Today I read, in its entirety, Rules of Civility by Amor Towles. It was fine. Mostly I just had to power through it because I remembered this morning that I had signed up for a book club on it tomorrow evening... The story, about a young woman in the late thirties in New York, was interesting, and the main character and her friend were engaging. Interestingly, the male characters, in this book written by a man, all come across as pretty two dimensional. It's clear the author has a real interest in the culture (literature, art, and music) of the time, and took an interest in working it into the book in a significant but not obtrusive way. He never really explains enough about the protagonist's background, though, to account for her knowledge of the same. At one point near the end of the book a character explicitly says what much of the rest of the tale has been saying, that the main character, a bright, thoughtful, intellectually curious and informed young woman, is unusual in not being a drudge or housewife but pursuing a career instead. It's true, but I'm not sure that the life the author has mapped out for her can come about just through force of character and personality - I wanted to know, at least a little, or even just have acknowledged, how the daughter of a singe, Russian immigrant father is so familiar with some of the cultural aspects she translates into a better life...
The writing was quite good, though; there were some fantastic lines, and overall it was a very clean, bright, sharp prose, if not particularly lean.
I also finished Susan Hill's The Betrayal of Trust, which I read over the weekend. I do love a good English mystery, and this was one; well-written, anyway, for sure, and a decent plot although I did start too feel like there were too many story lines that were twisting around one another but not actually tying together. The "who dunnit" part was also pretty obvious. I picked it up at the Overlook Press table at the AWP on the recommendation of the two guys that were working there, and they said it was their favorite in the series. I am wondering if maybe the author is really just writing a long series about one man, and the people around him, and he just happens to be a policeman who solves crimes...
Grabbed a bunch of books at their table, though, because the guys were friendly and helpful, and the books seemed interesting and for the most part I really liked the covers. This is the first one I've read, and while I do think there were some sad copy-editing mistakes (including one on the back cover - that must EAT at them), I have high hopes.
Speaking of expectations AND English policemen who solve mysteries in series just as much concerned with their personal lives, last weekend I read Elizabeth George's The Edge of Nowhere. Unlike her other books - and what I thought I was picking up from the library - this was not an Inspector Lynley mystery. It was, I guess, a mystery of sorts, but it's also a somewhat paranormal teen romance adventure story? The story is set in the Pacific Northwest, and George does a fantastic job of describing the setting, but she doesn't know how to replicate teenagers' words. I may still read the next ones in teh series whenever they come out, but I hope she gets back to Lynley - and Havers!
Showing posts with label book club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book club. Show all posts
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Randoms
Labels:
book club,
Elizabeth George,
England,
Hill,
historical fiction,
mystery,
Overlook Press,
Towles,
YA
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Good and Okay
It was a long week, so I went home to play in the snow (awesome snowshoe hike!) and veg out before a few long (but awesome) weeks to come. I also wanted a break from serious reading so I brought with me a book that I had grabbed on impulse last time I was at the BPL, Pauline A. Chen's The Red Chamber. It was more substantive than I was expecting, and/but I really enjoyed it. The re-imagining of a classic (apparently) Chinese story, The Dream of the Red Chamber, the book traces the lives of three women of the aristocratic (I...think? Kind of? Chinese social hierarchies confuse me; upper classes, in any case) Jia family in eighteenth-century Beijing. The three main characters are finely drawn, but I appreciated that other characters were multi-dimensional and nicely fleshed out as well.
Chen also did a good job of setting the scene, and making the world the women live in, while obviously very far from my own experience, real and not overly, falsely exotic. Part of the reason I wasn't expecting much was that one of the blurbs on the back was from Arthur Golden, the Memoirs of a Geisha guy; I don't love that book, and I don't get why it was so popular, unless people were responding to the selling virgins / selling sex titillation aspect. That's probably unfair. I'm sure it was exhaustively researched and God knows he did love a setting-detail. I never thought there was much emotional depth, though - unlike Julie Otsuka's Buddha in the Attic, which I loved. Otsuka also wrote a blurb for this book, and that was what instantly decided me on checking it out. Interestingly, I probably also would have if I had read the acknowledgments and seen the should out to Leslie Levine (editor at Knopf / Random House), since I have yet, I think, to read a novel in which she participated in the production of, that I wasn't impressed with (full disclosure, there's something of a slim professional relationship there). I think Levine worked on Buddha in the Attic, too...
After Red Chamber I went back to Ben Fountain's Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk to finish it, since I had a book club meeting centered on it last night. It is...okay? Honestly, I think it's a really, really long short story. But a great short story, probably. The title character is a young war hero home from Iraq after a massively publicized firefight with Iraqi insurgents, being trotted around the U.S. with his squad (er, or whatever - team? I'm not a military expert) for a publicity tour culminating in their appearance at the Thanksgiving Day Dallas Cowboys game. We went back and forth about whether this was a book about sports or war, in the words of one of the book club organizers; I would say neither. It's about a young many, naive in many ways, who's never quite been fully integrated (mentally/emotionally) into the world around him who's now definitely somewhat adrift in a couple worlds that don't really make sense to him. And about figuring out who he is and what he wants - although in a book that takes place in a day, obviously there are no clear answers to be had. Billy, though, is a really appealing and believable character, and very well delineated. His fellow "Bravo squad" members, while never as fully drawn (the whole book is Billy's thoughts), are similarly human, with distinct personalities and backgrounds. Like the character of Billy, Fountain did an excellent job with the relationship of the team, and its one of the strengths of the book. Billy's sisters, too, and his relationship with them, feel very real, although his parents are surprisingly more caricature-like.
The book is rocky, though. The beginning is especially tough to get through, with a story that maybe is meant to be somewhat stream-of-consciousness-y, but just feels over-enthusiastic and under-edited. Fountain also does this thing where he has pieces of words trailing across an otherwise blank page to indicate the flashes of conversations that are getting through to our dazed (hungover and unsure of the world around him) hero. It gets the point across, I suppose, but it feels lazy or like something a writing class student would come up with and find very clever...and then do over and over again. I read the book, as I try generally to do, without knowing anything about the author, and I have to say, I wasn't surprised to find out afterwards that this was a first novel. Fountain is definitely a talented writer - strong characters and some really vivid, evocative descriptive lines - but the book felt like it needed to be edited way the hell down. Maybe not to short story length, but it should have been a lot shorter. In particular, it was one of those situations where the author would make a point really, really well with one or two passages, but then go on to make the same point, again and again, with several more "okay" passages. Less would definitely be more here.
I'm not even going to get into the fact that apparently Billy manages to, in a few moments in a hidden corner, get a cheerleader off merely by rubbing his pelvis into hers. Sure. I am, however, pleased that V, my book club-buddy, also had to go back and re-read that passage to see if she had missed something. I am also amused that the only guy at book club totally thought that was a perfectly reasonable scenario, lol.
So, overall...it was good, but not great. I'd have loved to have gotten my hands on it while it was still being edited, though. A lot of decent points about America and our war machine were made, although often made not subtly at all and repeatedly. Billy, again (I can't say it enough), was a fantastic and fantastically handled character. And the end was a lot better than the beginning. Maybe I just never got over the beginning. In any case, I'm still talking about it and mulling it over, so that's good (and V and I kept talking about it at the next bar after we bailed on the book club after it had melted down into a general discussion of...something).
Chen also did a good job of setting the scene, and making the world the women live in, while obviously very far from my own experience, real and not overly, falsely exotic. Part of the reason I wasn't expecting much was that one of the blurbs on the back was from Arthur Golden, the Memoirs of a Geisha guy; I don't love that book, and I don't get why it was so popular, unless people were responding to the selling virgins / selling sex titillation aspect. That's probably unfair. I'm sure it was exhaustively researched and God knows he did love a setting-detail. I never thought there was much emotional depth, though - unlike Julie Otsuka's Buddha in the Attic, which I loved. Otsuka also wrote a blurb for this book, and that was what instantly decided me on checking it out. Interestingly, I probably also would have if I had read the acknowledgments and seen the should out to Leslie Levine (editor at Knopf / Random House), since I have yet, I think, to read a novel in which she participated in the production of, that I wasn't impressed with (full disclosure, there's something of a slim professional relationship there). I think Levine worked on Buddha in the Attic, too...
After Red Chamber I went back to Ben Fountain's Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk to finish it, since I had a book club meeting centered on it last night. It is...okay? Honestly, I think it's a really, really long short story. But a great short story, probably. The title character is a young war hero home from Iraq after a massively publicized firefight with Iraqi insurgents, being trotted around the U.S. with his squad (er, or whatever - team? I'm not a military expert) for a publicity tour culminating in their appearance at the Thanksgiving Day Dallas Cowboys game. We went back and forth about whether this was a book about sports or war, in the words of one of the book club organizers; I would say neither. It's about a young many, naive in many ways, who's never quite been fully integrated (mentally/emotionally) into the world around him who's now definitely somewhat adrift in a couple worlds that don't really make sense to him. And about figuring out who he is and what he wants - although in a book that takes place in a day, obviously there are no clear answers to be had. Billy, though, is a really appealing and believable character, and very well delineated. His fellow "Bravo squad" members, while never as fully drawn (the whole book is Billy's thoughts), are similarly human, with distinct personalities and backgrounds. Like the character of Billy, Fountain did an excellent job with the relationship of the team, and its one of the strengths of the book. Billy's sisters, too, and his relationship with them, feel very real, although his parents are surprisingly more caricature-like.
The book is rocky, though. The beginning is especially tough to get through, with a story that maybe is meant to be somewhat stream-of-consciousness-y, but just feels over-enthusiastic and under-edited. Fountain also does this thing where he has pieces of words trailing across an otherwise blank page to indicate the flashes of conversations that are getting through to our dazed (hungover and unsure of the world around him) hero. It gets the point across, I suppose, but it feels lazy or like something a writing class student would come up with and find very clever...and then do over and over again. I read the book, as I try generally to do, without knowing anything about the author, and I have to say, I wasn't surprised to find out afterwards that this was a first novel. Fountain is definitely a talented writer - strong characters and some really vivid, evocative descriptive lines - but the book felt like it needed to be edited way the hell down. Maybe not to short story length, but it should have been a lot shorter. In particular, it was one of those situations where the author would make a point really, really well with one or two passages, but then go on to make the same point, again and again, with several more "okay" passages. Less would definitely be more here.
I'm not even going to get into the fact that apparently Billy manages to, in a few moments in a hidden corner, get a cheerleader off merely by rubbing his pelvis into hers. Sure. I am, however, pleased that V, my book club-buddy, also had to go back and re-read that passage to see if she had missed something. I am also amused that the only guy at book club totally thought that was a perfectly reasonable scenario, lol.
So, overall...it was good, but not great. I'd have loved to have gotten my hands on it while it was still being edited, though. A lot of decent points about America and our war machine were made, although often made not subtly at all and repeatedly. Billy, again (I can't say it enough), was a fantastic and fantastically handled character. And the end was a lot better than the beginning. Maybe I just never got over the beginning. In any case, I'm still talking about it and mulling it over, so that's good (and V and I kept talking about it at the next bar after we bailed on the book club after it had melted down into a general discussion of...something).
Labels:
book club,
China,
contemporary US,
Fountain,
Golden,
historical fiction,
Otsuka,
P.A. Chen,
soldiers,
war
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