Sunday, October 11, 2015

Vanishing Girls by Lauren Oliver


Vanishing Girls by Lauren Oliver


This is the first Lauren Oliver I've read. I've been meaning to pick one of her books up for a while, given how often I hear her name mentioned as an author of excellent young adult novels, and Vanishing Girls seemed right in my wheelhouse. It was described as a psychological thriller with heart, by none other than the author of We Were Liars, a book I absolutely loved.

In Vanishing Girls, we meet Nick and Dara, sisters who used to be inseparable, until something awful happened. Readers don't know what exactly that something was, only that it somehow involved an accident. Hints are expertly dropped as the novel progresses, and readers get insight through diary entries, e-mails, and photographs.

Running parallel to the story of Nick and Dara is the story of Madeline Snow, a young girl from their town who has gone missing. As the two stories begin to intersect, the secrets from Nick and Dara's past begin to emerge.

For the first three quarters of the book, I thought it was good. I was enjoying it, and found it interesting, and I definitely wanted to know more.

But when I hit the last quarter or so of the book, I actually gasped out loud. I've read a lot of mysteries, but Oliver had managed to completely fool me, and I was blown away. I won't say anymore because I don't want to give anything away, but even if you find the beginning of the book a bit slow, I highly recommend that you keep reading. It's worth it.

4/5 stars

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

I Was Here by Gayle Forman

 


The day after Meg died, I received this letter.

This is the opening sentence of Gayle Forman's I Was Here, and it is the premise from which the entire novel spins. 

The narrator, Cody, was Meg's best friend, but now Meg is dead. 

Meg committed suicide, and Cody never saw it coming.

I Was Here is the story of Cody's search for the truth, the story of how guilt and grief can bring people together and tear them apart. Cody must figure out who she is without her best friend, and how to go on.

Forman handles a difficult topic with finesse and understanding, and creates a cast of characters the reader can't help but get invested in.

3.5/5 stars

Friday, October 2, 2015

Assassination Vacation by Sarah Vowell


Sarah Vowell is a history buff. And not just a history buff, but one fascinated by political assassinations, specifically Presidents Lincoln, Garfield, and McKinley.

In Assassination Vacation, Vowell takes her readers on a wry, reverent, fascinating journey to various landmarks, big and small, that somehow featured in the lives and deaths of assassinated American presidents. She searches out plaques, (sort of) climbs mountains, and tallies up every presidential assassination Robert Todd Lincoln was somehow an observer of (the final tally is all three).

Along the way, she sees the musical "Assassins" (and scares off strangers with just how much she loves it), gets seasick on a boat ride to the prison where Lincoln assassination conspirators were held, discusses the idea that maybe John Wilkes Booth really did escape (and was then mummified after death, with his corpse being toured around carnivals), and visits the spot where the Oneida Community used to reside (a group marriage Biblical commune where Charles Guiteau, the assassin of President Garfield, once lived).

This is the kind of book you want to give to students who think history is boring. It will definitely change their minds.

3.5/5 stars

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Author Interview: Ami Polonsky


I was lucky enough to be able to interview the amazing Ami Polonsky, author of the brilliant book Gracefully Grayson. 

Ami Polonsky (www.amipolonsky.com) is a sixth grade English teacher, a mother to two young children, and an author, among other things. She is passionate about guiding children towards a love of books and helping create life-long readers. Ami lives outside of Chicago with her family. You can find her on Twitter (@amipolonsky) and Facebook (www.facebook.com/AmiPolonskyAuthor)


1) How did your background in teaching influence the story and characters of Gracefully Grayson? (As a fellow teacher who loves to write, I love seeing teachers succeed like you are!) What would you want your students to take away from your book?

I wouldn’t have been able to write GRACEFULLY GRAYSON if not for my teaching experience. An adult reader once said, “Only a teacher could have written GRACEFULLY GRAYSON,” and that was a fantastic compliment.

I’ve spent many years getting into sixth graders’ heads as I’ve taught them to interpret literature and write, so I have a good sense of how sixth graders think and what’s important and scary to them. While the characters in GRACEFULLY GRAYSON aren’t based on particular students I’ve taught, qualities of all my students found their way into the characters in the book. I also tend to visualize the school setting in GRACEFULLY GRAYSON as similar to Onahan Elementary School in Chicago, which is where I used to teach.
I want my students to learn about bravery from GRACEFULLY GRAYSON. I want them to understand that it takes courage to show the world your true self. Taking a risk can be scary but is always worthwhile.

2) The topic of someone not identifying with the gender they have been assigned to has really come into the public consciousness. What made you decide to write about this topic, and how did you go about preparing to write the book?

The idea came to me when my two children were in preschool. I have a son and daughter and neither seemed to fit into the stereotypical “gender box.” I began to wonder about gender—how much of gender identity is a social construct? Then I wondered what a child’s experience would be like if their true identity was different from how the world saw them.

I wrote a draft of GRACEFULLY GRAYSON before I began to research, and I did this so nobody’s personal story would seep too deeply into Grayson’s. I didn’t find it difficult to relate to a transgender child—Grayson’s wishes and desires to be seen as her true self are, in the broadest sense, universal. I tapped into her emotions by finding common threads between her experiences and my own.

After I wrote a draft, I did thorough research including a lot of reading and interviewing, but the heart of the book never changed as I went through the revision process. I think this is incredibly important. We, as human beings, are perfectly capable of standing in others’ shoes. We are all able to empathize and draw parallels between our own life experiences and others’.

3) If Gracefully Grayson was made into a movie, do you have a dream cast in mind?

As long as this is a fantasy, I get to time travel, OK?
Grayson: Leonardo DiCaprio as a boy—circa What’s Eating Gilbert Grape.
Paige: A young Emma Watson
Aunt Sally: January Jones
Uncle Evan: Dustin Hoffman, thirty years ago
Jack: Robert MacNaughton as a boy (I might have had to look this one up—he was Elliott’s older brother in E.T.)

4) Grayson really begins to find herself through theater. Did you do any theater in high school or college, and what was your experience like?

No! I was an incredibly shy kid, and I wish I’d had the courage to step out of my comfort zone when I was younger. I had to do a lot of research to get the theater piece right. The last time I was on stage was when I was in 4th grade—I was in the chorus of my school’s Snoopy production, hiding in the back row behind two tall kids.

5) Can you tell me about your new book coming out in fall 2016, Threads?

THREADS was inspired by an article I read about an Australian woman living in New York who found a handwritten note and photograph in a shopping bag from an African man in a Chinese prison factory. The man wrote that he had been wrongfully convicted of a crime and needed help. It blew my mind that two very different lives could become suddenly and dramatically linked. I wondered: What if there was a young girl who wrote a similar note, and another young who girl found it? What if their lives became intertwined? THREADS is the story of two girls’ journeys—one Chinese and one American—and how their lives intersect.



Wednesday, September 30, 2015

One Lovely Blog Award, and Sunshine Blogger Award

My first awards! I'm so excited!

Thank you very much to the wonderful The Reading Armchair for both nominations!


The rules for this award are:

  • Say thank you to the person that nominated you
  • Explain the rules of the award
  • Say seven random facts about yourself
  • Nominate 15 other bloggers
  • Display the badge/logo of the award in your blog
So, seven random facts about myself: 
  1. I read while I walk.
  2. My best friend and I first met when we were six.
  3. I moved recently, to an apartment I absolutely love, that has a super cozy reading corner.
  4. My favorite artist is Claude Monet.
  5. I would love to have a room in my future house that is a giant library, with one of those rolling ladders, and a fireplace.
  6. My dog, Sherlock, is a rescue dog. 
  7. I have been a Pre-K teacher for five years now.


The rules for this award are:
  • Answer the 11 questions provided for you
  • Nominate other bloggers
  • Ask them 11 questions of your own
The questions I got asked, with answers:
  1. Which is your most anticipated novel?  The third book from Will Lavender, which is currently untitled.
  2. Do you read graphic novels? Which is your favorite one? I do read graphic novels, though not frequently. My favorite is definitely From Hell.
  3. What was your favorite book so far this year? It's so hard for me to pick just one! The Girl on the Train is definitely up there for me, as is Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking. I also loved The Night Sister, and Luckiest Girl Alive. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up had a big impact on my life this year as well. 
  4. Do you like winter? I actually really do like winter. I love having the perfect excuse to cozy up under a warm blanket with my dog, a cup of tea, and a good book, or take a long hot bath, or wear cozy sweaters and jeans.
  5. How would you like to spend this Halloween? I would like to spend it the way I do every year, on my parents' front porch handing out candy and hanging out.
  6. Who are your top three authors? Agatha Christie is my absolute favorite author. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle rounds out my top two. And then I have a really hard time settling on a third. Ngaio Marsh, Erle Stanley Gardner, Gillian Flynn, Marisha Pessl, Will Lavender, and P.D. James all would be way up there for me.
  7. Is there a series you would like to be continued, although it doesn't? I would always want there to be more Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple books. I was thrilled when The Monogram Murders came out, for that exact reason. 
  8. How do you choose which book to read next? For me, it really depends on what I'm in the mood for. I have a lot of TBR shelves in my apartment, and live relatively close to a very big library, so I'm lucky in that I have lots of choices available depending on what I feel like reading.
  9. Would you buy a book because it has a beautiful cover? Most likely, I would only buy a book because it has a beautiful cover if its an Agatha Christie. I collect Agatha Christie's, and want to someday own a copy of every cover version of all her books.
  10. Do you prefer detailed descriptions or witty dialogues in a novel? I definitely prefer dialogue over prolonged descriptions. I tend to lose patience with very long descriptions.
  11. Which book would you recommend? I would recommend The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin. Its been my favorite book for twenty years now, and I re read it at least once a year.

My questions for the nominees:
  1. What's one book you started, but never finished?
  2. What was your favorite book you had to read for school?
  3. If you could only take three books with you on a long trip, which three would they be?
  4. What book would you love to see turned into a TV series?
  5. Is there one genre of book you never read?
  6. Where is your favorite place to read?
  7. Which fictional setting would you love to visit the most?
  8. Do you collect anything, and if so, what?
  9. What was the first book you ever read?
  10. What's one popular series/book you've just never been able to get into?
  11. Do you like hot weather or cold weather better?
I nominate for both awards (I'm new to the book blogging world, and am still navigating my way around the many incredible blogs, so apologies if I nominate someone who was already nominated, or miss anyone):


Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Top Ten Tuesday: Ten Books To Read If You Like Sherlock Holmes


I love Sherlock Holmes-my dog is even named Sherlock! So I've read a lot of Sherlock Holmes books outside of the original canon (those penned by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle).  Here are ten of my favorites to check out if you really enjoyed Doyle's original stories.


1. The Beekeeper's Apprentice by Laurie R. King

I tend to struggle with books about Sherlock Holmes that take too much liberty with the canon and change it too much-i.e. minimize Watson's role. But King won me over with this far-outside-the-box idea that really works. My blog's name is even a takeoff on the title of this book. The series loses steam after the first few entries or so, and I've actually stopped reading it now, but those first few books are magic.



2. Sherlock Holmes Was Wrong: Reopening the Case of The Hound of the Baskervilles by Pierre Bayard

Bayard takes the case of The Hound of the Baskervilles and does a deep and fascinating analysis of it, developing his hypothesis that Holmes accused the wrong person. Bayard also wrote a book analyzing The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, in which he offers his proof that Hercule Poirot accused an innocent person. Bayard's books are absolutely fascinating for fans of the original stories he is breaking apart, and I have read each multiple times.


3. The Italian Secretary by Caleb Carr

I discussed how much I love this book in a previous post, but needless to say, Carr is an incredible author, and the weaving together of a real historical mystery with the beloved characters of Holmes and Watson results in a book you can't put down.

 

4. The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness, and Obsession by David Grann

This is a collection of non-fiction stories centered around the mysterious, a topic Holmes himself loved to investigate. One of the true tales is specifically linked to Sherlock Holmes, surrounding the bizarre death of a Holmes scholar. 

 

5. Arthur and George by Julian Barnes

While this is not a non-fiction novel, it is based closely off a true story involving an unjustly accused man whose case catches the attention of the famous creator of Sherlock Holmes.

 

6. The Sherlockian by Graham Moore

The Sherlockian contains two parallel tales. In one, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has just killed off his beloved character Sherlock Holmes, and, along with Bram Stoker, is hunting for a murderer. In the present day, a dedicated fan of Holmes attempts to solve the mysterious death of a Sherlockian scholar who had claimed to have found the long-missing diary of Doyle himself. 

 

7. The Art of Detection by Laurie R. King

King is the author of the previously mentioned Mary Russell series. But here, she combines her other series, the Kate Martinelli mysteries, with the great Sherlock Holmes. A Sherlock Holmes collector has been murdered, and a previously undiscovered Sherlock Holmes story may just hold all the clues.


8. Some Danger Involved by Will Thomas

The main characters of Cyrus Barker and Thomas Llewelyn reminded me immediately of Holmes and Watson when I first read this book. Barker is a brilliant private detective who cannot be bothered with the trivialities of polite society, while Llewelyn is his devoted assistant who has quite a bit of fight in him as well. 

 

9. A Life in Letters by Jon L. Lellenberg, Daniel Stashower, and Charles Foley
10. Teller of Tales by Daniel Stashower

Both of these reads are biographies of the creator of Sherlock Holmes himself. They offer fascinating insight into the man who is responsible for one of the most famous literary creations of all time.


Monday, September 28, 2015

Banned Books Week: My Recommendations of Frequently Challenged Books to Read

In honor of Banned Books Week, I wanted to recommend some frequently challenged books that I have personally read and enjoyed.