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Showing posts from November, 2013

White is for Witching

Helen Oyeyemi's novel White is for Witching is one of those books that get better the more I think about it. This could be because I struggled a bit while reading it. The book is a mystery, and I didn't have a firm grasp of the plot until 150 pages in to this 200 page book. But once I figured out what was going on, a lot of other stuff fell into place. Given that, it's really hard to talk about this book without spoiling anything, except to say that it's beautiful and different. It deals with a wealth of issues, from eating disorders to immigration, racism to sexual identity, family legacies to obsession. These themes are mostly subtle, but once the truth of the mystery is revealed, they become a lot more powerful. Like I said, the more I think about this book, the more layers I see. One of the most interesting things about this book is that I cannot tell you, with any confidence, how many narrators there are. Miranda is the central character. Both he

The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making

I can't very well be expected to resist a title like that, can I? September, like so many other heroines in so many other stories, finds herself traveling to a magical land where she makes friends with interesting creatures and has wonderful adventures. She learns a lot along the way, and I love the way the lessons pop up throughout the text. The narrator is incredibly self-aware. This is one of those books that I had to fight not to read out loud. The language is just so much fun. The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making has elements of all the childhood stories I loved growing up. September receives a pair of special shoes. She falls down a hole and travels by boat to an island full of one-legged creatures. She meets a girl who arrived via a wardrobe in an attic. She is warned to stay away from fairy food, but munches on pomegranate seeds anyway. But it has it's own charms too, setting itself apart from the other books by not forcing

Who Cooked the Last Supper?

I continue my recently renewed interest in non-fiction works with Rosalind Miles' Who Cooked the Last Supper?: The Women's History of the World . I'd seen a few excerpts floating around the internet and, honestly, who can resist that title? This wasn't the greatest book I ever read. There's a lot of anger in these pages, and an uncomfortable amount of flipping some Freudian theories to accuse men of womb envy and natural inferiority to account for their oppression of women over the millenia. Additionally, while individual women are referenced a great deal, their struggles tend to be painted with a single brush. Intersections of gender with race or class are largely ignored and glossed over. There is a chapter about imperialism that touches on some of these issues, but Miles also misinterprets Sojourner Truth's famous "And Ain't I A Woman?" speech as being about the virgin/whore dichotomy rather than race relations. Despite that, ther

Hyperbole and a Half: Unfortunate Situations, Flawed Coping Mechanisms, and Other Things That Happened

You already know whether or not you'll enjoy this book. If you've been reading Allie Brosh's blog for the past several years like I have, then buying her new book is really a no-brainer. And if you've never heard of Allie Brosh or Hyperbole and a Half, then you need to fix that right now. Go read about The Alot , which I believe was my introduction to her genius. The book is nearly 300 pages of stories in Brosh's unique style. It's color-coded, so you can easily flip to a particular story and it looks really cool on your shelf. I may actually have to display it with the binding towards the wall. Assuming it ever makes it off my coffee table, that it. While there are a few classics included in this compilation (like The God of Cake and This is Why I'll Never Be an Adult ), it's mostly new material. Material that you will speed through and then return to over and over again. This is one of those books that I may have to buy and electronic