Saturday, July 28, 2012

The Art of Racing in the Rain

The Art of Racing in the RainThe Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Despite being a dog adoring person, I avoided this book for a long time. Uber popular lit fiction does that to me, oddly enough. But it kept falling into my hands (the book that is) and so I finally read the first few pages, and got completely sucked in. Tight writing, unique narrative, good symbolism throughout and well wrapped up at the end. Typical modern literary fiction, but that's not a bad thing. In fact, it's a shame how many current books can't hit all the right marks that this one did.

But to be honest, the real reason I loved this book is because I totally want to believe that this is what my dog thinks, for reals. I blame my second grade teacher, who aloud read to the class "Where The Red Fern Grows".

Was surprised by the racing metaphors, but it works. Of course, I don't know a damned thing about racing to begin with.

Fun delightful book, well written that makes good reading.

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Saturday, June 2, 2012

The Angel's Game

The Angel's Game (The Cemetery of Forgotten Books, #2)The Angel's Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafón
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I liked this book as much as I liked Carlos Ruiz Zafon's previous one, Shadow of the Wind. Lots of potential, great beachy/summer read, but not without many flaws. Definitely not a great tome of literature, and I'm at a loss as to why so many people wish to compare it to Umberto Eco and Alexander Dumas. Not nearly as cheeky and funny as Dumas, not nearly as puzzling and plot-twisting and intelligent as Eco.

Contrary to a few other reviews, I found the first 2/3 of the book ho-hum, and only was the last 1/3 interesting, tighter and more action-packed. Many complained of being lost at the end, so maybe I paid extra careful attention, and it made sense to me.

As with the previous book, there was only one really great character that stuck out - Isabella. She came to life, and crackled on the page (though Fermin from "Shadow of the Wind" moreso). Her personality came through in her dialogue, her actions, she just shone. But everyone else was so mundane, and too much alike.

Pros: lots of great lines that beg to be underscored, but when is that the story, and when is that just the author trying to make a clever point? Love the setting itself - author, books, bookstore. Interesting plot twist, just enticing enough to make this a page-turner.

Cons: Extremely flowery prose, too much space dedicated to setting the atmosphere, over and over again, to the sacrifice of the action. A character walks into a room, and we get a description of the floor, the ceiling, the right wall, the left wall, the far wall, the doors, the windows. He walks into the next room, and again another paragraph dedicated to describing the floor, ceiling, walls, windows, and everything in between. I also found something off about the writing, which might just be a translational issue.

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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

The Jane Austen Book Club

The Jane Austen Book ClubThe Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This book was a simple read, modern setting, perfect fluffy beach reading. The author writes very well, and I think I like that most about this book. Not the characters really, not the plot (was there one, really?), not the many references to Jane Austen (unfortunately, am not a fan). Was no gripping tension, not a page-turner, not keeping me up all night just waiting to see what comes next.

I do look forward to reading more of this Karen Fowler's books because of her writing.

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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Fifty Shades of Grey

Fifty Shades of Grey (Fifty Shades, #1)Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Uh, wow. This was unexpectedly hot. Like, super hot.

I was all about resisting the hype, even though I caved with Twilight, and Hunger Games, and okay even Harry Potter, which I didn't start until the fourth book was out, way back when.

All because I can't stand people discussing and heatedly debating pop cultural things like books and movies which I have no experience with!

So I bought the first, Fifty Shades of Grey, a couple of days ago, deciding there was no way I was going to get the second and third books. I really was not a big fan of the Twilight series, and I had yet to read any erotic fiction that I found palatable. How could this combination possibly appeal to me? Oh, but it did. Because of my age, because of my education, because of my low expectations?

In short, I found the book engrossing, the characters crisp and well defined (though a few points were lacking credibility - really Ana, you're graduating college and never got drunk, never kissed anyone, and you don't own a computer?? Hard to believe!), the plot absorbing and even humorous. And did I mention hot?

I received this book yesterday afternoon, and finished it at 2:30am this morning.

And of course, I've ordered books 2 and 3, am kicking myself for not order them for next day delivery.

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Friday, February 24, 2012

The Cat's TableThe Cat's Table by Michael Ondaatje
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Michael Ondaatje's one of my favorite authors, so I was greatly looking forward to his latest book, "The Cat's Table." Unfortunately, it is not one my favorite books. His writing is still beautiful, poetic and magical, but some of what he attempted to do with this book - the narrator jumping back and forth in the narrative time between his 3-week boat journey to England, and his adult point of view looking back to events of that trip - did not work for me. There is a bit too much telling of what things meant, rather than allowing the beautifully wrought details to express themselves.

There is also a long passage that is a quote from one of the character's letters, and rather than giving the character her own voice, the letter sounds exactly the same as the rest of the narrative. One of my pet peeves in books - give characters distinction!

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