See You Later Christopher Pike

While the library lost its stand-alone copy of See You Later, I discovered that all was not lost:

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See You Later is in a Christopher Pike omnibus that the library does have! I got it on inter-library loan last week and read it all and now I have re-read See You Later and my life is complete, if by complete I mean pretty much exactly the same as it was before.

The book was not as awesome as I remembered. Not even close. The first story in the collection, Spellbound, was pretty terrible (it has a magical negro so you can pretty much guess how subtle the rest of the story is). The stories have been “updated” in that characters talk about DVDs and Blu-Rays, yet they don’t seem to have cellphones and they are still buying video games at Future Shop-type places rather than Steam or EB or any of the other places people buy games. I don’t know what about See You Later lodged itself in my mind over any of the other Christopher Pike books I read – maybe because the protagonist designed computer games and I played computer games? Maybe how the love story plays out? I remember being so impressed by the depth and literariness of the novel at age twelve, which demonstrates how sheltered I was when it came to literary quality.

Still, every now and then I see a Christopher Pike book at a thrift shop or a yard sale and I contemplate picking them up as I see them for when Tesfa’s older. Maybe she’ll enjoy them or maybe she’ll just be confused as to why the main character didn’t just text whoever is being threatened by the ghost/spirit/were-creature/vampire/alien/etc. to warn them.

reading around the world – Pakistan

Pakistan: How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Mohsin Hamid

Synopsis: (from amazon) From the internationally bestselling author of The Reluctant Fundamentalist, the boldly imagined tale of a poor boy’s quest for wealth and love . . .

His first two novels established Mohsin Hamid as a radically inventive storyteller with his finger on the world’s pulse. How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia meets that reputation—and exceeds it. The astonishing and riveting tale of a man’s journey from impoverished rural boy to corporate tycoon, it steals its shape from the business self-help books devoured by ambitious youths all over “rising Asia.” It follows its nameless hero to the sprawling metropolis where he begins to amass an empire built on that most fluid, and increasingly scarce, of goods: water. Yet his heart remains set on something else, on the pretty girl whose star rises along with his, their paths crossing and recrossing, a lifelong affair sparked and snuffed and sparked again by the forces that careen their fates along.

How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia is a striking slice of contemporary life at a time of crushing upheaval. Romantic without being sentimental, political without being didactic, and spiritual without being religious, it brings an unflinching gaze to the violence and hope it depicts. And it creates two unforgettable characters who find moments of transcendent intimacy in the midst of shattering change.

Thoughts: I picked this book up because I had read The Reluctant Fundamentalist in one setting way back in January 2008. This one, I would pick it up, be entranced for a few pages, then lose the thread. Maybe because of the style (second-person singular) and me very much not being the “you” in question (male, south Asian, Muslim, etc.), I had trouble relating. The novel takes place over sixty or seventy years, but at the same time always in the present, which sounds like it shouldn’t work, but it ingeniously did (perhaps something I’ll steal and try out myself this month).

I just feel like I’m almost loving books lately, but I just can’t seem to get the whole way there. I wanted to like this book more than I did.

Rating: 3/5

Previous Readings Around the World.

June 2014

I read:

Thoughts:

  • In Praise of Hatred by Khaled Khalifa: Discussed earlier.
  • Roost by Ali Bryan: Sort of a funny novel. Irreverent maybe. It takes place in Halifax, but it didn’t have that much of a Halifax feel until the end (with a shoutout to KOD). Sometimes I wish I could write (intentional) humour when I read books like this, but other times, absurdity in fictional life feels overdone, which it did sometimes here too. But it’s a first novel, so there are always rough spots, and it isn’t as if I have a first novel or anything so maybe this is all sour grapes.
  • Wildwood by Colin Meloy: Reel Girl has some good complaints about this book, but overall, Tesfa seemed to enjoy it. We finished it near the beginning of the month and yesterday Tesfa started talking about a little, inconsequential scene in the book, so clearly the plot sticks in kids’ heads.
  • The Ramona books: I am surprised by how much I remember from these books. I wish they wouldn’t call people stupid in it though. Yes, I am one of those very very politically correct freaks.
  • The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen: Ugggg. The Great American Novel bores me. The middle is such a slog. I wish Franzen committed to the Aslan subplot as deeply as David Foster Wallace did for The Entertainment in Infinite Jest. I didn’t really need the love triangle. I didn’t really need the long sentences. I did warm up to it near the end and the Lithuania subplot, but most of the other subplots just ended up dragging and dragging and dragging. But I’m not a fan of The Great American Novel in general, so it’s sort of a mystery why I decided to read this. So far I’ve got two conflicting pieces of advice for Freedom: Freedom is so much better than The Corrections versus The Corrections is so much better than Freedom, but I have a copy of Freedom so I’ll probable end up reading it eventually.
  • The Truth About The Harry Quebert Affair by Joël Dicker: Discussed earlier.
  • The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie: I think I’m going to buy this book as part of my nephew’s birthday present. Quality YA.
  • The Dinner by Herman Koch: Discussed earlier.


Best book:

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Here’s another Halifax book I read this month that is completely, overwhelmingly, achingly Halifax, but a book that seems to have come out and vanished without making much of a splash. I wish for more people to read it. If nothing else, it demonstrates how great books from small publishers about POC get forgotten quickly.


Most promising book put on my wishlist:

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I read a review of this book that talked about it being literary fiction and a mystery. I keep searching for books like that (as evinced by, for example, The Harry Quebert Affair). I keep trying to recreate when back in the late nineties when I picked up a Minette Walters book (The Dark Room I think it was) and read for what seemed like the first time, a well-written, non-pedantic mystery novel. Maybe Viviane will be it. The library only has it in the original French. I don’t know if I’m brave enough to try to read it or just wait until the library purchases a translation.


I watched:

  • Les Revenants: Yay, I love spooky shows that haven’t let me down. But there’s only one season so far, and maybe there will never be another one, and then it will have let me down. Time will tell.
  • Portlandia: I finally finished Season Three. Liked the other seasons better, but did appreciate Matt Berry being there for an episode.
  • My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic: Oh thank you sweet Deities, Netflix has new episodes. Not that Tesfa wants to watch them. No, she wants to start back at Episode One and work up to them. Why does my child want to have me lose my mind?
  • Game of Thrones: The show doesn’t seem to be making an impression on my brain this season. I thought and thought and thought just now about what happened in the final episode. I finally remembered a little bit, then I thought some more and remembered more, but this was a non-trivial amount of thinking to remember.
  • Frozen: I have decided that no, I do not want to build a snowman. Or ride my bike around the hall. I don’t even own a bike.
  • American Horror Story: All I am eager to watch right now is spooky and horror. I just want to watch this nonstop because I suppose horror and fear are the best escapism I have right now. Of course, doing the single parenting thing means that I have to wait until Tesfa goes to bed. Tesfa is not going to bed at appropriate times. So I’ll have to wait until Geoff returns to watch more. I’m so jaded that I’m already expecting to be disappointed.
  • Maleficent: So in one of my moments of stellar parenting, I decided Tesfa and I would go to the movies and we would see Maleficent because if I was paying twenty dollars for us to go (ten dollars each), we were going to see a movie I had at least some small interest in seeing (the other option being How To Train Your Dragon 2 and I just don’t want to spend that much money to see it). So we saw Maleficent, which is the first time I’ve been to the movies since The Trailer Park Boys Movie.

    Tesfa did well – a few jumps and closed eyes, but no nightmares. The trailers before the movie however – whatever Transformers junk movie they are on now and Jupiter Ascending – they frightened her far more badly (loud explosions and random screaming and fighting). Even the trailer for whatever that Chris Pratt movie is (I looked it up – Guardians of the Galaxy) seemed unnecessarily violent. Uggg.

    But then we watched the movie and I have sort of a soft spot for it. I was just nice to have a movie about women that wasn’t a rom-com or had plotlines about pairing off happily ever after. I also think I may be in love a bit with Sharlto Copley (somewhat worrying as he was a horrible villain in this movie) but as he is dating a supermodel, I doubt things are going to work out between us.

    Bits from the movie keep popping back into my head now and then. But, and I felt the same with Frozen, which is one of the few other newer movies I’ve seen recently, the story seems so fast. Movies just rush by. Maybe because I’m reading long books and watching long television shows, I’ve lost my short-attention span for movies. I could have watched so much more of Maleficent. I could have sat there for hours.


I wrote: Minimal faerie story work. Proof-read fan story and IRA story. Working on another magical-realism story, similar to fan story, about breathing underwater. Submitted to some contests and publications – haven’t heard back from any. A story that was accepted in March was published (Ana’s Cupcakes). A difficult month to work since Tesfa was off school for large parts of it and Geoff was/is away. I can write longhand somewhat with Tesfa around, but typing it up, don’t even bother. I have to wait until she sleeps, and then I’m too tired to type. I don’t have much hope for accomplishing much writing this summer, but perhaps a creative break will do me good.

reading around the world – Netherlands

Netherlands: The Dinner by Herman Koch

Synopsis: (from amazon) An internationally bestselling phenomenon: the darkly suspenseful, highly controversial tale of two families struggling to make the hardest decision of their lives — all over the course of one meal.

It’s a summer’s evening in Amsterdam, and two couples meet at a fashionable restaurant for dinner. Between mouthfuls of food and over the polite scrapings of cutlery, the conversation remains a gentle hum of polite discourse — the banality of work, the triviality of the holidays. But behind the empty words, terrible things need to be said, and with every forced smile and every new course, the knives are being sharpened.

Each couple has a fifteen-year-old son. The two boys are united by their accountability for a single horrific act; an act that has triggered a police investigation and shattered the comfortable, insulated worlds of their families. As the dinner reaches its culinary climax, the conversation finally touches on their children. As civility and friendship disintegrate, each couple show just how far they are prepared to go to protect those they love.

Tautly written, incredibly gripping, and told by an unforgettable narrator, The Dinner promises to be the topic of countless dinner party debates. Skewering everything from parenting values to pretentious menus to political convictions, this novel reveals the dark side of genteel society and asks what each of us would do in the face of unimaginable tragedy.

Thoughts: I’ve complained enough about Breaking Bad and how it seems we’re now equating repulsive with depth and interesting. Maybe if I wasn’t tired of the male, jerk protagonist, I’d have more patience for this book. You know where something can be done well, but you’re just so sick of similar things, that’s how I feel about this book – a pop song you loved the first five or six times, but after the thousandth you are so sick of it you want to throw the radio out the window (or just never listen to the radio in the first place as I do with my radio-hatred). I guess unreliable narrator too, I’m just a bit bored with that.

I also didn’t really find the wife Claire believable, but I guess that’s sort of the point: how much of this is real versus in Paul, the narrator’s, mind.

Goodreads has a good convo going about the ending the ending of The Dinner for those interested. Reading through some of the ideas made me appreciate the novel more, but I guess I was expecting the novel to be a lot heavier than I found it.

Rating: 3.5/5

Previous Readings Around the World.

I learned Writing

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Well, that was unexpected considering my mentor and I ended up at odds and I never submitted my final submission and I haven’t heard a word from anyone at Humber since March, but apparently I paid my fees and so I passed.

So now I have educational proof of my vocation. I’ll try not to lose it the way I managed to toss my Masters somewhere along the line.

reading around the world – Switzerland

Switzerland: The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair by Joël Dicker

Synopsis: (from amazon)

August 30, 1975. The day of the disappearance. The day Aurora, New Hampshire, lost its innocence.

That summer Harry Quebert fell in love with fifteen-year-old Nola Kellergan. Thirty-three years later, her body is dug up from his yard along with a manuscript copy of his career-defining novel. Quebert is the only suspect. Marcus Goldman-Quebert’s most gifted protégé-throws off his writer’s block to clear his mentor’s name.

Solving the case and penning a new bestseller soon blur together. As his book begins to take on a life of its own, the nation is gripped by the mystery of “The Girl Who Touched the Heart of America”.

But with Nola, in death as in life, nothing is ever as it seems. Joël Dicker’s phenomenal European bestseller is a brilliantly intricate murder mystery, a hymn to the boundless reaches of the imagination, and a love story like no other. Nothing you’ve read or even felt before can prepare you for The Truth about the Harry Quebert Affair.

Thoughts: From above, nothing could prepare me? Yeah, I’m pretty sure every cheap thriller from the past thirty years has prepared me for The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair.

This is a book about America by someone I’m not convinced has ever been to America. It seems like a book about America by someone who has watched Die Hard and read a great number of John Irving novels, which would give someone a very skewed view of America. This book was on the shortlist for the Prix Goncourt, which baffles me as it is not a very good book. It isn’t a bad book, but it’s an airport paperback thriller at best, unless a great deal is lost in translation. The excerpts from the “masterpiece” within deserve the quotations I put around masterpiece; the book within a book, the one written by Harry Quebert (there is more than one book within a book in this story), is flat and trivial.

I read this book and I read to the end to see what would happen. It is a good thriller and characters do things that only make sense within the world of thrillers, but I keep seeing this presented as some sort of literary piece of art and for me, it was not that. Good for the beach, good for summer, good for me reevaluating the Prix Goncourt, but otherwise, sort of a tepid sort of book.

(I’m considering this under Switzerland since it was written by a Swiss author, which seems as good a reason as any.)

Rating: 2.5/5

Previous Readings Around the World.

vindication

A horseman riding by would never know the difference.

You totally made that up Geoff said.

Did not. My grandmother used to say that her mother said it.

Whatever Geoff said. You totally made it up.

Then, reading Ramona and her Father, page 59 in my edition: It will never be noticed from a trotting horse.

And, on page 166: Those pink bunnies will never be noticed from a trotting horse.

Thank you Beverly Cleary for vindicating me in my unending fight to be perpetually right against Geoff.

the opposite of bad

A piece of writing is never good … There is simply a moment when it is less bad than before

Joël Dicker – The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair

(Although there’s still a lot of more bad still in The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair. Poor translation? My difficulty enjoying commercial fiction? Possible drek? Hard to determine at half-way through. Maybe the book will turn around and surprise me.)

reading around the world – South Africa

South Africa: Who Was Nelson Mandela by Meg Belviso

Synopsis: (from amazon) As a child he dreamt of changing South Africa; as a man he changed the world. Nelson Mandela spent his life battling apartheid and championing a peaceful revolution. He spent twenty-seven years in prison and emerged as the inspiring leader of the new South Africa. He became the country’s first black president and went on to live his dream of change. This is an important and exciting addition to the Who Was…? series.

Thoughts: I had thought I’d read a book about South Africa for my Readings Around the World, but I guess the last few books I read about South Africa were before I started trying to read my way around the planet, so this is sort of late, since I read this book in April.

I bought this book for Tesfa for Easter because Supermom made me feel bad about not having any presents for Tesfa (Supermom is someone I know, not an amalgam of great parents or something). I felt bad, but not bad enough to go anywhere other than the grocery store where I was already going. The previous week, the grocery store had a huge stack of Roald Dahls, but they vanished and the only children’s books not involving hypersexualized Bratz or Monster High dolls were either this one about Nelson Mandela or a book about Pokémon. Easy choice.

I’m sure this whole series of Who Was books skirts some sort of copyright or trademark issues – I don’t think it was authorized by the estate of Nelson Mandela (which reminds me of an episode of Made In Canada when Alan wants to make a movie about a conman but the lies the conman told so that it would still be fiction and he wouldn’t have to buy the rights). I’m also pretty sure this book was published to capitalize on the emotion following Mandela’s death in December.

All that being said: it’s a good book. Obviously aimed at the younger crowd, and Tesfa at five may have been a bit too young to grasp some of the more salient points other than that apartheid means separating people based on skin colour and if your skin was dark, you were treated poorly. But she was interested in reading it and seeing what happened. The book didn’t seem to sugar-coat the situation. People were shot at. There were riots. Nelson Mandela wasn’t readily available for his family.

Most importantly, unlike many books that discuss race relations in terms of the benevolent white savior (The Help, To Kill A Mockingbird), Nelson Mandela and his black South African compatriots are the focus of this book. It’s probably sad that I have to be excited when a book about a POC is actually about said POC.

Random fact: Nelson Mandela’s birthday was the same day as my birthday (is? I don’t know the correct verb tense when comparing the dead to the living).

Rating: 4.5/5

Previous Readings Around the World.