Saturday, September 29, 2012

It's Like This, Cat (Emily Cheney Neville)

Hardcover

Dave, a New York teen in the early '60s, befriends a college-age thief, is constantly arguing with his father (which sets off his mother's asthma attacks), is friends with the apartment complex's cat lady, isn't interested in easy bimbos, and adopts a tomcat.

I read this because it's a Newbery winner and I'm working my way through them all.  It took a few chapters to kind of get into its groove -- the writing is both stiff and spars, which made it feel more dated than it already was by its setting.  Once I got used to the style, though, this was a quick and decent read.  The time when young non-gang teens were able to roam freely through a big city without their parents calling the cops may be long gone, but it's nice to have a reminder that it once existed.

B-

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Revolutionary Road (Richard Yates)

Paperback

I breathed a sigh of contentment after the first couple of pages.  It was such a relief to be so obviously in the hands of a master (especially after traipsing through lots of literary "eh" in the not-too-distant-past).

I was a big fan of the movie based on this book and, while I wouldn't say either is better than the other, the book is definitely a match for its adaptation.  It's just so smart about the way that couples relate -- or fail to relate -- to each other and to other people. There didn't seem to be a single false note.  Though the story felt at times almost too heavy, it's always human.  I alternately loved and loathed both April and Frank; Yates made it possible to simultaneously understand them even as I sat in judgment of them.

A-


Thursday, September 13, 2012

Breadcrumbs (Anne Ursu)

Audiobook

Hazel doesn't really fit in with most of the kids in her new school.  But that's OK because she does fit in with her best friend and next-door neighbor, Jack, and he makes sure to meet up with her every day during recess, making the rest of her day bearable.  Jack and Hazel are each other's refuge -- he needs one from the home that holds his depressed and empty-eyed mother and she needs one from what would probably be too difficult a rejection to bear: her father's recent choice to leave Hazel and her mother for a new life.

So, even though Jack has stopped being "Jack," and is now callous and uninterested in Hazel, when he goes missing, Hazel knows it's her job to find him.  And that's where the story becomes a tedious slog.  What was a vivid and honest depiction of how it feels to be sad and lonely in grade school becomes a Forrest Gump-style tromp through the fairy tale woods.  There's a white witch who jokingly offers Turkish Delight, red ballet shoes that dance their wearer to death, wolves to frighten, and birds to point the way, and kindly couples that take you in and then refuse to let you go....  I was bored and frustrated by its end.

Ursu created a couple of great child characters.  They experienced the pain of real life and the joy of real friendship.  Why jank it up with second-rate fantasy thriller rip-offs?

C-

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Homestuck Book One (Andrew Hussie)

Paperback

Most of the reviews on Goodreads start with something like, "I didn't actually read the book, I read it online..." which is fine for the content of the very inventive/clever/funny comic itself, but to not have read the author's book-only comments about what he was thinking, what his intent was, and just random laugh-out-loud current observations is to have really missed out.  The book may be a true representation of the online experience, but it's an experience with its own worthwhile extras.

I did "cheat" a little and check out the online pages after reading it so that I could see any flash stuff that couldn't be rendered in the hard copy, but even if I had no internet, the book would stand just fine on its own.  I don't know what lies ahead in the thousands of online pages, but the beginning here is more than promising.

B+