Check out my latest post on Mocha Girls Read. It's all about this season's new shows that are based on, or at least inspired by books. There's SyFy channel's The Magicians based on the trilogy by Lev Grossman, The Expanse based on the series by James S. A. Corey (also on SyFy), and many more. Find out more at Mocha Girls Read.
Thursday, January 28, 2016
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Lev Grossman's Magicians Trilogy
Lev Grossman's The Magicians trilogy takes Harry Potter, Narnia, and
other stories and tropes and mashes them up into something new. It left me with
lots of complicated thoughts that I’m still trying to sort out and for that
alone I’m grateful for this series.
I usually try to
avoid spoilers when writing about books here but this time I'm making an exception. If you want to avoid spoilers, stop reading here. If not, here are some of my thoughts:
The trilogy starts out as a coming age / figuring out
life in your 20s story. At the beginning of the first book Quentin is a high
school senior. He’s at the point of in life when it feels like you’re waiting
for life to begin, as if one’s current situation isn’t actual life. Quentin
gets that life-is-starting-now moment when he finds himself sitting in a room
taking an entrance exam for Brakebills, the one and only magical college in
North America. It all seems so promising, so fun and exciting, and then it
isn’t. Turns out that doing magic is well, less magical than one might expect.
It requires memorization, mastering precise hand movements, and learning
ancient languages. One thing that I found odd (and that I'm still wrestling
with) is that in Grossman's conception magic is not fun. It can be fun at
times, but mostly it is tedious, hard work. Not only it is hard, in a way magic
ruins people. Magic makes some parts of ordinary life (like holding down a job)
easy if not unnecessary. Without something to care about Quentin and his
friends spend their post-college days drinking and partying, which ends up
being less fun than it sounds. It's like they one the lottery but don't know
what to do now that they no longer have to work to pay the rent.
In the first two books Quentin is forever looking for an
adventure. He is never happy with what he has. This would be a less annoying
trait if he were working toward something. For instance, if you’re dream is to
build the best widget and your first prototype is good but you know you can do
better so you keep trying, then it is good to not be satisfied. That is drive;
that is motivation and ambition. Quentin’s dissatisfaction with life is more
about it never being like it is in the Narnia like Fillory books. Quentin’s
whole concept of adulthood is wrapped up in a fantasy and when confronted with
the reality of day-to-day life he’s bored. But instead of building a career or
a relationship he just goes looking for another adventure. Even more annoying
is that Quentin never anticipates the potential dangers of his adventures. It
is like he expects life to be like a children’s story where there is always a
happy ending.
One of the most interesting characters in the series is Julia. Julia sat for the exam Quentin did but failed. I think I, as
a reader, am supposed to feel sorry for Julia or feel that she was unjustly
treated in this instance. I don’t. When
Julia tells her story in The Magician King (book 2) she remarks that Quentin
walked into the exam room “buckled right down and killed that exam, because
magic school? That was just the kind of thing he’d been waiting to happen his
whole life.” The way I see it Quentin and Julia were faced with an unexpected opportunity.
Quentin grabbed it and went with it. He didn’t think too hard about it; he just
accepted it and decided to see where the opportunity would lead. Julia, in
contrast, sat back and thought about what the opportunity might mean. I don’t fault
Julia for the way she reacted. It was totally reasonable under the
circumstances, but I don’t feel sorry for her either or feel she was treated
unfairly. She had the same chance as Quentin and didn’t take it. There is
something to be said about being open to opportunities and ready to grab them
when they come sailing by.
Notwithstanding my lack of sympathy for Julia’s initial
rejection by the world of magic, I totally loved her journey (well except for
the part I’ll get to in a minute). After failing the exam her memory was
supposed to be erased of all things magic and Brakebills related but it didn’t
take. Julia remembered, not all of it
but there was a thread of something that kept nagging her. She grabbed that
thread and ended up institutionalized and multiple prescriptions for
anti-depressants. Once again Grossman made magic not fun. In The Magician King
it is practically a symbol for mental illness. Mental illness diagnosis
notwithstanding, Julia went and found magic on her own, Brakebills be damned.
And she wasn’t the only one. I love the idea that there was this underground
world of magic. One of the things in that struck me about the first book was
not only that magic was boring, it was elitist and exclusionary. Outside of
Brakebills all kinds of people are doing magic.
Julia ascends up the ranks of the magical world and
becomes the best there is. More importantly she finds a home among other prescription
carrying depressives. Together they dig for the roots of magic and end of
stumbling upon a demon trickster god who kills most of them and rapes Julia.
This was infuriating. Not only that she was raped, but that she loses her
humanity. She becomes a powerful goddess in the end, but exactly what is the message here?
Another interesting character is Alice. She came from a magical family. After her older brother
died while at Brakebills the college decided it was best to cut ties with the
family and declined to invite her to attend to the school. Alice forced her way in anyway and and she was brilliant. She hooks up with Quentin.
They are cute together, then they are horrible to each other. Then she dies in
book one, or rather she becomes a ball of blue rage and power. Quentin brings
her back to life and she is not happy about it, at least not at first. I’m not sure
what to think about this particular sequence. Did he do the right thing? He was trying to
help her. He couldn’t have known that she liked being a ball of rage and power.
The ending was not entirely unexpected, but still pleasing. Fillory was dying and Quentin has to figure out a way to save it. He does save it, but he also moves on and decides to create his own land, which is fitting. It is time for him to grow up and create something for himself. It was a good ending to the series.
Although I am not entirely sure what to think of this series I would recommend it for the simple fact that it gave me lots to think about. This is the kind of book I could talk about for hours.
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Bookish Podcasts
I recently began writing for Mocha Girls Read, an online and in-person book club, of which I'm a member. My first post was published today. Check it out and find out about The Wonderful World of Bookish Podcasts. Maybe you already are fans of these podcast, or perhaps you'll discover a new one to enjoy.
Happy reading and listening!
Happy reading and listening!
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Dark Wild Night by Christina Lauren
The Wild Seasons series has been an unexpected delight. It started with Sweet Filthy Boy in which three girl friends - Mia, Harlow, and Lola - went to Vegas to celebrate their college graduation and met three sexy guys Ansel (the Frenchman), Finn (the Canadian), and Oliver (the Australian). After a night of drinking and sexy times, the six singles wake up as three married couples. Harlow and Finn and Lola and Oliver quickly get their Vegas marriages annulled. Ansel refuses to give Mia a quickie divorce, insisting they talk about it first. By the end of Sweet Filthy Boy they're happily in love and still married. (This is a romance series so the ending shouldn't be much of a surprise.) Harlow and Finn work out their issues in Dirty Rowdy Thing. Finally in Dark Wild Night we get to Lola and Oliver.
Lola and Oliver seemed like a perfect match from the get go. She writes and draws graphic novels. As the first book in the series opens, he is about to open a comic book store. However good they seem on paper, of the three couples, Lola and Oliver are the only two who didn't spend their night Vegas getting hot and sweaty in a hotel room. Instead they spent the entire evening walking and talking. Back in San Diego (where the three girls are from), Lola and Oliver have become the best of friends. They each secretly want more but for reasons of his and her own, keep things in the friend zone.
In the time since their Vegas marriage, Oliver's and Lola's careers have taken off. Oliver's new business is doing great. Lola's first graphic novel has become a bestseller and is being made into a movie, plus she has a contract for two more books. Perhaps it is her career success that gives Lola the courage to test things out with Oliver. It starts of well but as Lola begins to move forward with Oliver she begins to unravel a bit with her work, which causes her to question herself and her ability to handle all the new changes in her life.
Of the three books in the series, Dark Wild Night might be my favorite. It was steamy hot and full of romance. Lola is a great character. I found her problems in trying to balance work with her social life very relatable, along with her struggles in protecting her creative vision when it came to her work. My one complaint is that there wasn't enough about Oliver's background. In the prior two books, we learn a great deal about the female characters' childhoods and family lives, as well as that of their new boyfriends/husbands. In this one, all that is revealed about Oliver is that he's from Australia and was raised by his grandparents. Oliver was kind of the perfect boyfriend - understanding, patient, and giving - but it was never quite clear how he got to be that way. Given the pattern of the first two books I was expecting to learn more about who raised him and why he moved to San Diego.
This series started as a trilogy but I have recently learned there will be a fourth book. Can't wait!
Lola and Oliver seemed like a perfect match from the get go. She writes and draws graphic novels. As the first book in the series opens, he is about to open a comic book store. However good they seem on paper, of the three couples, Lola and Oliver are the only two who didn't spend their night Vegas getting hot and sweaty in a hotel room. Instead they spent the entire evening walking and talking. Back in San Diego (where the three girls are from), Lola and Oliver have become the best of friends. They each secretly want more but for reasons of his and her own, keep things in the friend zone.
In the time since their Vegas marriage, Oliver's and Lola's careers have taken off. Oliver's new business is doing great. Lola's first graphic novel has become a bestseller and is being made into a movie, plus she has a contract for two more books. Perhaps it is her career success that gives Lola the courage to test things out with Oliver. It starts of well but as Lola begins to move forward with Oliver she begins to unravel a bit with her work, which causes her to question herself and her ability to handle all the new changes in her life.
Of the three books in the series, Dark Wild Night might be my favorite. It was steamy hot and full of romance. Lola is a great character. I found her problems in trying to balance work with her social life very relatable, along with her struggles in protecting her creative vision when it came to her work. My one complaint is that there wasn't enough about Oliver's background. In the prior two books, we learn a great deal about the female characters' childhoods and family lives, as well as that of their new boyfriends/husbands. In this one, all that is revealed about Oliver is that he's from Australia and was raised by his grandparents. Oliver was kind of the perfect boyfriend - understanding, patient, and giving - but it was never quite clear how he got to be that way. Given the pattern of the first two books I was expecting to learn more about who raised him and why he moved to San Diego.
This series started as a trilogy but I have recently learned there will be a fourth book. Can't wait!
Saturday, January 2, 2016
2016: A New Year of Reading
In 2015 I took on several reading challenges. I challenged myself to read (1) at least 36 books from my To Be Read (TBR) pile, (2) authors from around the world, and (3) books from thirty-nine different genres. Additionally, I took on (4) Book Riot's Read Harder challenge, (5) the What's In a Name challenge, (6) the Eclectic challenge, and (7) the Goodreads challenge to read one hundred books overall. Unfortunately, I only managed to complete three of the seven challenges - the TBR challenge, the world challenge, and the Goodreads challenge. I think my failure to complete all my challenges was due to the conflict between choosing a book based on whether it met the requirements of a challenge and choosing a book simply because it interested me. More often than not I went with option number two.
This year I am taking on six challenges:
1 - Mount TBR
2 - Specific TBR Challenges (reading certain books & series from my TBR pile)
3 - Reading the World
4 - Book Riot: Read Harder
5 - Genre
6 - Cloak & Dagger
My main reading goal for 2016 is to whittle down my TBR pile, hence the Mount TBR and specific TBR challenges. Further, I plan to fulfill the non-TBR challenges (3 through 6 on the above list) with books from my TBR pile. Hopefully by the end of the year my TBR pile will be a fourth (maybe a third) of what is is now.
Four of the six challenges I've done before. The specific TBR and the Cloak & Dagger challenges are new for me. Participants in Cloak & Dagger challenge can read any book from the mystery, suspense, thriller or crime genre. Read one to ten books and you're amateur sleuth, eleven to twenty and you're a detective, twenty-one to thirty and you're inspector, thirty-one or more and you're a special agent. I love mysteries so this challenge is made for me.
I am excited about this new year of reading. So many books and 365 days to read them. With some luck I'll complete all my challenges. Even if I don't, I'm sure to read a bunch of good books in 2016.
This year I am taking on six challenges:
1 - Mount TBR
2 - Specific TBR Challenges (reading certain books & series from my TBR pile)
3 - Reading the World
4 - Book Riot: Read Harder
5 - Genre
6 - Cloak & Dagger
My main reading goal for 2016 is to whittle down my TBR pile, hence the Mount TBR and specific TBR challenges. Further, I plan to fulfill the non-TBR challenges (3 through 6 on the above list) with books from my TBR pile. Hopefully by the end of the year my TBR pile will be a fourth (maybe a third) of what is is now.
Four of the six challenges I've done before. The specific TBR and the Cloak & Dagger challenges are new for me. Participants in Cloak & Dagger challenge can read any book from the mystery, suspense, thriller or crime genre. Read one to ten books and you're amateur sleuth, eleven to twenty and you're a detective, twenty-one to thirty and you're inspector, thirty-one or more and you're a special agent. I love mysteries so this challenge is made for me.
I am excited about this new year of reading. So many books and 365 days to read them. With some luck I'll complete all my challenges. Even if I don't, I'm sure to read a bunch of good books in 2016.
Happy New Year & Happy Reading
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