Kamis, 30 Juni 2011

You know you have a problem when...

...there are 101 books in your to-read piles. Also, when you say you are going to bring only a few books back from ALA Annual in New Orleans and you bring back 61.

Is there a 12 step program for my bibliomanic hoarding? I'm sure of it.

Will post major ALA update sometime this weekend. But now, I'm off to enjoy my ARC of Michelle Hodkin's The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer. Word to the wise: it's super creepy. Perfect hot summer night read!

Jumat, 27 Mei 2011

Crunch Time

Okay, there are now 30 days until we begin meetings for this cycle of Best Fiction [in hot, sticky, but delicious New Orleans]. And as of today, 31 books I still have to read. YIPES!

But if I have learned anything from the Little Engine That Could, it is that mental power is everything. Which is why I am about to start training for a half-marathon. And start my new job. And continue hunting for the perfect sofa. And why not add a new round of edits on my manuscript?

Oy. Would that I could be this one kitty I know, lounging around all day because it is 84 degrees in our apartment.

But no. As usual, time to read!

Kamis, 26 Mei 2011

I guess I fit right in

Evidently Cambridge is the country's most well-read city. Given that I've read almost 300 books since moving here, I have to say I agree.

Back to Laini Taylor's ah-mazing Daughter of Smoke and Bone.

Jumat, 20 Mei 2011

Book Review: Jasper Jones by Craig Silvey

This afternoon I finished up the remaining 100 pages of Craig Silvey's Jasper Jones, an Australian YA novel. The day before, I gave myself the lofty goal of reading three books. Well, I read three books, but I only managed to finish one of them yesterday. The other two I finished off earlier today. While the other two were quite good, Jasper Jones was the one that truly kept me spellbound.

The effortlessly moody coming of age story starts off when teenage Charlie is awoken at night by Jasper Jones, the half-Aboriginal outcast in town. The two barely know each other at the novel's start, but as it continues, their stories become intricately entwined. Jasper has found something horrifying in his eucalyptus hideout: Laura, the head of the shire's daughter, whom he had been secretly seeing at night, is dead, battered, and suspended from the tree. He knows how he is seen in town. No one will believe that he didn't do it. So the two young men do the only thing they can imagine doing at that point. They hide the body and tell no one.

With purposeful echoes of To Kill a Mockingbird, Silvey sets Jasper Jones in a town with two Boo Radleys: Jasper Jones and the Jack Lionel, the reclusive old man that Jasper holds under suspicion for killing Laura. What impresses me about this book, though, is that there is so much of interest going on in addition to the murder mystery (itself quite captivating). Set against the backdrop of the Vietnam War as witnessed in a small Australian town, there is Charlie's friendship with Jeffrey Lu, a Vietnamese refugee whose hilarious conversation topics belie the serious mistreatment his father receives from their neighbors. And we also have Charlie's family life, with his horrid witch of a mother, and his hapless teacher father, the tension bubbling to the surface only towards the novel's end. And then there's Charlie's budding romance with Eliza, Laura's sister.

This is a rich, textured novel that readers will want to soak in, not hurry through. Teenage Me craved books like this, with glimpses of the messy grown-up world, and beautiful writing.

This is coming of age at its best.

Rabu, 18 Mei 2011

I love the mailman

At least, I do when he deposits this on my doorstep.

I guess I know what I'm reading this afternoon!

Rabu, 09 Februari 2011

New favorite authors

There's nothing quite like discovering a new favorite author. That feeling, just a few paragraphs into a book when you realize that your specific reading taste and something about the way that author writes, imagines, or explains, are completely in sync. The other night, when I read the first page of Tim Tharp's latest novel Badd, I had that realization.

His National Book Award-winning The Spectacular Now was one of my favorite books the year it was published. It, too, was one of those delightful surprises, a book I read only because it was nominated for the National Book Award. Somehow, it fell just under my radar. Well, that was not to happen with his new book. When I saw the galley at ALA Midwinter, I thought in a Liz Lemon-y way, "I want to go to there." Finally, I've had the chance to go to there, to sit down and enjoy this book

Okay, enough blabbering. To the book!

Ceejay is not a girly girl. She's stubborn and a little difficult, and she idolizes her older brother Bobby, who was, to put it frankly, a badass all through high school. It was his final act of badassery, though, that put him in the situation that would change his life. He stole a car, and the repercussion for him would be either jail or a joining the army. He chose the latter, unaware that it would involve actually going to Iraq.

Bobby is finally coming home, and Ceejay's anticipating a hero's welcome, followed up by (fingers crossed) the opportunity to move out of her parents' house and in with Bobby. But life is never that easy. The Bobby that returns home is not the Bobby that has left. He's depressed, he drinks too much and in a different way than before, and he's befriended the town weirdo, Captain Crazy.

While a central part of this book is Ceejay's growing understand of what happened to Bobby and why he has changed -- that they can't so easily go back to the way things were -- it is also so much about family and the connections people make with each other. Ceejay and Bobby have been at odds with their parents and siblings, but at least for Ceejay, that starts to change. Big family events bring them together in ways that allow Ceejay to get a different perspective on her younger sister and her mother. And maybe a family isn't just your mom and dad, and your siblings. Maybe family means taking care of someone else that you grow to know.

Tharp's latest book is so refreshingly honest. It is about real people -- they live in Oklahoma, they do not have a reality show, they are not vampires or werewolves. They have to work, they fight in wars, they get by. Bobby's story, when it finally comes out, is heartbreaking and unforgettable, just like this book.

If you read and enjoyed Dana Reinhardt's excellent The Things A Brother Knows, you must read this one. I have a feeling we'll be hearing much more about it. Clearly, I have a new favorite author.

Senin, 17 Januari 2011

It's official

After nearly a week of meetings in sunny and gorgeous San Diego, we hemmed and hawed and ultimately, committed to a list of 99 titles in the first ever YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults list. And here it is!

I'm so happy with our list and the diversity of titles recognized. There were some personal favorites that didn't quite make the cut (okay, and some that weren't even close) but that's all part of the pleasure of working with 14 individuals from around the country, bringing such a variety of tastes and experiences to the table.

Our work does not resume until February 1, so I am rewarding myself for all that reading with, okay, a bit more reading, but also some serious indulging in the things I have missed for the past several months. I am sorely behind in watching Oscar-worthy performances. My to-watch list is nearly matching my to-read list. Okay, that's not exactly true. My to-read piles are still rather impressive, in that they span about 5 shelves. But I'm trying to mix in some fabulous grown-up books with the must-read ARCs picked up at Midwinter. Just finished Rhoda Janzen's Mennonite In A Little Black Dress, a delightfully funny and surprisingly profound memoir. Next up: ARC of Sarah Dessen's forthcoming What Happened to Goodbye and the Newbery winner, Moon Over Manifest. Also, must finish Gary D. Schmidt's Okay for Now.  I've historically never been one to read multiple books at once, but I think I'm embracing this new reality.