Thursday, August 23, 2012

"Picture Perfect"-Jodi Picoult

Book Title: Picture Perfect
Author: Jodi Picoult
Version: Paperback
ISBN: 9780425185506
Published: July 22, 2002
First Published: March 21st, 1995
Publisher: Berkley Trade
Voice: Third and First Person
Genre: Fiction

SYNOPSIS: Cassie Barrett seems to have literally hit the jackpot of life. She is world renowned in her field of anthropology, and is married to one of Hollywood's best loved actors Alex Rivers. One night Cassie wakes up on a grave in a cemetery somewhere with no memory as to who she is or what she is doing there. A Lakota police officer named Will Flying Horse and shelters her until Alex shows up to take her home. Despite having no actual memory of life with Alex everything seems perfect when she gets home. As her memories begin to come back to her she realizes that things aren't always like they seem.

Cassie remembers their whirlwind romance on a movie set in Tanzania. How she watched him from afar and slowly fell in love with his wit, charm, good looks and kindness. She remembers how surprised she was when he started showing interest in her, an anthropologist who spent most of her time covered in dirt down a hole rather than on the red carpet. Cassie remembers how Alex literally swept her off her feet and convinced her to marry him. She remembers being sublimely happy and in love and believing that she really had found her prince.

Cassie also begins to remember how Alex would get angry and jealous and would beat her. And when Cassie sees a positive pregnancy test in her bathroom trash she suddenly remembers why it is she finally got up the nerve to walk out on Alex. When she realizes what that means Cassie knows that in order to protect herself and her baby she has to walk away for good. It's figuring out how she is going to do that, that gives Cassie her greatest pause.

REVIEW: You may be asking yourself why it is that I am reviewing an "older" book. Well I love Jodi Picoult and really that is all there is to it. I read this book a long time ago but I felt that it was time to review it because I enjoy going back to review books I read awhile ago. Plus to be honest I have already reviewed all the newest books I've read so here this is.

As always Jodi Picoult brings her beautifully unique voice to a normally untold story. Spousal abuse is something that is unfortunately a very common occurrence in the world but nobody talks about it. And Ms. Picoult looks at this topic wide her eyes wide open and without flinching. At least in the way she writes the tale there is no flinching I'm sure that it was a difficult thing to research. Anyway this is a story that should be told and here it is told in a literal spotlight. The story is tragic and encouraging in turns and making it a celebrity was a stroke of genius on Ms. Picoult's part. As a society we look up to and revere celebrities, especially actors, which makes the story that much more of a draw. 

Ms. Picoult's writing was, as it always is, superb. The way she described the joy that Cassie felt as she was falling in love made me smile. And her ability to write the scenes where Cassie was beaten with just as much poetry made me cringe and want to weep. Her writing is something that is unique and in my opinion untouchable. But in such a down to earth way. It is no wonder that I love her writing more than just about any other author I've come across.

I have said it a few times before now and I am going to say it again. I recommend any and all of Jodi Picoult's novels. This is one of her more memorable for me for some reason. I love all of her novels just about equally but there are a few that really stick with me and this is one of them. It is probably because some of them are deeper and darker than others. I loved this book and I highly recommend it to someone just starting out with Jodi Picoult because it is an excellent preview of all her talent.


More Female Voices:

"Between the Lines"                   "Then Came You"
                                        
                                           
 

Monday, August 20, 2012

"The Handmaid's Tale"-Margaret Atwood

Book Title: The Handmaid's Tale
Author: Margaret Atwood
Version: Paperback
Published: March 16th, 1998
Publisher: Anchor
First Published: 1985
ISBN: 9780385490818
Genre: Dystopian Fiction
Voice: First Person

SYNOPSIS: "Let the women learn in silence with all subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence. For Adam was first formed, then Eve. And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression."

It is the future and the government has been completely overthrown by what can only be called the Christian fundamentalists, those that feel that the Bible should be followed word for word. Especially the parts about women being the inferior sex. There are different classes of women, the Wives, married to Commanders (high ranking officials in the new regime) and with the most in the way of "freedom", Marthas, basically maids and cooks, unwomen, those that have been deemed unworthy and sent to the outer colonies basically to die and the Handmaids, they are the incubators. The Handmaids are put into houses where the Wives can no longer conceive and once a month they go through a ceremony. They lay down in the lap of the Wives with their faces covered in a red veil and the Commanders have intercourse with them. Their hope is to conceive a healthy child so that their lives will be seen as valuable.

Offred is such a Handmaid and lives in such a situation. She is allowed out, to meet up with a second Handmaid, for daily shopping. The shops are all marked by pictures in their windows for women are no longer allowed to read. Although Offred has all the correct greetings and knows how to keep her head down and out of trouble she still remembers what life was like in the time before. She remembers wearing jeans and buying cigarettes on her way to work, she remembers making love with her husband and holding their daughter in her arms. It is in these memories that Offred rebels in her quiet way.  

One night as Offred really steps out of bounds and sneaks into the parlor one of the Guardians, a male chauffeur/guard, comes in and tells her that the Commander wants to see her in his study alone the next night. After this message is delivered everything begins to change for Offred. Her life goes from being quiet and boring to more full and slightly more dangerous. Which makes a nice change for Offred. But it's a change that leaves her having to decide whether or not everything is worth it. Offred has to decide which is more important, being alive or having a life.

REVIEW: This book is my greatest nightmare realized. And the fear and slight disgust I felt in reading this was part of why I loved it so much. It was so well done that the fear I felt was real, palpable and thick through out. I really, really liked "The Handmaid's Tale" as much as I feared and hated the ideas that were in it. But I kind of think that was part of the point. It was Ms. Atwood's warning to everyone of what could happen if one group with a single minded idea was allowed free reign.

The story was depressing and frighting to read about but at the same time it was beautiful in a very dark way. Reading about the way Offred saw the world she was living in was strangely beautiful in its bleakness. It is literally a nightmare version of what the world could turn into. There was nothing redeeming about the story except for Offred and her memories of the time before. But even those are few and far between.

Margaret Atwood is obviously a poet first. Her writing is all poetry. Sweeping lines of beauty and pain, fear and lost time. She mixed the past and present so simply that there was barely a break between the two. There were even times when I was unsure if I was reading about the present or the past but I kind of liked getting lost like that. And Ms. Atwood's descriptions of colors and places, the picture signs in shop windows, the white of a hanged man's hood, is so rich. It's vivid and tangible. There were times that I actually felt shivers race up my spine just from the way something was described. My feelings about her writing boil down to this, it was brilliantly done.

This is an incredible book, writing that leaps off the page and gets under your skin, a story that makes you stop and really think about things and a narrator that pulls at your heart strings. It's a tough story to read but that kind of makes the book fly by. For me I couldn't get enough of the tale and I read it in a few days. After reading it I felt a sense of accomplishment and slight relief that not only was I done but that it really was just fiction. Because it's the type of book that you get lost in and if you aren't careful you begin to fear that the fiction is the reality. It's that rich and thick in all the best ways. It's a classic for sure not only because it is a nightmare version of what the world could turn into but also because of the writing, Offred and her memories and maybe most importantly the way she sees things. She without a doubt becomes our ticket into this world and it is only through her that we are allowed in and out safely. It's a terrific read if you are brave enough to try it.

Just As Dark:

A Density of Souls          The Secret Holocaust Diaries




                                                


Friday, August 17, 2012

"Shadow of Night"-Deborah Harkness

Book Title: Shadow of Night
Author: Deborah Harkness
Version: Hardback
Published: July 10, 2012
Publisher: Viking Adult
ISBN: 9780670023486
Genre: Adult Fantasy
Voice: First Person
Number of Pages: 584

NOTE: With this I am going to jump right to the review because this is the sequel to "A Discovery of Witches" and I don't want to give too much away. I purposely kept the synopsis of "A Discovery of Witches" short and vague because there are so many twists and turns in it that I didn't want to reveal any of the wonderful surprises. In that same vein I want to skip the synopsis part of this entry so that I don't accidentally give anything away. 

REVIEW: This was another win for Deborah Harkness. No need to worry about "A Discovery of Witches" being a fluke or beginner's luck because this second part is just as good, if not even better. It took me two weeks to read it, and the only reason it took so long was because I was in the middle of packing and moving. If I had, had the time I would have finished it in a couple of days. It was that good! 

The story was even more full and complicated than the first one and in this volume Deborah Harkness' past as a historian really came in to sharp relief and let me tell you she didn't disappoint. Of course there were embellishments and small liberties taken but from what I could tell, based on my limited knowledge of Elizabethan London, she had really done her research. One of my largest pet peeves when it comes to books in a historical fiction novel is lack of research so I was overjoyed to find how well researched this was. It was one of my favorite parts about the novel. 

Again miss Harkness' writing was superb, full of subtle poetry and beauty. And the way she wrote some of the most beloved characters from history, such as Christopher Marlowe, Walter Raleigh, Queen Elizabeth and William Shakespeare, was so well done it was difficult to remember that they were fictional representations. I love when that happens! I find that a mark of truly great writing; when the reader can completely forget that the characters they are reading about aren't real somewhere in the world.  

This was such a good book that I am actually missing reading it. And although logically I know that the third book won't be out for a very long while I still can't wait. Though I know that it is a trilogy I love her writing and these characters so much that I kind of wish the series would continue on. These books, both books in the All Souls Trilogy so far, are the whole package. Great story, superb writing, and characters that you fall in love with. I mean what more can you ask for in a book? I love them and I really recommend them to everyone. Even if you think that these aren't the kind of books you usually go for you should give them a try. They will surprise you in all the best ways. I mean honestly what else can you ask for when picking up a new type of book? 

You May Also Like:

 A Discovery of Witches




Monday, August 13, 2012

"A Discovery of Witches"-Deborah Harkness

Book Title: A Discovery of Witches
Author: Deborah Harkness
Version: ebook
Pubished: February 8th, 2011
Publisher: Viking Books
ISBN: 9781101475690
Genre: Adult Fantasy
Voice: First Person Majority

SYNOPSIS: Diana Bishop is your average tenured history professor and witch. She has taken some time off to further her research on alchemy at Oxford. While in the Bodelian library she requests a book called Ashmole 782 thought to be the definitive book on alchemy. When she gets it her arm begins to tingle and the words race back and forth across the page. After years of denying the magic inside her, Diana quickly slams the book closed and decides to pack it in for the day. She sends the book back in to the depths of the library and decides to forget the whole thing ever happened. If only things were that simple. 

Her next night in the library Diana finds that she is in need of a book that is just out of her reach. Kind of willing the book into her hand Diana heads back towards her reading nook and promptly runs into a vampire. Introducing himself as Matthew Clairmont this alluring and slightly dangerous strange vampire asks Diana to dinner. Fearing that she will be on the menu and having no desire to know any supernatural creaures Diana says 'thanks but no thanks.' After this first meeting Diana finds that Matthew Clairmont is a persistent vampire when he begins showing up daily in the library. It turns out though that he is not the only supernatural creature that has taken up a sudden desire in research. In short order witches and daemons begin showing up at the library with a special interest in all things Diana Bishop.

When Diana discovers that all this sudden attention from other creatures has something to do with the strange book Diana looked at, Ashmole 782, Diana decides to form an unusual and highly unorthodox alliance with the vampire Matthew. Together they head out on an adventure to figure out exactly what is in Ashmole 782 and exactly why the whole creature realm is after Diana and the book. Along the way Diana finds that the necessary alliance with Matthew becomes so much more when she begins falling in love with him. Endangering them even more the two form a bond that not even the ancient rules of their world can break.

Delving further into this mysterious new world Diana begins to learn more about her past, who her parents were, and exactly just how powerful a witch she is. Through ups and downs, danger, mystery, and discovery Diana and Matthew have each other and a very specific goal in mind, discover what Ashmole 782 has to hide and exactly what it has to do with the creature world.

REVIEW: I love books about books and so I was on goodreads.com looking through a list of books about books. "A Discovery of Witches" came up on the list but as I read the description I was totally turned off. I kind of forgot about it for awhile until a really good friend told me that she read it and that it was really good. She told me that Deborah Harkness was a historian so it wasn't only well written but very well researched. Since I highly respect my friend's opinion I decided I would give it a try. Boy am I glad that I did because it is now on my list of favorites.

The story is a surprising one, one that is more complicated than I thought it was going to be. I enjoy paranormal and supernatural stories so the fact that there was that element in it was a really wonderful surprise, I mean I knew that it was going to be about a witch hence the title, but adding in the other creatures was the pleasant surprise part. But there was a twist to it, it was academic and grown up in nature which was a refreshing turn seeing as most of the vampire tales these days are trying to jump on the 'Twilight' bandwagon. Anyway the point is that this was a grown up book about the paranormal and I loved, loved, loved that.

Deborah Harkness' writing was superb and really that's all there is to it. She has such a beautiful way with words it's almost hard to describe. Her writing is not only well thought out but it's well put together. Every word is put deliberately together to form the perfect sentence that goes on to form the perfect paragraph. I don't know what it is about the writing but I lapped it up and I didn't want to put the book down. The great story, coupled with amazing writing, and add in the fantastic research it all makes for a really, really great book.

I highly, highly recommend this book to everyone because it has everything in it. I know that most people steer far away from all things vampires, which is a shame because there are some good paranormal stories out there, but this is so much more than just another vampire story. And I say this again that this is a very grown up story, by that I don't mean there is a lot of sex or violence or swearing in it, I mean that it is a supernatural tale told through the eyes of adults. I don't think that covers it but it will have to do for now. Go out and read it, it is one of those books that I deem a must read. It is full of mystery and magic, history and love and it is all mixed together in such a wonderful and beautiful way.


More in the Same Vein:

The Raven Boys             Once Bitten, Twice Shy