Friday, July 29, 2022

Gritty

This week's PNW heat wave (temps reached into the 90s) has me feeling a bit gritty. Hence this repost from 2009.

Hearing Richard Price extolled again and again on Fresh Air for his mastery of dialogue, I decided to venture into the section of the library where many of the dust jacket blurbs proclaim “gritty.” I begrudgingly picked up Samaritan and rushed back two days later for Lush Life

Samaritan proves you can go home again but may get a severe concussion as a result. Ray Mitchell returns to his home town after a stint as a Hollywood writer and soon ends up in the ICU after being attacked in his apartment. He refuses to name his attacker but a childhood friend, now detective, Nerese Ammons is determined to make an arrest regardless. 

Lush Life takes place on the Lower East Side, where every bartender has a screenplay under the bar and every waiter has a casting call after work. When a mugging goes awry leaving one up and comer dead, detectives aren’t sure who’s telling the real story and who’s just acting the part. 

Can’t afford to go see the latest summer blockbuster? Price provides an action-packed thrill with dialogue you’ll probably be hearing in next summer’s box office hit.

Friday, July 15, 2022

Under the Same Sky, But Different

“The sky was magnificent. I have always loved the sky and I do not take notice of it often enough.”

So writes one of the characters in Meet Me at the Museum by Anne Youngson. But it also aptly describes the past week I’ve spent in Colorado Springs. When not out hiking under brilliant blue skies, listening to cowboy songs under the stars, or exploring the neighborhood under threatening thunderstorms, I found myself dipping in and out of this epistolary novel.

Anders is a Danish curator. Tina is an English farmer’s wife. Tina writes to his museum to inquire after its famous artifact, the Tollund Man, that she remembers studying as a schoolgirl. Although their initial letters explore the history of this amazing find, they soon relate more mundane details of their daily life. The mundane turns profound as Anders reveals he is a widower and Tina shares she is unhappy in her marriage. Over the course of the novel, two strangers grow perilously intimate despite having never met in person. What begins as a curiosity leaves both their worlds irrevocably changed.

Friday, July 1, 2022

Firsts

On my son’s first birthday, he experienced his first ice cream sandwich. I’m sure we have a picture somewhere of his blissful grin in a face covered in melted ice cream and smeared chocolate. The summer my daughter turned seven she rode a bicycle for the first time without training wheels. Since we lived on a hill that descended into a busy street, she was mostly confined to big lazy circles in the street in front of our house. In a few weeks, they will both make their first plane trip, unaccompanied by any adults, to Austin to visit their grandparents.

I heard an excerpt from an interview with Jenny Han the other day where she mentioned something like “Firsts are best because they are beginnings.” That’s partly why she is drawn to writing about teenagers. And why we, as adult readers, are drawn to YA fiction. If you haven’t read Han's trilogy, The Summer I Turned Pretty, start there. Then you can watch the melodramatic, but nonetheless engrossing, series adapted from the books that was just released on Prime.

If you still haven’t gotten your fill of firsts, then I recommend Breathless by Jennifer Niven. Claude and her mother are “banished” to an island off the coast of Georgia the summer after her senior year after her parents separate. With little to no cell service, she can’t rely on the text support of her best friend (who she loves more than “libraries and sunshine and boys with guitars”), so she turns to the other young people in her midst. An encounter with Miah starts off as a welcome distraction, but soon forces her to face her issues with trust and acceptance.

What is your favorite "first" fiction?

Friday, June 24, 2022

Summer Loving

Summer is taking its sweet time in arriving here in the Pacific Northwest. But with temps finally exceeding 70 degrees, I’ll be putting away the cozy mysteries and cracking open a few beach reads.  

Crying in the Bathroom by  Erika Sánchez

Invisible Things by Mat Johnson

Olga Dies Dreaming  by Xochitl Gonzalez

Sabrina and Corina by Kali Fajardo-Anstine

The Hotel Nantucket by Elin Hilderbrand

Translating Myself and Others by Jhumpa Lahiri,

True Biz by Sara Nović,

Yerba Buena by Nina LaCour

 

Thanks to the following lists for the above suggestions:

Books for summer 2022 (Chicago Tribune)

Book recommendations for 50 states  (NPR)

21 books to read this summer (The Washington Post)

Friday, June 17, 2022

Keeping the Spheres in Alignment

 It’s been awhile since my daughter looked up from her book and said, “Listen to this.” But somehow the book I had put in my son’s Easter basket this year ended up on her TBR pile. As she was reading Hannah Green and Her Unfeasibly Mundane Existence by Michael Marshall Smith -while savoring her 15 ingredient salad (another thing I love about her)- she smiled and said those magic words.

It's now making the rounds from my nightstand to my husband's. Fans of  Neil Gaiman take note. You won't be disappointed by the premise, humor, or observations about life. 

“And so later Hannah was back at the kitchen table in her house. Sitting where she’d sat earlier. Her place. Hannah didn’t know that humankind has a deep-set belief in the idea that we create and maintain reality through ritual, that repeated actions are what keep the spheres in alignment. She also didn’t know that it doesn’t work, and that there are far older, more complex, and much darker designs in motion, ones that override ours as effortlessly as a crack of thunder blotting out birdsong.”

Friday, June 3, 2022

"you'll only ruin each other"

Did you fantasize about attending boarding school when you were young? No, me either. (I did, however, long to have a turret bedroom like Anastasia Krupnik.)

For some reason, I’ve been drawn to books about the boarding school experience lately. Here are three I recommend that delve into the privilege, drama, and microaggressions of these elite institutions.

Admissions: A Memoir of Surviving Boarding School by Kendra James

All These Beautiful Strangers by Elizabeth Klehfoth

The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by e. Lockhart

Friday, May 27, 2022

As seen on tv

This week I was watching Conversations with Friends based on the novel by Sally Rooney (see the show vs book comparison here). In one scene the main character Frances is on vacation in Croatia and pulls out her beach read - Childhood by Tove Ditlevsen. Uncannily, the next day, my google feed pops up with this article on how books become props. Some shows are better at this than others. Issa’s nightstand in Insecure was always a good place to look for a recommendation. That’s how I discovered The Turner House by Angela Flournoy. For more books seen on screen, check out this post from Penguin. What books have you spotted in your favorite show?