Wintergirls by Laurie Halse Anderson

Synopsis:
The death of her best friend sends an anorexic girl into a backsliding tailspin.

Review:
While all of Laurie Halse Anderson‘s books are fantastic, Wintergirls is the first one to equal Speak in its simple depth, elegant honesty, and dynamic storytelling.

Anderson frames Lia’s emotional journey through her grief over the death of her best friend, the girl who taught her to be anorexic in the first place. It’s a heartwrenching story because Lia’s suffering is so palpable, yet Anderson isn’t afraid to let us be frustrated by Lia’s stubbornness and blindness.

Anderson’s wordsmithing is in top form. She come up with imagery that’s fresh, precise and evocative, without calling attention to itself. This is topnotch writing in service of a riveting story–it doesn’t get much better!

Posted in American Literature | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Replies

The Warded Man by Peter V. Brett

Synopsis:
At night, the demons rise, terrorizing humanity for centuries until three grown orphans dare to fight back.

Review:
Warning: freak-out coming…

THE WARDED MAN ROCKED ROCKED ROCKED.

I mean, seriously. I am losing my mind over how good this book was. Why oh why oh why am I going to have to wait all the way until the end of the year to read the next book? I haven’t been this insane about a book since I read Assassin’s Apprentice. I was so sucked in I forgot how eager I am to read Dance With Dragons. It’s books like these that make me hate my superpower, because my time with Arlen, Leesha, and Rojer passed way too shortly. I wish the book had been twice as long, honestly!

The basic premise is that humanity is under attack from demons that rise up from the Earth’s core every night at sunset. Only painted or carved wardings can repel them, and like any human-made thing, the wards are prone to fading, chipping, or being covered by dirt. People have grown accustomed to living in fear, with only courageous messengers and their portable warding circles daring to travel between cities and hamlets. Folklore is replete with foretellings of a Deliverer, who will lead humanity in the next war against the demons, presumably to defeat them once and for all. But most believe the Deliverer is just a fairy tale.

One young man, Arlen, despises fear and dreams of a way to fight back. When he’s left orphaned and fostered by a Messenger, he discovers a talent for warding and a desire to seek out the lost cities of the first Demon Wars. The Warded Man is told through Arlen’s point-of-view, as well as that of Leesha, a privileged young woman with a talent for healing, and Rojer, another orphan whose fiddling is so sweet it makes the demons dance.

Brett makes these people real, constantly taking risks in their interactions with those around them. He excels at hinting at the stories taking place off-stage, as it were, and that gives his characterizations depth and breadth. I was drawn in as much by the emotional journeys of the characters as by the action scenes–not to take anything away from those, of course. The fighting and battle scenes are as visual as any I have ever read. Brett skillfully leads the reader through the action using emotional stakes that are just as high as the physical ones.

In many ways, The Warded Man is an origin story for a superhero, but there’s no “Chosen One” nonsense here. Brett realizes that the best heroes don’t know their own heroicism–like Neo in The Matrix–nor are they protected by those whose lives are deemed less important by the author. Brett lets every human life count and doesn’t make things easy for anyone, least of Arlen, Rojer, and Leesha. By respecting his characters enough to let them suffer, he crafts a story that is worthy of however many sleepless nights you’ll need to tear through it.

Incidentally, Brett wrote this on a smartphone, largely during his subway commute to work. How cool is that? I wasn’t surprised to learn that he is a fan of Stephen King, because the book that it resembles most is King’s Wolves of the Calla, my personal favorite from the Dark Tower series.

I need people to read this book so we can talk about it. It comes out on March 10th, but you can pre-order it on Amazon. Many thanks to Librarything‘s Early Reviewer’s program–I’m always amazed when I get a book because so many people request them. Some of the ones I’ve received have been real stinkers, but all is forgiven because I’ve now got a new epic fantasy obsession.

UPDATE–The Warded Man is out today!

Stop Me if You’ve Heard This One Before by David Yoo

Synopsis:
After winning the heart of the most popular girl in school, dorky Albert risks losing it all when her alpha ex-boyfriend develops Hodgkin’s.

Review:
Imagine the dorkiest kid you can imagine–the guy with no social filter, the one who’s never seen talking to anyone, who eats lunch in the cafeteria and never makes eye contact. Now picture the pretty popular girl with perfect calves and bouncy hair and a smile that’s an invitation to share in eternal happiness. Now make them kiss. You can’t do it, can you? It’s impossible to conceive of such a thing–yet David Yoo, in Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before makes the scenario not only believable, but achingly, poignantly real.

Yoo has the wit of a Larry Doyle or a Gordon Korman, and all the heart of the best movies in John Hughes’s canon. I totally have a reader/author crush on him for writing this book. I got completely swept up in the love story to the point where I was having trouble remembering that I am not actually a geeky Korean-American high school boy. When Albert hurt, I hurt–bad. Yoo gets all the aching emotions of first love gone bad so terribly right that it’s hard to read in the best kind of way.

I’m going to have an interview with Yoo running in a few days, and hope all my YA-loving readers will stuff their own stockings with this book.

Posted in American Literature | Tagged , , , , | 2 Replies

Gilead by Marilynne Robinson

Synopsis:
An aging minister writes a letter to his young son, telling him all he’ll never have the chance to tell him when his son is a man.

Review:
“Just now I was listening to a song on the radio, standing there swaying to it a little, I guess, because your mother saw me from the hallway and she said, ‘I could show you how to do that.’ She came and put her arms around me and put her head on my shoulder, and after a while she said, in the gentlest voice you could ever imagine, ‘Why’d you have to be so damn old?’”

Only Marilynne Robinson’s own words are sufficient to communicate the grace and beauty of Gilead, her second novel and Pulitzer Prize winner. The narrator, Reverend John Ames Boughton, is nearing the end of his life and his heart aches with love for his younger wife and their seven-year-old son Robbie. His reflections are inspired by the return of his namesake, John Ames Boughton, the middle-aged scoundrel son of his dearest friend, the Reverend Robert Boughton. Known as Jack, Boughton’s son has squandered his heritage–and yet, in true prodigal fashion, Ames knows that he is the one of Boughton’s many children who is closest to his heart.

Ames’s recollection meander through memoir, apologia, philosophy and confession. Robinson’s prose isn’t showy, but she finds new ways to express the startling beauty of the ordinary. This is my second time reading Gilead and I found so much more in it the second time around. It’s about as deeply Christian a work of fiction as anything I’ve ever read, and Robinson surpasses even Walker Percy in the way she discovers the sacramental in the quotidian.

Posted in American Literature | Tagged , , , , | 1 Reply

Gunnar’s Daughter by Sigrid Undset (Translated by Arthur G. Chater)

Synopsis:
Callously ravished by the man she hoped to love, an 11th Century Norwegian woman shapes her life around dreams of vengeance.

Review:
Gunnar’s Daughter is an early novel from the Sigrid Undset, author of the Nobel Prize-winning Kristin Lavransdatter trilogy, and it is no less of a powerful, shocking work not just for a book set in medieval Norway, but for a book written at the beginning of the 20th Century. Continue reading

Emperor and Clown by Dave Duncan

Synopsis:
Now married to the cursed Sultan Azak, Princess Inos finally heads to the capital city to plead her case in front of the wardens, as stable boy Rap rushes to meet her and embrace his destiny.

Review:
(Is that like the worst cover you have ever seen? Seriously.) Emperor and Clown is the final installment in Dave Duncan’s A Man of His Word series, and a most satisfying conclusion indeed. The overall story is a rich, satisfying adventure full of political machinations and romance, with a thoroughly original world and three-dimensional characters. In short, I would recommend this series to any readers who enjoy George RR Martin or Robin Hobb. I’ve mooched the follow up series, but will be taking a palate-cleansing break from epic fantasy. Continue reading

Perilous Seas by Dave Duncan

Synopsis:
Rap the stableboy joins a merchant crew still intent upon rescuing Queen Inosolan, who is crossing a haunted wasteland in order to appeal her case to the four wardens.

Review:
Perilous Seas is the third book in Dave Duncan’s A Man of His Word series, and again I’m impressed at the skill with which Duncan crafts his narrative. He continually places his characters in severe jeopardy, taking the kinds of risks that fantasy authors so often fear. It’s almost as if the work it takes to build an alternate universe is too precious to dismantle. They’re afraid to damage, when in fact the best stories come when the world is shattered into irretrievable pieces. Continue reading

Faery Lands Forlon by Dave Duncan

Synopsis:
Inos might be queen of Krasnegar, but she’s been magicked to the other side of the world, and the same magic has sent stable boy Rap, the goblin Little Chicken, and boy thief Thinal to the land of Faery, where Rap discovers that Inos is a pawn in a deadly game between powers greater than any army or king.

Review:
Faery Lands Forlorn is the second book in Dave Duncan’s A Man of His Word series, and it’s clear that none of these books is meant to stand alone. It picks right up where Magic Casement left off, and ends with another cliffhanger. Continue reading

War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy (Translated by Anthony Briggs)

Synopsis:
The lives, romances, and fortunes of 3 prominent Russian families play out against the backdrop of Napoleon’s invasion of Russia.

Review:
It’s absurd to blog about War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy’s sprawling behemoth of a novel. The title alone is ludicrous and unfathomable. People laugh when you say you’re reading it, not because they think it’s not worth reading, but because of its reputation as one of the longest books ever written. Nevertheless, I, the Superfast Reader, who read this book for the Summer Reading Challenge, and as a personal goal before my baby comes in November, will try my best. Continue reading

Posted in Russian Literature | Tagged , , , , | 11 Replies

The Cross (Kristin Lavransdatter 3) by Sigrid Undset

Synopsis:
As her seven sons grow to manhood in 13th Century Norway, Kristin finds her marriage tested by long-simmering resentments, and struggles with her passage into senescence.

Review:
This might be my favorite of all three Kristin Lavransdatter books, because I think Undset is operating at the peak of her narrative powers. She really brings to life a time in Kristin’s life that isn’t as readily appealing as Kristin’s passage into womanhood, and the novelty of Kristin and Erlend’s life together has worn off. In that way, reading The Cross is like experiencing a mature marriage, from what I can imagine. It’s no longer new, yet surprises and delight still exist if you have the patience to endure. Continue reading