Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Callisto by Torsten Krol


Torsten Krol, whoever you are, I loved Callisto. Published under a bizarre pseudonym, this raucous novel was described as a modern-day Catch-22. Protagonist, Odell Deefus, is the unluckiest bumbler to ever have his car breakdown on a country road. Deefus stumbles from a murder scene, into espionage and finally spends time in a terrorist holding cell before his travels end. This crazy novel entertains.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Welcome to the Departure Lounge by Meg Federico


Meg Federico applies her journalistic flair to chronicle the hilarious and heartbreaking escapades of her 80-year-old mother and step-father. Caring for aging parents is a subject on my mind a lot these days, and Federico made me grateful for the fact that at least my mother hasn’t woken up in a hospital screaming, “I demand an autopsy”. At least not yet!

Monday, May 04, 2009

Geek Love by Katherine Dunn


I like to read along with my students when they are reading their self-selected American novels, so I chose Geek Love, a novel I have picked up and put back down many times in the bookstore. I would describe it as a cross between John Irving and Chuck Palahniuk, heavy on the Palahniuk. I was alternately fascinated and disgusted by this story about a family of circus freaks and their freakish behaviors. Crystal Lil and Art Binewski breed an assortment of children - Arturo the Aqua Boy who performs from a tank; Siamese twins who play four-handed piano; Oly, the narrator, who is an albino dwarf; and Chick, who they initially try to leave on the side of the road because he is "normal" just as his telekinetic powers are revealed. I've read some pretty weird fiction, but this National Book Award Finalist is way, way out there.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

A Thousand Days in Venice by Marlena de Blasi


Spring break took us to Delaware to reconnect with family and spend a few days near the ocean. I wanted a true escape from my normal reading, and A Thousand Days in Venice proved to be just perfect. Marlena de Blasi was a food writer visiting in Venice, when a handsome man approached her, told her she was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen and promised to pursue her. Their love story is accompanied by recipes and lovely descriptions of Venice. I was drawn into the beautiful landscapes and am excited to read the continuation in A Thousand Days in Tuscany.

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Going to See the Elephant by Rodes Fishburn


I was given this book by a fellow AP grader I met in Louisville last year who teaches at Emory and Henry College in Virginia where Fishburn went to school. What a pleasant spring break surprise this novel turned out to be. Journalist Slater Brown arrives in San Francisco and takes a job at a failing newspaper, The Morning Trumpet. He quickly realizes that he needs to find great stories in order to keep his job, and through a serendipitous happening, he gains access to the secrets of the city. He meets and falls in love with a beautiful chess champion, wards off the evil politicians and finds a happily-ever-after solution to his personal unrest. I was enchanted by this little fable.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Still Alice by Lisa Genova


I just finished reading this gem of a novel after months of avoiding it. Since my mother is currently suffering from dementia and speech loss due to strokes, I didn't know whether a book narrated by an early onset Alzheimer's patient would be too close for comfort. Genova draws on her own expertise as a Harvard educated neuroscientist to render an authentic view of the world from inside the mind of one slowly slipping into the darkness of dementia. I did not weep as I supposed I would, but rather appreciated Genova's frank portrait of struggle so many people are dealing with as parents and loved ones live with this disease.

Monday, March 02, 2009

Coraline by Neil Gaiman


After hearing the Gaiman had won the Newberry Award, I became intrigued by the awesome reviews I was reading of the movie Coraline in 3D. Of course, I figured I needed to read the book before seeing the movie. Coraline is

Sunday, January 04, 2009

The Dying Animal by Philip Roth


After reading two very long books back to back, I decided to finish off Christmas break with a short one. I had never really read any Philip Roth, and, against my best judgement, I had bought this one with the movie-tie-in cover a while back, wanting to read the book before seeing the movie. It is a very erotic story of 60 plus year old professor who repeatedly falls for young women he teaches. But last woman, Consuela Castillo, is the one who nearly undoes him.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

The Hour I First Believed by Wally Lamb


This was a gift from David for Christmas, and I started in on it on the 26th, my favorite reading day of the year. At first I was not comfortable in the details of the lives of the narrator and his wife, both employees at Columbine High School at the time of the shooting. I had to let myself get through those early pages to realize the greater subject of loss and post-traumatic stress that Lamb was addressing. It is a very ambitious book -- almost too much so.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

My Christmas Break Reading 2008 - The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson


I had read all of the advance buzz when this book was released for the first time in America in October after experiencing international success. I bought it right away, read the first (slow) chapters, and because of its length, set it aside for Christmas break. I'm so glad I did. Once I let myself into the murder mystery and tangle of similarly named Swedish characters, I loved the intrigue and ruthlessness of the investigation. I recommend it and wait for the next book which is due out in August.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Requiem Mass. by John Dufresne


I am a huge fan of Dufresne's humor, so when I happened upon an autographed copy of his new book in a bookstore in Amherst, Mass, I felt the connection. Unfortunately, this book was tougher to get through, which characters more pitiful than laughable.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Goldengrove by Francine Prose


This tender novel is narrated by a thirteen year old girl named Niko whose older sister, Margaret, drowns in pond as the book opens. The title comes from Gerard Manley Hopkins's Spring and Fall (which begins Margaret, are you grieving/ Over Goldengrove unleaving?) Niko and Margaret's father is a bookseller, which makes the connection even more interesting when Niko finds the poem in a book in his shop and tries to use it to explain her pain and loss.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

A Mercy by Toni Morrison


This slender Morrison novel reminded me of Beloved more than any other novel since. I have read all of Morrison's novels and the last several didn't hold me. This one did.

Friday, November 07, 2008

Salvatore Scibona Nominated for National Book Award

National Book Award Site

Ms. Hempel Chronicles by Sarah Shun-lien Bynum


A great collection of interlocking stories about Beatrice Hempel, middle school English teacher. This book was a gift from Salvatore Scibona, who thought I would enjoy the humor and honesty of the classroom that Bynum perfectly paints.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro


In October, our book club read Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. This cautionary tale would pair well with Brave New World, since both deal with the intersection between scientific experimentation and human rights.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Home by Marilyn Robinson


David bought me Home for my birthday since I am a big Marilyn Robinson fan. This new novel revisits Gilead and follows three characters, Glory, Jack and Rev. Boughton, as they putter around the house contemplating the true definitions of faith and family. I am reading slowly and enjoying her lovely sentences.

Thursday, September 04, 2008

How Far is the Ocean From Here by Amy Shearn


I have been recommending this book to my students as the anti-Juno. Protagonist Susannah Prue has agreed to be the surrogate mother for a young couple, but as the due date approaches she flees to the Texas-New Mexico border and stays at the Thunder Lodge. There she meets the rest of the cast of oddball characters, two of whom she kidnaps and takes on the rest of her pilgrimage to the ocean. Madcap and dangerous - I liked it well enough to call it a great end of the summer read.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows


This little epistolary novel tells the story of an author who travels to Guernsey to meet the member of the Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. It was entertaining, but not quite as "delightful" as other readers suggested. I did enjoy the history lesson about the German occupation of Guernsey in the 1940s.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Currently Recommending - The End by Salvatore Scibona


The End by Salvatore Scibona is an introspective stroll through the “old neighborhood”. I predict this novel will quickly be featured by independent bookstores, added to university reading lists, discussed by book clubs, and eventually join the canon of great literature articulating the American Dream. It may well be the next Pulitzer Prize winner. Of course, I am totally biased, since Scibona is a former student of mine. He was a high school prodigy and a college wordsmith. Since his time at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, his energy has been channeled into crafting the characters – a 93 year old widow, Mrs. Marini, the baker Rocco LaGrassa and the other residents of Elephant Park. The End is a character driven examination of the growing tensions in Little Italy – the Cleveland neighborhood of Scibona’s grandparents’. In fact, the neighborhood itself is a character, bucking under the pressures of racial tensions and the unwelcome evolution of tradition taking place in immigrant communities all over America in the mid 1950s. Clevelanders will hear the strains of the paper-rags man hawking in the streets and smell the bakery sweets prepared for the annual Feast of the Assumption, the culminating event of the novel. Universally, readers will empathize with the haunting sense of loss propelling each character to his or her inevitable end. I celebrate Salvatore Scibona’s talent and recommend placing The End at the top of your summer reading list.


website for The End

How Elizabeth Barrett Browning Saved My Life by Mameve Medwed


This clever little novel was full of literary references. The protagonist is an antiques dealer who believes she owns Elizabeth Barrett Browning's chamber pot and has that authenticity confirmed on Antiques Road Show.

Thursday, August 07, 2008

Made in the U.S.A. by Billie Letts


It isn't the new Where the Heart Is but it is pretty close. The story follows teenage Lutie and her aptly named brother, Fate, who begin their journey in Las Vegas where they believe they will find the father who abandoned them. They end in Oklahoma, taken in by a circus family that welcomes them into their crazy family circle. The book reads a bit like Letts opened the police blotter in any given city and incorporated all of deviants she found there - thugs, drug dealers, rapists, pornographers, homeless shelter regulars, as well as those kind folks who always look out for the good will of the innocents. It was a mindless read for a hot August night.