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Thoughts on ‘The Kitchen Daughter’ by Jael McHenry post image

In the midst of The Move and other big life changes, I’ve found that reading fiction is somehow easier for me. I’m not sure why, but I’m certainly grateful since it made now a great time to read The Kitchen Daughter for BookClubSandwich. I’ll admit I was a little skeptical about the premise — after her parent’s death, a woman discovers she can communicate with the dead when cooking their recipes — but ended up satisfied with the book as a whole. (If you want a more detailed summary, the one on IndieBound sums things up nicely).

the kitchen daughterReflecting on the book, there were two things about it that worked especially well for me. First, I enjoyed reading about the main character, Ginny. I didn’t necessarily always like Ginny, but I thought she was intriguing. Although it’s never labeled, it’s pretty clear in the book that Ginny suffers from some sort of disorder (likely Asperger’s syndrome), which makes it especially difficult for her to relate to and connect with others. Her parents spent their lives sheltering her, so after their death she is thrown for a loop. But instead of giving into her disorder, allowing herself to be labeled and treated like a victim, Ginny tries to stand up for herself. While Ginny could be prickly and frustrating and hard to understand, I wanted to know more about her.

I can’t talk much about the second thing I liked, the ending, because I don’t want to give too many spoilers away. Suffice it to say, things don’t work out quite the way you might expect them too (if it’s possible to make predictions about a book where ghosts materialize from recipes). I appreciated that the book ended up with a more complicated ending than I was initially expecting.

One of my favorite parts of doing BookClubSandwich is reading though all the other reviews of a particular book and pulling out the places where readers agree and disagree on the same things. In the case of The Kitchen Daughter, Ginny’s voice/personality causes some disagreement. Andi (Estella’s Revenge), the co-host of BookClubSandwich, actually found Ginny so frustrating she wasn’t able to finish the book. Andi explains:

I found Ginny really hard to “be with” in the book. Her nervousness and social anxiety just made me feel nervous and anxious and drew the book out to a point that was almost painful for me to read. It grated on my nerves, got a bit under my skin, and ultimately I did not finish.

In contrast, Joy (Joy’s Book Blog) enjoyed Ginny’s voice. In fact, I think she describe why I liked it even better than I’m able to:

I suspect going through it quickly helped my reading experience because Ginny has the sort of brain that is intriguing to visit but you wouldn’t want to live there. In fact, I got mesmerized by this narrator’s voice and had difficulty putting it down.

[continue reading…]

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To Read or Not to Read: ‘Game of Thrones’ post image

While you’d be hard-pressed to know it by reading this blog, I used to be an avid epic fantasy and science fiction reader. When I was a kid, my mom took us to the library about once every three weeks — the length of the lending cycle at our local library. As my reading speed increased, I started choosing books based on how long they were: I needed a lot of pages to fill the time between visits.

That’s how I managed to pick up Michael Crichton (CongoSphere, and Jurassic Park), Carl Sagan (Contact), Diana Wynn Jones (too many to even mention), Brian Jacques (the entire Redwall canon) and Melanie Rawn (the Dragon Prince Trilogy, the Dragon Star Trilogy, The Golden Key, and the Exiles Trilogy). I also loved mysteries, and read almost the entire Amelia Peabody series by Elizabeth Peters. And of course there was Harry Potter. I never managed to read the Lord of the Rings series, which seems odd on reflection. I think I was put off from the books in middle school when I tried to read The Hobbit and truly hated it.

I loved books that were long, and I loved long books in a series — it made it so much easier to pick my next read when I knew there was another book coming with my favorite characters. I think that may be why I love watching television series so much. There’s just so much time to delve into characters, to feel like you really know them and their world and the things they love and hate.

[continue reading…]

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BookClubSandwich Discusses ‘The Kitchen Daughter’ post image

Today’s the big day when BookClubSandwich will be chatting about Jael McHenry’s book The Kitchen Daughter. I managed to finally finish the book over the weekend while on a road trip from Madison to Morris and back to find a house for Boyfriend, Hannah, and I. Fourteen hours in the car leaves plenty of time for reading (and napping).

Overall, I enjoyed The Kitchen Daughter. Some parts were a little cheesy, but the magical elements weren’t overdone and I connected with the different characters as I read. The plot also managed to have some unexpected twists, which kept me surprised. I’ll have more of my thoughts on the book later this week. For now, the main discussion post for the week will be over at Andi’s (Estella’s Revenge), so head on over there sometime today to get started. I’ll post a wrap up here at the end of the week. Thanks for chatting with us!

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Three Thoughts When Reviews Can’t Be Written (And a Question!) post image

Point the First: Thank you everyone for your very kind and supportive comments on my big “I’m Moving!” announcement earlier this week. I’m not going to have time to respond to all the comments, but they mean the world to me. It’s really amazing how supportive online communities can be.

Point the Second: I recently had a review published in our local newspaper for Paul Farmer’s new book, Haiti: After the Earthquake. You might be familiar with Farmer because of Tracy Kidder’s book Mountains Beyond Mountains, which is one of my favorite narrative nonfiction reads.

Haiti: After the Earthquake is a collection of first-person accounts by Farmer and his colleagues about what life was like in Haiti in the year after the January 12, 2010 earthquake struck hear the capitol, Port-Au-Prince. I enjoyed the book quite a bit — it’s funny, sad, and thought-provoking all at the same time. If you’re at all curious about Haiti or larger discussions about the role of government and NGOs in recovery efforts around the globe, this is a book to check out.

Point the Third: I am struggling to find the words to get some recent reviews written and posted. I blame the Dangerous Record Heat Wave and The Impending Move, but there could be other factors at play here.

I’m just four reviews behind, but honestly, I just can’t find the momentum to get started. Instead of staring at the computer feeling like slamming my fists on the keyboard hoping words come out, I decided to turn to all of you one more time. I’m going to solicit questions about each of my four unreviewed books, then use those to help me get started. Here’s what I’ve got:

  • The Girls of Murder City by Douglas Perry — This book is a nonfiction account of the murders that inspired the play/musical/movie Chicago. I read it over my 4th of July vacation at the lake, and it was a perfect nonfiction choice for reading by the beach.
  • The Help by Kathryn Stockett — If you don’t know even a little about what The Help is about, then you must live under a rock even bigger than the rock I live under. This is the book my sister and I are reading together for our book club, so if you have any questions about it you’ll probably get a Two-for-One answer! Great deal! (And possibly a vlog!)
  • Sex at Dawn by Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jethá — Ryan and Jethá take a crack at explaining the sexuality of our primitive ancestors and how we live today does or doesn’t fit into the behaviors we evolved to have. (Hint: Farming may have destroyed us all!) I was fascinated and skeptical while reading this one.
  • Storming the Tulips by Ronald Sanders, translated by Hannie J. Voyles — This book is a pretty slim collection of essays about students in Holland during the Nazi occupation. In the intro, the translator says it can be read as a companion book to The Diary of Anne Frank, as this book is about students living out in the world while The Diary of Anne Frank is the story of a girl in hiding. I really like that comparison.

If you have any questions about these four books, leave them in the comments and I’ll use those as the basis of my review. Or, alternatively, you could just let me know which book you’re most curious to read about and I’ll use votes to decide which review to tackle first.

Photo Credit: J.D. Hancock via Flickr
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The Sunday Salon.com So, I have some big news: I took a new job. In about three weeks Boyfriend and I will be moving nine hours away so I can take it. It feels enormously big and terrifying and exciting and awesome all at the same time.

The job is to be the editor of the newspaper in the town where I went to college, Morris, MN. I was actually living in Morris when I started this blog about three years ago, but shortly after moved to Madison to start grad school. I went to grad school in order to get a job exactly like this one, so this new job is a great opportunity for me. I know this is a job that I can do really well, and I can’t wait to get started. On the other hand, I love Madison and am going to be really sad to leave here. Emotionally, I’ve been up and down about everything all week, but mostly up 🙂

Because of all the, you know, life changes, I haven’t felt like reading or blogging or really doing anything of the sort. I’ve been making lists and researching U-Haul prices and calling landlords and numbing my brain with some mindless tv… but not much reading. I can’t seem to focus long enough on the books I’ve got obligations to read (book clubs, book tours) to get anywhere with them. And I can’t figure out how to write anything resembling coherent blog posts or reviews while my brain is going a million miles an hour all the time.

Happily, my brother and sister came to Madison this weekend, and they’ve been a welcome distraction/sounding board while I freak out about the move. We went to see Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 yesterday, which I thought was awesome. The pacing near the end was a bit off, but overall I thought it was a fitting end to the movies. It also made me want to re-read the books immediately, which I might do just because I could use some comfort reads at the moment. They also brought me a bunch of cupcakes, yum.

I wish I had more bookish things to say, but at the moment books are about the last thing I can think about (other than trying to estimate how many boxes I’m going to need to move all of mine — I should start a pool or something!). I’m not sure what’s going to happen with the blog in the next month or so — I expect erratic posting, shorter reviews, and fewer comments on other blogs — but I hope you’ll stick around while I get picked up, moved, and settled again.

When life goes crazy, do you dive into books for comfort or find yourself unable to read at all? What books do you turn to when you need to get centered again? 

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