Showing posts with label Modern Fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Modern Fantasy. Show all posts

Saturday, June 15, 2019

New Book Alert; The Book Charmer by Karen Hawkins; Charming Magical Southern Tale About Friendship in a Small Town



New Book Alert: The Book Charmer by Karen Hawkins; Charming Magical Southern Tale About Friendship in a Small Town


By Julie Sara Porter


Bookworm Reviews



Spoilers: There are bookworms and there's Sarah Dove. She is the type of reader in which books talk to her, literally in her case.



In Karen Hawkins’s charming and magical novel, The Book Charmer, Sarah first hears the voices of books when she is a little girl. She hears the voice of her ancestor's diary begging for her to read it. After much deliberation and argument (Sarah wanted to read about dragons), she agrees and becomes fascinated with her family history.


The Doves are a unique family in Dove Pond, South Carolina. They have always produced seven daughters and each one is bestowed with some unique ability. The seventh (in this case, Sarah) is the most powerful and is often the head of the family and her community. Sarah's ability to hear books calling to her is put to good use in her role as town librarian. The books long to be matched to the right person and tell her who should read them. Sarah is able to match a Reader with the right book to solve their problems or answer their questions.


However, a once thriving town, Dove Pond is now dying. Businesses and residents are leaving. The mayor, an honorary position, is tremendously lazy and is inept in handling the town's funds. Even many of Sarah's sisters have left leaving only her and Ava, a horticulturist who hears plants the way her sister hears books. If Sarah doesn't act fast, there won't be much of a Dove Pond left.


Enter Grace Wheeler. Grace arrives in Dove Pond with her troubled orphan niece, Daisy, and her dementia-ridden foster mother, Mama G., to accept the job as Dove Pond’s Town Clerk. Sarah's books tell her that the new arrival will be the one to save Dove Pond, so she wants to get Grace to join the committee of the upcoming Apple Festival as a springboard to save the town. At first, Grace is reluctant but when the two eat coffee cake and carpool together, a friendship begins to develop.


The plot of The Book Charmer is similar to many of the other books of this type. Big City person visits a small town (usually in the South) of good-hearted eccentric locals. At first, the City Slicker has their own personal problems and doesn't want to have anything to do with them but still they begin to like it there, and become an active member of the community helping to save it from dying. Expect some cute little magical touches and a friendship and/or romance with a local.
It's not a bad plot, and if done right the results can be quite pleasant. Luckily Hawkins does it right. Grace and Sarah make for an interesting duo that play the familiar plot rather well.

One way is that they compliment each other so well. Sarah is a romantic almost otherworldly figure. She takes much of the strangeness of her family and the town in stride. She treats her beloved books like wise old friends and she is always on the lookout for signs and omens like flowers inexplicably changing color to let her know she is on the right track.
Sarah is an engaging people person who knows a great deal about the locals’ personalities, interests, and of course reading habits. She takes her role as a community lead seriously because she loves Dove Pond and doesn't want to see it die.

Grace is the more cynical realist. A former foster child, she developed a tough exterior that she uses in her relationships with others. While she could have been written as a heartless yuppie or an urban snob, Hawkins instead writes her as someone who is overwhelmed. She is trying to care for her niece and mother so when the mayor forces her to chair the Apple Festival, it's no surprise that at first she instantly delegates it to someone else and automatically resigns.
However, once she is tricked into rejoining the Festival committee, Grace shows a strong business strategy and work ethic. When she realizes the town's finances are in bad shape, she is able to plan a business outreach to send businesses to Dove Pond for the festival. To reach out to local business owners, she needs to get to know them and that's where Sarah comes in.

Grace and Sarah make for a great team that work well together and are able to use their talents to achieve their goals. Sarah wouldn't have the business acumen to draw in various companies without Grace and likewise Grace wouldn't understand how the town works without Sarah. They are practically two halves of the same woman representing the realist and romantic sides.

There are also other interesting characters that go through great change throughout the book. Daisy starts out as a rebellious sullen girl, but begins to enjoy being a part of the town when she is given extra duties such as reading to children. While Mama G’s faculties are diminishing, she is still on hand to provide a sympathetic ear and some words of encouragement. There is Trav Parker, an Afghanistan war vet and childhood friend of Sarah's who begins to develop a fondness for Grace and Daisy. His relationship with Grace and her family allows him to move beyond his PTSD and self-imposed isolation. There are also other memories of the community that are likable and charming in their own ways.

That's what this book has plenty of. Charm. The Book Charmer is a sweet book that casts a gentle spell on the Reader. While it does mention serious topics like dementia, death, mental illness and others, the book does not overwhelm the Reader with them. Instead it suggests that even when things are at their darkest, there is always a solution out of it. There is some light to be offered whether it is through the kind words of a friend, a gentle walk through town, a slice of coffee cake, the smell of a new flower, or the pages of a beloved book.

Monday, December 24, 2018

Weekly Reader: Other Kingdoms by Richard Matheson; A Brilliant But Slightly Flawed Fantasy About Witches, Fairies, and WWI.



Weekly Reader: Other Kingdoms by Richard Matheson; A Brilliant But Slightly Flawed Fantasy About Witches, Fairies, and WWI.

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews




Spoilers: Richard Matheson's Other Kingdoms could go down in that legendary file marked “Modern Fairy Tale” in which characters encounter fairies, magic, and other situations in the 20th and 21st century. Luckily, he does so in a book that is clever and brilliant but with some flaws that keep it from being a perfect retelling.

Much of the cleverness lies in its protagonist. Alex White AKA Arthur Black, a popular author in his 80’s, retells his past of when he was an 18-year-old WWI vet. Many times he comments on his past actions with a self-aware wryness and wit such as when he calls his younger self an idiot for doing certain things. Alex also is found of complimenting his own writing by referring to a particularly poetic quote as “worthy of Arthur Black.”

One particular moment that displays Alex (and Matheson's) clever narrative is that he at first refuses to go into too many gory details about trench warfare by saying “it's too horrifying” and that he “will tell (The Reader) later.” When later comes and he graphically describes the death of a fellow soldier, Harold Lightfoot complete with intestines blown out of his body and rats scurrying from the approaching bombs, Alex then adds “I told you it would be horrifying.”

The self-awareness of the genre also continues when Alex moves to Gatford, England, Lightfoot's childhood home. (Alex, an American, has nothing to go back to except an abusive widowed father whom he dubs “Capt. Arthur Bradford White USN” or sometimes “You Know Who.”) At first he is confused by the superstitious locals who warn him of fairies which he mocks. It is only when he encounters the fairies for the first time that he realizes that they have reasons to be superstitious.


Far from being a stereotypical Fairy Tale, Matheson turns the genre on its head by making the Fairy Tale stock characters more relatable and interesting than most of the human characters except Alex. He is warned at first away from “The Witch in the Woods” but when he encounters, Magda Variel, he sees a kind beautiful woman who is in mourning for her late husband and son. She also explains that she is a Wiccan telling him about the nature based religion (earning this Wiccan's gratitude). Finding her to be beautiful yet troubled and her magical practice to be fascinating and not scary, the much younger Alex engages in an affair with the middle-aged Magda. (Leaving the older Alex to be both proud of his younger self for getting lucky with an older woman and appalled because he knows what is to come.)

Matheson is also brilliant in reconstructing the Fairies making them very developed and somehow...human. Alex encounters Ruthanna, a lovely Fairy and falls in love with her. He is warned by everyone including Magda that the fairies are shape shifters and mischief makers who will use any trick to lure a human because it amuses them. So when he encounters Ruthanna, he and the Reader, are on guard for any mischief.

Instead Ruthanna reveals herself to be a complex misunderstood being who genuinely falls in love with Alex at first sight. She and the others of her kind explain that many of their tricks such as shape shifting are survival instincts to avoid the human race that have been known to hunt the Fair Folk down to potential extinction.

Matheson's complex writing is particularly noticeable when Magda and Ruthanna both confront Alex. They both say they can be trusted and the other is lying. Alex (and the Reader) are not sure who to trust. All of thee stereotypes surrounding them have been challenged so who is right and who is wrong? It becomes a well-written dilemma as Alex is uncertain so Magda makes the decision for him.

Unfortunately, Magda's decision leads to the book's huge glaring flaw. Once it is made, Alex joins Ruthanna in her Fairy World. There are many beautiful moments as the two explore the world together and Alex learns about Fairy culture from her Uncle Garal. (He also learns the late Harold Lightfoot was her brother who died fighting for a human country in which he felt a deep connection). Their romance would be complete if not for Magda.

Once Alex gets involved with Ruthanna, Magda just kind of disappears. In her final confrontation with Alex, she reveals some graphic secrets that the Reader never learns if they were true or just a blatant attempt to push Alex away because she is angry with him. The book never tells us and she fades into the background becoming an afterthought. For a character to begin so brilliantly realized to have such an anticlimactic resolution is wrong somehow.

However Alex and Ruthanna's romance is solid and is movingly felt even long afterwords when Alex becomes exiled from the Fairy World after a confrontation with Ruthanna's bad tempered kinsman.

Despite the lack of resolution with Magda, the book is an excellent modern fairy tale that gives compelling characters, plenty of magic, and an ending that may not be happily ever after but for Alex White and Ruthanna might be as close as they are going to get.