Boy Snow Bird - A Review

I decided to try something new this reading list and post reviews as I finish the books instead of posting them all at once at the end of the season. I just finished reading Boy, Snow, Bird earlier this week, and finished writing up my review last night. Oh! and please note I tweaked my Spring Reading List. Check it out here :)

*************

Boy, Snow, Bird - A Review

Boy-Snow-Bird.jpg

*Spoiler alert! It will be impossible for me to talk about this book without giving several things away. You have been warned.

This book is weird. I didn't like it, but I didn't not like it either. I wanted to know what happened next, but it was a kind of morbid fascination, rather than a deep investment in the story (like why people still watch Law and Order: SVU even though Stabler's gone). I wasn't rooting for any of the characters, but I wasn't waiting for them to fail either. I keep thinking back on all the books I've read, trying to liken this experience to another, but I can't think of a single one.

The story centers around Boy Novak, who runs away from her abusive father dubbed "the rat catcher" in New York City, to a tiny little town where everybody knows your name up in Massachusetts. Once there she meets a widower, with a child, marries said widower, has a child with him, and then casts his original child out of their home to live with her aunt. She and her stepdaughter eventually reconcile in the end. That is the story in a nutshell told on the most basic of basic levels.

During all of that, Oyeyemi weaves a tale that is just enough Snow White for you to notice (with Boy being the wicked stepmother), but not so much that it is overdone or irritating. The story takes its most interesting turn when the concept of passing is introduced. Unknowingly Boy marries into a family of Black people that has been passing for years bordering on generations, and the the only reason she finds out is because she gives birth to a daughter with unmistakably ethnic features. Beauty as it relates to Blackness becomes a very interesting focal point for a large chunk of the book, and while I believe Oyeyemi could have gone further with it, it was still fascinating all the same.

There is also a preoccupation with mirrors that is highly disturbing but also very intriguing. Boy sees different versions of herself in mirrors, and Bird, her daughter, occasionally doesn't see herself in mirrors at all. I was puzzled every time the issue came up, and kept hoping it would be explained or further explored later on in the book. As it so happened, there was an explanation, but I found it highly problematic.

In the last 20 pages of the book, literally, we find out that "the rat-catcher," Boy's father, was actually born a woman, was raped when she conceived Boy, after which when she looked in the mirror she saw a man, and from then on assumed that identity. It was hard to tell if Oyeyemi was saying that Boy's father was trans, or was suffering from an identity disorder, but it seemed to lean toward him being trans. Aside from this part of the book being extremely rushed, it felt to me like Oyeyemi was saying that Boy's father being transgender was some kind of mental illness that was passed down to Boy and then Bird, which is pretty messed up. I could be totally wrong about where Oyeyemi was going with that spin-off of the stories, but that's how it felt to me.

If after reading this you still decide to read Boy, Snow, Bird, and I'm not saying you shouldn't, but if you do, don't read it alone. This is a book you need to talk about with someone, and debrief once it's done. Trust me.

Spring Reading List

Every season I create a reading list for myself. So far there have been Summer Reading List 2014, Fall Reading List 2014, Winter Reading List 2015, and now we have arrived at the Spring Reading List for 2015. 2015 is proving to be an excellent year for books, and choosing what to read was a challenge.

But! I've made my list, am excited to start reading, and have plenty of titles ready to step in as bonus books in the event that I speed through this list as quickly as I did the Winter Reading List.

Spring Reading List 2015*

(I always feel like I'm reading nominations for the Oscars when I write these, "And the nominations for the Spring Reading List of 2015 go to..." hehehe. Don't mind me).

Boy, Snow, Bird by Helen Oyeyemi

God Help the Child by Toni Morrison

The Girl Who Fell From the Sky by Heidi W. Durrow

I'm excited! If you've reading any of these books before, or would like to join me in my spring reading, comment below, and stay tuned for reviews!

* I amended this list on 4.18.15. I decided The Vault of Dreamers fit in better with all the other fantastical books I have planned for my Summer Reading List, so I swapped it out for The Girl Who Fell From the Sky.

 

The Secret: Irin Chronicles Book Three - Review

I wondered how Elizabeth Hunter would solve all of the mysteries and tie up all the loose ends readers are left with at the end of The Singer (Irin Chronicles Book Two), but she pulled it off, in part because The Secret is considerably longer than the previous 2 books. The Scribe is 290 pages, The Singer is 336 pages, and The Secret surpasses both of them at 374 pages. And they are 374 action packed pages. I finished the previous 2 books in about 48 hours, but that just wasn't possible with this book. It's a marathon, not a sprint ladies and gentlemen. I needed time to digest the revelations that just kept coming before I could continue on through the book.

That was the major difference for me between this book and its predecessors. In the previous two books it felt like the entire narrative was building to one great OMG moment, whereas every other chapter in this book provided you with that moment. Even with its length I found myself wishing I had even more time to spend with each new piece of information. I wanted more back story. I wanted more history. I wanted more development of all the many offshoots this book had to offer.

In truth what I really wanted was for this series not to be a trilogy. I want more of Ava and Malachi and Sari and Damien and Max and Renata and Leo and Rhys. I want more of the world of Irin, Irina, Grigori, Grigora, kareshta, Fallen Angels, Forgiven Angels, ancient languages and love than spans millenia. I take comfort in knowing I can always return to the series like an old friend and read it again, but deep down I know it will never be the same as it was the first time. 

If you have not gotten into this series yet, what are you waiting for??

The Secret  can be purchased at the following places:

Amazon: http://tinyurl.com/mm6uycp

iBooks: http://tinyurl.com/lkf3vdf

B&N: http://tinyurl.com/n4bgcwk

Smashwords: http://tinyurl.com/mcbz57b

Happy Reading!

Children of Men - Review

I usually like to read books before they are turned into films. I like to create the story world in my mind before I see someone else's interpretation of it. For instance, when I was reading this book, I couldn't help but see Clive Owen's face whenever Theo was narrating, or Julianne Moore's face when Theo is talking about his wife. It's possible those are the people I would have attached to these characters on my own, but I will never know that.

All of that is to say, my general rule is books before films, but every now and again I'll see a movie, a really impressive movie, and then find out it's a book. at which point I'm caught between the struggle of "Should I read it?" or "Should I not read it?" Something feels ruined in having seen the film first. The flow of the story feels interrupted because I already know what will happen (and for some reason I'm not as bothered by that when I read a book and then see its film). But, I loved Children of Men the movie, so I needed to read the book.

Children of Men reads more like a historical account than a piece of fiction. James covers all of her bases and has answers to questions you didn't even know you had making this story of a world in which humanity has lost its ability to reproduce seem not only plausible, but like a terrifying inevitability. I kept thinking about the rising rates of infertility in the real world and wondered how long it would take for the children of men world to become our world. I actually felt physically uncomfortable and anxious at some points while reading and contemplating all of this.

P.D. James seems to have created a genre all her own with this book. It transcends science fiction, and crosses into a realm of futuristic historical fiction. I'm thrilled I added this on as my bonus book.

 

The Singer: Irin Chronicles Book Two - Review

The-Singer.jpg

*SPOILER ALERT - If you have not read Irin Chronicles Book One, do not read this!!*

At the heart of the Irin Chronicles there is a beautiful love story. That fact is undeniable. But it's so much more than that, and I was reminded of this when I picked up The Singer. The time Hunter has taken to describe this rich world with such lush details is incredibly admirable. The story is spun in such a way that seems entirely plausible. I often made myself wondering if there might be whole worlds (possibly full of angels and half angels, etc.) hidden within our own, existing just beneath the surface. That is the power this story has.

The agony you experience as a reader waiting for Ava and Malachi to be reunited is a mere shadow of the misery those two feel in the other's absence. I often found myself wanting to literally insert myself into the book and tell them what was going on, to end their agony. I raced through the pages simultaneously absorbing every delicious detail and anxious for Ava and Malachi's inevitable reunion. It does not disappoint.

I am more than excited to see how Hunter will bring closure to this amazing series in The Secret. There are so many questions to be answered and so many mysteries to be solved. Luckily, we don't don't have to wait long. The Secret was originally scheduled to be released on March 31st, but Hunter surprised all of her readers earlier this week announcing an early release on March 19th, a whole twelve days before the original date. Owing to my fancy Advanced Release Copy, you can check out my review of The Secret here on my blog the day it comes out!