was tempted to say "Dudes, you're lives are in danger! Get some perspective!"
Then there is the thrown in conclusion meant to tell us in the best horror movie fashion that the fight isn't over.
The Caller has some good things going for it particularly with strong character development between the protagonists and antagonist as a mental chess game between equal opponents. But the flaws make this novel a definite wrong number.
New Book Alert: Saint X by Alexis Schiatkin; Cause Celebre Crime Comes to Life in Fictional Caribbean Setting
New Book Alert: Saint X by Alexis Schiatkin; Cause Celebre Crime Comes to Life in Fictional Caribbean Setting
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: There are certain true crime stories that we remember because of the intense media coverage. Names like Jaycee Duggard, Natalee Holloway, Elizabeth Smart, and Jonbenet Ramsey still get stuck in our minds. Terms like "Women in Jeopardy" or "Missing White Woman Syndrome" are used to describe these cases.
But what happens once the media circus is gone? The documentaries and movies have been filmed. The story gets trotted out once in awhile as a cautionary tale on the anniversary or a "where are they now" piece. What happens then?
These are the questions that are faced by the characters in Alexis Schiatkin's novel, Saint X. The murder of a young college student haunts family, friends, and the people who lived on the island where the murder happened. The characters have to fight through the public scrutiny and piece together their involvement in the murder and how their lives changed not only from the death but the suffocating publicity that came afterwards.
In the 1990's, Alison Thomas is visiting the fictitious Caribbean island of Saint X with her parents and younger sister, Claire. She and her family hang out at the beach, swim, play volleyball, and all of the other things that privileged white families do when they vacation on expensive islands filled with tourists and locals.
Alison sneaks out of the hotel to get high, dance, and have fun with the locals, all perfectly harmless until the last day of their vacation when Alison sneaks out and doesn't return. She is listed as a missing person and her disappearance receives a great deal of coverage. However, Alison's body turns up a few days later. Two Saint Xians, Edwin Hastie and Clive Richardson, who were the last to see Alison alive, are questioned and released. The case goes cold and remains unsolved as years go by.
Claire grows older, moves to New York City, and tries to put her past behind her. Her sister and the unanswered questions to her death continue to haunt Claire interfering with her attempts to get some hold onto her own life. Unfortunately, Claire has an encounter that forces her past forward. She catches a cab and is stunned to find that the driver is Clive Richardson, one of the Saint Xians who was the last to see Alison alive and was questioned about her death.
The book brims with sharp characterization and setting. It would be tempting to make this a fictionalized version of the Natalee Holloway story about the woman who went missing in Aruba. One way that Schiatkin does this is by creating a completely original setting so the novel is not pigeonholed by comparison with real life crimes. Saint X is solely created for the purpose of this novel.
That can be a slippery slope. The Saint Xians use pronuons "they," "he," "she," "I", or "we" in every instance instead of "him", "her," "them" etc. (For example, characters say "I gave it to he" instead of "I gave it to him.") In an era when a book like American Dirt exists and is the target of controversy, this can be somewhat jarring and could lead to uncomfortable accusations of stereotyping.
However, Schiatkin does a great job of describing the island itself with the flora, fauna, and topography. She makes the island come alive with description that activates the senses.
Not only the setting but Schiatkin considers such structures as the sociopolitical area, economic disparity, and race relations. This is particularly shown within the divide between the wealthy mostly white tourists and the impoverished black locals. Locals like Clive and Edwin have to live with abject poverty and a low employment outlook that causes many to leave the island. They barely tolerate the visitors who come expecting to be entertained and catch "the local experience" but depend on them for economic survival. So they bite their tongues and get to work with their wide and "Have a nice days" and "What can I get yous" while hiding exasperated eye rolls and sarcastic remarks. The young men like Edwin and Clive, can flirt with and romance the young visiting ladies as they do with Alison almost as a break from the hopelessness that they feel about their situation.
Alison is also looking to break her own tedium and feels ashamed at her privileged lifestyle. She bonds with Clive and Edwin out of boredom and to get away from the handsome Ivy Leaguers/College boys/MBA's at the hotel. She wants to experience real life outside of her comfort zone even if it's just as a tourist.
The crime aspect is top notch because Schiatkin focuses more on the aftermath rather than the crime itself. We get brilliant insights into what happens when a crime becomes a media frenzy. Claire despairs about the constant interview coverage and how the publicity was so intense that her family moved across the country.
Some humor is provided when Claire critiques a Lifetime Movie of the Week about her sister's murder. She mocks the loose party girl portrayal who was so different from the introspective woman that she knew. She also laughs at the obviouly evil hammy villain (called "Apollo") in the film. Despite the humor in the film, it is still a reminder of who her family lost. It's hard for Claire to move on when she is surrounded by constant reminders.
Schiatkin also writes how a crime affects many people involved, not just the victim, murderer, and their families. Throughout the book, multiple first person narratives are used from different characters who were at the hotel or were involved with either Alison, Clive, Edwin, or the investigation. We read this from people like the main investigator, Clive's girlfriend and her mother, and various witnesses such as a famous unnamed actor whose personal life made a steep downward descent since Alison's murder. Every person has their own separate story to tell, their own memories of the Thomas family, and their close proximity to what became a very newsworthy event. The characters's individualities come through in these chapters.
By far the strongest characters are Claire and Clive. Claire is someone who has physically grown older, but mentally and emotionally her development has arrested since those days at the beach. Her cell phone ring tone plays "Day O (The Banana Boat Song)", one of the songs that she heard during that fateful trip.
Claire works as an Assistant Editor for a publishing company that mostly specializes in True Crime books. While she claims that Alison's death has nothing to do with her current career choice, reading and editing books with similar stories to her sister's causes a lot of damage to her psyche especially when she reopens her own investigation into Alison's death. Claire has very few friends and no romantic ties. All she lives for are answers.
She even retains habits that she had as a child, particularly spelling words into the air with her finger. She tries to control that habit, but it is almost involuntary like she considers it communicating with her deceased sister. (In one eerie scene, another character recognizes her just from that habit.)
After Claire meets Clive, she ingratiates into his life by lying about her identity and faking a friendship with him just so she can finally get some final answers towards Alison's murder and whether Clive killed her. She has little regard for his feelings and whether she will hurt him. She doesn't even entertain the possibility that he might be innocent. She wants a confession from him and will sacrifice anything even her personal happiness and life to get it. Claire needs to receive closure towards her sister's death before she can move on.
Clive is also a fully realized character. His life was also shaped by Alison's disappearance and death. However, it doesn't define him as much as it does Claire. He is also driven by his economic situation and desires for a better life. He grew up in an impoverished village in Saint X. He had a childhood marked by unemployment, parental abandonment, and few opportunities. He is swept up by the schemes from his best friend, Edwin including drug dealing and romancing the wealthy female tourists.
Clive is also a father. His encounters with his young son and the boy's mother are some of the more moving passages in the entire book. He moves to New York, so he can make a life for himself and provide for the boy even if he doesn't get along with the boy's mother and maternal grandmother.
That's what makes Clive different from Claire. He has goals, ambitions, friends and family: things that Claire lacks because of her unwillingness to move on from Alison's death. As she stalks Clive, the Reader's sympathies change from the girl who misses her murdered sister to the man who befriends a potentially unstable stalker. We see that Claire and Clive are both damaged people and they both carry emotional scars from that day.
Saint X is a moving novel that asks to peer inside the media circus and see the individuals from within. Crime marked them, but it's the scrutiny, the loss, guilt, and questions that remain with them.
New Book Alert: The Surrey Stalker by B.L. Pearce; Tight Suspenseful Novella About the Hunt for a Serial Killer
New Book Alert: The Surrey Stalker by B.L. Pearce; Tight Suspenseful Novella About the Hunt for a Serial Killer
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoiler Alert: B.L. Pearce's novella, The Surrey Stalker is extremely short. Because of that, it lacks something in characterization. But what it lacks, it makes up for plot and suspense. It's a brief read but it is one that keeps the Reader on the edge of their seats from first page to last.
A sinister character has been stalking and murdering various women around Surrey. His latest victim is an archivist named Julie Andrews ("like the actress", the officers say). DI Rob Miller uses the case as a distraction from his relationship woes with his fiancee, Yvette. As the body count increases and the investigators profile the killer and follow possible leads, Miller puts his and Yvette's lives on the line in his determination to catch him.
This is a tightly wound book where clues and suspense are laid out intelligently and lead to precise and well thought-out conclusions. When the police officers learn that the victim's engagement rings were forced inside the victims, they realize that the killer might be involved with weddings and envy those who have had good relationships when he had none. Profilers analyze that this is someone who had a stormy love life. Those leads prove to be effective in catching the Stalker.
The victims are chronicled through their encounters with the Stalker and the interviews with anguished fiances and family members. Justin remembers Julie as a loving affectionate woman who was worried about a troublesome follower. Sara Bakshi wanted to start a family. (I just want to mention how personally weirded out I am, reading a suspense novella in which two separate victims share my first and middle names.) The Reader really feels for these women who had their lives ahead of them but were cut short just when they should have been their happiest.
The chapters between the Stalker and the victims are the best. We peer into the Stalker's dangerous frame of mind almost like a hunter or predatory animal closing in on his prey. It is terrifying and mesmerizing as he follows them and ultimately traps them.
The characterization towards the police officers is unfortunately not as effective. Miller's relationship woes with Yvette are heart felt but serve mostly as distractions to the goal of catching The Surrey Stalker. They become repetitive and don't add anything new to "the lonely cop with spouse/significant other problems" trope.
However, Miller and Yvette's arguments puts her at a vulnerable position and leaves her right in the path of the Stalker so it moves the narrative along to an effective climax.
The Surrey Stalker is a tight finely structured novella that is filled with suspense and leads to a thrilling conclusion.
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