Shakespeare and politics...when the bard got political, people died. He would have appreciated our current election cycle, I think.
And so, the third annual Summer of Shakespeare begins!
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Sweetbitter by Stephanie Danler --a review
Like The Devil
Wears Prada and Debt and other
books about coming of age in New York, this debut novel introduces us to Tess,
who is a fish out of water in her sundress and cardigan, trying to bluff her
way through an interview when she’s way over her head. We like her, and we
enjoy being educated along with her, introduced to the nuances of taste—you
will develop a palate—and the intricacies of food service where meals are works
of art and presentations like little pieces of theater. We also love the vision
she has of her New York self—a sophisticated, better-dressed, better paid
version of herself who lives a life filled with art openings and concerts and
love and excitement. We KNOW that vision because we’ve all had a version of it.
Tess is an “Everywoman” who is relatable, not just to
Millennials, but also to anyone who ever followed a dream from a dusty town
where the residents were obsessed with football and church to New York or Los
Angeles, or any other glittering metropolis where the possibilities seem
limitless and even the reality is better than the reality left behind. When she
first arrives in town, it seems like she’s always being wrong-footed and
judged, and her thoughts about the people she meets are bemused and sensible
and endearing. She is an OUTSIDER who wants to be an INSIDER in the worst way
and if there are few readers alive who can’t remember that feeling, even if
they won’t admit it. When she literally “earns her stripes” (the servers all
wear striped shirts while the back waiters wear white button-downs), we’re
pleased for her.
Labels:
Babette's east,
Chef,
foodie,
soul Food,
Stephanie Danler,
Sweetbitter,
Tampopo
A Fairytale retelling
The Twelve Dancing Princesses is one of my favorite fairytales and you don't really see it retold. I love that this version, A Branch of Silver, a Branch of Gold, went the old fashioned route with the cover. I had books that looked like this when I was a child; they'd been my mother's and they were frayed on the bindings, the fabric worn away at the corners and showing the boards beneath.the author, Anne Elisabeth Stengl, has rewritten other fairytales. She has a story in Five Enchanted Roses (a collection of Beauty and the Beast stories) and another in Five Golden Slippers (five Cinderella stories.)
She has also created her own fanciful world, Goldstone Woods," and there are a number of books in that series with "please read me" titles like Moonblood and Dragonwitch. I can't wait to explore that landscape, which she describes as "an ever-growing world of knights and dragons, mystical forests and hidden demesnes, unspeakable evil and boundless grace."You can read more about the series on her website.
She has also created her own fanciful world, Goldstone Woods," and there are a number of books in that series with "please read me" titles like Moonblood and Dragonwitch. I can't wait to explore that landscape, which she describes as "an ever-growing world of knights and dragons, mystical forests and hidden demesnes, unspeakable evil and boundless grace."You can read more about the series on her website.
Cover Reveal...Beauty Sleep
Yet another entry into my "Modern Magic" series of fairytale retellings. I saw this pre-made cover by Sarah Beard on the Book Cover Designer and snatched it up over the weekend. It is, as you might be able to tell from the cover, a retelling of the classic story "Sleeping Beauty." This one is longer than the other entries in the series, which are mostly novelettes. I really love this cover and have not seen the model on a bazillion other covers. I also love the color palette.
Sunday, May 29, 2016
Aixa and the Shark
Part two of my three-part La Bruja Roja series is free for the next five days. Check it out here. It's urban fantasy about a witch who lives in a border town that's not just on the border between Texas and Mexico, it's on the border between life and death. The final story, Aixa and the Spider, will be out next month. I'm fond of the Aixa stories. Maybe you'll like them too.
Friday, May 27, 2016
Tanglewreck by Jeanette Winterson
This smart book about a
young protagonist taking on dark forces owes a lot to the Harry Potter series. She’s an orphan
whose father and mother perished under peculiar circumstances and she now lives
with a woman who may or may not be her aunt, but who is certainly rather
abusive. Mrs. Rokaby is bad enough but
her evil rabbit Bigamist is a real villain!
The characters are rooted in the real world, which makes the
time tornados and time traps really work.
They’re more magical fantastical than science fiction, and we are very
interested in how things are going to play out.
(That opening is really tasty and very visual.)
In some ways, we can see the derivation of a lot of the
ideas here. In particular, the story
reminds us of John Bellairs’ trilogy of books that begins with The House with the Clock in its Walls. The young
protagonist of that book (a chubby ten year old) has to track down the clock by
solving a mystery, and saves the world thereby.
This book is just as complex and just as satisfying, and young Silver
(named after her father’s favorite pirate, Long John Silver) is a kid we can
really sympathize with and really like.
She is just little (sort of like a hobbit) but she has to do a brave
thing because it’s the thing to do.
Thursday, May 26, 2016
The Devil in the White City
If you love true crime, you've probably read this by now; if you haven't read it, you should. Erik Larson is a terrific writer and from the first book of his I read, Isaac's Storm, about the devastating Galveston hurricane at the turn of the last century, I was hooked. I haven't read his most recent book, Dead Wake, about the crossing of the Lusitania, but ... it's on my TBR list.
Here's my review of The Devil in the White City, still Larson's most famous work:
The true story of two great events that occurred simultaneously in
Chicago—the extravagant World’s Fair honoring the 400th anniversary
of the discovery of America; and a series of heinous murders.
This is a tremendously entertaining book for fans of 19th
century architecture, the city of Chicago, and true crime. Larson has taken on a couple of interesting
stories and interwoven them in a way that’s not quite totally successful, but
which always engages us. His non-fiction prose style is so graceful that it’s a
pure pleasure to read.
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