One of my favorite books from this year is The Painted Girls by Cathy Marie Buchanan. One look at the beautiful cover showing a Degas
painting and I was hooked on this story about three sisters living in
poverty in Paris in the late 1800s. Their father has died due to poor
working conditions and their depressed mother has slipped into an
absinthe addiction to escape the drudgery of trying to take care of her
family as a laundress. The girls are forced to work as dancers at the
Paris Opera, earning just enough to survive, but the competition is
fierce and the oldest sister, Antoinette, loses her position and falls
into a relationship with a young man who is accused of murder.
The
other sisters are also working as dancers with 14 year old Marie
showing the most promise. She is naturally gifted but has trouble
asserting herself over the other dancers. When the painter Degas takes
notice of her, she finds another way to earn money and begins posing for
him in his studio and must walk the line between her desperation and
moral standards.
The book is told from both girls’ point of view
and portrays the seamier side of Paris and the struggle between survival
and maintaining your dignity in a society that values only beauty and
opulence. The descriptions of the city and Parisian life are both
beautiful and horrible, but the Van Goethem sister’s tenacity and spunk
will keep you engaged throughout the book.
~Michelle, Circulation
If you're looking for more works of historical fiction inspired by the works of great artists, check out this read alike post for The Painted Girls.
Friday, December 6, 2013
Monday, December 2, 2013
Staff Review: Innocence by Dean Koontz
What does it mean to be human? Is there such a thing as a “damaged” person? If you want to explore these questions while reading an eerie, enchanting tale, then I recommend reading Innocence by Dean Koontz. I came to this book having read his Frankenstein and Odd Thomas series, but this was his first stand alone book for me. Innocence has the endearing traits I’ve come to expect from Koontz, like characters I loved and respected and villains who were, well, outrageously villainous. Also some utterly creepy marionettes . . .
In Innocence, we meet Addison Goodheart, a being so deformed that he is rejected on sight by any person he encounters. Even so, he is an essentially happy, if lonely, man who deeply loves humanity even though he is rejected by it. He lives in hiding in an unspecified American metropolis that feels a little bit surreal and very mysterious. When he dares to make a real connection with another person, he begins an adventure of discovery and danger.
You shouldn’t read this book if you like easy answers. You’ll be asking yourself, “What IS this guy’s deal anyway?” In fact this question is so compelling that you will keep reading through all the (sometimes slow) backstory and present day until you find out. Or don’t. All I will say is that if you keep reading, you won’t be disappointed. It’s an intriguing book with a very satisfying ending.
~Laura, Circulation
Advance reader's review copy was provided by the publisher.
If you're looking for more Dean Koontz, check out our Dean Koontz read alike post.
In Innocence, we meet Addison Goodheart, a being so deformed that he is rejected on sight by any person he encounters. Even so, he is an essentially happy, if lonely, man who deeply loves humanity even though he is rejected by it. He lives in hiding in an unspecified American metropolis that feels a little bit surreal and very mysterious. When he dares to make a real connection with another person, he begins an adventure of discovery and danger.
You shouldn’t read this book if you like easy answers. You’ll be asking yourself, “What IS this guy’s deal anyway?” In fact this question is so compelling that you will keep reading through all the (sometimes slow) backstory and present day until you find out. Or don’t. All I will say is that if you keep reading, you won’t be disappointed. It’s an intriguing book with a very satisfying ending.
~Laura, Circulation
Advance reader's review copy was provided by the publisher.
If you're looking for more Dean Koontz, check out our Dean Koontz read alike post.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
December Magazine of the Month
It's December, and that means holiday entertaining! Our magazines of the month will help you get the celebrations started.
Martha Stewart Living is part of our Zinio collection of digital magazines. Our book collection includes a number of her cookbooks and other helpful titles. We'll assume that you are already familiar with Martha's empire, but if not, check out her website to learn more: www.marthastewart.com
Bon Appetit is our second magazine of the month. With a focus on food and entertaining, this magazine has been in publication since 1956. Their website includes recipes, tips, tricks, and recommendations: www.bonappetit.com
Martha Stewart Living is part of our Zinio collection of digital magazines. Our book collection includes a number of her cookbooks and other helpful titles. We'll assume that you are already familiar with Martha's empire, but if not, check out her website to learn more: www.marthastewart.com
Bon Appetit is our second magazine of the month. With a focus on food and entertaining, this magazine has been in publication since 1956. Their website includes recipes, tips, tricks, and recommendations: www.bonappetit.com
Monday, November 25, 2013
A Review of Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill
I read basically the entire novel.1
I tried to read it in a single sitting, but my wife kept yelling at me.2
I kept getting lost in the index.3
It's pithy. Very pithy. Maybe too damn pithy.4
It's a novel about a writer who wants to write a novel.5
It is very much about how it feels to have bedbugs.6
It's as compact and mysterious as a charred heel bone.7
It's as if Roz Chast slowly lost her sense of humor.8
If your average book is a sandwich, this is a panini maker.9
Michael May
___
Notes
1. My favorite review of Dept. of Speculation was written by Cameron on Goodreads: "I underlined basically the entire novel."
2. The publisher's synopsis says, "Exceptionally lean and compact, Dept. of Speculation can be read in a single sitting, but there are enough bracing emotional insights in these pages to fill a much longer novel." While my first reading was interrupted, I did manage to finish it the next evening. Maggie and I have been married for nineteen years, so I can relate to whisper fights, the "Little Theater of Hurt Feelings," and even hair pulling. This especially rings true:
The husband and wife whisper-fight now in the gloves-off approved way. She calls him a coward. He calls her a bitch. But still they aren’t that good at it yet. Sometimes one or the other stops in the middle and offers the other a cookie or a drink.3. An excerpt from Dept. of Speculation, which does not have an index:
The wife is reading Civilization and Its Discontents, but she keeps getting lost in the index.4. Dept. of Speculation is a mosaic of fun facts, quotations, and short observations. The result is concise, expressive, and a little gimmicky. I wanted to warn people to wear pithy helmets while reading the novel, but this pun has already been taken.
Analogies
bare leg on a cold night, 40
cautious businessman, 34
guest who becomes a permanent lodger, 53
Polar expedition, ill equipped, 98
5. Some of the best passages in Dept. of Speculation are of the narrator reimagining events in her life as fictitious scenes in the second novel she's struggling to write. In real life, Jenny Offill's previous novel, Last Things, was published in 1999, fifteen years ago.
6. From author Dana Spiotta's advance praise: "Dept. of Speculation is ... very much about how it feels to be alive right now." Midway through the novel, the narrator's apartment is infested with bedbugs, and bedbugs have been in the news a lot, lately. Interestingly, the word "bedbugs" was removed from some versions of the publisher's descriptions of the book. Compare the cached image below to the current Amazon page:
7. From author Michael Cunningham's advance praise: "Dept. of Speculation is ... as compact and mysterious as a neutron." In the novel, the narrator describes how Russian cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov was killed when his space capsule plummeted to Earth in 1967, and that since his body was unrecoverable, all his widow ended up with was his charred heel bone.
8. This excerpt from Dept. of Speculation reminds me of Roz Chast's neurotic New Yorker cartoons:
The longer she sits [on the toilet] the more she notices how dingy and dirty the bathroom is. There is a tangle of hair on the the side of the sink, some kind of creeping mildew on the shower curtain. Their towels are no longer white and are fraying along the edges. Her underwear too is dinged nearly gray. The elastic is coming out a little. Who would wear such a thing? What kind of repulsive creature?Roz Chast and Jenny Offill share a similar sense of humor, they are both Brooklynites, and they've both written children's books. But unlike Chast's cartoons, bemusement succumbs to fell rage and black despair in Offill's Dept. of Speculation. On a happier note, Roz Chast has a new memoir coming out in May 2014, Can't We Talk about Something More Pleasant?.
9. According to the New York Times Media Decoder blog, Jenny Offill's agent Sally Wofford-Girand described Dept. of Speculation this way: "If your average book is a body, this is an X-ray." The literati must have agreed; more than eight publishing houses bid on it and a two-book deal was reportedly made for about $500,000. Dept. of Speculation is being published by Knopf on January 28, 2014. It does not have footnotes.
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