BBAW: First Treasure

Book Blogger Appreciation Week 2010

Book Blogger Appreciation Week (BBAW) was started by Amy of My Friend Amy to celebrate and recognize book bloggers. This is the third BBAW and my first year semi-participating. I say semi for several reasons. One, I only just found out about BBAW and haven’t had much time to prepare. And two, I’m in the middle of moving, so things are a bit chaotic on my end!

Each day of the week has a theme, and today’s was one I definitely wanted to do. Here’s the theme for Monday:

Let’s talk about that first treasure today.
For those of you who participated in BBAW last year, what’s a great new book blog you’ve discovered since last year’s BBAW?
For those you new to BBAW, what was the first book blog you discovered?

I honestly can’t remember the first book blog I discovered. I go through phases where I clean out my Google Reader and refill it with all kinds of new things, so my subscription list has changed so much since I first started reading book blogs that I don’t know where it began. However, there are some blogs that stay on the list no matter how many times I clean out my reader. One of my favorites is Minnesota Reads.

Minnesota Reads is a site run by several Minnesotans / self-professed “book nerds.” They review books and highlight events. There are two things I especially love about this site:

  1. First, their reviews. Their literary tastes seem to line up very well with mine, so most of what they review ends up on my TBR list! In addition, reviews are always that perfect length, giving you just enough to be interested but not so much that the story is ruined or you get tired of reading. And they’re well written — always a plus!
  2. Second, in addition to reviews, MN Reads features a calendar of literary events that you can even subscribe to. This feature does me no good, since I don’t live in or even near Minnesota. But I love the idea anyway!

Minnesota Reads has become a staple of my daily blog reading. I think if you give them a try, you might find they fit into yours as well!

Thoughts on “The Last Survivors” Trilogy by Susan Beth Pfeffer (Audiobook)

I heard about Susan Beth Pfeffer’s The Last Survivors trilogy — Life as We Knew It, The Dead and the Gone, and This World We Live In — from a school librarian who came into the store to buy books for her library. She raved about the audiobooks, which she was listening to in her car, she said. I brought them along on my recent trip, curious to see how they’d be.

Last Survivors Trilogy Covers

The first and third books are structured as the diaries of a teenage girl living in small-town Pennsylvania, around our own time. The second follows another character — a teenage Puerto Rican boy — in New York City and overlaps time-wise with the first half of Miranda’s story.

The concept for the books is quite good. Right at the beginning, the moon is knocked closer to Earth by an asteroid. The tides go crazy, severe weather rips through the world, food and water become scarce as epidemics ravage populations across the globe. All three books are survival stories, recounting the ways in which their characters stay alive one day at a time. I enjoyed the plot and remained interested to see how it would play out. There were, however, a couple of things that bothered me.

I’ll start by saying that I can absolutely see where the books would appeal to the age for which they’re written, which is mid-teens. The voice of Miranda, especially, in the first and third books is pretty authentically teenager, and Alex’s story in the second book is captivating. But my goodness, did Miranda get on my nerves. Her story is fascinating, but I found her thoughts and comments to be so grating that there were times I actually physically cringed. Her whiny character contrasted so sharply with Alex’s mature one that, when she reappeared in the third book, I found her even more irritating. Yes, I know it’s supposed to be her diary, but still.

I wonder if I would have felt differently had I read the books instead of listening to them. The reader who plays Miranda, Emily Bauer, sounds like a little kid, and I think it was largely her reading style that made Miranda come across as an immature whiner. Either way, though, I’d still have gotten sick of the phrase “What difference does it make??” The reader for The Dead and the Gone, Robertson Dean, was tolerable, if a touch overdramatic.

I also felt like the story deteriorated toward the end of the third book. Like all of a sudden, everyone went nuts and I was suddenly reading a different book full of new characters. But, I guess if the moon was knocked off its course and I’d been scrounging for food as long as the characters in the book had been, maybe I’d go a little nuts too!

There are a few things about how the story played out that irked me, but I can’t get into those without revealing some major plot points, so I’ll leave them be.

I’m glad I listened to Susan Beth Pfeffer’s The Last Survivors trilogy. I just think I may have liked it better if I’d read it instead.

Thoughts on “The Cailiffs of Baghdad, Georgia” by Mary Helen Stefaniak

The Cailiffs of Baghdad, Georgia by Mary Helen Stefaniak came to me through LibraryThing‘s Early Reviewers program. When it arrived in the mail — thankfully, before I left! — I read a few pages and immediately put it into my suitcase. From the first page to the last, this novel had me hooked. I was delighted by the writing and completely drawn in by the story. The characters were every bit as endearing (if not more so!) than the quirky cast of Shaffer & Barrows’s The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.

Cailiffs of Baghdad Georgia by Mary Helen Stefaniak (cover)Our narrator, a young girl by the name of Gladys, is one of many children in the Cailiff family of Threestep, Georgia. Through her eyes, and alongside her delightfully entertaining commentary, the tale of Miss Spivey and the Baghdad Bazaar unfolds.

It is August of 1938 when Miss Grace Spivey steps off the train in tiny Threestep to begin her new job as the teacher for the town’s one-room schoolhouse. She is, as the town’s children quickly discover, nothing like any teacher they’ve had in the past. For one, she has traveled to places all over the world, including Baghdad. For another, she has spent enough time in the North to challenge some Southern ways of life. To most of the children in Threestep, she and her tales of camels and jinns and harems are nothing short of magical. When she begins to plan a Baghdad Bazaar for the school’s yearly fundraiser, featuring a stage adaptation of Alaeddin from One Thousand Nights and a Night, almost everyone is on board.

But the longer Miss Spivey is in town, the more her actions begin to rub certain people the wrong way. As she charges ahead with her plans, everything begin to unravel, leaving no one in Threestep untouched.

The Cailiffs of Baghdad, Georgia is an enchanting novel peopled with a splendid cast of characters and written in a style that’s easy and wonderful to read. I loved it from start to finish and will most definitely be looking into more of Mary Helen Stefaniak’s work!

Books Make the Best Souvenirs

When I travel, I love to bring home books as souvenirs. I try to make my choices reflect the place I’m visiting. This trip has been no different! Here are the books that will be making the trek home with me this time:

India books

As I look at my purchases all together, I realize it’s a bit like that Sesame Street game, “One of these things is not like the others.” Alright, so Nick Hornby’s The Polysyllabic Spree has nothing to do with my trip. However, the copy I read was a library book, and I loved the book so much that I wanted my own copy. Plus, I found it on sale.

The two books on the right are both by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, and I’ve been wanting to read them for a while now. The Palace of Illusions retells the Mahabharata, one of the great Indian epics, from the point of view of Draupadi, the wife of the five Pandava brothers. They are one of two branches of a family struggling to inherit the kingdom of Hastinapura. I quite enjoyed Margaret Atwood’s novella The Penelopiad, in which Penelope explains what was happening on her end while Odysseus was out wandering, so I am looking forward to The Palace of Illusions.

The second Divakaruni book I picked up is her most recent. Here’s the synopsis from the jacket blurb:

“A group of nine are trapped in the visa office at an Indian Consulate after a massive earthquake in an American city….As they wait to be rescued — or to die — they begin to tell each other stories, each recalling ‘one amazing thing’ in their life, sharing things they have never spoken before.”

I think the concept has a lot of potential, and the four quotes featured on the back of the book are from Abraham Verghese, Jhumpa Lahiri, Ha Jin, and Lisa See, so I think it’s worth a shot!

I tried to read Salman Rushdie’s The Enchantress of Florence some time ago but didn’t get very far. However, Rushdie is a wonderful writer, so I was quite happy to come across Imaginary Homelands, a collection of essays that cover topics ranging from Indian and Pakistani politics to John le Carre and Philip Roth.

Finally, at my husband’s suggestion, I picked up R. K. Narayan’s The World of Malgudi, a compilation of four novels set in the imaginary South Indian town of Malgudi. Narayan’s Malgudi stories were some of my husband’s favorites growing up, so I’m looking forward to reading them.

A quick update on my trip reading: I’m nearly finished with the third audiobook book of Susan Beth Pfeffer’s Moon books and have mixed feelings about the trilogy. I’m also reading — and absolutely loving — Mary Helen Stefaniak’s The Cailiffs of Baghdad, Georgia. It’s out on September 6th from Norton. More about it as soon as I finish!

Thoughts on “A Canticle for Leibowitz” by Walter M. Miller, Jr.

A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr., is a bit out of line with the sort of books I usually read. Every now and again, though, I feel the urge to read a book one of my co-workers has selected as a “staff pick” for the store. The novel, published in 1960, is a major piece of classic science fiction.

A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr. (cover)A Canticle for Leibowitz is broken into three parts: Fiat Homo, Fiat Lux, and Fiat Voluntas Tua. As you move from one section to the next, the book moves ahead by about six centuries so that, by the time you reach Fiat Voluntas Tua, you are over a thousand years beyond Fiat Homo. The novel is set in the future, yet most of it reads like it’s set in years past. Throughout the book, the primary perspective comes from Leibowitz Abbey, where the monks of the Order if Saint Leibowitz have been quietly minding “the Memorabilia” for centuries.

We learn that, shortly after our own time, a massive human-initiated disaster–known as the Flame Deluge–and the ensuing chaos wiped out most of the world’s learned men and women, along with the records and examples of their work. Essentially, by its own choice, humankind has been brought into a new Dark Age. The Memorabilia, then, is a collection of pre-Deluge documents which the brothers of the Order carefully squirreled away while the Deluge raged. Though no one can understand what the documents are, much less what they mean, the monks sense that this important piece of civilization must be preserved, and they have made it their mission to ensure its survival.

The book opens as novice Brother Francis of the Order of Saint Leibowitz is performing his Lenten fast out in the desert that surrounds the abbey. Half delirious from heat and lack of food, Brother Francis meets a strange pilgrim, who rather casually leads him to the location of an old fallout shelter. The shelter, it is later discovered, contains papers that very likely belonged to the great Leibowitz himself. The entire episode — pilgrim, rock, shelter — becomes the cornerstone in the abbey’s push for Leibowitz’s official canonization, and the papers are added to the abbey’s collection.

Jumping ahead to Fiat Lux, we meet Dom Paulo, the abbot. Centuries after Brother Francis’s ordeal, the tales of his doings have faded into myth as the world begins to rediscover the knowledge it once possessed. Only recently has word of the Memorabilia’s existence reached beyond the abbey’s walls. Dom Paulo’s time as abbot sees the arrival of scholar Thon Taddeo, which forces faith and science to work side by side.

Finally, in Fiat Voluntas Tua, Dom Zerchi is facing nuclear holocaust. In an age mimics the Flame Deluge, cities and countries have turned against one another with the goal of mutual annihilation. Faith and science clash full force as the world collapses again.

I enjoyed A Canticle for Leibowitz. Where it could have been preachy, predictable, and blatantly allegorical, I found it to be none of those things. Miller lets his characters work through major issues without himself choosing sides, which allows fascinating insight into their various arguments. Pieces of the story are given in small doses, so that the reader is left to piece history together. Miller writes, especially in the initial Brother Francis section, with a subtle sense of humor, all the while maintaining the seriousness of his plot. This step outside my usually reading comfort zone was one worth taking.