10.27.2009

Kissing Kate

Title: Kissing Kate
Author: Lauren Myracle
Pub Date: 2003
Pages: 198
Genre: Young Adult, LGBT




I almost didn't want to write a review about this book because I didn't really enjoy it. Still, I'm trying to keep up with all of the books that I've read this year (I think that I've only missed a couple of reviews) so here it goes.

I. Didn't. Like. It.

Kissing Kate is the story of two best friends, Kate and Lissa. One night at a party, a very tipsy Kate approaches Lissa and kisses her. (In fact there's quite a bit of kissing going on and minor touching). When Kate's boyfriend and a couple of guys approach she pushes Lissa away and acts like nothing happened.

And she continues to act like nothing happened at school the next day.

This pretense carries over for weeks. The Kate and Lissa twosome now no longer talks because of this white elephant in the room. During this time Lissa realizes her attraction and love for Kate. She believes that Kate feels the same way but refuses to acknowledge it.

So why didn't I like it? By no means was it because of the plot. Nope. I think the plot is quite believable and realistic for high school experiences. I didn't like it because I couldn't care about the characters. They weren't three dimensional, they weren't people I would picture in high school. I wanted to do a character intervention, shake them up a bit, and tell them "you have a good story here, do something with it."

10.19.2009

Boy Meets Boy

Title: Boy Meets Boy
Author: David Levithan
Pub Date: 2003
Pages: 185
Genre: Young Adult; Fiction; GLBT



OMG. And really, this book definitely deserves an OMG. I absolutely ADORED this book.

My experience with David Levithan is only as a co-writer with Rachel Cohen. (Some of you might remember that I really enjoyed Nick & Norah, but not so much Naomi & Ely). After reading Boy Meets Boy I have to announce that I am a Levithan fan.

The story is quite simple. Boy (Paul) meets boy (Noah) and they dig each other. Boy's ex boyfriend (Kyle) comes into the picture and causes tension between the diggin' boys. Boy and boy separate. Boy and boy finally come back together.

But the writing! The writing is incredible. Levithan truly captures what it is like to be an adolescent and meeting *that* person. Y'know, that person that makes you believe that love at first sight can happen, life is going to change, love is incredible and it will conquer all. He gets that. The simplicity and beauty of these two boys falling for each other, thinking about each other, hesitant and yet very much vulnerable.

Oh and let me not overlook the high school that these kids go to. I mean, the quarterback of the football team is a fashionista. That's right, when s(h)e's not on the field, Infinite Darlene is the queen of the school.

Then you have the side story of Tony (Paul's best friend) who struggles with coming out to very religious parents who pray out loud to God that a nice girl will come his way and change him back. This is the story of Tony finding strength to stand up for who he is and what he knows is right for him.

Finally, it's the story of Joni (Paul's other best friend) who begins dating someone that the group doesn't approve of. Mainly because it's Infinite Darlene's ex.

Do you see the beauty of all of this? The simplicity of normal adolescence with the complexity of awesome writing.

I've lived in the same town my whole life, Im used to dating people I already know well. There are always smaller mysteries to unravel, but I often have the general picture right in my mind when the dating begins. Noah, however, is entirely new to me. And I am entirely new to him. It would be so easy to lie - to make my favorites the same as his, or to pick more impressive choices. And yet I tell the truth. I want this all to be the truth. (67)

The Forest of Hands and Teeth

Title: The Forest of Hands and Teeth
Author: Carrie Ryan
Pub Date: March 2009
Pages: 320
Genre: YA, Dystopian

Brief Summary:


Mary's village is surrounded by a protective fence. Not only are the villagers contained, their lives are bound to many rules. Rules created by The Sisters in order to protect the people from the Unconsecrated, those of the undead who devour human flesh. Mary wants to live a normal life, and even though marriage is not determined by love, she wishes to marry Travis. Unfortunately, Travis is betrothed to her best friend, Cass and she is engaged to Travis's brother, Harry. Her frustration continues when she finds out that there is more to the outlying forest, referred to as The Forest of Hands and Teeth, when she discovers a hidden visitor. The Sisters warn her from asking too many questions, lamenting that some curiosities should be put to rest. In the end, it matters little: the fence is overpowered, the Unconsecrated have taken over the village, and Mary, her brother and his wife, Cass, Harry, Travis, and an orphaned boy are the only ones remaining. They must make their way through the Forest of Hands and Teeth without becoming contaminated by the flesh-eating zombies.

My thoughts:
Zombies. (!) Zombies. (!) Zombies. (!) Zombies. (!)
I quickly burned myself out on Dystopian Fiction having focused on it so much in high school, early college yeas, and then teaching The Giver years over again in the classroom. You must understand that I needed a break, and up until this year had an immediate gag reflex at the thought of reading any more dystopian fic. (For emphasis, I have refused to read The Uglies series for that very reason. Who cares that it has received accolades from everyone in the book community!)

Why, then, did I pick up tFoHaT? First, the cover. Isn't it gorgeous? it's eery, dark, and romantic.

And then, I decided to read some of the information on Amazon, mainly the author interview where I read this:

Amazon.com: Your book has drawn inevitable comparison to the archetypal zombie flick, Night of the Living Dead. How does Mary’s world differ from the world George Romero created more than 40 years ago? Are the movies what first got you hooked on zombies?

Ryan: George Romero has really sparked a lot of imaginations and while any book or movie with zombies inevitably owes a massive debt to Romero's world, I tend not to think of The Forest of Hands and Teeth as a "zombie book," but rather a book that happens to have zombies in it. The Forest of Hands and Teeth, which takes place generations after the apocalypse, is really about a girl struggling with growing up, desire, and a controlling society set against the backdrop of a world with zombies (called “Unconsecrated”) constantly pushing against the fences. The characters have already come to terms with the Return (the zombie apocalypse) and know nothing else: this is their world and they've accepted it.


Ummm... Did she say ZOMBIES? I love zombies. I don't get enough time with Zombies. Plus, it's October, so it seemed like the perfect month to read a dystopian novel that included flesh eating undead ravishing the land.

Trick or Treat

This is where the review gets a bit tricky. While the zombie attacks are taking place, a love triangle of sorts forms. Mary is in love with Travis, who is in love with her. But, as I mentioned, Travis is to be married to Cass. Cass is in love with Harry, who is to marry Mary. Oh yeah, and Harry happens to be in love with Mary as well. Cass, having dealt with being "second" to Mary all her life, struggles with some initial bitterness.

Now, the love triangle doesn't really take away from the story, but it does make me very frustrated with Mary. And frustration is good, because, well, if you're frustrated with a character, then you feel something, right? In those moments of frustration, I could get along with the story. Unfortunately, most of the time I felt disconnected with all of the characters.

I couldn't really figure out what my problem was. Especially because it's not as though the writing was awful; in fact, I thought Carrie Ryan wrote quite well. None the less, I was reading it within a disconnected fog.

Or so I thought.

There's this scene (and because I don't want to give away spoilers, I'm going to be vague) where Mary and Travis have a very real and honest conversation. The messiness of Truth hung on the pages with no one to clean it up. Souls were bared, sadness was enveloped, anger lashed out. It was raw, and without realizing it, I was crying. Tears streaming down my face.

I closed the book in awe. Although I'm not against growing so emotionally involved with the characters that I bawl, I admit to being thrown off when I didn't really find myself feeling anything for the first two-thirds of the novel. At what point did I begin connecting with Mary? The desperation? The sadness?

I think overtime this might grown into one of my favorite Young Adult books. In the very least, it will deserve a re-read in the future.

10.16.2009

The Principals of Uncertainty

Title: The Principals of Uncertainty
Author: Maira Kalman
Pub Date: 2007
Pages: 336
Genre: graphic novel, memoir-ish

The Principals of Uncertainty is like no other graphic novel I have read. It is literary, political, philosophical, and artistic. Plus, it's very much stream of consciousness, which I love, and very rarely find.

I cannot remember how I stumbled upon this book; but I ended up checking it out of the library a couple of weeks ago. Whereas most graphic novels I breeze through (for good reasons, not because of any lesser than _______ reason) this one I wanted to savor. Kalman does a phenomenal job posing questions and thoughts about life in a mixed media, well, I only wanted to read a couple of pages a night. (You'll see spotlights of Shakespeare, Goethe, her family, friends, and strangers).

Can I just say that the book is about nothing and everything all at once? Also, unbeknownst to me when I checked this book out, Kalman is a NYT's writer. You can check out her opinion column here (Really. Click. You'll be able to see some of her work!)

I think that it is best to just share some of the pages from The Principals of Uncertainty to convince you to check it out!

10.12.2009

Dead High Yearbook

Title: Dead High Yearbook
Author: Ivan Velez
Pub Date: 2007
Pages:80
Genre: Graphic Novel

I found this book while looking for graphic novels for my classroom and my inner goth just squealed in delight.

The first thing that you might notice about this book is it's authenticity. The front cover is hard and squishy - if that makes sense. Also, the author's name is no where to be found on the cover (hmmm...or inside, unless I overlooked it. I had to go on Amazon to find it out).

It opens with a very dead yearbook staff laying out the year's issue. They carry on offhandedly as an introduction to vignettes of death. I admit this part is a bit confusing. Are they introducing people on the staff and how they died? Who knows. There are a total of eleven miniature stories captured within the book and most are all worth it. I mean, you have zombies, vampires, werewolves, even a demonic chihuahua. Plus the graphics are deliciously creepy. Overall, I'm pretty pleased with this one.




10.11.2009

Sunday Salon (Monogamy)

Hey there Sunday Saloners. I hope everyone is enjoying their Sunday. If you are in Florida, chances are you have locked yourself indoors with the air conditioner blasting. We're looking at near-record highs again - 94 degrees! I lie not. I am envious of all those in regions where you can feel the season change. I'm still hanging out on my couch in a tank and shorts praying that I might be able to bring a sweater into my wardrobe at some point in 2009.
Unfortunately my desire to stay away from the great outodoors in this heat has not increased my reading time. In fact, since I've been in the classroom I have sounded like a broken record - "I'm not reading nearly as much as I used to. Wahhh!" While in my own pity party, I considered why I was in such a slump. (I can only allow myself to use the excuse, "I'm sooo busy" just so often before it even wears on me. I realize that I make a choice to watch the tele or play Wii rather than read to de-stress).
What's around with a bookmark?


Weekends at Bellevue by Julie Holland - I received this from LT's Early Reviewers and actually squealed when it arrived at my house months ago. It's the story of lead psychiatrist, Dr. Holland, and her experiences working at one of the most well-known psych units. I've been reading this right before I go to bed, therefore by the time I get to it I only manage to read a couple of pages before I am O.U.T.
The Principles of Uncertainty by Maira Kalman - This is a beautiful graphic novel that I checked out at my library. I have no idea how I found it (perusing through the web one day?) I'm a really lucky girl because my library carries a lot of graphic novels. I've been savoring this one because, not only is the writing stream of consciousness - which I love, the artwork is a combination of illustrations and mixed media. Super cool!
The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan - I checked this book out of my school library so I would have something to read along with the kids. (As much as I would love to read the whole day away with the kids for Friday's DEAR, realistically I just can't. Still, I like to alternative periods so they can see me read as well. Modeling works!). This book is wicked cool. I'm slowly falling in love with dystopian fiction again and this one has zombies. Hell to the yah!

So what's my problem?

I mean really? What *is* my problem. I have three outstanding books at my fingertips and yet I cannot seem to fall in "reading" mode. I'm wondering if it has something to do with my lack of commitment to just one book? (Ah, I was going to tie in monogamy!) I used to like to think of myself as a multitasking reader, but what I found was that simply isn't true. Sure I might start a couple of books a few days a part from each other, but I would rarely move in and out of them seamlessly like television shows. My scenarios usually went something like this: find a book that interest me, begin reading some pages. Find another book that interests me even more, read a couple of pages. Get some books from the library, pick one up in the car, begin reading third book a few pages in. Eventually one captivates me and I finish it in its entirety and then move back to one of the other books that I started until that one i finished, etc. So you see, that's not really flip-flopping. At heart, I'm a serial monogamist. I am wondering if my lack of commitment to any one book is bringing me down.
I'm also curious if I can give up this monogamy. I mean, I had to in college. I was taking anywhere to four or five lit classes: Survey of Lit, Shakespeare, PostMod, 18th Century Poetry & Prose; I had to multi-task. I will take in consideration that my brain was potentially functioning quicker than it is these days (I feel as though I have too much clutter going on right now), and there is nothing more inspiring than sitting in classes filled with others who have a passion to read and discuss (which is why I heart book blogging!). I get that. But damn if I wish I could capture that sort of unchaste reading snogging.

In order to (a) assure that I read more than 3 books this month and (b) practice the fine art of book juggling, I've signed up for Dewey's 24 Hour Read-A-Thon . This will be my first time participating as a reader; last year I cheered and in between errands and Life I managed to stop by nearly everyone's blog once. I had so much fun and met so many cool people. I'm super excited.
I don't have a list just yet. The decision to join was rather two seconds ago! But my bookshelves are getting a bit insane, so this might be just the right opportunity for me to organize and stack.
My biggest challenge? My SO is so not a reader. Making sure that I am locked away for the 24 hours might be a problem. Luckily it's football season so I think I can make arrangements.
Cheers!

10.06.2009

Bend, Don't Shatter

Title: Bend, Don't Shatter
Author: (Edited by) T. Cole RAchel & Rita D. Costello
Pub Date: 2004
Pages: 110
Genre: GLBT, Poetry


Bend, Don't Shatter is a collection of GLBT poetry written by adolescents (most of the poets are much older now). It's an honest portrayal of struggle. Struggle to find oneself, struggle to fit in, struggle to love.

I'm not a huge poetry fan to begin with.* In fact, I can count on one hand how many poetry books I've read in the past couple of years. But this collection just drew me in as I was looking for books to check out for Amanda's challenge.

I knew that I lucked out when I opened the page, "A Note from the Editors":

We tried to include in this book poems which show that everyone deals with this confusion - those that bully and those who are bullied, those that do well in school and those that fail, those that come from perfect homes and those who come from places not so perfect - and there is no reason to crumble under the pressure. The more comfortable you are with the uncertainty of growing up, the stronger you will be. Let the experiences - happy or terrible - make you who you are, not crush you under their weight.
Don't you just love that last line? I think that safe to say about Life in general - adolescence or not!
I don't really want to write a review of this book; I feel that poetry is too revealing of the person's soul to critique it. Instead, I would rather share a poem.


The Girl in the Boy's Dressing Room by Jody Helfand


When my grandmother and I shopped for clothes
we went to the boy's section and looked through
racks of dress shirts and ties, until a salesman
came over and told us where the girl's department was.
I let my grandmother handle this:
Young man, she would say, my granddaughter
feels comfortable wearing boy's clothing.
Will you please help us find her size?
Then, arms filled with clothes, I went to
the boy's dressing room as my grandmother
kept searching for other styles that would fit me.
As she did this, I was aware of the salesman
standing outside my dressing room, switching from
one foot to the other, describing pretty dresses-
trying to take the girl out of the boy's dressing room.



* I have decided it's not that I dislike poetry, but I would rather read it with others, rather than silently to myself.