Monday, November 14, 2016

Born a Crime



Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood
On Sale November 15, 2016 by Spiegel & Grau
Rating: ★★★★

Trevor Noah was the only white kid in the black neighborhood, the only black kid in the white neighborhood, and the only mixed-race kid in the colored neighborhood. He didn't always know where he fit in, but he always knew who he was.

Noah was born in South Africa while it was still under the system of apartheid. He is the product of a black woman from the Xhosa tribe and a white Swiss father, who broke the racial purity laws that could have landed them in jail for several years if their "crime" of having a son together were ever discovered. Noah spent the first couple years of his life hiding indoors, his family not wanting to attract too much attention or have people asking questions. 

More than anything, this book is a coming of age story, set on a backdrop of insane social and political injustice. The star of the story is not the author himself, but his mother-- a no-nonsense and deeply religious woman who was determined to raise her son to be able to withstand the harsh treatment he'd get from the world.

I'm going to be honest: I didn't think this book was all that funny. That didn't surprise me, because I don't find Noah funny on The Daily Show. That said, this book contains occasional gems like this:

"But the more we went to church and the longer I sat in those pews the more I learned about how Christianity works: If you're a Native American and you pray to the wolves, you're a savage. If you're African and you pray to your ancestors, you're a savage. But when white people pray to a guy who turns water to wine, well, that's just common sense."

However, I really did enjoy his insider view of apartheid and the transition years right afterward. It's the larger perspective that earns this book my recommendation.

Friday, November 11, 2016

The Romantics



The Romantics by Leah Konen
Published November 1, 2016 by Amulet Books
Rating: ★★★★

Love is patient. Love is kind. Love totally dropped the ball with Gael Brennan's parents and feels the best recourse is to save Gael's own love life. And that means keeping him away from the rebound girl.

"... leave it to the Manic Pixie Dream Girl trope to convince a guy that someone who straight-up irks him will also somehow save him."

I might cross-stitch that onto a pillow.

The problem with Gael is that he's a romantic. Not like he's into romantic comedies or anything like that, because he's not. He likes real movies, like Wes Anderson ones. But he falls in love too hard and too fast. So it's not surprising that his very first relationship ends in disaster when he blurts out the big ILY way too early. Hurt, Gael is desperate for a reminder that love is real. So when he runs into Cara in a meet-cute, he puts too much importance on the moment. But even as Gael is perusing Cara, Love knows his real destiny is with Sammy, his younger sister's babysitter.

This is a cute, fun read. That said, if you remove the quirky element of Love as the narrator, this becomes a very basic, expected romance. It's clear early on that a Sammy and Gael pairing is the endgame, and while I accepted the premise, I didn't think it grew organically. Sammy was supposed to be perfect for Gael, but I didn't really see it. In any case, this is a quick and mostly satisfying YA romance for those so inclined.

Monday, November 7, 2016

Dead Girl's Society




Dead Girl's Society by Michelle Krys
On Sale November 8, 2016 by Delacorte Press
Rating: ★★★

"The Society. Weird. Sounds like spam, but you know what they say: life is short, read spam." 

Hope is facing a shorter, more sheltered life than most: she has cystic fibrosis and a mother who keeps her trapped inside the house. The only person she has outside contact with is her best friend, Ethan, who is also the object of her crush (go figure). So when "the society" offers her a bit of excitement and a chance to break out of her narrow mold, the email invitation to join the "games" proves too tempting to pass up. Hope finds herself in a twisted competition with a handful of other girls from her old school (when her mom used to let her go to school, that is). The winner gets a huge cash prize, but losers will be severely punished. At first, the society almost seems like a blessing. Hope is being raised by a single mother working a cashier job, and the medicines she needs do not come cheap. But as the consequences mount, Hope starts to wonder why the society is after her and will do anything to quit the game.

It was hard for me to take this book seriously. A couple of teens playing games set up by a "mysterious society" with "consequences"-- I was just at the very edge of my seat. So when real, dark stuff starts happening to the characters, I was kind of thrown for a loop. Where did that come from? This book goes from 0 to deadly serious very quickly, and I just didn't find it believable-- any of it. I also thought Ethan could have been eliminated from the book entirely. His character adds little to the story beyond being Hope's love interest, and that proved a pretty average and expected subplot. A teen girl whose best friend happens to be a hot, understanding guy that she happens to be in love with-- is that well not dry yet? I would describe this book as: good, not great, it has it's fun moments and logic does not apply.

Friday, November 4, 2016

The Sound of Gravel



The Sound of Gravel: A Memoir, by Ruth Wariner
Published January 5, 2016 by Flatiron Books
Rating: ★★★★★

Holy Moses, this book just about destroyed me.

This book isn't a TLC show, and readers going into with a certain sense of schadenfreude about polygamist compounds are going to be disappointed. In the end, this is a tale of what happens when people pursue selfish desires (like religious fervor, ideological purity, and attention from a lover) over the well being of their children. The themes that prevail throughout this book hit a lot closer to home than LeBaron, Mexico.

LeBaron is the remote location Ruth Wariner's grandfather, Alma LeBaron, chose as the home for his polygamist cult. The Firstborns, as the group becomes known, believed the modern Mormon church had lost its way, and that polygamist marriage was one of God's most important decrees, as well as the only path to salvation. They refer to the United States as Babylon, and they feel God will sweep down from the heavens any day now to smote it. No surprise the group feels safer in Mexico-- and it doesn't hurt that government officials down there turn a blind eye to their polygamist and child bride practices.

Ruth never knew her father, who was at the time of his death considered the great prophet of the church. He was murdered just months after she was born, at the hands of his own brother in a family-feud-turned-holy-war. Her mother remarries her stepfather, Lane, and Ruth never ever feels comfortable around him. Her young instincts will turn out to be devastatingly correct.

Life is always turbulent as Ruth grows up. Her mother and Lane fight a lot, and Ruth can't understand why her mother keeps having babies with him. Unfortunately, several of Ruth's siblings have mental and physical disabilities of varying degrees. It's not an easy challenge to face in any situation, but Ruth's family also has the burden of being dirt poor and living area with no doctors and no social services. They struggle to survive without even the basics-- no electricity or indoor pluming, no telephone, inadequate food. Her family moves around a lot-- in one hovel more cramped than the next-- and when they are in Mexico, they still have to come back to the US frequently to claim benefits. As a "single mother," Ruth's mother collect food stamps and other types of taxpayer aid. The Firstborns see nothing wrong with living off the teat of Babylon.

I was definitely left with mixed feelings about Ruth's mother. You could tell she loved her children, but she wasn't willing to fight for them when it counted. It seemed like the more children she had, the more pressure put on her by the polygamist compound lifestyle, the more she lost her free-thinking spirit. It's hard to understand why she put so much faith in Lane when he made a fool of her time and time again, and why she didn't protect her children more. But then I have to wonder she owned total responsibility for her actions when she was so brainwashed and beat down.

Through this tumultuous tale, it becomes ever more clear that Ruth is a survivor. She endures more suffering and loss than most and does so with admirable strength. By the end of the book, I was at the edge of my seat, waiting to see if she would escape the cult. I don't think I've come across a memoir where I felt so invested in seeing the author getting a happy ending. I highly recommend this.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Non-Fiction November

This month, I'm participating in Non-Fiction November. The goal of this challenge is to read more non-fiction than you would usually read in a month. I estimate I read 2-3 nonfiction books a month, so for this challenge. I'll be reading 4 books. At least I hope. In addition, there are 4 category challenges: new, fascinating, important, and controversial. Here's what I'll be reading this month:


For the category fascinating, I'll be reading Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah. This book won't be published for another couple of weeks, but I was lucky enough to win it in a giveaway. I don't know a lot about apartheid. The system was abandoned before I got old enough to be aware of socio-political issues in far away countries. But when I read the book blurb for this, I was fascinated. Because Noah is the child of a white man and a black woman, his existence was literally considered criminal by the state. Can you even imagine? He had to hide for the first five years of his life. I can't wait to read more.


In the new category, I'll be reading Sing for Your Life: A Story of Race, Music and Family by Daniel Bergner. This book was published back in September, and I have an ARC copy of it, but haven't gotten around to it yet. This is about a boy who grows up in poverty in a trailer park only to become a singer with the NY Metropolitan Opera.


For important, I'll be reading Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and Warning, by Timothy Snyder. I'll admit: I'm a little intimidated by this book. It's nearly 500 pages of small type and there's just so much material packed into these pages. I also know this won't be an easy read, as histories of genocide never are. Still, I'm looking forward to seeing what this book adds to the others I've read on the Holocaust (if you're my Goodreads friend, you might have already noticed I read a lot of books on WW2).


I wanted to read one book from every category, but, after racking my brain, I couldn't find a nonfiction book I owned that could be considered controversial. I really don't want to rely on library books for this challenge, because I just know someone will check out what I want first and keep it for the whole month. So I'm reading The Run of His Life: The People v. O. J. Simpson by Jeffery Toobin. Honestly, I've had this book on my shelf for months, waiting for the perfect opportunity to read it. So thank you Non-Fiction November!

Would you like to join Non-Fiction November? Stop by the Goodreads group: https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/174090-nonfiction-november-2016. If you blog about what you're reading for the challenge, please feel free to link your post in the comments section below.

Monday, October 31, 2016

And Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer



And Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer by Fredrik Backman
On Sale November 1, 2016 by Atria
Rating: ★★★★★


"We're in my brain, Noahnoah. And it got smaller overnight again." 

Noah and his Grandpa share a special bond. Together, they speak the language of numbers. Because mathematics will always lead you home.

Until it doesn't anymore.

Lately, Grandpa has been struggling to make it home. The distance between hazy memories and lucidness is growing longer each day. Grandpa doesn't want to forget all the numbers to pi, his favorite doctor joke, and especially not his beloved late wife. Luckily, Noah vows to help him remember.

This charming and heartbreaking novella is everything you'd expect from Fredrik Backman. It's a rare author who can wrap dementia up in sunshine and do it in a way that feels moving instead of flippant or manipulative. If you enjoy Backman's usual brand of quirky melodrama, this will be no exception. This is the kind of book I think I would get even more from on a reread (it can be a bit confusing at first to decipher what was in Grandpa's head and what was really taking place-- at least it was for me). And coming in at less than 100 pages, why not revisit Grandpa and Noah's special world?

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Faithful


Faithful by Alice Hoffman
On Sale November 1, 2016 by Simon & Schuster
Rating: ★★★

Shelby is determined to pay a lifetime of penance. When she's seventeen, she's involved in a one-vehicle crash that leaves her best friend in a vegetative state and herself in psych ward. Shelby is convinced the accident is actually her crime, and she's volunteered to serve as the warden to her own emotional prison. Instead of going to college, she shaves her head, festers in her parents' basement, only making human contact with her weed supplier.


I thought the beginning to Faithful was really interesting. A young woman in pain, full of self-loathing and self-abuse. There were so many directions this story could have gone... but I don't think it went much of anywhere.

Things just happen to Shelby. Good things. Even though she doesn't want them, doesn't think she deserves them, and does nothing to earn them. First, her aforementioned pot dealer turns into a stable adult and falls in love with her, and they move to NYC. She gets a job at a pet store-- happy to stock shelves and avoid both customers and co-workers-- and is promoted to manager because. Then she starts going to college, surprises herself that it just all comes so naturally to her, and the state of New York throws money at her for her education. She's also the most wonderful babysitter in the world and can fix an entire family with her reluctant awesomeness. She also rescues (steals) pets all over the city because she loves animals so much and knows what is best for them.

Shelby, in her way, is a total Mary Sue. She's so determined to self-destruct, and yet just so special that all the forces of the universe conspire to keep her alive and give her a happy ending. All while she wallows in her own, endless pool of self-pity.

There are elements of magical realism here, but they play a minor role in the book and felt a bit out of place with the rest of the book. Romance played a much larger role, but, in the end, I only became convinced that Shelby makes horrible choices when it comes to men.

Shelby didn't grow enough for me as a character, especially considering the timeline of this book spans over a decade. It's hard for me to knock this book below 2.5 stars, because it is well written, decently paced, and many of the supporting characters possess the charisma Shelby lacks. And I did enjoy the relationship between Shelby and her mother. Ultimately, though, Faithful fell flat for me.

Monday, October 24, 2016

The Best Possible Answer


The Best Possible Answer, by E. Katherine Kottaras
On Sale November 1, 2016 by St. Martin's Griffin
Rating: ★★★

So this is the book I expected: an over-stressed, over-worked, high school perfectionist with trust issues learns to open up to "Mr. Right" and live in the moment.

That's not the book I got. This book is not a typical YA romance. In fact, it's not really a romance at all.

This is a book about struggling to keep things together when your life is falling spectacularly apart.

Viviana has real issues. It goes deeper than the humiliation she feels from her first love spreading around her nude selfies in retaliation for their break up. This incident puts her in the hospital with a severe case of anxiety. Viviana's parents put enormous pressure on her to get into an elite college, and her father is livid that the nude pics might bar her from Stanford (how?). In fact, her father is so disappointed he's moved out of the home and gone off to Singapore. If that weren't enough pain, Viviana also struggles to repair her relationship with her mother. Then she learns the truth about her father, and it's something that would land even the most well-adjusted person into a lifetime of therapy. With all this going on, she learns her best friend, Sammie, is moving away, and they spend much of their last summer together fighting over a boy. Then there's a mentally ill professor living in their apartment complex who somehow is going to teach a bunch of teens some important life lessons (sigh).

I think this book tries to do too much. From the romance drama, to the family drama, to the best friend drama, to the sister drama... this book feels like a collage. A bunch of plot bits slapped together with glue into something that's not altogether horrible to look at but is undeniably cluttered. Each chapter starts with headers about studying for SATs, entrance essays to college, ect.-- I skipped past those.

Something needed to give with this book. Removing one or more of the story elements and going further into depth with the remaining could have made this a much better novel, IMO.

Friday, October 21, 2016

The Fall Guy



The Fall Guy by James Lasdun
Published October 18, 2016 by W. W. Norton & Company
Rating: ★★★★

So this review is a bit of an unpopular opinion. The rating on this book has sunk to little over 3 on Goodreads. One of the common complaint is that this book is not riveting. And that's right. This book has a bit of an old-fashioned feel to it, imo. It's slower, less shocking, less sadistic than many modern thrillers. I don't think the thriller label is a good fit for this book, and I think it was slapped into that popular category for marketing reasons. Ok, enough of my rambling, onto the review....

Matthew and Charlie are cousins, more like brothers really, but their lives have gone in very different directions. Charlie is a successful investment banker and a married father. He owns multiple homes, has a million dollars in cash in his home safe, and is the type to be impressed with his own wealth. Matthew lives in a dingy one bedroom and is still striving to make his mark in the restaurant business. Both men are harboring some measure of resentment toward the other, but, like in most families, they keep it bubbling under the surface. That's until Charlie invites Matthew to spend the summer at his vacation home. As the days go on, the cracks between become undeniable.

Maybe things would be less complicated if Matthew weren't enamored with Charlie's wife, Chloe. While he's not in love with Chloe and isn't looking to steal her away from his cousin, Matthew feels both an intimacy and possessiveness over her that he can't quite explain. She's his without really being his. It's a dynamic they've all danced around for the last decade. But as the summer wears on, Matthew starts to suspect that Chloe is hiding something, and he becomes obsessive about it, more or less acting like a stalker. It takes him down the road of no return.

This is a suspense novel, and it might disappoint fans of modern thrillers, but this is the type of book I really appreciate. It's told from one perspective and relies on a slower build up of tension. The writing is good and the plot realistic. It kept me interested, and, while not a true page turner, by the end I was racing through to see what would happen to Matthew. My main frustration was with Chloe and Charlie, who I felt were underdeveloped. What did Charlie really think of Matthew? What were Chloe's motivations? On the whole, though, good book.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

The German Girl


The German Girl by Armando Lucas Correa
Published October 18, 2016 by Atria
Rating: ★★★★




When eleven-year-old Hannah Rosenthal winds up on the cover of the German Girl, a Nazi propaganda magazine for pre-teen girls, it's almost a sick joke. Because if her childhood in Berlin living amongst the "Ogres" has taught her anything it's that she's not German-- not pure, not wanted, barely tolerated. Her blonde hair and blue eyes can do nothing to change that. By 1939, her family is more or less holed up in their apartment building, the one that's been in her mother's family for decades but that the Ogres now want for themselves. The Rosenthal family's tenants used to respect them, but now they ask "Why won't they just leave?" (the building they own! the country of their birth!)"Why are they still here? Don't they know how uncomfortable this situation is making us?"

And Hannah's family does leave, because as Jews they don't really have any other options. The Ogres arrest Hannah's father, only allowing the family to leave the country if they turn over all their assets. But it's worth it for the chance to escape to Cuba, where they will go on to America. Along with 900 other Jewish passengers, including Hannah's best friend, Leo Martin, the Rosenthals set sail on the MS St. Louisbound for Havana. In one final insult, all the passengers are forced to buy return tickets, even though everyone knows this is a one way trip.

For two weeks, they're human beings again. Their captain, a German but not an Ogre, makes sure that his passengers were treated with respect. There is fine dining, dancing, and swimming. It's almost a dream vacation.

It ends in a nightmare. Unknown to the passengers aboard, the Cuban government had retroactively invalidated almost everyone's visas. Hannah and her pregnant mother are allowed to disembark, but her father and Leo are still on ship as it is forced to sail away from salvation. 

But Cuba doesn't turn out to be a salvation for Hannah, not really. Even though she lives to become an old woman, her life pretty much ended in 1939.

The German Girl is told from two perspectives: Hannah and Anna, her only living relative. Hannah's story follows the events of 1939, from life in Berlin, where her only refuge is in her friend Leo, to the sailing of the St. Louis, to life in Cuba afterwards. Anna is her grand-niece. She comes to Cuba to meet with Hannah and learn about her father's past. Anna's father died before she was born on 9/11.

The historical subject matter of this book is pretty fascinating, but I wasn't always riveted by the The German Girl. The writing is beautiful, but I don't read a book like this for the glamour. This book was slow for me to get through. I will say the ending was masterful. I don't know that I would have given this book 4 stars otherwise. Overall, this is a book that grows on you and gets better as it goes on.

I don't feel like we get to know too much about Anna. Hannah definitely dominates this book, but even then we get a lot of "I wish I had said" and "what I wanted to do was" and not a lot of genuine action. Hannah is definitely stuck in her own head a lot.

I loved the story of Hannah and Leo. I enjoyed the parallels between Nazi German and Communist Cuba. When the passengers boarded the St. Louis, crowds jeered and spit on them. Newspapers covered the event with the words: "Good Riddance!" The same exact thing happened to Cubans fleeing the island to America. The Nazis took Hannah's mother's apartment building; the Cuban state took her pharmacy. Their Cuban maid's nephew became an "enemy of the state" as a Jehovah's Witness and sent to a work camp, with a huge sign at the entrance that read: "Work will make men of you."

Sounds familiar, no?



I recommend this book to fans of historical fiction, lovers of beautiful writing, and ww2 buffs. I also recommend learning about the real St. Louis and especially its hero captain Gustav Schroder.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

We Are Still Tornadoes



We Are Still Tornadoes by Michael Kun and Susan Mullen
On Sale November 1, 2016 by St. Martin's Griffin
Rating: ★★★★

Cath and Scott are best friends who grew up on the same block and never experienced life without each other. That bond is tested when Cath goes off to college several hundred miles away, and Scott stays behind in their hometown to sell menswear in his Dad's shop. Their lives are seemingly taking different directions. Together, they were Tornadoes, class of 1982. But what will they become?

The book is written entirely in the format of letters exchanged back and forth between Cath and Scott. I have to admit, I find the premise a bit hokey. I mean, outside of war and possibly prison, what 18-year-old guy writes this manyletters to a platonic girl friend? Overall, though, it was enjoyable to read, and I laughed pretty hard at some of Scott's letters. I did feel the expected ending came abruptly, like the authors only had x amount of paper and needed to fit it in before they ran out.

This is a cute, fluffy read that does not require a serious time investment. It's forgettable but fun and good when you're craving something lighthearted.

Friday, October 14, 2016

The Killing Game



The Killing Game by J. S. Carol
Published October 13, 2016 by Bookouture
Rating: ★★★★


Actions have consequences.

A gunman bursts into Alfie's, an exclusive L.A. restaurant where several A-listers are having lunch. These Hollywood VIPs, used to answering no one, are now his hostages. The gunman has a bomb strapped to his chest, attached to a heart rate monitor and set to detonate if his pulse goes too far above or below its normal range. If he gets agitated, if a swat team takes him out... his hostages will explode, along with the rest of the city block.

JJ is used to being able to fix any situation. It's why her big name clients pay her the big bucks. That actress from that thing who ran over someone with her car while drunk, maybe-- JJ is the reason you can't quite remember the details; she's the reason it barely made the news. It's her job to smooth over celebrity scandals and re-build their image. 

But JJ has finally found something she can't fix. And the more she tries, the worse the hostage situation gets. People keep dying...

Actor Alex King knows all about JJ's power to manipulate someone's public image. He only came to Alfie's for lunch that day because JJ set up a "date" for him with a supermodel. King gave up a real relationship in exchange for a life of fake-dating starlettes (paparazzi invited along, of course) at JJ's insistance. He realizes how deeply he regrets that decision as he faces the chance he won't make it out of Alfie's alive. But he didn't crawl his way out of a trailer park childhood and drug addiction to go down without a fight...

Everyone has a price.

The media can't believe their luck. A hostage crisis involving more than a dozen L.A. big wigs? It doesn't even matter who lives and who dies, or even if anyone comes out alive, as long as they can be the first network, the first reporter to break the story. Pay a rent-an-expert to push the agenda you want... pay off a cop to get insider information. But when the media realizes they have a direct line to Alex King, will they betray him to air the exclusive scoop? Will they get him killed?

I thought this was a really good book. I've had a lucky reading streak as of late, but nothing quite as addictive as this one. This is a true thriller, not a dressed up mystery novel, and a real page-turner. The writing didn't impress me. As the story progressed, I didn't much care, because I was riveted. There's a lot of perspective switching in this book, probably too much. There is one major, unforgivable plot issue that prevented me from giving me this 5 stars. I also had a problem with the bad guy's motivations. We find out why he targeted Alfie's, and two patrons in particular, but there's no reasoning behind how he acted toward the other hostages.

Monday, October 10, 2016

Faller


Faller by Will McIntosh
On Sale October 25, 2016 by Tor Books
Rating: ★★★★

A man wakes up in the middle of a street. He has no idea who he is, where he is, or what has happened to him. He's on a strange island that looks like a slice of urban jungle floating in the air. There are other people on the island with him, but none of them remember anything, either. The landscape is dotted with strange machines that no one remembers how to operate. Food only comes from cans found in abandoned homes and apartments-- and it won't last forever. This is Day One. And it's brutal. The strong band together in clans, hoarding cans for themselves. The weak, including almost all children, get tossed over the edge.

The man checks his pockets for clues to his identification. Others have found strange plastic cards with their picture on it and what they can only assume was their name before Day One. But all that's in the man's possession is an odd combination of a toy parachute man, a piece of paper marked with weird symbols drawn in blood, and a picture of himself with a woman. As far as he can tell the woman is nowhere in his world, but he longs for her regardless. He's convinced these items from his pocket are the key to discovering the truth about who he really is... if only he could figure out what they mean.

When Faller falls off the edge of the world, it's an accident. But it's also the begining of a discovery of who he is and what happened to him. He finds other world below his, other floating islands, each with a unique society that has dealt with the transition from Day One in its own way. Faller can't believe his luck when he finds the woman from the photograph. But just like there's more than one world, it seems there's more than one of this woman. From island to island, Faller continues to come across familiar faces.

What the heck is going on?

And as if things couldn't get more complicated for Faller, he starts to suspect someone is out to kill him. But who would want him dead? And why?

I'm not an avid reader of science fiction, but I really enjoyed this book. It seemed like every chapter added a new layer to the story. Just when I thought things couldn't get more freaky, something would happen that threw me for a loop. At first, I was annoyed that Faller's story was interrupted-- right after he fell off the edge of the earth, no less!-- with the story of some guy named Peter. But then it becomes clear that Peter and Faller have converging story lines. That said, I never warmed to Peter and preferred Faller's chapters.

I can't give this book a full five stars, because I was left with too many burning questions. Everyone had their memories wiped clean but has some muscle memory that allowed them shoot guns and open cans. Why couldn't that same principle apply to cars? It just seemed a little random what people could and couldn't remember post Day One. I also didn't like that Ugo was transformed from a complex character into a superhero villain. That's a complaint that I would apply more broadly over the entire plot as well. As the book went on, it definitely took on a quasi comic book feel. Less mind-blowing world building and more good vs. evil action scenes. Luckily, however, the book pulls back in the reigns towards the end.

I can't talk about most of the logic issues I had with this book without ruining it. So I've hid them in a spoiler (click at your risk):



This book is definitely worth a look for fans of post-apocalyptic sci-fi.

Friday, October 7, 2016

Coming Clean


I don't normally post reviews for books published this long ago, but with this being available on Amazon's new Prime Reading, I thought it was appropriate. Also, I liked this book a lot, and wanted to share it.

Coming Clean, by Kimberly Rae Miller
Published July 23, 2013 by New Harvest
Rating: ★★★★

For a book about a child growing up in a hoarding environment, I found this to be surprisingly tragic. Like many others, I'm addicted the popular tv shows that feature, and some might argue exploit, this mental health issue. If you look around online, it's not hard to find articles and forum comments that are very judgmental, and often times vicious, toward the people who appear on these shows. It's not uncommon for viewers to suggest that watching Hoarders is inspiration to clean their own homes. It's easy to forget that these are human beings-- not motivational tools.

Kimberly Rae Miller puts a very human face on the issue of hoarding. Her father has no memories of his childhood, at all. His parents were hard-core alcoholics and whatever happened to him in his youth was protectively erased by his brain. Her mother grew up unloved by neglectful parents. She suffers with an extreme spinal condition because her parent's couldn't be bothered to get her a back brace as a child. Kimberly's father starts as the catalyst for the hoarding situation. He's fond of papers, any paper, and radios. Their house quickly fills of them. Her mother is angry at the mess, but also ultimately resigned to it. She eventually becomes a compulsive shopper who adds to the hoard.

The hoard slowly takes over the family's life. Their first house burns down in a fire, spurred on by the mounds of paper, killing all the family pets. Her parents separate for a time, partly to keep CPS from discovering their true living conditions. The boiler explodes, and they have to start taking weekly showers at a local gym. Then they discover a surprise living in their attic, the reveal of which literally had me screeching at my Kindle.

This is a very well-written memoir, better than many I've read from professional writers. The author is likable and down to earth. I think some people will be confused, maybe even put off, by her forgiving nature to her parents. But I get it. My interest in hoarding actually comes from my husband's family-- both he and his mother have hoarding tendencies. Yet, I grew up in a dysfunctional environment, and I could relate to every inner struggle with her parents. I wish her the best of luck going forward and dealing with her parents as they continue to age.

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Amazon's New Prime Reading (Potential Life Ruiner)

A book made out of paper. What an adorable concept!

Remember when Amazon Prime's big reader benefit was the once-a-month ability to borrow a book from their lending library? (FYI, I'm told this feature still exists, but your guess of how to access it is as good as mine... Amazon seems to have blown up all the bridges leading to this mythical e-library). Then there was the Kindle First program, which I stopped bothering about because I was underwhelmed with the choices. Then there's Kindle Unlimited, which is like a library... if the library grew a pair and started charging 10 bucks a month and was mostly stocked with self-published romances.

Well now there's Prime Reading. And it's completely free!* It functions similarly to Kindle Unlimited, in that you can fill your Prime Library with 10 titles at a time, and return one when you'd like to borrow a new one. Amazon currently has 1K titles available and describes its catalog as "revolving." So get the good ones before they're gone.



There are two ways this program could go, imo. It's either the sample that hooks you into subscribing to Kindle Unlimited (similar to when your friendly neighborhood heroine dealer offers comps you that first dime bag) OR it will become unwelcome competition for their existing program and the quality of offerings will decline rapidly.

So, again, get the good ones before Amazon changes its mind they're gone. So what are the good ones? Well, that's a matter of opinion, but here are my picks:



1. Coming Clean, by Kimberly Rae Miller. This is one of the very few books on the list I've read, and I gave it 4 stars. I'll post a review for this one tomorrow. It's a really good book.



2. Wayward Pines, by Blake Crouch. I'm horrible with keeping up with pop culture stuff, because I'm just learning that this was turned into a television series. It caught my eye because the author, Blake Crouch, wrote Dark Matter, one of my favorite new books for 2016. The other books in this 3-part series, however, are not part of Prime Reading.



3. Getting Started Knitting Socks, by Ann Budd. This one might seem a bit random. I don't really discuss craft or hobby books on this blog and have only included a few on my Goodreads list. But I've read a bunch of them in the past. I'm one of those people who can pick up any sort of handcraft. Some people can speak multiple languages-- I can make stuff. And this book is excellent for anyone who aspires to knit socks. The instructions and pictures are really clear. Even a novice can master socks thanks to this book.



4. The Man in the High Castle, by Philip K. Dick. I liked this book enough to give it 4 stars (even without understanding what the heck that ending was supposed to mean), but it might disappoint fans of the show, because it's not all that similar.



5. The Queen's Prisoner, by Jeff Wheeler. I can't tell you anything about this book. I just really want to read it.

And then there's this:



Don't get me wrong, I like Consumer Reports. Enough to pay for a copy of this to come to my house each month. This is part of why I have doubts about the future of Prime Reading. I don't think I'll be continuing with my subscription after seeing this (why buy the cow-- amirite?), I don't think I'm alone, and I can't imagine publications like CR will enjoy losing all that business.

But until daddy takes the convertible away-- Happy Reading!

* After you've paid $100 for a yearly Prime subscription. Best not to think about it.