Wow, another month gone! And another year at the same time! My year-end review will be up tomorrow to start the year off right, so let's look at the lovely month of December today. I finished up my second semester of grad school, maintained an awesome 4.0, and still managed to read 11 books. Basically, I'm awesome, is what I'm saying (and modest?).
It wasn't an especially delightful month of reading; I felt pretty lukewarm about most of the books I picked up, even the ones I was excited about. Oddly, my favorite, Shutter Island, almost went back to the library unread because I didn't have high hopes for it. That should teach me, right? Maybe.
My greatest personal reading accomplishment this month was finishing off all of my challenges — it was looking a little iffy there for a while, but I did manage to defeat Sir Arthur Conan Doyle yesterday, finally, to close up the Case of the Baker Street Challenge. With any luck, next year's challenges will go as well.
Now to the numbers...
Days spent reading: 29
Books read: 11
...in fiction: 11
...in mystery: 3
...in fantasy: 1
...in classics: 1
...in short stories: 1
...in young adult: 5
...in children's: 1
Series reads: Unfortunate Events
Favorite book: Shutter Island, by Dennis Lehane (Review) 9/10
Challenges
My Year of Reading Dangerously Challenge: +3 books for 12/12 Completed!
The Baker Street Challenge: +1 books for 3/3 Completed!
Back to School Challenge: +3 books for 4/4 Completed!
Critical Monkey Challenge: +0 books for 1/6
Countdown Challenge: +7 books for 27/55
31 December 2009
30 December 2009
The Adventures and Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle (? — 30 December)

I had read A Study in Scarlet and The Sign of the Four in my mysteries course senior year, and The Hound of the Baskervilles a few months back, and found them delightful, but I wasn't really prepared for these short stories. In both the novels and the stories, Holmes gets called on a case, checks out the scene, makes some deductions, and solves the matter in a rather quick fashion, but in the stories, that's it. There's not a narrative to go along with the detecting; Holmes just does his thing and Watson reports it.
That's not to say I didn't like the stories. I just had to get used to them. :) And... I don't have much else to say about them! If you want a quick little reminder of how incredibly stupid you are, I recommend finding a Holmes story or two online and enjoying.
Rating: 7/10
(Baker Street Challenge)
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
28 December 2009
The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold (23 December — 24 December)

The conceit of this novel is that it's told from the point of view of a murdered girl. That's pretty cool, right? The girl, called Susie, is all dead and stuff, but she's looking down on her family and friends and even the guy who murdered her, watching them deal with the aftermath of her death. Her parents grow apart, her siblings try to deal with going to the same schools Susie went to and being "that dead girl's little siblings," which isn't easy, of course.
When the book starts out, it seems like it's going to revolve around the living people figuring out who killed Susie, but the murderer is pretty savvy and the trail grows cold pretty quickly for the police, if not for Susie's dad. Once that happens, the story's more about how people deal with death, and it's actually rather interesting to see how Susie's friends grow up and how her parents start to drift apart. But then... then. There's a part toward the end where Sebold gets all supernatural and briefly brings Susie back in her friend's body while her friend goes and hangs out in heaven for a while, and it just completely ruined the book for me. I was okay with Susie's friend being able (or thinking she's able) to see spirits after Susie's death; I am not okay with her being able to go muck about in heaven without being dead. And this whole development is really not important to the story at all except for maybe giving a couple of people closure and providing a sex scene for the novel. No, really. I have no idea.
So. I give Sebold props for writing a convincing portrait of a family after a brutal death, but I would like her to never write such a creepy sex scene ever again, kthx.
Rating: 6/10
(Countdown Challenge: 2002)
25 December 2009
Happy Christmas!
This is my Christmas tree this year... Scott and I made it together! Last year I made our tree myself out of construction paper, but this year we wanted to take it to the next dimension! This was actually the third or fourth design that we attempted for the tree — do you know how difficult it is to make a pipe-cleaner tree look halfway decent? I mean, unless you're Martha Stewart. Then it's easy. Whatever, ours was made with love.
I'm not really big on Christmas, but I will enjoy spending today with my dear parents and brothers and tomorrow with whatever family members stick around at Scott's house (they are a very come-and-go bunch, which is odd to me). I will also enjoy watching this video probably, oh, five hundred times in a row. I am such a sucker for Muppets.
24 December 2009
Shutter Island, by Dennis Lehane (22 December — 23 December)

The premise of this novel is that there's a US Marshal called Teddy (short for Edward) Daniels who hops a ferry to Shutter Island with another Marshal to look into the disappearance of an inmate at the hospital/mental ward/jail-type institution on the island. The woman, called Rachel Solando, managed to escape from a teeny-tiny cell and past several guards without anyone noticing, so Daniels and Aule (the partner) think it was probably an inside job. As they're looking into this case, Daniels is also looking into some retribution — he's heard that the guy who set the fire that killed Daniels's wife is locked up on Shutter Island, and he'd like to give him a little what-for. But neither investigation is proving easy, what with how everyone on the island is being a little secretive about just what exactly goes on there, and how there's a convenient hurricane keeping Daniels and Aule stuck on this island for maybe a little longer than they thought...
I hate to admit it, but even though I should have seen the ending of this book coming, I did not. Not at all. And I liked that. I was so drawn in by Lehane's storytelling that I forgot to be looking for all the inconsistencies in the stories told by the characters. So good! And so I don't want to say too much about this book, because I want you to go read it and be surprised as well. Or you might not be surprised, because you're keener than I am, but you should still enjoy the plot twists and turns without my help.
One thing, though, for the people who have read this already... what do you think of the choice of Laeddis for a surname? It's either incredibly uncommon or nonexistant, which made the ending seem a little forced. If it had been the other way around, I would have believed it more.
Rating: 9/10
(Countdown Challenge: 2003)
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
23 December 2009
Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe (21 December — 22 December)

See, the plot of this book... well, there's not really a plot. But there's a protagonist, so that's good, and he's called Okonkwo and he lives in Africa and he aspires to great things. His father was a loser, so Okonkwo fashioned himself a winner, to good results. But then he kills this kid that was sent to live with him and who called him "father" and who liked living with Okonkwo, and then things seem to start falling apart, as they do.
And I thought that maybe that was the point of the book, because it's pretty emphasized — that Okonkwo did a bad thing by killing a boy he thought of as a son, and now he gets to be punished. And he does get punished, in various ways, including being exiled for seven years for inadvertantly killing some other guy's son. But then Achebe completely ignores all of that and starts in with some missionaries, who come to the villages and start converting people to Christianity, and then things seem to start falling apart, as they do.
Wait, what? Okay, fine, so things are falling apart for a different reason now, that has nothing to do with Okonkwo. But Okonkwo, whose life was already falling apart, doesn't want it to fall apart anymore so he tries to bring an uprising against the missionaries, which totally fails, and [ending alert] then he kills his real son (who's a convert and who is "not his son anymore" and cetera) and then he kills himself. Or is said to have killed himself. And SparkNotes says he did it. But I don't believe that.
Anyway, so I finish reading the book and I'm like, okay, this plotline that I've just outlined makes sense, but I've only included, like, less than half of the scenes in the book and what were those supposed to be for? So I ask SparkNotes, and it tells me that this book is really about showing the Western world that Africa is a real place with real people with real emotions and religions and languages and customs and such and that colonization sort of makes those things fall apart and also the colonial nations are pretty stupid for not realizing that Africa is a real place etc.
And then I go, oh. That makes sense. I get that. I would feel stupid for not seeing that while reading it, except that I was too busy trying to follow the story Achebe was telling, and not the one he was implying, which is unfortunate. I guess if I had known in advance that the written story was merely a vehicle for a bigger statement, I would have liked it better. As it stands, I am just confused and disappointed.
Rating: 5/10
(Back to School Challenge)
See also:
an adventure in reading
Books 'N Border Collies
Rhinoa's Ramblings
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
21 December 2009
Let it Snow, by John Green, Maureen Johnson, and Lauren Myracle (18 December — 20 December)

The book is three shorter interconnected stories: Johnson's, the first, tells of a high-school girl called Jubilee who ends up stranded on a train in western North Carolina. Because of the scary cheerleaders who are also stranded with her, she treks away from the train as fast as she can, which is of course not very fast in snow that can strand a train. Jubilee ends up at a Waffle House where she meets a cute guy who offers her his and his mother's hospitality for a few days. I think we all know what a mother's "hospitality" is like. -eyebrow waggle-
Then Green comes in to tell the story of three kids who are friends with the manager at said Waffle House, who, by the time he calls, is looking at a room full of cheerleaders and wants to invite along Tobin, JP, and the Duke to ogle them. Of course, the Duke being a girl, she'd rather ogle maybe one of the other people I've already mentioned, so there's awkwardness there, and oh, did I mention the snowstorm? Because there is some slow-tastic adventuring out in Tobin's mom's SUV just to get to the Waffle House. Current me is like, "Why would you go out in the snow like that???" but high-school me is like, "ADVENTURE!"
Myracle's story is about a girl called Addie who is devastated over her breakup with Jeb, a bit player in the two previous stories (stuck on the train and then stuck in the Waffle House), even though it was all her fault. She's pretty self-absorbed, but when her best friends and her manager and the old lady that comes in to Starbucks all the time all tell her so in the span of a couple days, she starts to take it to heart and tries to make up for all of her mistakes.
I'm always a little wary of teen romantic novels, because they're always a little implausible, but this one is just completely implausible so it worked for me. :) I don't think any girls are going to be looking for romance in a snowstorm at the Waffle House (though, maybe), and after Addie is portrayed as a bad guy for wanting a storybook/movie romance... well, there's a chance for teens yet!
Rating: 7/10
(Countdown Challenge: 2008)
See also:
Library Queue
an adventure in reading
Book Nut
Blogging for a Good Book
things mean a lot
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
19 December 2009
The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini (15 December — 18 December)

Unfortunately, that's sort of still how I feel. The cover blurbs promised adjectives like powerful, haunting, riveting, extraordinary, unexpected... I'm not convinced. I called most of the plot "twists" ages before they happened, and even though they weren't really presented as twists, per se, they felt imbued with a sense of "Look at what I wrote! Isn't it ironic and also incredibly clever of me?" whether Hosseini intended it or not.
The story was interesting, at least. It follows the life of our protagonist, Amir, from his childhood in Kabul through his emigration to America in the midst of Russian occupation and on to his return to Kabul to atone for past sins. These sins were against Hassan, the son of Amir's father's servant, who considered Amir his best friend and stood up for him against bullies but whose friendship was never quite reciprocated. When Amir witnesses an atrocity against Hassan, he takes the coward's way out; running away from the scene and later running away from his guilt by getting Hassan and his father sent away. This event becomes a big old rock that weighs Amir down for the rest of his life, as we get to read!
I loved how Hosseini handled the friendship between Amir and Hassan — how they were friends by circumstance and how the power dynamic between them kept Amir from really accepting Hassan's friendship. I thought all of the childhood scenes in Kabul were really well-written and believable. It was the rest of the book I was not so enamored with; the move to America and Amir's marriage and difficulty having children took a long time to read but still seemed to be superficially written so that Hosseini could get his story back to Kabul, where Amir goes to find Hassan's son and do that atoning thing. And then from there everything seemed to fall apart; it takes only a chapter or two for the son to be found, and then an entirely implausible scene occurs that gets the son into Amir's hands, and then the process of getting the two of them back to America is meant to take forever but then is conveniently sped up, but then we have to keep reading to get to the kite running tie-in from the beginning of the novel.
Certainly the themes of the novel are good; friendship and betrayal and how our lives are so based on our childhoods. But I've seen these in other places and I found nothing unexpected or haunting or extraordinary about this treatment.
Rating: 6/10
(Back to School Challenge, My Year of Reading Dangerously, Countdown Challenge: 2003)
See also:
The Bluestocking Society
Blue Archipelago
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
15 December 2009
The Yiddish Policemen's Union, by Michael Chabon (3 December — 15 December)

Meyer Landsman (or just Landsman, really) is our protagonist, and he starts the story off by being called out of his fleabag hotel room to another fleabag hotel room a few floors down to check out a dead body — because he's a cop, not because the hotel staff are weird or something. Landsman is off duty, but when he notices the chess board set up in the room, he takes the case anyway, due to his longstanding hate-hate relationship with his father and chess, among many other family issues. Of course, when Landsman goes to investigate the death, it turns out that the body didn't belong to just some random person, and in fact the biggest of the bigwigs in the area might not be pleased that Landsman is poking his nose in.
The first thing you need to know about this book is that it's got an alternate history going on. I may have known that at one time, but I had forgotten, and I spent a few pages trying to figure out why Chabon was insisting that three million Jews lived in Sitka, Alaska. When he mentions that, oh, there also aren't any in Jerusalem, I said, "Ohhhhhh," and was much better able to follow the story from there. So, yes. Israel hasn't happened, Sitka is where the Jews live because of some American niceness that is about to end and leave said three million Jews looking for somewhere else to go, and Landsman only has a few weeks to tie up (or, if need be, "tie up") all of his unsolved cases before he doesn't have a badge anymore. Woohoo!
Also, this book is less about the "who killed Mr. Dead Person" mystery than I would have liked, and much much more about all of Landsman's problems — a chess-wizard dad who didn't pass those genes on to his son, a sister that died in a plane accident a few months back, an ex-wife who once aborted a fetus for him and who is now his commanding officer, a cousin who once looked up to him enough to become his partner but who now just pities him, the alcoholism that lets him live with all of these people... the list goes on and on. Some of these problems intriguingly work themselves into Landsman's Dead Person investigation, some of them just hinder it.
I was kind of dissatisfied with the ending for reasons that I keep attempting to type and then erasing, because I'm not really sure what I didn't like about it. The various threads get tied up, for the most part, but I can't even remember what happened at the end even though I keep going back to it right now! I guess that's the moral of Chabon's story... weird things can happen, but at the end of the day it's unremarkable business as usual.
Rating: 7/10
(Countdown Challenge: 2007)
See also:
books i done read
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
11 December 2009
The Bermudez Triangle, by Maureen Johnson (10 December)

I first heard about Maureen Johnson and this book back when it was all a-being banned over the summer, and I thought to myself, "Banned book? I like reading banned books. Give it here!" and then I requested it from the library and then I got it and then I didn't read it for, like, three months and then I suddenly had a craving and I read it! Good job, self.
And in the first few pages, I was like, "Oh, no. This book is overdescriptive and overexpositive and if this keeps up I am going to just throw its hefty self¹ across the room because I can't deal with that again for a long time.
But it did not keep up, thank goodness, because I might have dislocated my shoulder in trying to heave it, and it was actually a very fun read!
The eponymous "triangle" is three high-school-senior girls who have been bffs(aeae) for some relatively long period of time. The summer before senior year, Nina goes off to a pre-college thing at Stanford, meets a guy, has a great time, and comes back to upstate New York ready to get her party on with Avery and Mel. Except that while Nina was gone, Avery and Mel met... each other, and now it's all sorts of awkward-pants up in this triangle. Nina tries to figure out how to deal with her two best friends dating, Avery tries to figure out why a straight girl like herself is dating a girl, and Mel sort of gets left out in the process.
Obviously, the whole book-banning thing is on account of the < whisper > lesbians < /whisper >, but except for the fact that Avery and Mel are girls, it's pretty much your basic high school story of one or more friends finding significant others and totally ditching Friend One. And even more so the story of two friends hooking up and then trying to figure out how to make the relationship work. And doing these things all while trying to graduate from high school, because that stupid homework never stops coming.
I thought this book was delightful, and I recommend it if you're in the mood for a reality-infused tale of love and friendship.
¹ As you can see from the image of the book cover I've included, the copy I ended up with is a "splashproof beach read!" with 100% waterproof cover and ridiculously stiff pages that must have been printed on, like, sixty-pound paper. It's intense, and I'm not sure that I would be willing to lug this thing to the beach anyway. But someone must have!
Rating: 8/10
(My Year of Reading Dangerously, Countdown Challenge: 2004)
See also:
things mean a lot
Book Nut
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
10 December 2009
Booking Through Thursday (10 December)
Today's Booking Through Thursday: "What items have you ever used as a bookmark? What is the most unusual item you’ve ever used or seen used?"
Oh, bookmarks. I love bookmarks. I think they are lovely. But it seems that every time I use a "real" bookmark, especially one that someone has given me or one that has special meaning, it manages to fall out of my book and I lose it forever! So even though I still love getting bookmarks and have a good collection of them, I won't use them if I plan to take the book out of my house (which I do for almost every book I read).
So instead I use... anything that's handy. Restaurant menus, receipts, envelopes, bills, checks (that I need to deposit!)... anything that is the right size to fit in the book I'm reading. I don't know about "unusual items", but I'd have to say that the oddest things I've ever put in my book were my and Scott's plane tickets to Florida in July, and that's because of the reason I put them there. See... I figured that I would keep better track of my library book than the very expensive pieces of paper I was using as a bookmark. This is my life. :)
Oh, bookmarks. I love bookmarks. I think they are lovely. But it seems that every time I use a "real" bookmark, especially one that someone has given me or one that has special meaning, it manages to fall out of my book and I lose it forever! So even though I still love getting bookmarks and have a good collection of them, I won't use them if I plan to take the book out of my house (which I do for almost every book I read).
So instead I use... anything that's handy. Restaurant menus, receipts, envelopes, bills, checks (that I need to deposit!)... anything that is the right size to fit in the book I'm reading. I don't know about "unusual items", but I'd have to say that the oddest things I've ever put in my book were my and Scott's plane tickets to Florida in July, and that's because of the reason I put them there. See... I figured that I would keep better track of my library book than the very expensive pieces of paper I was using as a bookmark. This is my life. :)
08 December 2009
The Reptile Room, by Lemony Snicket (4 December — 7 December)

Oh, audiobooks. Scott and I listened to about 2/3 of this book driving from Pittsburgh to Cleveland on Friday, but then we totally neglected it until yesterday. And then, when I was playing it on my computer and had lots of distractions? Terrible! I had to fold laundry just so I could focus on the book. Moral of this story? Save the audiobooks for the car. :)
But anyway, this is the second in the Series of Unfortunate Events, which I am apparently very slowly catching Scott up on. (Is there a rule about ending sentences with two prepositions?) Violet, Klaus, and Sunny, having recently avoided Violet's marriage to Count Olaf, get to go live with their herpetologist uncle, Montgomery Montgomery, and his large collection of snakes. Uncle Monty is everything that Olaf is not, and the orphans have a lovely time for the few days until Monty's new assistant, "Stephano" (really Count Olaf) shows up. Unfortunate things then happen to the kids, as you may have guessed.
This audiobook was a lot different than the one for The Bad Beginning; instead of different actors for all the voices, Tim Curry took on all of them, which made the tone rather a bit darker than in the first book. Curry also employed a hacking cough every time he spoke as Poe, which is correct, I suppose, but incredibly annoying (especially to Scott). It was still delightful, however, and I highly recommend again the series and the audiobooks.
Rating: 7/10
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
06 December 2009
Should you become a librarian?
Not if you believe this. This makes me a little sad. But a little more mad.
Firstly, and most obviously, because I am in library school. I'm certainly qualified to do other things, I like respect, and my cat has a historical cat name — crap. I guess I should just quit now, right?
That's the secondly: Seriously? Seriously? Because I want respect as a librarian (this seems to be the overarching theme of the flowchart), I can't be a librarian? So we're going to leave the profession to people that don't want respect anyway? This seems a little bit off to me.
Some of the commenters on the post find this flowchart funny, and maybe that's its intent. Because while I'm sure that public librarians, especially, find themselves feeling like overpaid babysitters at times, I'm also sure that there are times that make those librarians say, "This is why I became a librarian." Because otherwise, why would they still be going to work every day? But to have this flowchart out there, where non-librarians and potential librarians can see it (potentially) taken out of context... that's going to drive away some really great future librarians.
Other commenters note that librarians are going out of style, that they're being replaced by paraprofessionals, that soon enough everything is going to be automated so why should anyone enter library school right now? To that I say, because library science and information science are changing, too. MLIS students don't just learn how to shelve books. They learn how to use new information tools and how to teach others to use them. They learn how to put together and maintain digital libraries. They learn how to be a librarian of the future, not of the past that these commenters seem to be living in.
If your boss doesn't respect you, and especially if you don't respect your boss, figure out why not. If it's a personality clash; find a new boss. Get out of there. If you're doing something wrong, make it right. If your boss is doing something wrong, make it right. Take initiative.
If the customers are fighting you, and you are doing your best to help, you need to find a new way to help. Ask more questions. Put yourself in the customer's shoes. Don't be confrontational. Make the customer happy, even if you can't answer the question.
If your coworkers despise you, you are probably doing something wrong. Fix it. Or possibly you are doing everything right. Fix them, but be respectful about it.
If your mother cries and begs you to join a religious cult, your mother is crazy. Get her professional help. (Okay, this one's obviously meant to be humorous. But just in case.)
I agree with one (sadly anonymous) comment: "Instead of whining about being a librarian, go be something else." If you don't, there's a chance you'll soon become the disrespectful boss or co-worker that ruins things for everyone else. There are plenty of excited young students (I am one of them) who want to change your profession for the better. Let us do it.
Firstly, and most obviously, because I am in library school. I'm certainly qualified to do other things, I like respect, and my cat has a historical cat name — crap. I guess I should just quit now, right?
That's the secondly: Seriously? Seriously? Because I want respect as a librarian (this seems to be the overarching theme of the flowchart), I can't be a librarian? So we're going to leave the profession to people that don't want respect anyway? This seems a little bit off to me.
Some of the commenters on the post find this flowchart funny, and maybe that's its intent. Because while I'm sure that public librarians, especially, find themselves feeling like overpaid babysitters at times, I'm also sure that there are times that make those librarians say, "This is why I became a librarian." Because otherwise, why would they still be going to work every day? But to have this flowchart out there, where non-librarians and potential librarians can see it (potentially) taken out of context... that's going to drive away some really great future librarians.
Other commenters note that librarians are going out of style, that they're being replaced by paraprofessionals, that soon enough everything is going to be automated so why should anyone enter library school right now? To that I say, because library science and information science are changing, too. MLIS students don't just learn how to shelve books. They learn how to use new information tools and how to teach others to use them. They learn how to put together and maintain digital libraries. They learn how to be a librarian of the future, not of the past that these commenters seem to be living in.
If your boss doesn't respect you, and especially if you don't respect your boss, figure out why not. If it's a personality clash; find a new boss. Get out of there. If you're doing something wrong, make it right. If your boss is doing something wrong, make it right. Take initiative.
If the customers are fighting you, and you are doing your best to help, you need to find a new way to help. Ask more questions. Put yourself in the customer's shoes. Don't be confrontational. Make the customer happy, even if you can't answer the question.
If your coworkers despise you, you are probably doing something wrong. Fix it. Or possibly you are doing everything right. Fix them, but be respectful about it.
If your mother cries and begs you to join a religious cult, your mother is crazy. Get her professional help. (Okay, this one's obviously meant to be humorous. But just in case.)
I agree with one (sadly anonymous) comment: "Instead of whining about being a librarian, go be something else." If you don't, there's a chance you'll soon become the disrespectful boss or co-worker that ruins things for everyone else. There are plenty of excited young students (I am one of them) who want to change your profession for the better. Let us do it.
05 December 2009
Google vs. the Dewey Decimal System
The other day I found myself a bit confused by a question from a relative: "Do we even need the Dewey Decimal system anymore, now that we have Google?" Her question was mainly based on not knowing what Dewey Decimal is at all, but might it be a valid question?
Well, let's look at this. Google is, as I'm sure everyone who can read this knows, a search engine. If you're looking for, say, information on whether you get more wet by running or walking in the rain (this is an example given to me by the aforementioned questioner), you can use Google to find the answer, or at least potential answers on a variety of websites.
The Dewey Decimal Classification system, on the other hand (and along with its friend the Library of Congress Classification system, among others), is an organizational tool. It says that if you are looking for, say, an item about whether you get more wet by running or walking in the rain, you can find it on the shelf in probably the 530s (that's the lovely physics section) or so. But the trick is that sure, you can find books on physics in the 530s, but you might find the answer to this particular question somewhere else entirely. Like in the 613s in a book on health... I suppose you'd want the best way to avoid a cold, after all. You're really better off finding the book you want via the catalog (or Google, as I did here) and then heading for the shelf with decimal in hand.
So you cannot use Dewey directly to find an answer; that's what the books are for (which you can locate in your library using Dewey). You cannot use Google to find a book on a shelf (unless, of course, it gives you a call number), though you could use it to find a digitized book pretty quickly.
And that's another thing. Now that Google is digitizing books like a madsearchengine, I can see why Dewey and other classification schemes would be falling out of style. Who needs a call number for something intangible? But even with this mass move to the Web, libraries are still housing books that need to be organized. And even on the Web, people are interested in finding items that are related to the ones they are looking at now.
Why else would we have social bookmarking sites or an online encyclopedia that has at least a few good articles or even Google image search? Clearly, information wants to be organized (or at least we silly humans like it that way). Is there really a difference between using Dewey to sort books into categories like Technology and History and using tags to sort blog posts by the celebrities they mention?
No. Not really. So maybe Dewey and his decimals aren't going to prevail in the world of digitized books, where books can be "shelved" next to any other book that shares a tag (and really, that is a much nicer system to use!), conflicting topics be damned. But the concept behind Dewey, that of being able to sort and organize information, of being able to figure out which darn Google link is going to give you the answer you want... that's definitely going to stick around.
Well, let's look at this. Google is, as I'm sure everyone who can read this knows, a search engine. If you're looking for, say, information on whether you get more wet by running or walking in the rain (this is an example given to me by the aforementioned questioner), you can use Google to find the answer, or at least potential answers on a variety of websites.
The Dewey Decimal Classification system, on the other hand (and along with its friend the Library of Congress Classification system, among others), is an organizational tool. It says that if you are looking for, say, an item about whether you get more wet by running or walking in the rain, you can find it on the shelf in probably the 530s (that's the lovely physics section) or so. But the trick is that sure, you can find books on physics in the 530s, but you might find the answer to this particular question somewhere else entirely. Like in the 613s in a book on health... I suppose you'd want the best way to avoid a cold, after all. You're really better off finding the book you want via the catalog (or Google, as I did here) and then heading for the shelf with decimal in hand.
So you cannot use Dewey directly to find an answer; that's what the books are for (which you can locate in your library using Dewey). You cannot use Google to find a book on a shelf (unless, of course, it gives you a call number), though you could use it to find a digitized book pretty quickly.
And that's another thing. Now that Google is digitizing books like a madsearchengine, I can see why Dewey and other classification schemes would be falling out of style. Who needs a call number for something intangible? But even with this mass move to the Web, libraries are still housing books that need to be organized. And even on the Web, people are interested in finding items that are related to the ones they are looking at now.
Why else would we have social bookmarking sites or an online encyclopedia that has at least a few good articles or even Google image search? Clearly, information wants to be organized (or at least we silly humans like it that way). Is there really a difference between using Dewey to sort books into categories like Technology and History and using tags to sort blog posts by the celebrities they mention?
No. Not really. So maybe Dewey and his decimals aren't going to prevail in the world of digitized books, where books can be "shelved" next to any other book that shares a tag (and really, that is a much nicer system to use!), conflicting topics be damned. But the concept behind Dewey, that of being able to sort and organize information, of being able to figure out which darn Google link is going to give you the answer you want... that's definitely going to stick around.
04 December 2009
Sleeping Freshmen Never Lie, by David Lubar (2 December — 3 December)

I would never have picked this book up except that it was on my Back to School Challenge list, but I am really glad I did! Super cute.
Scott Hudson is a new freshman at a slightly stereotypical high school — the upperclassmen are bullies and lunch money thieves, the gym teacher is brutal, the Spanish teacher doesn't speak English. That's fine, because Scott is a pretty actual-typical guy. He's moderately into sports, he has a few close guy friends, and he loves to read lots of wonderful books. I like him already! The story follows Scott's escapades through freshman year, starting with a failed attempt or two or three at getting close to his crush, Julia, and also includes some diary entries written to Scott's unborn new sibling, Smelly (not its real name), on how to survive high school.
While it's true that Scott gets into a few more weird situations during his first year in high school than most people get into in four years, I liked that he kept a level head about all of them and dealt with them in a very adult manner. A few times that he acts like an idiot about things, but he figures that out pretty quickly. This is the kind of book I might get for my little brother in the future to keep him from getting in trouble. :)
And, of course, the best part of the book is all the English stuff! Scott's got a very "O Captain, my Captain" English teacher who is awesome and whom Scott also enjoys, so Scott gets into writing newspaper articles in various styles, from Tom Swifties to a diary entry, and Lubar works a lot of book references and name-dropping (The Princess Bride, anyone?) into the story.
I feel like this is one of those books that even people that don't like to read would get into as well, which is probably why it's on my high school's 9th-grade reading list. Perhaps we should experiment on a few non-readers... anyone know a fourteen-year-old with too much time on his hands?
Rating: 8/10
(Back to School Challenge, Countdown Challenge: 2005)
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
02 December 2009
Lord of the Flies, by William Golding (24 November — 1 December)

No, seriously. I was promised cannibalism, and there was none. Hinted potential cannibalism? Yes. Actual eating of humans? No. Totally unfair.
For this review I'm going to assume that a) you are unlike me and actually had to read this at some point in your schooling or b) you are like me and the book was spoiled for you by a person of the A persuasion. If neither of these are true, well, now you know there's no cannibalism?
Tiny plot summary: a bunch of boys get stranded on a jungle island after some mysterious circumstances. They start off working toward rescue, but then some kids break off to have fun on the island or hunt the native pigs. The latter group gets bigger, the former group gets smaller. The hunters get all worked up in a tizzy one night and kill one of the other boys, who they thought was a beast at the time. Oops. Then they get worked up in a bigger tizzy about wanting to run the island and they on-purpose kill the fat kid with the asthma. Mmmm, dashed brains (and still no cannibalism!). Then. Then. -twitch- Then, right before they kill (and possibly eat? Cannibalism, please!) the last of the relatively sane people, they get frickin' rescued. WHAT.
I mean, yeah, the book is old and British, and the writing is difficult to understand at times, and there is NO CANNIBALISM, but I was pretty much on board with the book the whole way through. I was intrigued by the slow descent into madness (well, faster for some) of the boys, especially the one who's trying to keep everything together. I was horrified but admiring of the sow "rape" scene (no, there is no sex with pigs. Or cannibalism). But then, right when we're about to find out just how deep into evil 12-year-olds can get... they get frickin' rescued. Jeez. The one time they keep the fire lit. Especially after all of the stuff in the beginning about how maybe there was an atomic bomb and probably everyone else is dead and all, the rescue really seemed completely out of place. I get it — the kids are all crazy and stuff until a real voice of authority comes, at which point they become good little Brits again. But I think the drama, the horror, and the irony would have been just that much more delicious if Golding had at least waited until AFTER Ralph was dead for the rescuers to come. Seriously.
The other problem I had with this book is that while I liked specific scenes (the "rape", Simon talking with the Lord of the Flies, the parachutist/Beast nodding in the breeze, any time Ralph says "sucks to your ass-mar"), I had a lot of trouble remembering any character that wasn't on a page for a while. Jack, Ralph, Piggy, sure. But everyone else I had to flip back and re-learn who they were all the time. I don't know if that was Golding's intention (kids are interchangeable?), but it was really rather confusing.
But I did actually like this book, possibly because I didn't have to read it for school. :) Funny how that works.
Rating: 7/10
(My Year of Reading Dangerously)
See also:
Rhinoa's Ramblings
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
01 December 2009
Invisible I, by Stella Lennon (30 November)

One (the only?) good thing about Scott getting sick on vacation is that I got to spend yesterday finishing up some homework and reading! Yay, reading. I hope he's not still deathly ill today, but I did bring a lot of books with me....
Right. Anyway. The book I decided to curl up with yesterday is called Invisible I, and I had not heard of this book before I saw its bright pink cover on the YA shelves at my local library. As you might know, I am attracted to shiny things and things in neon colors, so clearly this book was for me! The inside cover sounded cool, too, talking about a high schooler disappearing and her only friend(s) (more on that in a second) having to go out looking for her. There is also an interactive website for the book, where apparently people can go to pretend to be Amanda's friends and potentially change the outcome of the series. I declare that pretty cool.
The plot! Our protagonist, Callie Leary, is called into the vice principal's office one day, and though she thinks it might be news about her disappeared mother, it's not. No, instead, Callie's friend Amanda has cut school and played a prank, which is not unusual except that this time Amanda has implicated Callie in the crime. Oh, and these two other people that Callie once associated with before she became an I-Girl (read: Heather [read: Mean Girl, if you're a young'un]), but whom she'd rather not be seen with anywhere, let alone the vice principal's office. The veep wants info on where Amanda went, but the three kids just don't know... until they start getting clues from Amanda, who has apparently not run too far away and who apparently has plans to make Callie, Hal, and Nia BFFs for life. The search begins!
It's a fun book. I remarked on the Twitters yesterday that it reminds me of Paper Towns, Mean Girls, and Veronica Mars rolled into one — Paper Towns for the friend what runs away and leaves clues behind, Mean Girls for the clique aspect and the "let's wear green on Saturday" note (though there are some things that make a couple of I-Girls more Heathers than Mean Girls), and Veronica Mars for the disappeared mother and the multi-layered mysteries that it seems our intrepid heros will be solving. This is a good combination, but it does make the plotting a little choppy as the author jumps around.
Speaking of the author, I guess I should have added The 39 Clues to yesterday's list, because a) there's a different author for every book (though in this case there's a pen name for the series) and b) it's all interactive and stuff and some clues show up on the aforementioned website. Now I'm wondering what a collectible card game for The Amanda Project would look like. I am intrigued.
Rating: 8/10
(Countdown Challenge: 2009)
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
30 November 2009
November Wrap-up
Another month of reading done... my, how time flies. I feel like I haven't read anything this month, what with all of the schoolwork and such taking over my life, but I seem to have done pretty well! Good work, self. :) I'm on vacation right now, so I think I'll leave it at that and get back to the relaxing and the reading. Lovely times.
The numbers!
Days spent reading: 24
Books read: 9
...in fiction: 8
...in memoir: 1
...in mystery: 2
...in thriller: 1
...in fantasy: 4
...in classics: 1
...in young adult: 4
...in children's: 1
Series reads: His Dark Materials, Leviathan, The Amanda Project
Favorite book: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time 10/10
Challenges
My Year of Reading Dangerously Challenge: +2 books for 9/12
The Baker Street Challenge: +0 books for 2/3
Back to School Challenge: +1 books for 1/4
Critical Monkey Challenge: +0 books for 1/6
Countdown Challenge: +6 books for 20/55
The numbers!
Days spent reading: 24
Books read: 9
...in fiction: 8
...in memoir: 1
...in mystery: 2
...in thriller: 1
...in fantasy: 4
...in classics: 1
...in young adult: 4
...in children's: 1
Series reads: His Dark Materials, Leviathan, The Amanda Project
Favorite book: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time 10/10
Challenges
My Year of Reading Dangerously Challenge: +2 books for 9/12
The Baker Street Challenge: +0 books for 2/3
Back to School Challenge: +1 books for 1/4
Critical Monkey Challenge: +0 books for 1/6
Countdown Challenge: +6 books for 20/55
26 November 2009
Support Your Local Library Challenge 2010

One more challenge, and then I think I'm done for a while (famous last words?). But
this one is practically not a challenge, as it simply requires me to check out books from the library, which I do, like, all the time. :) I am going to super-size myself and commit to checking out 100 library books next year — I probably have already done that this year, so no prob!
The list, as it happens:
1. First Lord's Fury, by Jim Butcher (Review)
2. The Knife of Never Letting Go, by Patrick Ness (Review)
3. The Secret of the Old Clock, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
4. Shades of Grey, by Jasper Fforde (Review)
5. The Secret Hour, by Scott Westerfeld (Review)
6. Schrödinger's Ball, by Adam Felber (Review)
7. The Hidden Staircase, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
8. The Bungalow Mystery, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
9. Cake Wrecks, by Jen Yates (Review)
10. Boomsday, by Christopher Buckley (Review)
11. The Mystery at Lilac Inn, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
12. The Lightning Thief, by Rick Riordan (Review)
13. How We Decide, by Jonah Lehrer (Review)
14. The Secret of Shadow Ranch, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
15. Wife of the Gods, by Kwei Quartey (Review)
16. Across the Nightingale Floor, by Lian Hearn (Review)
17. The Secret of Red Gate Farm, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
18. The Clue in the Diary, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
19. The Wide Window, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
20. The Miserable Mill, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
21. Cat Breaking Free, by Shirley Rousseau Murphy (Review)
22. The Austere Academy, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
23. The Ersatz Elevator, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
24. The Weed That Strings the Hangman's Bag, by Alan Bradley (Review)
25. This World We Live In, by Susan Beth Pfeffer (Review)
26. Nancy's Mysterious Letter, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
27. Meanwhile, by Jason Shiga (Review)
28. Déjà Dead, by Kathy Reichs (Review)
29. Lord Sunday, by Garth Nix (Review)
30. The Summer Before, by Ann M. Martin (Review)
31. Sharp Objects, by Gillian Flynn (Review)
32. The Pox Party, by M.T. Anderson (Review)
33. American Born Chinese, by Gene Luen Yang (Review)
34. The Maze Runner, by James Dashner (Review)
35. The Sign of the Twisted Candles, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
36. Tender Morsels, by Margo Lanagan (Review)
37. The Monstrumologist, by Rick Yancey (Review)
38. Going Bovine, by Libba Bray (Review)
39. The Compound, by S.A. Bodeen (Review)
40. The Word Snoop, by Ursula Dubosarsky (Review)
41. The Plain Janes, by Cecil Castellucci and Jim Rugg (Review)
42. Thirteen Reasons Why, by Jay Asher (Review)
43. How I Live Now, by Meg Rosoff (Review)
44. The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things, by Carolyn Mackler (Review)
45. If I Stay, by Gayle Forman (Review)
46. I Am a Genius of Unspeakable Evil and I Want to Be Your Class President, by Josh Lieb (Review)
47. Death Note Vol. 1, by Tsugumi Ohba (Review)
48. A Short History of Nearly Everything, by Bill Bryson (Review)
49. Last Exit to Normal, by Michael Harmon (Review)
50. Catalyst, by Laurie Halse Anderson (Review)
51. The Death of Jayson Porter, by Jaime Adoff (Review)
52. Death Note Vol. 2, by Tsugumi Ohba
53. Janes in Love, by Cecil Castellucci and Jim Rugg (Review)
54. Almost Astronauts, by Tanya Lee Stone (Review)
55. I Hadn't Meant to Tell You This, by Jacqueline Woodson (Review)
56. Hold Still, by Nina LaCour (Review)
57. Password to Larkspur Lane, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
58. Death Note Vol. 3, by Tsugumi Ohba (Review)
59. In the Woods, by Tana French (Review)
60. The Clue of the Broken Locket, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
61. The Likeness, by Tana French (Review)
62. Faithful Place, by Tana French (Review)
63. The Chalk Circle Man, by Fred Vargas (Review)
64. Tell-All, by Chuck Palahniuk (Review)
65. The Physics of the Buffyverse, by Jennifer Ouellette (Review)
66. The Invisible Gorilla, by Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons (Review)
67. Heck: Where the Bad Kids Go, by Dale E. Basye (Review)
68. The Forest of Hands and Teeth, by Carrie Ryan (Review)
69. Foiled, by Jane Yolen (Review)
70. Death Note Vol. 4, by Tsugumi Ohba (Review)
71. Fingersmith, by Sarah Waters (Review)
72. The House of Tomorrow, by Peter Bognanni (Review)
73. The Black Minutes, by Martín Solares (Review)
74. The Name of the Wind, by Patrick Rothfuss (Review)
75. Mockingjay, by Suzanne Collins (Review)
76. Biting the Wax Tadpole, by Elizabeth Little (Review)
77. Mildred Pierce, by James M. Cain (Review)
78. The Quickening Maze, by Adam Foulds (Review)
79. High Fidelity, by Nick Hornby (Review)
80. Death Note Vol. 5, by Tsugumi Ohba (Review)
81. Orion You Came and You Took All My Marbles, by Kira Henehan (Review)
82. Word Freak, by Stefan Fatsis (Review)
83. The Dead-Tossed Waves, by Carrie Ryan (Review)
84. The Postman Always Rings Twice, by James M. Cain (Review)
85. Double Indemnity, by James M. Cain (Review)
86. Y: The Last Man Book 1, by Brian K. Vaughan (Review)
87. The Haunting of Hill House, by Shirley Jackson (Review)
88. When You Reach Me, by Rebecca Stead (Review)
89. The Unit, by Ninni Holmqvist (Review)
90. Y: The Last Man Book 2, by Brian K. Vaughan (Review)
91. The Little Stranger, by Sarah Waters (Review)
92. Earth (The Book): A Visitor's Guide to the Human Race (Review)
93. Y: The Last Man Book 3, by Brian K. Vaughan (Review)
94. Y: The Last Man Book 4, by Brian K. Vaughan (Review)
95. One For the Money, by Janet Evanovich (Review)
96. Mr. Peanut, by Adam Ross (Review)
97. The Night Bookmobile, by Audrey Niffenegger (Review)
98. The Vile Village, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
99. Behemoth, by Scott Westerfeld
100. The Hostile Hospital, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
101. The Carnivorous Carnival, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
102. The Alchemist, by Paulo Coelho (Review)
103. Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life, by Bryan Lee O'Malley (Review)
104. Never Let Me Go, by Kazuo Ishiguro (Review)
105. The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook, by Eleanor Davis (Review)
106. How to Be Alone, by Jonathan Franzen (Review)
107. Death Note Vol. 6, by Tsugumi Ohba (Review)
108. The Caretaker of Lorne Field, by Dave Zeltserman (Review)
25 November 2009
Nancy Drew Challenge

I don't know about you, but I was once obsessed with a certain girl sleuth. I have definitely read all of the books for this challenge already, but they are totally worth reading again (and they're short, so it shouldn't be too hard)!
The goal here is to read all 56 yellow hardcover versions of the Nancy Drew stories by the end of 2010. I'll plop them here in this post as I read them!
1. The Secret of the Old Clock (Review)
2. The Hidden Staircase (Review)
3. The Bungalow Mystery (Review)
4. The Mystery at Lilac Inn (Review)
5. The Secret of Shadow Ranch (Review)
6. The Secret of Red Gate Farm (Review)
7. The Clue in the Diary (Review)
8. Nancy's Mysterious Letter (Review)
9. The Sign of the Twisted Candles (Review)
10. Password to Larkspur Lane (Review)
11. The Clue of the Broken Locket (Review)
24 November 2009
The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger (21 November)

So... I never read this in school. Ever. Which is apparently some kind of sacrilege on the part of my school district, because it seems like everyone else has read this! Alas. And I think my teachers' oversight has led to me not liking this book as much as the aforementioned "everyone else" seems to. I don't know.
I think that an appropriate subtitle for this novel would be "Three Days in the Life of Holden Caulfield," because (unless I miscounted the number of days, which is possible), that's what this book is. Holden gets kicked out of school, decides not to wait until the semester break to come home and skips out early, stays in a hotel in his hometown of New York City to avoid his parents until the official expulsion letter comes, decides to run off to the West Coast, and then doesn't.
I hope that didn't spoil it for you, but it shouldn't since the story is in the details. Example: Holden spends a lot of time at the beginning of the story describing just how ordinary (and lame) his school and his schoolmates are, including a very squick-inducing description of a boy with oozing acne lying down on Holden's pillow. -twitch- That's gross, dudes.
This book really reminded me of a compacted On the Road, with the general dissatisfaction with life and the grand plans that don't really come to fruition. It didn't quite resonate with me so much, though, which might be a function of being eight years older and wiser than Holden and thus having survived the crap that is high school. I don't know. Opinions?
Rating: 7/10
(Reading Dangerously Challenge)
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
23 November 2009
Musing Mondays (23 November)
Today's Musing Mondays: What books did you read while in school? Were there any that you particular liked, or even hated? Did any become lifelong favourites?
This sort of goes off of yesterday's Flashback Challenge post... how convenient! I've read a lot of books for school, probably the same number that I've "read" for school, but I really only remember the ones I loved and the ones I absolutely hated. You know how that goes.
Of the ones I enjoyed, I'd have to put To Kill a Mockingbird, The Outsiders, The Giver, and Bridge to Terabithia at the top of my list. The first one I read in ninth grade, the second and third in eighth, and the last in, like, third. Not sure about that one. They are all wonderful in different ways, but I would recommend them to anyone.
On my hated list, which includes books that I've "read" (due to the aforementioned hate), I would put up Return of the Native as a strong first, then A Tale of Two Cities and The Power of Myth, all read or "read" at some point during high school. The last one's not even a proper book, for crying out loud!
This sort of goes off of yesterday's Flashback Challenge post... how convenient! I've read a lot of books for school, probably the same number that I've "read" for school, but I really only remember the ones I loved and the ones I absolutely hated. You know how that goes.
Of the ones I enjoyed, I'd have to put To Kill a Mockingbird, The Outsiders, The Giver, and Bridge to Terabithia at the top of my list. The first one I read in ninth grade, the second and third in eighth, and the last in, like, third. Not sure about that one. They are all wonderful in different ways, but I would recommend them to anyone.
On my hated list, which includes books that I've "read" (due to the aforementioned hate), I would put up Return of the Native as a strong first, then A Tale of Two Cities and The Power of Myth, all read or "read" at some point during high school. The last one's not even a proper book, for crying out loud!
22 November 2009
Flashback Challenge

So, as we might recall from the Summer Lovin' Challenge, I am not much of a book re-reader.
Even when I love a book so much that I purchase it, it tends to take me a while (if ever) to get around to reading it again. This is a sad thing.
And now that I'm on GoodReads, I find myself marking down books I've read long ago but that I could not for the life of me tell you what they're about. Even the ones that I remember enjoying as a kid! No idea! Crazy! !!!
So I'm going to enter this challenge on the "Literati" level, which is the level in which I read more than six books... I'm going to try to read one per month, but I think "more than six" is a good goal. :)
A list of books that I should probably re-read:
The Secret Garden, by Frances Hodgson Burnett
Anne of Green Gables, by L.M. Montgomery
Harriet the Spy, by Louise Fitzhugh
To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
Life of Pi, by Yann Martel
Matilda, by Roald Dahl
Bridge to Terabithia, by Katherine Paterson
The Outsiders, by S.E. Hinton
...um, that's not 12, but I'm sure I'll think of more as I go. :)
The re-reads:
1. The Secret of the Old Clock, by Carolyn Keene (Review)
2. The Wide Window, by Lemony Snicket (Review)
3. Life of Pi, by Yann Martel (Review)
4. The Giver, by Lois Lowry (Review)
5. In the Woods, by Tana French (Review)
6. Matilda, by Roald Dahl (Review)
7. Harriet the Spy, by Louise Fitzhugh (Review)
20 November 2009
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, by Mark Haddon (19 November)

Said flap (or, at least, the back cover of the paperback): "Christopher John Francis Boone knows all the countries of the world and their capitals and every prime number up to 7,057. He relates well to animals but has no understanding of human emotions. He cannot stand to be touched. And he detests the color yellow.
This improbable story of Christopher's quest to investigate the suspicious death of a neighborhood dog makes for one of the most captivating, unusual, and widely heralded novels in recent years."
You know I'm a sucker for a prime number.
But I shouldn't make too much of the flap copy, because the book isn't really about the fact that Christopher knows a lot of things. Or really about the dog. But the dog is important.
The book opens with Christopher finding the dog, his neighbor's poodle, in his neighbor's front yard. The dog is not just dead, it's murdered, as it has a garden fork sticking straight through it into the ground. When the neighbor comes out of her house and finds Christopher cradling her dead dog, she calls the cops, and a misunderstanding between the cop (trying to pry the boy away) and Christopher (an autistic boy who doesn't like to be touched) leads to the latter spending a little time in a jail cell. Christopher decides that he is going to be a detective like his favorite, Sherlock Holmes, and solve the mystery of the dead poodle, even though his dad doesn't like him poking into other people's business (a phrase that Christopher doesn't even understand), but soon enough more mysteries turn up and Christopher is left to sort them all out.
I really loved Christopher; he is a fairly high-functioning autistic who is prone to some violent outbursts, which is bad, but who has some really insightful takes on humans and their silly emotions, like so: "All the other children at my school are stupid. Except I'm not meant to call them stupid, even though that is what they are. I'm meant to say that they have learning difficulties or that they have special needs. But this is stupid because everyone has learning difficulties because learning to speak French or understanding relativity is difficult and also everyone has special needs, like Father, who has to carry around a little packet of artificial sweetening tablets around with him to put in his coffee to stop him from getting fat, or Mrs. Peters, who wears a beige-colored hearing aid, or Siobahn, who has glasses so thick that they give you a headache if you borrow them, and none of these people are Special Needs, even if they hae special needs."
He may like his run-on sentences, but they are so good I will forgive them! There are also footnotes. And diagrams. And an appendix. It is a good time.
The story is really about how Christopher can reconcile the truths he knows with the lies that everyone else tells. Christopher doesn't lie — well, he has perfected the fine art of omission, but he doesn't outright lie — and even metaphors and novels leave him incredibly confused. So when certain truths pop up that contradict truths he thought he knew, well, that's no good. Time to count to fifty or groan or hit something.
I thought the autism aspect was really interesting; Haddon has apparently worked with autistic kids, so I'm going to assume that he's got a bit of an "in" to the autistic mind. And Christopher's thoughts aren't really different from the ones I might have, except that they aren't as fine-tuned to other people's emotions or to the dance of politeness that we tend to play. I could totally empathize with his confusion about what was going on in his world, and at the same time I could totally empathize with his father and the other people in his life who simply could not understand why he couldn't understand.
Such a great book. I'm glad I finally got around to reading it!
Rating: 10/10
(Back to School Challenge, Countdown Challenge: 2003)
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
18 November 2009
Top Producer, by Norb Vonnegut (16 November — 17 November)

So. I, um, I really didn't like this book. To reference my least favorite book ever one more time, because it's just really useful for comparisons: Castle I kept reading because even though the writing hurt my brain, the plot line seemed to be going somewhere. Of course, then the plot line went somewhere worse than I could ever have imagined and then I was rather upset that I'd bothered to read on.
Top Producer, on the other hand... the writing hurt my brain (examples to follow), and the "plot line" was tenuous at best, but I soldiered on because it was a book club book and I was not going to let it defeat me. Then the solution to the mystery was actually pretty okay, and I was not terribly upset about having read the book, and then the end bit was crap and now I'm just feeling incredibly ambivalent about the whole thing.
Right. Story. Grove O'Rourke is a "top producer" (shocking), which I promise you you will never forget because I'm pretty sure those words are placed together at least twice on every page. Ahem. Sorry. A top producer, apparently, works at a... brokerage firm? I'm not clear on that part... and helps people manage their money possibly by trading stocks but also possibly by putting it into funds, but also possibly by swearing at people a lot. Or something. Anyway. Grove's friend Charlie Kelemen throws this big birthday bash for his wife at the New England Aquarium at the beginning of the novel, and pretty soon a bunch of men are wearing burqas and Kelemen is swimming with the sharks. And then eaten by them. Mmmm, finance guru is delicious in the evening.
Grove is understandably upset, as his wife and child were killed in a car accident 18 months earlier. I would call this a spoiler, but as soon as he started being vague about that thing that happened 18 months ago (which continues for many pages before resolving, and then for many pages after that) I knew that his wife had died. Right. So when Charlie's wife Sam phones up saying that she's somehow got just $600 to her name (as opposed to the $53,000 she claims that her husband could spend in a month), Grove naturally dives in to help, both because Sam is a friend and because he has apparently decided that he's a detective. I don't know.
And, of course, as these money things go, not everything is as it seems and suddenly — wait, no, wrong book — very slowly Grove finds out that maybe Charlie isn't the person everyone thought he was. Goody.
I think that the biggest problem with this book, the biggest, is that the finance and lingo in it is really really really dumbed down, to the point where Vonnegut feels the need to explain that "sitch" means "situation" or that holding your hands six inches apart and palms in is a nonverbal indication of size or even (and often) that top producers make so much money because their jobs are stressful and difficult.
Oh, and Vonnegut throws in gems like this, which make me hope beyond hope that he wrote this as a satire: "Brevity was a time-honored tradition on Wall Street. A one-name greeting spoke volumes. It said in effect, I'm really fucking busy. So quit screwing around and get to the point. Time is money, and I'm not here for my health or your small talk. Now, what do you have?" -twitch-
Things I liked about this novel: the end was okay. Vonnegut doesn't really do that red herring thing where everyone is a suspect and then they aren't; he just sort of builds up to the reveal and then the reveal is more than you expect, and I appreciated that. But then he does that thing I hate where he does the "Now, slightly into the future, here's what all of my characters are doing!" rundown, and throws in a completely unneccesary and not fully realized love story that serves no purpose but to help make this book about 200 pages longer than it really should have been. Brevity, my right foot.
Mary: I told you not to read this! No complaining at me, you still have to read the book.
Rating: 2/10
(Countdown Challenge: 2009)
See also:
[your link here]
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
17 November 2009
Leviathan, by Scott Westerfeld (14 November — 15 November)

Maybe I forgot to tell myself that I love steampunk, I don't know. Leviathan starts right at the beginning of World War I, immediately after Franz and Sophie are assassinated (by poisoning, this time). The usual suspects go off to war, but it's not trench warfare on the menu today, but a machines vs. nature showdown. See, in this world, there are Clankers and Darwinists (and neutral people, of course, but they aren't as exciting). The former love their giant walking machines; the latter love their giant whale zeppelins. And when I say whale, I mean that oh, also, Darwin has figured out DNA in this world and the Darwinists evolve their zeppelins and the like by splicing together interesting bits to make battle animals and flying implements that are alive. That's pretty darn cool. Let's work on that. :)
So the background of the story is excellent, and then the two main characters, who share chapter-time, are pretty awesome themselves. We first meet Alek, the only son of Franz and Sophie, who is whisked away in the middle of the night to go hide from the people who'd rather he be dead. Of course, he's fifteen, so he's not too good at the "shut up and hide" aspect of this whisking. Our other protagonist is Deryn, a girl who is passing as a boy (called Dylan) so that she can join the Air Service and go flying. She is also fifteen and a titch full of herself, but she thinks awesome things like, "Hey, all you sods, I can fly and you can't! A natural airman, in case you haven't noticed. And in conclusion, I'd like to add that I'm a girl and you can all get stuffed!" Deryn's kind of a badass.
Oh. And the illustrations are magnificent. As are the endpapers. Keith Thompson is my new artist-crush. :)
This is the first in another trilogy, I think; I can't wait for the next one!
Rating: 9/10
(Countdown Challenge: 2009)
See also:
Blogging for a Good Book
Pass me yours, if you've got 'em.
16 November 2009
Musing Mondays (16 November)
Today's Musing Mondays: With the holiday season now upon us, have you left any hint – subtle or otherwise – for books family and friends might buy you for Christmas? Do you like to receive books, or do you prefer certificates so you can choose your own?
Hmm. Well, I do like getting books, that is a fact, but for some reason people never seem to know what to get me! I've taken to giving my parents selections from my to-own list, so as to spend less on books myself, and of course there's always a person or two throwing a gift card my way.
As to preferring books or gift certificates... that is a really tough one! Let's weigh the pros and cons:
Books: 1) Are awesome. 2) Mean that the gifter has actually thought about what I would like! 3) Give me new things to read that I might not have got for myself.
Gift certificates: 1) Are also awesome. 2) Mean that I don't have to worry about returning books I've already got. 3) Don't give me that sense of obligation to read something because someone gave it to me.
Well. Blast. I think I do prefer books overall, mostly for that number 3. Generally, when I buy books for myself they are books that I've already read and loved; when I get books from other people I get to have shiny new stories! And if the book is a dud, I can trade it in for credit at Mac's Backs and then I can have shiny new stories for used-book prices! Delightful.
Hmm. Well, I do like getting books, that is a fact, but for some reason people never seem to know what to get me! I've taken to giving my parents selections from my to-own list, so as to spend less on books myself, and of course there's always a person or two throwing a gift card my way.
As to preferring books or gift certificates... that is a really tough one! Let's weigh the pros and cons:
Books: 1) Are awesome. 2) Mean that the gifter has actually thought about what I would like! 3) Give me new things to read that I might not have got for myself.
Gift certificates: 1) Are also awesome. 2) Mean that I don't have to worry about returning books I've already got. 3) Don't give me that sense of obligation to read something because someone gave it to me.
Well. Blast. I think I do prefer books overall, mostly for that number 3. Generally, when I buy books for myself they are books that I've already read and loved; when I get books from other people I get to have shiny new stories! And if the book is a dud, I can trade it in for credit at Mac's Backs and then I can have shiny new stories for used-book prices! Delightful.
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