Paperback Picks for April

Book cover from Goodreads

THE FAMILY FANG

by Kevin Wilson

5 Stars

Hands down the most brilliantly creative book I read in 2011. Darkly comic (and sometimes just dark), the Fangs live at the border between life and art.

Art, if you love it, was worth any amount of unhappiness and pain. If you had to hurt someone to achieve those ends, so be it. If the outcome was beautiful enough, strange enough, memorable enough, it did not matter. It was worth it.”

Wilson takes this thought-provoking premise and fills it with these wonderful characters. Buster and Annie (the children of the family now struggling into adulthood) are exactly the products we might expect from a dysfunctional family. I couldn’t help falling in love with them and truly caring what happened as the story twisted through to its conclusion.

Book cover from Goodreads

THE DOVEKEEPERS

by Alice Hoffman

5 stars

The events in the book swirl around the fall of Jerusalem and the siege of the fortress at Masada. Although I knew little about these events when I started the book, she draws the setting and characters so well at I honestly felt I was living there with them. My pulse quickened at dramatic moments and I felt the heat and wind of the desert just as described. The four women who tell this story are all damaged, yet strong (my favorite kinds of characters). And I love that they are all dovekeepers (peacekeepers) in a time of war and brutality.

We stood and watched as God abandoned us, and then we did the best we could.”

The symbolism is deep and constant, but the deeper levels never get in the way of the storytelling.

Book cover from Goodreads

THE COFFINS OF LITTLE HOPE

by Timothy Schaffert

4 stars

I’m not quite sure what to make of this book. It has the feel of a Tim Burton film — dark and funny at the same time. I found myself smiling a lot at the odd characters and their observations about modern-day small-town living. But Schaffert is also exploring some deeper ideas about aging, mass media, and perceptions of reality. Just when I was cruising along, I’d go back to reread passages, surprised to be so moved so suddenly.

We could endlessly reminisce, live in the past to an unhealthy degree, then politely kill each other some winter night before bedtime, stirring poison into our cups of whiskey-spiked chamomile tea, wearing party hats. Then, nervous about our double homicide, we could lie in bed together, holding hands again, frightened and waiting, still wondering, after all these years, if we even believed in our own souls.”

Without including a spoiler, I will admit that the last 30 pages are very weak, which was really disappointing given how strong most of the writing is. I’ll definitely give this author another shot.

Book cover from Goodreads

CALEB’S CROSSING

by Geraldine Brooks

5 stars

Geraldine Brooks is the Queen of Historical Fiction. I’ve liked everything she’s written, but Caleb’s Crossing is my favorite. Brook’s attention to detail, especially to the voice of narrator Bethia, is fascinating.

I felt the reckless abandon of one who knows she stands already among the damned. “Why not, then, another sin?”

Bethia’s diary put us squarely in the time and place of the book, 17th century Martha’s vineyard. We understand the constraints and opportunities of the time through her eyes. I could easily relate to her struggles to enlighten her mind while keeping her thoughts to herself. It’s a great conflict. As the title suggests, the story is also about her young Indian friend, whom she names Caleb. Can her. will he cross to the mainland literally and figuratively. That’s the story that moves the plot forward, but this is Bethia’s book all the way. A must read for historical fiction lovers

 

 

Food for literary thought

BEFORE YOU READ THE REST OF THIS POST, close your eyes and think about your favorite authors. I’m talking your “go-to” writers, the ones you’ve read and possibly reread. Can you say, “I’ve read almost everything written by so-and-so?”

This morning, the moderator of one of my Goodreads Book Clubs asked this very question. (Thanks Deb at Bound Together.) Without having to think too hard, I immediately answered.

I have several adored authors. If I had to choose a few whose books consistently blow me away, I’d go with:

Toni Morrison whose latest book in coming out in May. I know she’s not for everyone, but I love her voice and the way magic and ghosts and folklore are just woven into every story.

Ann Patchett because she’s smart and her settings are incredible and she can really craft a sentence.

Geraldine Brooks for historical fiction. No need to say more.

Aimee Bender is a newbie for this kind of list. But her books and short stories take me to such interesting places that I can’t wait to see what she has in store next.

As I prepared to post my comment, I realized that I had chosen all female authors. Frankly I was surprised. If you had asked me yesterday whether I preferred male or female authors, I would have refused to answer such a ridiculous question.  Of course I also have male authors I follow closely – Colum McCann and Dennis Lehane come to mind immediately.

I want to believe I read blindly when it comes to an author’s gender. But I’ve read multiple articles in the past month on the gender gap in literature and they have me questioning my own literary assumptions.

In a wonderful New York Times article by Meg Wollitzer, On the Rules of Literary Fiction for Men and Women – NYTimes.com, she writes:

But the top tier of literary fiction — where the air is rich and the view is great and where a book enters the public imagination and the current conversation — tends to feel peculiarly, disproportionately male. Will the literary habits of a culture change as younger readers take over?

I certainly don’t classify as a “young reader,” but I do believe I buck the male dominated trend.

  • According to my Goodreads stats, 51 of the 88 books I read in 2011 were by women. (I realize this is only one year of reading so it doesn’t prove much, but it’s all I’ve got.)
  • 9 out of the 10 books on my “Best of 2011” list are by women. http://alenaslife.wordpress.com/2012/01/03/bestbooks2011/ Again, it’s one year of many, but those are the numbers.

I want to believe that none of this matters. I want to assume that the above-mentioned authors are not my favorite because they are women, but because they are fantastic writers. But it’s given me food for thought today.

Now think back on the authors you chose as your favorites. Are they all one gender? Or, did you have some of each? Does it matter?

Monday Quote: Standing Among the Damned

I feel the reckless abandon of one who knows she already stands among the damned. “Why not, then, another sin?”

Geraldine Brooks, Caleb’s Crossing

Geraldine Brooks is, without any question, the current queen of historical fiction. I have read Year of Wonders, People of the Book, the Pulitzer Prize winning March, and Caleb’s Crossing. This quote stands out because it reflects what she does so well – balance the tragedy and optimism of her characters. She writes strong women and Bethia is no exception. Facing only disappointment, she chooses “reckless abandon.”

If you haven’t sampled Geraldine Brooks, Caleb’s Crossing is an excellent choice.

Which is your favorite?

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