Archive | September, 2010

Jill/Jack Book Previews

14 Sep

The Ruby Notebook by Laura Resau- It has been a couple of months since BBB featured a young adult book.  This one is about a 16 year old girl who moves to a different country every year with her wanderlust mother.  This year they arrive in Aix Provence and I’m looking forward to reading about southern France, to satisfy some of my own wanderlust.

Salvation City by Sigrid Nunez- After last Autumn’s flu season when H1N1 threatened to change society, we’re intrigued by Nunez take of the United States after a flu pandemic.  What would American society look like if H1N1 really had wiped out large portions of the American populace.  What kind of life would the survivors have?

To the End of the Land by David Grossman- Another look at conflict and affection, this time through the eyes of an Israeli mother. The story is modern and classic. We cannot wait to read about never ending war and love.

He Is Legend: An Anthology Celebrating Richard Matheson- With the recent homages to legendary HP Lovecraft wowing readers, celebrated author Richard Matheson receives the same anthology treatment. Father to I Am Legend, Matheson inspires a series of stories that seems about perfect with Stephen King and F. Paul Wilson among the contributors.

Biblioholic Review: Last Rituals

13 Sep

With the wave of Scandinavian crime cresting, we thought we’d explore the genre further beyond the likes of Nesbo and Larsson. And since we have a particular affinity for histories mysteries and the world’s panoply of religions, Yrsa Sigurdardottir’s Last Rituals piqued our interest.

Last Rituals follows Icelandic lawyer, Thora Guttmondsottir hired to investigate the case of a murdered German college student. The young man, troubled, into body ornamentation and some darker arts, was killed and gruesomely had his eyes cut out. Of course his counter-culture lifestyle and murky past make for an immediately moody investigation.

Last Rituals is a true procedural with Thora, and the family security expert Matthew Reich, spending time in interview after interview trying to piece together the true story behind the young German’s death. The Icelandic police made a convenient and quick arrest, which of course does not sit well with Matthew and the hired on Thora.

With each conversation or culling the lengthy paper trail, Last Rituals paints a portrait of a troubled young man and his personal turmoil manifesting itself in strange ways. His friends are in a way, collegiate coven, vacuous and smugly self righteous. His interest in witch hunts of the 15th and 16th centuries leads him, and the story, into more macabre directions.

Sigurdardottir creates a chilly ambiance without being bombastically moody. Iceland is a backdrop, less a character than in other Scandinavian fiction. She also does not rely on the gruesome to propel the investigation. Anticipating a gory description, or masochistic flair, instead she cuts away in classic writing craft.

Sigurdardottir does some info dumps on Icelandic witch hunt history, but they fit as part of Thora and Matthew’s fact-finding operation. Thora, a single mother of two, has some domestic incidents and one awkward amorous encounter that moves the book on multiple story levels.

No guns are discharged, the gore is implied and overall Sigurdardottir stitches together a methodical investigation to discover whether the murder had black magic or mundane motives.

Last Rituals was a quick read that blended the macabre with the academic. Smart and engaging, while not pace set by violent action, Last Rituals moves along with rapidity because Sigurdardottir shows patient skills with characters and setting.

Last Rituals by Yrsa Sigurdardottir was purchased for review by Boston Book Bums

B3 Week in Review

11 Sep

Monday: Our review of Ricard C. Morais’ The One Hundred-Foot Journey was a mixture of hunger and enchantment.

Tuesday: We roll out the first of two issues of Bookish Intelligence Report and feature a quartet of books in the Jack/Jill Book Previews.

Wednesday: Sara Gruen’s much anticipated Ape House was reviewed by the B3 team. We had mixed feelings about this book from the author of Water for Elephants.

Thursday: A late week installment of the Bookish Intelligence Report, as well as an Author 411 of Yrsa Siguroardottir ahead of next week’s review of her book Last Rituals.

Friday: We were lucky to be contacted by author Judy Sandra about her self-published work, The Metal Girl. An intimate work that excelled in fleshing out characters and the space they occupied.

Next week we review Last Rituals, The Ruby Notebook and The American (in a special new Books to Box Office review;) as well as bring out BIR, Jack/Jill Book Previews and another Author 411.

Biblioholic Review: The Metal Girl

10 Sep

It is cold, and a somewhat desolate winter in 1970′s Copenhagen and that seems to fit our protagonist state of mind perfectly in Judy Sandra’s first published novel, The Metal Girl.

The 25-year old American woman is traveling alone this winter and has secured herself a room in a cheap hotel near the red light district of Copenhagen.  She has been recently dumped and downsized, with her new found freedom; she travels to Europe to become a “woman of the world”.  Although, she clearly has no idea what that means.  She is adrift in the world and in herself.  She envisions that she will be a certain type of woman, a modern woman but it is only a vague idea.

She meets a series of interesting characters in her explorations of Copenhagen, such as the mysterious old woman who insists she must see the little mermaid statue, the book’s namesake.  She forms attachments to strangers in a window but rejects the advances of friendly Danes.   She encounters a Swedish woman named Elizabeth and shares an immediate connection to her.

Elizabeth also seems to be lost and the two identify with each other, claiming “you and I- are the same person.”  The American woman wants to cling to Elizabeth, while Elizabeth remains elusive, alternating encouraging and avoiding her friendship.

Sandra gives a matter-of-fact portrayal of a twenty-something woman on the cusp of realizing who she is.  Her observations of the locale and the locals are so hyper-real that it feels you may be able to reach out and touch the metal girl, like the protagonist, feel the coldness of the unknown.   Sandra weaves the feeling of loneliness in each personal interaction.

This is a short novel but Sandra’s writing easily entices the reader to come in from the cold and stay a while.

The Metal Girl by Judy Sandra was received as a free review copy by Boston Book Bums

Bookish Intelligence Report

9 Sep

  • The world’s most expensive book is up for sale again. Wanna chip in? (via BBC)
  • Why Indigenous authors in Australia are being overlooked. (via The Australian)
  • A list of upcoming thrillers on The Telegraph website shows that perhaps the thriller is dead (thanks in no small part to Dan Brown’s influence)
  • When it comes to books the Irish are looking forward, the Independent of Ireland has a robust list (via The Independent of Ireland)
  • Science books are apparently becoming just engaging enough to capture some readers (via The Telegraph)
  • How did or didn’t, the iPad change one scribe’s life? (via The Globe and Mail)
  • Don’t look now, but apparently some people think it will be the Chinese that reinvent publishing (via China Daily)
  • PIY is not so bad (via Denver Post)

Author 411: Yrsa Siguroardottir

9 Sep

Another wave of Scandanvian crime writers has crashed on our shores in recent years. Next week we review Last Rituals by Yrsa Siguroardottir and ahead of our thoughts on her inaugural crime work, we offer up some author 411.

  • Her first book was written for children and published in 1998
  • Besides writing, Yrsa has worked for over a decade as a civil engineer
  • She has written five children’s books
  • Her book, We Want Christmas In July won an award from the Icelandic department of the International Board on Books for Young People
  • Lives in a township outside Reykjavik that is only two square kilometers in size
  • One of two Icelandic crime writers to have their work translated into English

Biblioholic Review: Ape House

8 Sep

The much anticipated Ape House hit the shelves yesterday and we were lucky enough to get a last minute copy from the publisher. And so, here we get to review Sara Gruen’s Ape House.  Gruen’s fourth novel follows on the heels of an international bestseller and soon to be movie blockbuster starring some of Hollywood’s hottest actors, Water for Elephants.  Like many authors who move forward after a blockbuster, their next book inevitably has much hype to live up too.

Ape House opens sweetly, as John Thigpen a reporter interviews a researcher, Isabel Duncan and her family of Bonobos.  The bonobos, Sam, Bonzi, Lola, Mbongo, Jaelani and Makena, are fun-loving and endearing, as they rummage through gift bags presented by the reporter trying to get in their good graces.  Kisses and signed endearments show the ape’s appreciation and John is obviously touched by apes’ communication.  Which it turns out is the whole point of research- the apes understand English and respond using American Sign Language and Lexigrams.

This sweet scene is interrupted several pages later with an explosion that leaves Isabel in critical condition and the apes sold.  Isabel’s finance is illusive, her co-worker is questioned as suspect in the bombing and no one will tell her where her bonobos have gone.

Meanwhile, John has his own problems, his wife is a depressed, unsuccessful author, his career is hitting the skids quickly after an ambitious co-worker takes over his story and his nosy mother-in-law organizes his sex toys.  Eventually, Thigpen and Duncan cross paths again.  Isabel gives John a scoop that could resuscitate his career and exposes the terrorist behind the explosion.

Gruen has a lot going on in this story and she shines where she has in the past, in the tender relationships between her protagonist and animals.  The scenes with the bonobos are delightful.  There are the makings of an interesting commentary on human behavior as seen through our closest relatives’ actions, that may make you question our superior status.

Unfortunately, this important theme is watered down when mixed in with all the other story-lines going on.  We are distracted by superficial relationship problems, colorfully- dyed hair, and a Russian stripper with a heart of gold.  There is a reference early on that John Thigpen enjoys books of the blowing-up variety made famous by the Dan Browns of the world and Gruen does her fair share of explosion and darting off to new locations.

We were really looking forward to this new novel for two reasons; first, we enjoyed Water for Elephants immensely and recommended it to many friends and family, and second, we have a bit of a thing for great apes, admitting a little crush on Jane Goodall.  Gruen did not disappoint with her betrayal of the bonobos and her obvious admiration for the animals illuminates the bonobos scenes.

If only the story was more ape and less human.

Ape House by Sara Gruen was received as a free review copy by Boston Book Bums

Bookish Intelligence Report

7 Sep

  • Who buys books? Women and households with income under $32,000, according to the Seattle Times (via Seattle Times)
  • What does author William Gibson think lay in the future of the book? (via the Wall Street Journal blog)
  • Book burning a thing Americans wouldn’t do? Think again. Wonder if those burning these Korans in Florida know that Islam considers Jews and Christians fellow “people of the book?” (via ABC News)
  • Apparently, books are disposable to one school in Brooklyn (via NY Daily News)
  • One Book Sacramento kicks off this week with non-fiction entry, Zeitoun (via Sacramento Bee)
  • Once invincible Waterstone’s bookseller in the UK have fallen mightily, the Guardian opines on the descent (via The Guardian)
  • So the Boston Globe and Paris Review are chatting up the subway book reading observations and experience. Well we at B3 and all our lovely Twitter friends have been conversing about this for months (via Boston Globe)

Jill/Jack Book Previews

7 Sep

Half  Broke Horses by Jeanette Wall-  We read Glass Castle several years ago and know that Wall’s own determination to succeed is not from her own parents so perhaps her inspiration comes from her Grandmother, whom this book is based on.  A look back at Wall’s maternal grandmother’s life may give some insight on how Wall survived her own childhood.

Djibouti by Elmore Leonard: To say we’re lovers of Leonard is an understatement. And to see him stretch his authorial legs with this story centered on piracy in East Africa, we’re down right giddy!

After the Prophet by Lesley Hazelton: Coming out in paperback this month is a book about the split between Shia and Sunni sects of Islam. Most westerns know little about the third of the Abrahamic religions and this book seems like it could provide a solid dose for those unwashed.

Atlantic by Simon Winchester: A giant of engaging and smart non-fiction Winchester pens the history of, yes, the Atlantic Ocean and those who’ve crossed it, been consumed by it, lived and loved it.

Biblioholic Review: The One Hundred Foot Journey

6 Sep

To the French, haute cuisine is like the Sistine Chapel to the Italians, nothing speaks more eloquently of their culture. Richard C. Morais, an American journalist, seems to know this innately and portrays it’s essence in every page of The Hundred-Foot Journey.

In The Hundred-Foot Journey by Morais, the reader gets a very close look of gourmand society from the point of view of an outsider, an Indian named Hasaan Haji.  Hasaan’s life story begins before he is even born in the slums of West Bombay as his grandfather struggles against his rural background to become a businessman, a restaurateur.

Hasaan’s grows up in family’s restaurant kitchen by his grandmother’s side and seems predestined to grow up cooking.  But no boy in Mumbai could imagine the path from his family’s restaurant on Napean Sea Road to upper echelons of French society. Hasaan has talent and an unlikely fairy godmother of sorts, combine with his hard work, this novel follows Hasaan to the top of his profession.

Although Hasaan travels from Indian to England, spending some time traveling continental Europe to land in Lumiere, France and finally Paris, none of his travels are greater than his 100-foot journey across the street to his neighbor’s restaurant.

In memoir style, Morais tells of immigration, tragedy, prejudice, and talent while respecting the real hero of this story, the food.  Anthony Bourdain gives The Hundred-Foot Journey rave reviews and you can see why.  Bourdain, known for ingesting exotic dishes with often revolting ingredients can relate to the passion of Hasaan to find the most exquisite flavors for his concoctions that satisfy the most discriminating palates.

Morais transports the reader so thoroughly that you may wince with the menu descriptions at the same time your mouth is watering.  The Hundred-Foot Journey has particular appeal for Foodies but Morais’ talent for story-telling will appeal to even those who will never taste foie gras.

The One Hundred Foot Journey by Richard C. Morais was purchased for review by Boston Book Bums.

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