Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Just right.

I have terrible timing. So it's always with a little bit of astonishment when the stars seem to align and miraculously, the pieces fit together and, as in this case, I read the right book at the right time.
I've just finished David Levithan's Wide Awake and before I rave and quote this book, I have to say how much I've enjoyed a couple of other books he's written, Boy Meets Boy and Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist, written with Rachel Cohn. Levithan's novels have moments of sheer beauty in his writing and his storytelling is easy, flowing, and unrushed. I admired him as a writer and his newest book allows me to heap more praise on him.
Wide Awake takes place in the near future--a gay Jew has just been elected President of the United States. Duncan is a gay boy who has helped on the campaign in his home state of New Jersey and when the election is challenged by the governor in the state of Kansas, the President-elect calls on his supporters to go to Kansas. So Duncan and his friends go.
There is more background to this future, and Duncan explains it rather well in this paragraph:
"Some members of Congress had wanted to start a Second New Deal to get unemployed people back to work, restoring some of our national parkland and renovating schools and libraries. But instead the President started his War to End All Wars, and a lot of the unemployed men and women got shipped away to 'defend democracy' and 'defeat evil.' It was as if the President had decided that superpowers needed to follow the same plotlines as superheroes, that in order to be good you had to be actively, constantly fighting evil. So he sent our troops to Africa, which had been so debilitated by AIDS and other diseases as we watched, and to the Middle East, trying yet again to create the area in our own image. He left Europe alone because they were enough like us. And he left China alone because China would have bombed us to oblivion if we'd tried anything. The plan was poorly drawn, and as a result the WTEAW was drawn out and drawn out and drawn out, until enough people had died and the economy had recovered enough for the President to declare a victory only he believed." (page 116)
I watched the State of the Union this evening, which is why I found finishing this book so appropriately timed.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Quick post

Preparing for storytime. Ran across this fabulous book entitled The Unexpectedly Bad Hair of Barcelona Smith by Keith Graves and thought others might appreciate this bit of wisdom: "The prudent choice, strangely, appeared to be to simply accept that he was out of control. So Barcelona Smith allowed himself to gasp. 'Eeek.' It felt great, as though he had eaten a warm apple muffin."
Isn't that fabulous? I like the idea of simply accepting one is out of control. It's not easy.
All right, back to the stacks.

Friday, January 12, 2007

Weeee-hoo, Hoss!

So I've read Wintersmith. I really like Terry Pratchett, and once I've whittled down my ridiculously large pile of books I have checked out (and the pile I've bought that I've yet to read), I might pick up a few more of his titles.
I've just finished (last night) Alabama Moon by Watt Key. Crazy book. I've found the best way to describe it is: Hatchet meets the Dukes of Hazzard. Survival skills in the wild, living under the stars, hunting food, and setting traps meet crazy Southern boys driving around like hell on wheels in a clay pit, bustin' out of boys' homes, whippin' up on people and running from the Law. It is a lot of fun to read. Even touching at moments.
Next I'm on to A Dog for Life by L.S. Matthews about brothers, one of whom is sick and so their dog needs to be sent away but the other brother fights to keep the dog safe. I'll know more when I actually start it.
I was super excited because one of the books I ordered for purchase through work finally came in and it's the third of a trilogy. I'm looking forward to starting that one (it's yet another take on P&P--mock me if you will, but I enjoy them).
That's about all for library news, currently. I am enjoying purchasing dvds and popular music cds for the library. So until I finish another book (or remember to update),
happy reading.