Thursday, August 5, 2010

Strangers in Paradise Volumes 1-6 by Terry Moore

This is a review two to three years in the making.


Strangers In Paradise Pocket Book 1 (Strangers in Paradise (Graphic Novels)) (Bk. 1) Strangers In Paradise Pocket Book 2 (Strangers in Paradise (Graphic Novels)) (Bk. 2) Strangers In Paradise Pocket Book 3 (Strangers in Paradise (Graphic Novels))
Strangers In Paradise Pocket Book 4 (Strangers in Paradise (Graphic Novels)) (Bk. 4) Strangers In Paradise Pocket Book 5 (Strangers in Paradise (Graphic Novels)) (Bk. 5) Strangers In Paradise Pocket Book 6 (Strangers in Paradise (Graphic Novels)) (Bk. 6)

I'm not sure when I started reading Strangers in Paradise but I loved them so much, I had to take a break before reading the last in the series. Once I finished volume 6, it would be all over. I knew Terry closed off the series at the end of volume six. I didn't want to live in a world where there was no more SiP left to read. Perhaps it was a holdover from the shock of no more Harry Potter but still, it would have been a sad state.

Strangers in Paradise was a long running comic book brought together in graphic novel form. Mostly it is about love and loss and all our crazy issues that keep ourselves from finding our true happiness. Katchoo is secretly in love with her best friend Francine who is with a horrible guy named Freddie. Katchoo meets art fan, David, and he seems to have a thing for Katchoo to give us a lovely love triangle. Then we find out that Katchoo has a mafia past and in the next six volumes, it all plays out in so many different and surprising ways. It felt a little soap opera in parts but it was written at a time when the mere idea of these complications of love would never have dared been breathed on national television. Not to mention, the story was told in a semi-nonlinear fashion that really appeals to me.

Moore trusts his audience to have a brain and isn't afraid to craft his story around that notion. He drew all the art himself and I love how much he mixes up styles to match the scene. Frantic, intense moments are drawn with a quick lack of detail that hurry you to the next panel. Quiet moments make you want to pause and take in all the detail that he has provided on that single page before moving on. I realize that is likely graphic artist 101 but it never gets tired.  He mixes light and dark and never wastes either to make his statement. The scariest part is his ability to write women so well that everyone should be able to find a character they identify with or wished they were.

So now my beloved SiP is all over. Surprisingly, you can choose to hold onto the last volume for three years and jump right back in as if you read the previous five just last week. As much as I liked having that one volume left to read and hold onto, a person has to move on. I'm sure I'll find something else to love just as much and I can always revisit my books any time I need a Katchoo fix.

Monday, August 2, 2010

The Reader by Bernhard Schlink

Another finished book. Long weekends without any definite plans and a lot of stuff around the house you are trying to avoid doing will give you good reading motivation. Long weekends are great.

The Reader

But I really don’t have much to say about The Reader. I had seen the movie when it was in the theatres and loved it. A friend lent me the book and it has lived on my shelf for way too long. I’m going through my books and trying to make progress on what I have and what I need to return to people. At least I have one less borrowed book.

As for the book, it was beautifully written. Not a long piece and it gives an interesting perspective of the effect of the war on the German people, even to those in the next generation. Though it was a short read, every chapter felt like a piece of the puzzle that defined that man’s life in three acts to display how one person can become interwoven into the fabric of their character.

That might be a very bad description of what the book was about. I highly recommend the book and the movie. The movie was a faithful representation of the book and you could choose one over the other and not feel cheated out of the story experience.

Now, must find a happy novel to read.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Staked by J.F. Lewis

Vampires are back. Well sort of. You see them all over, especially when a new movie is out but those aren’t real vampires. Vampires are monsters, just like werewolves, sea creatures, goblins, etc. Making your vampires cute and cuddly is an affront to the monster community and they should take a stand for their rights to be seen in an unflattering light. They should garner the respect that only true fear can accomplish. Anything less goes against the monster code.

There. Got that off my chest and I think I should be awarded points for not using the word glitter. It was hard but I suspect everyone knows what I’m talking about anyway so I won’t bore you with that.

Staked

As for today’s novel choice, we have a book that I only picked up because I wanted something as ridiculous and schlocky as I could possibly find. I chose Staked because it came with a scantily clad woman on the cover with a gun in her hand. Not to mention a summary on the back that sounded like the guy version of chick-lit: girlfriend pressuring him into turning her into a vampire, business trouble at his co-owned strip club, and after a weird turn of events, the local werewolf pack is after him. Is it every guy’s dream to own a strip club? For the record, I don’t really want an answer to that question but I can’t imagine anything more depressing.

As for the book, it runs pretty much exactly like the back summary describes. The only surprise is that he turns the girlfriend pretty close at the first of the story and it isn’t a pretty sight. Blood and gore and they really should make an informational video on it ‘cause it would make anyone not to want to go through something so gross. Not to mention, character-wise, I can’t imagine why he would want to choose to spend eternity with this person, nor why she with him. Perhaps in that sense, they are made for each other. After the whole turning, they really didn’t spend all that much time together and the story splits off into two directions: Eric dealing with his werewolf issues and Tabitha getting Vampire 101. Basically, I spent a lot of the first half of the book asking myself why I was still reading.

It wasn’t a completely horrible book to read. It was starting to get good when it abruptly ends. I suspect the author wrote a really, really long book and the publisher decides to cut it off there to split it into two books to be more profitable. It included the first chapter to the next book and that little bit of plot really needed to be in the first book. Not sure what happens after that little piece but the ending just seemed awkward to me after finally starting to like the characters a little bit.

If you are willing to invest into a new vampire series and read more than just the first book, then I can recommend. If you like your books more stand-alone so you can move on to other things, I’d leave this one on the shelf. J.F. Lewis gets extra points in my book for making his vampires (or werewolves or whatevers) monsters in the truest sense. They are not nice, they kill, are not to be trusted, and make choices out of personal gain. And that makes them monsters, just as much as humans can be.

Now I’m off to do something productive and perhaps unmonster like. Cross fingers.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Certain Girls by Jennifer Weiner

Rainy Sunday. Perfect for reading and then posting about it.

Certain Girls: A Novel

Certain Girls is the sequel to Jennifer's big hit Good in Bed. Both of which I've borrowed from women at work and they make good pass around books. Also, they are quick reads and perfect for summer. I read Good in Bed before I started this reviewing books for fun thing. That is too bad because I'd have liked to go back and review what I'd felt about that book. Not really sure how I feel about this one.

Let's start with the story, the story centers around Candace and Joy, 12 years after the ending of the first book. Cannie is a stay at home mom who writes professional fanfic based on a sci-fi/fantasy movie under a pen name. She is super mom extraordinaire. Joy is a typical kid trying to break away from her overprotective mom, trying to fit-in with the popular kids at school, and trying to figure out who she is. In a lot of ways, she is a younger version of Cannie and it makes you wonder if you ever do figure it out. Lots of things happen and everyone learns something by the end.

I really do like these books while I'm reading them. They are so light and fluffy and fun and have a sharp wit, you don't want to see them end. They are not books I'd recommend to everyone but they are great to pass around to the girls at work book club or to anyone who enjoys books about mother/daughter relationships. Unfortunately, I do have a little bit of a guilty feeling afterwards. Like eating french fries instead of ordering the salad that was so helpfully offered as a healthy alternative. Oh well, I'll try to find a salad book next time.

Perhaps this conflicted feeling is because of what happened in the book. I really don't want to give that away but it really made me sad. Sad. Sad is such an odd word, like it only belongs to 4 year olds who don't know how to articulate how they really feel but it is an accurate description. I guess, as one of the centers of Cannie's happiness is taken away, it made me just as unhappy in direct proportion to how happy it made me when she found it in Good in Bed.

Bad things happen to people and life goes on. The book does end on a happy note so no worries if you were planning on taking this one to the beach.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Handle With Care by Jodi Picoult

I really really really shouldn't be posting about a book I just finished. I really really shouldn't be spending my morning finishing a book. I really really should be going to the market to find food for the upcoming week. I really should be at work, working on my evil project that I'd love to be taken off of so that I can find a new project. I really should be working on my photos so I can get my last PEI trip uploaded. That trip was like a month a ago and I still don't have them up... and one of my friends is likely going to kill me because of it.... life is hard but you know what trumps all the angst written in this paragraph? Schlock by Jodi Picoult!

Handle with Care: A Novel

Oh how I love Jodi... let me count the ways... She is awesome at her little formula. Typical Jodi book has two mothers who are best friends and love each other like sisters but because of the big event of the book, that relationship is destroyed for ALL TIME. Also in this little formula are the children, usually of that age when they finally realize that their parents aren't perfect and start keeping secrets from them. The children are usually the "big event" plot point of the book and one is usually neglected over the needs of the other. The husbands are not usually as interesting except they are excellent fathers despite their typical not perfect characters. Actually, Jodi is very adapt at writing imperfect people which make them much more interesting to read. There might be some MarySue qualities going on here but they aren't annoying ones.

Handle With Care is a story about a family who has a child that was born with Osteogenesis Imperfecta. OI is a genetic defect that causes the bones to be extremely brittle and break very easily. They love their daughter Willow no matter how hard life is living with a child with a disability. Problem is, OI is very expensive. Insurance will only over so much, they are very much in debt, and they see the future where Willow will need more and more surgeries, special equipment, and one and on... The mother's gamble on a solution: file a wrongful birth lawsuit against the doctor. Wrongful birth argues that the doctor should have diagnosed the disability in the womb and offered abortion as an option. The big problem, the doctor is her best friend. Bing! Big Event Plot is born.

I know this is coming off as sarcastic but I really do like Picolts books. They are easy reads, usually about controversial subjects that are fun to discuss in a group, and there is something comforting about them. It has been over a year since I've read one but it felt like putting on that warm comfy sweater you keep in the back of the closet for cold winter nights. But in this case, a warm cosy book that you bring out on hot summer days to while away those days that feel too humid to move.

Anyway, iPod is charged and I have no more excuses to prevent the start of my day... too bad that didn't take longer.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

Posting two in one day?! I know, that is the real shocker. Basically the last book was just lurking around, waiting to be reviewed and this one, just finished this afternoon, was demanding to be reviewed. Isn’t it weird how some books can be more patient than others?

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (Random House Reader's Circle)

Did you know that the islands in the English Channel were occupied by Germany during WWII? I had no idea, but then, my knowledge of the war is pretty limited to what I’ve been able to gleam from Hollywood movies. As far as I know, the US had nothing to do with those islands so no HBO special by Tom Hanks will ever give us that story. Not that I’m bitter.

The story starts in London, 1946, and the city is starting to rebuild after the war. Juliet Ashton is the centre of the story, a writer in search of her next novel. She receives a letter from a stranger asking if she might know of any other books by the author Charles Lamb. This kicks off a correspondence between herself and the people of Guernsey whom she finds herself falling in love with. The story is told in the form of letters, telegrams, and in one section, a journal.

The shining thread through out all is the love of books and how reading can help you get through some really terrible times. Or how books can bring people together and help you form unexpected relationships. Even though the subject matter is a little dark and heavy at times, the sharp wit of Juliet’s letters keeps you turning the page for more. It makes you wish you had someone as entertaining to correspond with in the old fashioned world of pen and paper, stamps and envelopes. Yet another book I liked and recommend to pretty much everyone.

Just think, this book didn’t have vampires or magic or any of the many other paranormal things I usually read. And the next one I finish might not either. Sign I’m getting old? A truly scary thought.

Heat Stroke by Rachel Caine

Woohoo! Finished another book in the year 2010. Shocking! I'm hoping to turn this summer into a reading summer but that is yet to be seen. It is so hard to find time to read and be social at the same time.

Heat Stroke (Weather Warden, Book 2)

Heat Stroke is a return to a favourite series of mine. Not sure if I wrote a review of the first one in the series, Ill Wind, but I really should have. Weather Wardens go out and help control the weather. They can ask the sky to rain or lessen the intensity of tornados. In this world, a select group of people have special powers to talk to the elements and help protect people from extreme dangers. Those extremes can be anything from hurricanes to wild fires.

At the start of this book, Joanne Baldwin, has been declared dead and she sort of is... or more like transformed into a whole new being, a Djinn. In this book, we get to see into the world of the Djinn. How they became to be, their role in the weather warden world, and how their darkest fear is to be enslaved by being stuck in a bottle. If you are tied to a bottle, you are under the power of whoever holds that bottle and you have to do everything that person commands no matter how much you don't want to. If your master is not a good guy, things could get really awful.

The best thing about this series is that you never know where the author is going to take you. Just when you think you know what is going on and all is happening as expected, she throws a curve and you are somewhere you never thought possible. Another great feature is her ability to end the book on such a cliff-hanger, you want to jump online and priority order the next book in the series.

Really don't want to give too much away just in the off chance you want to read it. If you are into fantasy popcorn that delivers a plot pace of a hundred miles per hour, this is the book for you.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Heat Wave by Richard Castle

This is mostly just a test, a test to see if I can still post to this blog. It has been forever and there really are no excuses. I wanted to blame my eyes and old age but apparently that isn’t completely the case. Or at least the eye part isn’t the problem, so says the optometrist. So I’m going to blame old age and the brain rotting power of television on my inability to finish books.

Heat Wave (Nikki Heat)

Coincidentally, the first book I’ve been able to finish in 2010 is based on the television show Castle. If you are not a fan, let me explain it a little to you. Richard Castle is an author who has used his connections to tag along with New York’s finest detectives as research for his new novel. Here he finds Detective Kate Beckett as his new muse. Each week we get a new weird murder and Castle uses his talents to help the police solve crime. So this brings us to the actual book. Turns out, if someone writes a fictional book based on a book that was fictionally created in a fictional universe…. I MUST HAVE IT. I must buy it, no matter how it makes me hate myself, just a little bit.

The book runs just like the show. Murder, suspect, suspect, interrogation, murder, evidence, suspect, alibis, forensics, action, suspense, etc. All the things you need for a Who-Done-It. Especially one that reads just like it was written as a script for the show except they changed the character names. There are a few things here that you don’t get on tv, like a sex scene and the relationship that seems to have a chance in hell of actually happening in my lifetime. But then, it wouldn’t be tv if they didn’t drag that out as long as possible.

Ultimately, it is the best example ever of a guilty pleasure. Don’t like admitting that I’d read a book like this but it was fun and don’t regret it. I suspect only fans of the show would appreciate the novelty of the book and forgive it for coming off a little over-the-top. Tell me if I’m wrong. Otherwise it was just fun and if you are a fan of the show, you will likely find it was worth the price of admission.

‘Til next time.