Showing posts with label clean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clean. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

The House of the Wind by Titania Hardie


*I received this book as an ARC.  The review, and my opinions, are all my own.*

The House of the Wind by Titania Hardie is definitely not a fluffy beach-read.  It is a book that demands to be savored slowly and thoughtfully with its lushly-written descriptions and gradually-evolving plot.  Neither is it a book that can be fully appreciated the first time it is read.  The reader may even feel a little frustrated with how slowly the plot progresses but when you get to the end, you want to read it again in order to appreciate all the nuances and subtle hints that were missed in the first reading.

The book begins with Maddie in California, waiting for her fiance to arrive from England until she is told that he has died in a car accident.  She grieves for him and for the marriage that will never take place.  She continues to work and live her life but feels isolated and lonely until her Italian grandmother sends her to Tuscany.  In Tuscany she begins to feel alive again and becomes interested in the story of a centuries-old villa. 
Interspersed with the story of Maddie is another story that takes place in 14th century Tuscany.  It tells the story of the inhabitants of the villa that Maddie finds so intriguing, although it isn't until well into the book that the connection is made. It is about Mia, a mute young woman who lives with her aunt Jacquetta in 1347 Tuscany.  She has reason to grieve as well as do some of the patrons of the wayside inn run by her aunt. 
It is while staying in Tuscany and discovering the history of the villa that Maddie is able to make peace with the empty space in her life that was supposed to be her first year of marriage.  She is able to find her life again and fill it with other people and interests.  Her visit to Italy has become a pilgimage where she feels the lines blurring between the ancient and modern worlds and where she can imagine a better and happier life for herself, one in which she can be whole.  "Something was allowing her to be touched by the world around her again" when before she "felt emotionally torn between two worlds."  The weather figures in the story in a mystical sort of way, as do birds.  There is also a sort of mysticism and a feeling of destiny in Maddie's life.  All in all, it is an interesting book that lingers with you when you finish it so that you have to go back and read bits and pieces again and again.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Cinder by Marissa Meyer

I really enjoyed this futuristic Cinderella story! Cinder is a cyborg due to an accident many years before which meant that her foot and hand were amputated and replaced by robotic parts. She was brought home by a man who promptly died after extracting a promise from his wife to care for Cinder. In New Beijing, cyborgs are considered outcasts and Cinder's adoptive mother never lets her forget that. Cinder is an amazing mechanic and the family, her mother and 2 sisters, live off the income Cinder makes. Her reputation is so good that Prince Kai brings his robot to her to be fixed. Naturally he is smitten by her but is also unaware that she is a cyborg. Add in a plague and an evil queen from another planet who wants the Prince to marry her to avert war and it all adds up to be a fun and new take on an old story.        

Thursday, January 12, 2012

I Am Half-Sick of Shadows by Alan Bradley


I got this book, as usual, from my local public library.

Another Flavia de Luce novel and I think it's my favorite so far.  I say so far because all indications are that Mr. Bradley will continue to write these wonderful books, thank goodness.  I love Flavia and her sleuthing!

Flavia de Luce is a precocious, Chemistry-loving, mystery-solving, 11-year-old girl living in rural 1950's England in a big old drafty mansion that her father cannot afford since her mother, the inheritor, passed away without a will.  He gives in to the necessity of allowing a movie to be filmed in the home.  Flavia and her sisters are thrilled and even put aside their bickering when the crew arrives just before Christmas.  Flavia has conjured up a super-sticky glue which she slathers inside the chimney in order to catch Father Christmas but even that is forgotten when a murder occurs.


What I loved about it:  Flavia, of course, but even secondary characters are well-described.  Dogger is one of my favorites.  I also love that all of Feely suitors end up at the house at the same time.  Oh, and I love that Flavia still believes in Father Christmas as smart as she is.

What I didn't like:  Hmm, can't think of anything.


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper


I cannot imagine what it would be like to have an intellect that is above average, gifted even, and to be thought incapable of learning.  Melody, a spunky 11-year-old with cerebral palsy, has lived with that her entire life just because she is unable to speak. 
I loved this book by Sharon Draper.  Because it is written from Melody's point of view we can get a small idea of the frustrations she deals with on a daily basis, including spending most of her day in a special ed class where she is bored, not being able to yell out in an emergency, and just desperately wanting to be included and treated like everyone else.  Melody eventually is able to communicate via computer and it opens up the world to her, even better it lets the world get to know Melody.

My 10-year-old daughter loved this book so much that she hoped there was a sequel.
It is written for ages 9-12 but I enjoyed it too.

Here is a fabulous study guide with discussion questions and ideas for book reports. (I'm going to have to remember this for my 10 year old):

http://sharondraper.com/bookdetail-guides.asp?id=35

What I liked about the book:  Being in Melody's "head", experiencing things as she did.

What I didn't like:  I had to wonder why she didn't have an advocate in the school to make sure her needs were addressed.  She should have had the computer much earlier.

Was it clean?  Sure was!

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Caleb's Crossing by Geraldine Brooks

     It was fun to pick this one up the day after visiting Martha's Vineyard and spending some time in Edgartown, called "Great Harbor" in the book.  Even though much of the island is inhabited, there are enough open spaces to get a feel of how it must have looked in the 1660's
     However, this book is mis-named.  Caleb is the first Wamponoag from the Island to attend Harvard but the voice of the novel is Bethia, the daughter of the local minister.  It is through her writings that Caleb's story, but more often her story, is told.  The "crossing" is his literal crossing the divide between the island and the mainland and, what is much more important, figuratively crossing over to a culture that was assumed by the English to be vastly superior to the Wampanoag culture, although there were many incidences that proved that he hadn't left behind his native beliefs entirely.
     Bethia first meets Caleb when she is twelve.  She manages to run into many times, always done without the knowledge of anyone else.  She teaches him English and he teaches her his language and culture.  They meet again when he comes to live with her family so her father could teach him along with her brother and another Wamponoag boy.  They eventually end up in Cambridge at a boarding school, preparing for eventual admission to Harvard.  Bethia goes too since, due to their reduced circumstances, she becomes an indentured servant at the school.
     I felt that the over-riding theme of the book is the comparison between the English culture and the Wamponoag culture, especially in regard to religious beliefs.  What the English accepted as true would seem strange to an outsider, just as the beliefs of the natives seemed strange to them.  After listening to Caleb explain their beliefs on many occasions, they started to make sense to Bethia.  She attempts to teach him Christianity only to be frustrated when he challenges her beliefs.  After listening to him describe some of his beliefs, she writes,  "Of course, I thought it all outlandish.  But as I rode home that afternoon, it came to me that our story of a burning bush and a parted sea might also seem fabulous, to one not raised up knowing it was true."  He eventually becomes a Christian, at least in appearance.  "Caleb had taken the teachings of his youth and simply recast them in terms of our teaching.
     The treatment of women in both cultures was a theme that I found very interesting. The prejudice against women at that time was just as strong as the prejudice against the natives, even stronger at times because Caleb and Joel, and even a native young woman, were able to get an education but it was denied to Bethia. She was fortunate to be able to work in an institution of learning so that she could eavesdrop on lectures and lessons.
     The assumption by the English that the Wamponoag were "salvages" seems ludicrous at times to Bethia when she realizes that her own culture, and their mode of living, is found wanting.  She worries when Caleb comes to live with her family that he would feel a "lack", that it would be inferior to the home of his childhood with its hard bed and burlap cover instead of soft furs.  Their homes were built in well-drained sheltered places, but the English had built their homes "in the path of maritime gales, and already constant use has fouled the springs...I feared that Caleb would feel himself in a reduced condition here."   Things are even worse when they go to Cambridge with its closely-built homes and pungent odors.  The school where they board is spartan and there is never enough food.  Yet Caleb flourishes in many ways, at least in the eyes of the English.  They feel that there is a "complete... crossing as Caleb has made into English ways, these many years."    Bethia considers him a hero.  "He ventured forth from one world to another with an explorer's courage, armored by the hope that he could serve his people.  He stood shoulder to shoulder with the most learned of his day, ready to take his place with them as a man of affairs.  He won the respect of those who had been swiftest to dismiss him."  During the commencement exercises, Bethia finds herself wishing that Caleb had given one of the commencement orations.  She thinks that he would have given a "lively exegesis, drawing as it did on a very different experience of what was good and beautiful, and how beauty might be perceived quite differently by foreign souls in unalike times."
    In other words, the culture of the natives was not inferior to the English culture, just different.  It was the English, in their arrogance and their assumption of superiority, that sowed the seeds of discord that led to war.
   Although the historical basis for this book is slim, little is known about Caleb, I felt that the author did well to describe the cultural conditions of the time.  I enjoyed it immensely despite being misled by the title and recommend it as a worthwhile read.

Was it clean?  Yes, very clean!  There was very little to object to, just a few adult situations that might make it too adult for younger children, who probably wouldn't want to read it anyway.