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Review: ‘Butterfly’s Child’ by Angela Davis-Gardner post image

Title: Butterfly’s Child
Author: Angela Davis-Gardner
Genre: Fiction
Year: 2011 (Paperback 2012)
Acquired: From the publisher as part of a TLC Book Tour
Rating: ★★★½☆

Two Sentence Summary: What would happen if the story from the famous opera, Butterfly’s Child were real? A three-year-old boy — the product of an affair between an American lieutenant and a Japanese geisha — is adopted by his father and new wife, Kate, and transplanted to a family farm in rural Illinois.

One Sentence Review: Butterfly’s Child is hard to put down, but an almost-too-clever mid-book revelation and general feeling of quickness in the storu left me wondering whether this is a book that will stay with me in the long-term.

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Review: ‘House of Stone’ by Anthony Shadid post image

Title: House of Stone: A Memoir of Home, Family, and a Lost Middle East
Author: Anthony Shadid
Genre: Memoir
Year: 2012
Acquired: Won in an online giveaway
Rating: ★★★★★

One Sentence Summary: After years of being beaten down working as a foreign correspondent, journalist Anthony Shadid returned to rebuild himself as he rebuilt his ancestor’s ancestral home in war-torn Lebanon.

One Sentence Review: House of Stone is a melancholy and undeniably beautiful book about history, home, and family that I wanted to re-read the moment I turned the last page. 

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Review: ‘Wild’ by Cheryl Strayed

Review: ‘Wild’ by Cheryl Strayed post image

Title: Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Coast Trail
Author: Cheryl Strayed
Genre: Memoir
Year: 2012
Acquired: Library
Rating: ★★★★★

Review: When Cheryl Strayed was 22-years-old, she lost her mother to a remarkably aggressive form of lung cancer; 49 days after the initial diagnosis, Strayed’s mother was gone. In the few years after, Strayed’s life slowly unraveled. She began sleeping around, cheating on her loving and devoted husband. She got pregnant and had an abortion. She fled her home in Minnesota to loaf around in Portland, where she started experimenting with heroin.

Eventually, while at REI to buy a shovel, Strayed came across a guidebook about walking the Pacific Crest Trail, a 2,663 hiking trail that goes from the Mojave Desert in southern California all the way into Canada. Without a clear sense of what it meant, Strayed decided that she would hike the PCT. Wild is the story of that hike and of Strayed’s coming-of-age journey on the trail:

I had to change. I had to change was the thought that drove me in those months of planning. Not into a different person, but back to the person I used to be — strong and responsible, clear-eyed and driven, ethical and good. And the PCT would make me that way. There, I’d walk and think about my entire life. I’d find my strength again, far from everything that had made my life ridiculous.

Aside being an utterly crazy and remarkable story, the thing that made me tear through Wild in less than 24 hours was the way Strayed wrote about her experiences. Given everything that happened in the years between her mother’s death and her decision to walk the PCT, the memoir could have easily turned melodramatic or self-pitying. But Strayed never goes there. There’s a sense of wisdom to her writing and a sense of distance from this experience that let her write about it in an almost serene and matter-of-fact way, even when the experiences she describes are far from that reality.

Really, her writing throughout is just pitch perfect. Strayed writes with this emotional honesty and clarity that most writers strive to find but often miss:

I knew that if I allowed fear to overtake me, my journey was doomed. Fear, to a great extent, is born of a story we tell ourselves, and so I chose to tell myself a different story from the one women are told. I decided I was safe. I was strong. I was brave. Nothing could vanquish me. Insisting on this story was a form of mind control, but for the most part, it worked. Every time I heard a sound of unknown origin or felt something horrible cohering in my imagination, I pushed it away. I simply did not let myself become afraid. Fear begets fear. Power begets power. I willed myself to beget power. And it wasn’t long before I actually wasn’t afraid.

I was working too hard to be afraid.

Obviously, there are a lot of section of the book that are not nearly as emotionally put together as that one — many that are just laugh-out-loud funny because they’re so absurd — but you get the idea, I hope. On the whole, I thought Wild was a remarkably honest and wise memoir that I highly, highly recommend.

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If you have reviewed this book, please leave a link to the review in the comments and I will add your review to the main post. All I ask is for you to do the same to mine — thanks!

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The Sunday Salon: Retro Reading

The Sunday Salon.comI spent most of this week taking a break from my normal reading habits and indulging in some retro reading, the kinds of books I used to devour but have since almost entirely abandoned.

When I was in middle school and high school, I read almost exclusively mystery and epic fantasy. It stemmed from my elementary school reading habit of picking out the longest books I could find in the children’s and young adult sections of the library, regardless of the subject. We only went to the library every couple of weeks, and I read voraciously as a kid, so I had to pick out really, really long books to tide me over between visits.

At my local library, those really, really long books tended to be fantasy and, as I branched out, mystery. Later, I also added some science fiction (Michael Crichton, that sort of thing). Fantasy and mystery also had many series to choose from, and I liked finding books in a series because it made picking new books easier — instead of having to peruse the shelves and make guesses, I just picked the next couple books in line and was good to go.

I can’t remember when I stopped reading those genres so voraciously, but at some point I stopped reading mystery and fantasy almost entirely and shifted my reading to what you see most here on the blog, nonfiction and literary fiction. This week I had a major urge to go back to those books I used to love for a little while and see what I thought.

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Review: ‘The Reconstructionist’ by Nick Arvin post image

Title: The Reconstructioninst
Author: Nick Arvin
Genre: Fiction
Year: 2012
Acquired: From the publisher for review consideration
Rating: ★★★★☆

One Sentence Summary: Accident reconstructionist Nick Arvin uses science to solve the mysteries of physics at accident sites, and, eventually, has to grapple with the accident that sent his life down this path.

One Sentence Review: Nick Arvin’s characters are smart, funny, and human, even when the situations they find themselves in threaten to veer entirely into chaos.

Why I Read It: I’ve been consistently impressed with the recent fiction from Harper Perennial (the publisher of one of last year’s favorites, Domestic Violets by Matthew Norman). I also love learning about forensics, so this seemed like a book that would be right up my alley.

 

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