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The Nerds <3 YA tournament is designed to showcase some of the best under-recognized YA Literature for a given year – especially YA literature that revolves around under-represented people groups. I am a second-round judge deciding between Melissa Wyatt’s “Funny How Things Change” and Lyn Miller-Lachmann’s “Gringolandia.” If you would like to see the Round 1 decisions that sent these books on to me, they were at Good Books and Good Wine and Pineapples and Pyjamas.

4774330195 1570d3265a m pictureGringolandia by Lyn Miller-Lachmann

Daniel has been living in Madison, Wisconsin with his mother and sister for about six years when his father Marcelo is released from prison in Chile, where he has been tortured by Pinochet’s government as a political prisoner. The man that arrives at their house in 1986 is not remotely the same man that Daniel’s family remembers being taken away in 1980. Marcelo is partially paralyzed on one side from a blow to the head and can’t stand being touched. Worse, he cannot get close to his wife and children, continually pushing them away.  He hates himself for living up in Gringolandia while many of his friends and colleagues are still being tortured. Things get even more complicated when Daniel’s girlfriend Courtney gets involved in trying to get Marcelo to share his experiences.

4774967266 a3a55eb787 m pictureFunny How Things Change by Melissa Wyatt

Remy Walker is ready to get out of Dwyer, West Virginia. The town is more or less dying anyway, and Remy’s girlfriend Lisa is about to leave for college in Pennsylvania, and she has asked Remy to go with her. They aren’t exactly sure how to fund their getaway and their life together, but it doesn’t matter, because Lisa’s determined to get out and Remy loves her and doesn’t want to lose her. He already decided to finish high school instead of transferring to technical school to become a certified mechanic – a job he loves – just so he could stay with her, so why wouldn’t he follow her to Pennsylvania?

The Decision

Both of these books are well-written, but I have this thing where books about coal miners or coal mining towns don’t seem to do anything for me. I’m thinking “American Rust” and “The Ballad of Trenchmouth Taggart.” So, really, “Gringolandia” had the advantage even before I cracked open the first book. And don’t get me wrong, “Funny How Things Change” is a great book. This is a first time a book with this sort of setting and themes has gotten me to care about the characters, even if it still took me about 100 pages. “Gringolandia,” though, is not only well-written, but also fearless. The book opens with Marcelo being taken from his family, followed by his torture at the hands of the guards. I loved how complex the emotions were in “Gringolandia” and how Miller-Lachmann didn’t dumb any of the reality of the situation down for her YA audience. I think “Gringolandia” is important for the message and history it imparts while also being an engaging compelling read that should appeal to the YA audience while also crossing over well for adult readers

“Gringolandia” by Lyn Miller-Lachmann moves on

Jul 082010
 

For all of you who are new to Devourer of Books, welcome!

If you arrived here via the post about audiobooks on Jacket Copy, you may be particularly interested in my posts from Audiobook Week, and the posts of the other bloggers who submitted their links. Or, if you would prefer, you can simply read some of my most recent audiobook reviews.

I review books frequently, have lots of guest posts from authors, and pepper my blog with other bookish content. I hope you’ll take some time to look around and, if you like what you see, subscribe by RSS feed or email.

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4771385523 a067890bb4 m pictureThe Scarlet Contessa by Jeanne Kalogridis
Published by St. Martin’s Press, an imprint of Macmillan

Daughter of the rakish Duke of Milan and daughter-in-law (yes, you read that right) of the Pope, Catherina Sforza was not your average 15th century woman. She loved where she wished, schemed for what she wanted, and fought to keep what was hers. She even matched wits and swords with the Borgias. That being said, Caterina Sforza is a strong, admirable woman, but is also perhaps not the most sympathetic character in fiction, particularly when she is younger. Which is why Kalogridis was wise to narrate her story through her (entirely fictional) lady-in-waiting Dea. Dea was actually a particularly compelling character in her own right: consumed with a need to understand the mystery behind and take revenge for her husband’s murder.

I was totally sucked into “The Scarlet Contessa.” I am just starting to read more about the Italian Renaissance, and it is absolutely fascinating. From what I learned in history classes in high school, I thought it was all artists and patrons, some scientific discovery, and maybe a little backlash against scientific discovery from the church. But, oh! the power struggles! And not only amongst the Dukes, Princes, and other leaders of the various cities, but between the secular leaders and the church, and within the church itself! Absolutely fascinating.

This is the second book by Kalogridis I read and reviewed. “The Scarlet Contessa” confirmed what I thought after reading “The Devil’s Queen,” that Kalogridis is a very skilled author. Her particular talent is taking characters who should be unsympathetic due to their actions and making the reader care about what happens to them. Not every author can do that, and many books have left me cold because I could not care less about the protagonist. Kalogridis, though, examines the complex motivations behind some very unsympathetic actions. Not to mention she is a great storyteller, one who knows how to captivate her audience.

Highly recommended.

Buy this book from:
Powells.*
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound
.*
Amazon
.*

This review was done with a book received from Sarah at St. Martins.
* These links are all affiliate links. If you buy your book here I’ll make a very small amount of money that goes towards hosting, giveaways, etc.
 

4691989009 3636b464da m pictureDay for Night by Frederick Reiken
Published by Reagan Arthur Books, an imprint of  Little, Brown and Company

The are novels, there are short stories, and there are novels in stories, which follow the same characters through different periods of their lives in a short story format. And then there is “Day for Night” by Frederick Reiken.

“Day for Night” is unlike any other book I’ve read, in that it is essentially a series of short stories that are somewhat but not entirely interconnected. And yet it was also a sort of novel. Instead of giving the depth of its story as experienced by a few characters like most novels, it instead gave the breadth of the story by focusing on a different set of characters whose lives interacted with one another in each of ten stories.

If you’re not quite sure what Reiken is doing here, it can be a little scary, because you’re wondering when these characters are going to reappear, how he’s going to pull everything together. But, if you’re reading carefully, he tells you exactly what it is that he is doing:

I recognize that we are all magicians in some way.  We are complicit in all we see and comprehend that what we see will never coincide with absolute reality.

As a result, the human brain must make a narrative.  This I can say with certainty, and yet each narrative we choose will reach a point at which it no longer suffices.  One narrative must inevitably be abandoned for another.  In this way, any narrative sequence defers meaning, even beyond the point at which it appears to end.

P. 133

When I read that passage, I felt comforted, I was able to let go and accept that everything might not really wrap up with a neat little bow (and it didn’t) and that was okay. I still don’t think I would like to read this sort of book on a regular basis, but Reiken’s strong sense of where he wanted to go with the story and his gorgeous writing made me really enjoy “Day for Night” and helped me be okay with not having everything come together.

Highly recommended.

Buy this book from:
Powells
.*
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound
.*
Amazon
.*

This review was done with a book received from the publisher.
* These links are all affiliate links. If you buy your book here I’ll make a very small amount of money that goes towards hosting, giveaways, etc.
 

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Richard C. Morais is the author of “The Hundred-Foot Journey,” which I reviewed yesterday and a reporter for Forbes magazine for 25 years. Please see the end of this post for a giveaway.

I learned the value of food as cultural commentary when I was Forbes’ European Bureau Chief, stationed in London. That job routinely parachuted me into remote cities in China, rural villages in Hungary, jungle outposts in Madagascar. The difficulty was, staggering jet-lagged off the plane, I had to quickly get up to speed to write a credible and accurate story on the country’s business or economic scene – even though I had never before set foot in the place. In other words, I had to learn how to convincingly and instantly fake it.

It was under this pressure to produce credible copy in far-flung corners of the globe that I developed my personal reporting technique: I always headed, first thing, to the local food markets and had a meal. When needing to quickly understand where a country is on the global scale of economic development, there is nothing like seeing and smelling and tasting the foodstuffs found at local markets, where the stalls are lorded over by colorful spice merchants, butchers, and fishmongers, and the very air of the market is filled with the farmers’ lively chatter and vicious gossip. It was like magic. You couldn’t help but absorb the country’s state-of-existence – right through your pores.

In the Ugandan capital of Kampala, for example, I went to Rufula, the city’s livestock market. Mesmerized, I followed brown-hide longhorns into the abattoir, where the walls were splattered with blood and the steers’ hacked-off hooves were stacked and sold as a culinary delicacy. An animal was felled before me, hoisted up on hooks and hauled along on chains. When the butcher’s ax fell into the steer’s chest cavity, blood splattered across my shirt. The sickly sweet smell of death hung in the air an stayed in my nostrils for the rest of the day.

From there I went to Nakasero, the vegetable market, where the teenage “coffee boys” guided the newly-arrived farmers, for a fee, to the merchants offering the highest prices for arabica and robusta beans. At the basket-filled spice market, a hallucinatory mix of bay leaves, cinnamon sticks, and vanilla pods greeted me. Meanwhile, over in the 20 square blocks that made up the Owino Market, a kind of biblical-era department store, I watched fascinated as the locals got their hair cut and dyed in the open air. Under the flame trees, women sipping milky tea shelled beans and sold Nile Perch broth or a peanut sauce to go with a starchy-green banana mush called matoke.

It was through these markets that this hardscrabble African nation entered my soul, and the descriptions in the subsequent article made Forbes’ readers in New York or Seattle viscerally understand Uganda’s economic landscape, far more effectively than the dry recitation of per-capita GDP statistics every could.

My senses were aflame. That same trip, near the headwaters of the Nile River as it flowed from Lake Victoria, I had a lunchtime red-curry with the prominent Madhvani family. This was an entirely different sort of an experience. Here we dined on white tablecloths on the family’s homestead’s porch, overlooking their 25,000-acre sugar estate. Pointy-eared Scotties scampered through the garden; strutting peacocks shrieked and fanned their tales. In the far distance, the hills of Africa were airbrushed with a purple hue. The servants served us tea.

It is this tactile taste for ripe-smelling markets and savory meals that mysteriously came to my aid when I turned to fiction. Consciously or not, it helped my protagonist, Hassan Haji, find his way through the culturally diverse worlds of Bombay, London, Lumière and Paris.

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4698120031 3fc4735f83 m pictureThe Hundred-Foot Journey by Richard C. Morais

When Hassan Haji’s mother is killed by a mob in the family’s restaurant in Mumbai, his family flees the country so as not to be constantly reminded of their loss. After a brief stop in England with family, the Hajis move to Lumiere, a small town in France with the intent of opening an Indian restaurant. The town’s primary restaurateur, Madame Mallory, is not at all pleased with this arrangement, particularly as the Hajis’ boisterous restaurant is located directly across the road from her stately restaurant, so she begins a campaign to shut them down.

You won’t hear me say this too often, but I actually think that “The Hundred-Foot Journey” was not long enough. I would have liked to spend more time getting deeper into many parts of Hassan’s young life. As it was, I felt like the story was progressing too quickly from plot point to plot point so that I wasn’t able to spend enough time with Hassan to truly get a feel for him, which kept me from caring as much about him as I would have liked. I really appreciated what an authentic feel of memoir Morais imparted on Hassan’s fictional story, but I wish I could have been made to care a bit more about Hassan and his story.

I also really liked many of the details of food and the restaurant business but, again, I would have liked to dwell on many of these things longer so as to get a fuller picture of it all. Still, the idea of looking at cultural differences and adaptation through the lens of food is a fascinating one.

“The Hundred-Foot Journey” is an interesting book with a great premise, but I think it could have been improved by being fleshed out a little more fully.

Buy this book from:
Powells.*
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound.*
Amazon.*

This review was done with a book received from Inkwell Management.
* These links are all affiliate links. If you buy your book here I’ll make a very small amount of money that goes towards hosting, giveaways, etc.
 

June was sort of a slow reading month. I blame Audiobook Week. And LOST, which we are currently working through season by season.

After my list of what I read this month, you’ll find a list of the other reviews I posted this month, as well as an update of how I’m doing in my challenges. Still, I did complete 16 books last month: 13 print books at a total of 4,311 pages and 3 audiobooks for 1.6 days of audio.

What I Read:

Fiction
Broken Glass Park by Alina Bronsky, translated by Tim Mohr
The Passage by Justin Cronin
Secret Daughter by Shilpi Gowda
Day for Night by Frederick Reiken (review coming July 7th)
My Name is Memory by Ann Brashares
Bad Marie by Marcy Dermansky
The Icing on the Cupcake by Jennifer Ross
The Nobodies Album by Carolyn Parkhurst
Backseat Saints by Joshilyn Jackson (review pending)
Commuters by Emily Grey Tedrowe

Young Adult/Middle Grades Fiction
Suite Scarlett by Maureen Johnson, narrated by Jeannie Stith (review pending)

Mystery/Thriller/Horror
Bury Me Deep by Megan Abbott (review pending)
So Cold the River by Michael Kortya, narrated by Robert Petkoff – audiobook
Still Missing by Chevy Stevens
Feed by Mira Grant, narrated by Paula Christensen and Jesse Bernstein (review pending)


Pick of the Month:

4698108563 cf760a70d9 m pictureThe Nobodies Album by Carolyn Parkhurst

What I Posted:

Discussion Posts
Oh, D.E.A.R! BEA Edition
By Popular Demand…My Reading Schedule
My Day As An Indie Bookseller
Shilpi Gowda – Author Event At The Bookstore
Hot Summer Reading

Audiobook Week Posts
Why Audiobooks?
How To Write An Audiobook Week Review
Audiobook Week Meme
When Do You Listen To Audiobooks?
Recommended Audiobooks
Other Audiobook Week Discussions

Fiction
Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand by Helen Simonson, narrated by Paul Altschuler
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
The One That I Want by Allison Winn Scotch

Mystery/Thriller/Horror
Bad Things Happen by Henry Dolan, narrated by Erik Davies – audiobook
The Whole World by Emily Winslow
Motherhood is Murder by Diana Orgain

Historical Fiction
31 Bond Street by Ellen Horan

Nonfiction/Memoir
My Life in France by Julia Child, narrated by Kimberly Farr – audiobook
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot, narrated by Cassandra Campbell and Bahni Turpin – audiobook
Leaving the Saints by Martha Beck, narrated by Martha beck – audiobook
Love in a Time of Homeschooling by Laura Brodie


 

bbaw button2010 med picture Hey, friends! It is almost time for the 3rd annual Book Blogger Appreciation Week! Amy and her helpers are working busily to bring us an awesome event, and I thought I would go ahead and throw my name in the hat for consideration for a couple of categories.

As far as niche categories, I’m going to be entering in the Best Eclectic Book Blog category  (perhaps if I get better about writing my audiobook reviews I’ll enter in the Audiobook category next year). Here are my posts for your expert judgement:

The Weight of Heaven – Book Review
The Time Traveler’s Guide to Medieval England – Book Review
Still Missing by Chevy Stevens – Book Review
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot – Audiobook Review
The House of Tomorrow – Book Review

I also want to go ahead and enter for Best Written Blog because, well, why not? Again, my posts for your judging pleasure:

The Weight of Heaven – Book Review
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot – Audiobook Review
Why Audiobooks? – Audiobook Week Discussion
Secret Daughter by Shilpi Gowda – Book Review
Hot Summer Reading

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4716641261 f05315c05f m pictureThe Icing on the Cupcake by Jennifer Ross

Ansley Waller is the perfect – but mean – Dallas sorority girl, kind of like a bitchy version of Elle Woods from Legally Blonde. Then her fiance, Parish, dumps her. He has finally seen her mean streak and he doesn’t like it. Now Ansley’s world has collapsed. She’s going to graduate without a man and, horror of horrors, have to get a job. She’ll never live this down in rich Dallas society. After a good deal of moping with her mother who is allegedly her best friend, she decides to get away from the people in Dallas who know her humiliation. To achieve this, she’s moving to New York to live with her rich grandmother who she’s never met because Ansley’s mother and grandmother are estranged.

Wow, “The Icing on the Cupcake” has one of the least likeable protagonists of any book I’ve read in recent memory. Ansley was a whiny, bitchy spoiled brat. Beyond that, the plot was fun, but far fetched and much too easy. Ansley wants to open a cupcake shop? Sure! She’s got her huge trust fund from her father that was supposed to help fund her first year of marriage. Easy peasey! There also seemed to be a gigantic plot hole around Ansley’s mother. The two of them are supposedly best friends who need to talk on the phone multiple times per day, but weeks and weeks seem to pass without them ever speaking with one another. Also, Ansley, if your feet hurt walking around New York in your impossibly high heels, maybe you should consider buying some damn new shoes.

Even with all of this, the inventive and delicious-sounding cupcake recipes almost made it worth it to want to slap Ansley for 2/3 of the book. Yum. I’d buy cupcakes from Ansley, even if I would never want to have any other interaction with her.

If you aren’t bothered by spoiled rotten protagonists, this book could definitely be fun (plot hole around the mother aside), but it won’t be good for a relaxing day around the pool if Ansley’s ridiculousness annoys you enough to cause your blood pressure to shoot up.

Buy this book from:
Powells.*
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound
.*
Amazon
.*

This review was done with a book received for review.
* These links are all affiliate links. If you buy your book here I’ll make a very small amount of money that goes towards hosting, giveaways, etc.
 

4748961245 4993fe1ac7 m pictureCommuters by Emily Gray Tedrowe

Winnie McClelland and Jerry Trevis’s families aren’t particularly happy when they marry in their 70s. Jerry’s daughter in particular feels that she is being abandoned – or that her family’s fortune is going to abandon her, she doesn’t seem to have fully admitted to herself what her motivations are. This, of course, makes things slightly awkward for her son Avery who ends up between Annette and Jerry. The tension with Annette doesn’t just affect Jerry’s side of the family, though, but Winnie’s family too. And, really, Winnie’s daughter Rachel has enough drama going on in her life already. Her husband had a debilitating accident that left him unable to work full time, putting a huge strain on the family’s finances and their marriage.

This was an admirable debut novel. Tedrowe had three narrators of varying ages, genders, and circumstances: Avery, Rachel, and Winnie. The three of them were not even related by blood, although they did all have a connection through Jerry. Tedrowe was able to keep the three narrators distinct and yet interwoven. All of the characters were well-written and realistic, as well as relate-able.

Although the novel was well-written and well-crafted, something about it failed to absolutely wow me. It may have just been me, since I really can’t place my finger on it, but it just didn’t grab me in the way I was hoping it would. It was a character-driven novel, rather than a plot-driven novel and I was interested in the characters, but I didn’t love them enough to get completely caught up in their lives.

I liked this well enough that I will be on the lookout for Tedrowe’s next book and I would recommend this to people looking for a well-written, character-driven novel, but it isn’t my favorite thing I read this year.

Buy this book from:
Powells.*
A local independent bookstore via Indiebound
.*
Amazon
.*

tlc tours pictureI read this book as part of a TLC Book Tour.  Check out some of the other tour hosts for more reviews.  Links go to the host’s site, not to their specific review.

Thursday, July 1st: Devourer of Books

Monday, July 5th: My Random Acts of Reading

Tuesday, July 6th: Til We Read Again

Wednesday, July 7th: Books Like Breathing

Tuesday, July 13th: Booksie’s Blog

Wednesday, July 14th: Sara’s Organized Chaos

Thursday, July 15th: Take Me Away

Wednesday, July 21st: Chaotic Compendiums

Thursday, July 22nd: lit*chick

Wednesday, July 28th: Bookstack

Thursday, July 29th: Reading at the Beach

Thursday, August 5th: Life Is A Patchwork Quilt

* These links are all affiliate links. If you buy your book here I’ll make a very small amount of money that goes towards hosting, giveaways, etc.
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