Reviews

Girl Gone Wrong: A Review of Girl Gone, by Gillian Flynn


I don’t read a lot of fiction.  Fiction probably makes up about a tenth of what I read in a year.  It isn’t easy for me to slip into someone else’s world anymore because I’ve made such strong connections with others that anything less than those frustrates me.  (That’s a main reason I get frustrated with my own writing.)  I don’t like crime drama, and I like true crime even less*, so I’m slow to pick up anything labeled Mystery.

Girl Gone, by Gillian Flynn, kept popping up on my Facebook feed, my Twitter feed, and my Goodreads notifications, and people whose opinions I respected were saying, “I am reading Girl Gone–really good!”  I had just finished reading Going Clear, by Lawrence Wright, and I needed a palate cleanser from the hard fact that it was only a couple of dollar signs between me and Paul Haggis.  I mean, had Jesse Duplantis asked for money, and the COS told me they were free, I might have joined the Sea Org instead of the Superkids.  So, Girl Gone seemed just the thing to soothe my ruffled thetans.

A few pages in and I was hooked.  Flynn is great writer.  She is descriptive in that way that you find yourself squinting because the sunlight she’s written about is so bright.  The tone, the pace, the voices were pitch perfect, and I could not put the book down.  I literally held it in one hand and brushed my teeth with the other.  It was that good.  I ended up with toothpaste close to my ear, and on my shirt, but I didn’t care.  I haven’t wanted to read a book so badly in years.

Then, halfway in, the plot twisted in a way that left me feeling betrayed.  I told B that it was as if I had started reading a mystery novel, and then realized I was reading sci-fi.  The book didn’t turn sci-fi, but the plot twist turned everything upside down and completely reset the novel, so that it was like the Bizarro version of itself.  This twist occurred while I was at lunch, and I sat there with my Jersey Mike’s Club Sub halfway to my mouth, just staring.  How had this happened?  bite  Did I miss something?  bite  I flipped back a few pages and reread, just to be sure.  bite  No.  That actually happened.  bite.

I chewed my way past the betrayal and decided that even though this was not the book I thought it was, it was still a good book.  That behind me, I read the next quarter of it with intrigue, if not as much enthusiasm.  It was still well written.  It was still well-paced.  The tone and the voices, though now utterly different, were still good.

The story devolved, though.  I reached the denouement puzzled and disappointed.  The sharpness of the first half of the book had muddled into something else.  The caffeinated clarity faded into a sloppy drunkenness, and by the time I reached the end, I was simply sad.

I can’t say I hated the end of the book.  The resolution was a plausible outcome, given what the characters had become, but it wasn’t one I could enjoy at all.  It was just enh.  For as simply brilliant as the first half had been, the ending was hard to take.  Still well written.  Still believable.  But it was putting a Ken doll’s head on a Barbie doll’s body and asking me to admire the hairdo.

I’m going to give the book 4 out of 5 stars just because the first half is that strong, and because in retrospect Flynn was very clever with little details that seemed like nothing at the time.  It felt so good to have a Book Crush again.  A book that drew me in so fast that I dreamed about it, brushed my teeth reading it, and snuck it around with me all during the day to keep reading it.  Yes, it broke my heart, but man it was worth the ride!

*I was in a B Dalton bookstore, my Freshman year in college and I was looking at the True Crime section.  My grandmother loved true crime, so I had read a lot of hers out of sheer boredom and had come to enjoy the thrill of them.  No matter that the subject just made my paranoia worse, and always gave me nightmares, I was standing there trying to suss out whether I wanted a book on one serial killer, or a book about what makes a serial killer tick.  Something kicked into gear in my brain and I thought, “Why would I want to know what makes a serial killer tick?  Do I really want to identify with that?  Knowing what a killer thinks doesn’t protect you from the thinking.  Same way knowing how many different kinds of sharks there are doesn’t keep one from snatching you off your surf board.”

Something else kicked into gear and I suddenly wondered how the families of the victims felt?  If these parents walked into the bookstore, were they faced by the smiling mugshot of the man who had murdered their daughter?  I thought about my mom and dad, and what that would do to them.  I felt a little ashamed for having been titillated by the genre, and the longer I stood there, the more “a little” turned into “a lot.”  So, I walked out of that section and never looked back.

books, Explaining the Strange Behavior, Friends of Mine, Inside Lane, Politics, Religion

Books, Cures, and Poor, Poor Baby Jesus (Updated)


I started a new book.  I can’t tell yet if it is good.  I’m two chapters in and the story has my attention, but the writer writes exactly the way I speak, and I find myself-in-other-people annoying, so I can’t decide whether or not to enjoy it.  I will end up with a grudging appreciation for it, as I do most things that remind me of myself. 

It is funny how we can be repelled by our own personalities.  My dearest friends are usually very different from me.  I gravitate toward big personalities (admittedly, I am one of those), but behind those big personalities are methodical, organized, slow-burning characters.  I have come to realize that the reason I get so irritated with short-fused, paranoid, self-effacing, mercurial talkers is because I am a short-fused, paranoid, self-effacing, mercurial talker.  (Thus, the heroine of the new novel is infuriating, being the poster child for above flaws.)

I do idealize solid people.  I idealize people who are doing the jobs they went to college to learn, and who have done the same jobs for entire career spans.  This fascinates and intrigues me.  To date, the longest I have ever stayed with one industry is five years.  Granted, I have returned to that industry (it also being the industry I most enjoyed), but I don’t feel like that counts because I only returned one peg above where I left it off 15 years ago.  I am in awe of people who commit to a course of career and keep it.

(Telaryn let me know that, “Reports are coming in that the statement is a parody and not, in fact, attributable to Akin.”  Good to know!  I found this retraction/correction.)

holiday guest blog

Days of Christmas: Holiday Have to Read–Second Death, by Emily Reese


You wouldn’t normally associate fangs with Douglas firs and fireplaces draped with Christmas stockings, but I am going to suggest that you get Emily Reese’s debut novel, Second Death, for all your vampire loving friends.  Emily has a great knack for writing a story so that you feel you are sitting in the same room, walking down the same street, driving the same car through South Texas as the characters, and boy does the story have a bite!

Today, Emily is sharing her favorite books so you can add those to your shopping list, too.  But before we get into her guest blog, here is how to find and order Second Death:

Emily’s Smashwords Profile
Sample or purchase Second Death
Also available for download direct to your Kindle or Nook
Read Emily’s blog: http://writerreese.wordpress.com/

When Lane asked me to chose my three favorite books, I had no clue that my criteria would be. There are some books, (usually series,) that I can read many times, but that doesn’t necessarily mean I would count them as my favorite. As an author, I also recognize how much effort goes in to putting a full-length story together, so counting anything out felt like a betrayal. Therefore, what I decided to do was this: these are three books I love that I am going to make sure my daughter reads. I can’t think of a better recommendation than that.

The Help by Kathryn Stockett

This is one of the few books that made me really angry. Like pacing and ranting before bed to a bewildered husband. The Help also had me wanting to go up to every African American I saw and give them a hug and an apology. Further deliberation made me realize those actions might be seen as condescending, so I decided against it, but still. It is a rare thing for a book to spur me (or almost spur me,) into action. It just blows my mind that my mother and my grandmother were around, in the south during this period. Were they as bad as some of Kathryn Stockett’s characters? I don’t think so. I mean, they raised me to be a tolerant individual. Yet I know that if my mother had brought home a darker skinned gentleman… it would have been Guess-who’s-coming-to-dinner-esque. In all truth, she wouldn’t have brought him home at all. I don’t think it would have occurred to her. This book reminds us that the civil rights movement is still right behind us.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling

I love all the Harry Potter books. I mean, LURVE them. I can’t tell you how many people I’ve turned on to this series, and I thank my lucky stars for Derek who worked at the mall bookstore. He bought me the first four books and refused to talk to me again until I had finished them all. I sobbed during this book. I talked to the author like an imaginary friend. I’ve taken (many) days off work for Harry Potter release days and stayed up until 6 am to finish. Here’s the best thing about these books, and why I’m so caught up in them: depth. These books are hella deep, though not necessarily in the metaphysical sense. The characters are deep. You are with them for undoubtedly the seven most important years of their life. You see them grow, and it’s a joy to discover who they’re going to be before they do. It was my first taste of parenthood. The story too is deep. I’ve reread this series over and over because I’m still finding things Rowling hid in book one that I didn’t understand until number seven. I’ve chosen The Deathly Hallows as my favorite book because it was the culmination of ten years of love and I was not disappointed.

The Lamb by Christopher Moore

The Lamb is one of my favorite books because it approaches religion the way I do. It accepts that what we know is from the perspective of the author, and encourages us to learn what we can from it. It implies that Jesus does actually have a sense of humor and found joy in everyday things. It reminds me that he was a person before he had to be the Son of God, something I find sermons to be lacking these days. There is nothing in this book about the “wrong” religion or the “wrong” type of people. Everyone is part of God’s people, and that’s something I can get behind.

That’s my list. This is what Autumn is going to roll her eyes at me about in ten years or so… but she’s still going to read them. Of course, there are many, many more I’d like to include. I also think it’s funny that there are no paranormal romances in my top three, since A) it’s by far my favorite genre and B) its my book’s genre as well. I also want to give a nod to authors who write sequels. I wrote my first book Second Death, before my daughter turned two. I wasn’t as hard as one might think; I’ve always been a night person, and I could write during naps (ah, blessed quiet!) In addition, I’d been rolling this idea around in my head for years. Now, she’s almost three. A few people have read my book and liked it enough to ask me for part two. Um… yeah, about that. My little monkey doesn’t nap so much, and demands much more interaction. Therefore, in closing, I’d like to ask you not to curse authors, (as I did) for not getting their sequels out in a year or less. To me that’s damned impressive.

 

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Lane is Reading

Way on Down


I am really into reading memoirs these days, and I picked up four at B&N last week. I gave up on reading Jenna Jameson’s book because it was depressing me. Reading about how much someone loves and trusts their spouse, when you know they are now divorced and acrimonious is sad. Also, what a horrible life that woman had! So, I started reading I’m Down, by Mishna Wolff.

On the back of the book, Jennifer Beals says that she was laughing from page one and throughout. Funny memoir, I thought. Excellent!

Bloody hell! Jennifer Beals either didn’t read the same book I did, or she has a really sick sense of humor. I could hardly read the last four chapters because the water in my eyes was blurring up the pages too badly. Not. Funny. At. All. Sad. Sad, sad, sad.

Sad, but extremely well written. If I may, Wolff has a voice like a Judy Blume character. Had Margaret Simon grown up in the ghetto, she could have written this book. So, it felt very comfortable and natural to read. Still, I have a headache from the sad now.

Why read memoirs? I like learning about other people. I find people endlessly fascinating. And I like knowing more about the human experience from the perspective of other humans living it–not just an anthropological or historical viewpoint. And, because I find that the experiences of others frequently informs me making better changes in my own life. Feeling sorry for myself because of X? Well thank god I didn’t have to live through Y! Wondering how to get from point A to point B? Maybe I can try how he went from point C to point D. It works for me.

Soon, I will start reading Love in a Headscarf and Mennonite in a Little Black Dress. I hope those are humorous. I would much rather laugh than cry.