Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Now reading: Song of Ice and Fire

Have been indefinitely sidetracked by George R.R. Martin...



Third book lined up already...all neatly wrapped still. But won't be for long :-)

Friday, April 15, 2011

Now reading: Ash

I typically use awards that books have received as a gauge to decide whether I would buy and read a book, or not.

So saying, Malinda Lo's Ash was a shoo-in for my book pile.

I soon realized that it was a completely different configuration of the Cinderella trope. I have always loved the re-telling of fairy tales. This is why Robin McKinley's Beauty and Rose Daughter are among my best-loved stories of all time. When I picked up Ash, I loved the idea of introducing the element of a fairy, that is, a sidhe, into the story of Cinderella.

The book had a fresh take on the development of the heroine. Simply put, the love interest is another girl. In stories of this genre, the author has a very challenging task, indeed, to walk that fine line between revelation and critique, on the one hand, and repackaging something and calling it new. I was interested to see how the character playing the love interest in the story re-structures questions of power, strength, weakness, love, and identity. I mean, is she an actual female character, or will her gender formulation in the story, when unravelled to the core, would simply reveal a man?

If you're reading Ash for the first time, know that you are entering a lyric, mesmerizing landscape. However, the story would require more soul-searching and insight in terms of what it means to be a woman. It's a different kind of soul work and  recasts questions about identity and sexuality than what Graceling posed, or even The Blue Sword.

On another matter, I have just discovered a new book by one of my favorite authors, Franny Billingsley. The title is Chime , and I am curious to see if it truly lives up to the glowing reviews I've read about it. I've waited for her to write another book after falling in love with her The Folk Keeper years ago. And with a long vacation coming up, I'm excited to have found what promises to be a delicious book to fall headlong into.

Well hello Lord Sunday!

What do you know? I bumped into Garth Nix's Lord Sunday (2010) so unexpectedly today. This book concludes the Keys to the Kingdom series which began with Mr. Monday.

The series is the story of 12-year-old Arthur Penhaligon and his adventures in saving the House and his own world. At the beginning of the story, he was pulled into the Kingdom at a critical point in his life. Arthur was asthmatic and  frail and he was about to die. One could say that his being pulled into the Kingdom was godsend: he became stronger physically. Also, as the Heir, he became the wielder of powers via the different Keys. Of course, the downside was that he became less human and more of a Denizen with each use of his power. Indeed, by the time the story reached the end of Superior Saturday, Arthur has become too far gone to return to being just a mortal.

The books in the series are named after days because these represent the seven Trustees assigned by the Architect to do her Will. They are collectively known as the Morrow Days. Each has been assigned a Key which has unique powers. When the Morrow days rebelled against the Architect, it was revealed that each has taken on anaspect of the seven Mortal Sins,  i.e. greed, pride, envy, etc. Each Trustee rules on the day that bears his or her name, and so the start of the books usually begins on the midnight when the power of the next Trustee takes effect. So to my mind, Arthur has to be one of the most hard-pressed and hard-working heroes ever because his headaches have barely passed when the next set appears.

Naughty me has actually read the resolution of the series in Wikipedia. But that will not stop me from reading the book from start to finish. Good thing, too, that my memory tends to conveniently forget key parts of the plot which means that I'll be able to thoroughly enjoy this last book.

*****
(2 days after inhaling the book, and after our internet connection was restored, AND when B. finally relinquished his spot in front of my laptop...)

And enjoy it I did. Unlike the previous books when a lot of things seem to be happening at once, and when the sub-plots were distracting (and frustrating me) me from the main storyline, Lord Sunday was an easy straightforward read. I also loved the way Garth Nix concluded Arthur's story. He is one of those authors who just knows how tie up loose ends. Still, I could see some possibilities of a sequel.

Keys to the Kingdom is on a different level from The Abhorsen series in terms of character development, but it is no less rich and thought-provoking. I wouldn't mind re-reading the entire series over again. I give the book  3.5 out of 5 stars, and the series 4 out of 5 stars.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Forever

I must have been seriously under a rock. How could I have missed this?

http://www.maggiestiefvater.com/shiver/forever.php

Best books of 2010




I can't resist. Do check these books out. They're worth every penny and every second...and book shelf space.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Next, and next, and next...

I have to find a way to temper myself.


I started this blog to share my favorite books, primarily young adult fiction, but lately I seem to be reading more, and sharing less.

Let me track where I have been in the last two weeks.

The beginning
There is something so comforting about encountering an old book--one you have spent pleasurable hours with, as you wandered around its unique world and peered over the shoulders of its characters as they battled monsters, and wielded fantastic magic. It's like meeting an old friend, and then sitting down over cups of coffee (or tea) to talk about old times.

 However, I wasn't so certain if I wanted to start my summer with A Wizard of Earthsea (Ursula Le Guin), though. It's not an easy friend. There's too much darkness in Ged's world, and  --superstitious me -- I didn't want that to foreshadow my summer.

A master storyteller, nonetheless, has the power to pull you in the tale whether you like it or not. And so before long, I was once again at Roke and at Earthsea meeting familiar characters, and re-tracing familar and forgotten paths. At the end of the Ged's reckoning with his shadow, I was glad to have re-read the book again.

The book follows a familiar story archetype of the outcast, flawed hero coming to terms with himself. Since Ursula Le Guin comes from that era of 'classical' fantasy writers in the ilk of J.R.R. Tolkien, Ged's reflections and internal struggle appear deeply philosophical to the modern reader. In short, do not expect stream-of-consciousness rantings from Ged.

What to me makes this book a classic is how it explores that universal experience of having committing a seemingly irreparable mistake. And then upping this a hundred times. After all, what can be worse than loosing an unknown dark creature in the world and not having the power to vanquish it?

As to its ending: I like it that Le Guin carefully reveals things to the reader that leads up to the eventual realization of what must be done. You begin to have an inkling of what to do, but you're not quite sure about it, until the denouement. Beautiful pacing. I hate it when some authors treat readers as dumb spectators and spring obvious "revelations" and resolutions on them.

So after A Wizard of Earthsea, I knew I was in for a good start on my summer reading.


The Blue Sword

(to be continued)