Monday, December 20, 2010

Top YA for 2010

Since I have yet to read Suzann Collins' trilogy, I have to leave the books off my list though I think it goes without saying that they are fabulous.

1. You
2. Rules of Attraction
3. Dark Water
4. Some Rivers End on the Day of the Dead
5. Not That Kind of Girl
6. Girl Stolen
7. Girl in Need of a Tourniquet
8. The Carrie Diaries
9. Will
10. Crossing

Friday, December 17, 2010

Top Non-fiction for 2010

I usually read more fiction than non-fiction, but these books really struck me during 2010:

1. The Wave (Wave action, surf action)
2. Scout, Atticus, and Boo (To Kill a Mockingbird analysis)
3. Pit Stops (It's about rescued pit bulls)
4. The Last Stand (Custer)
5. Empire of the Summer Moon (Comanches)
6. Finding Shandra (investigation of the Shandra Levy case)
7. Breaking Night (memoir)
8. Orangutan (memoir)
9. True North (memoir, journey in Canada)
10. Girl in Need of a Tourniquet (Borderline Personality Disorder)

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

FICTION: My Top Choices of 2010

Here are my favorite fiction reads of 2010. It's a baker's dozen!

1. Room by Emma Donoghue
2. My Hollywood by Mona Simpson
3. Matterhorn by Karl Marlantes
4. Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin
5. Kings of the Earth by Jon Clinch
6. The Irresistible Henry House by Lisa Grunwald
7. Little Bee by Chris Cleave
8. A Private Life by Jane Smiley
9. A Kind of Intimacy by Jenn Ashworth
10. Mornings in Jeninby Susan Abulhawa
11. Every Last One by Anna Quindlen
12. The Madonnas of Echo Parkby Brandon Skyhorse
13. Secrets of Eden by Chris Bohjalian

Monday, December 13, 2010

Book Look: Katia

In Katia, Bruce Judisch introduces us to an American college exchange student, Maddy McCalister. She takes on an interview assignment though it means extending her stay in Germany.

The woman she is to interview, Katia Mahler, is at first stern and off-putting, and Maddy thinks maybe she should pack it in and go home. But with a boyfriend out of the picture in the States, she decides to keep on trying to break through Katia's reserve.

The point of view shifts in the book as Maddy begins each chapter sending news home. Seamlessly, we move into the interview and the memories of Katia's life from World War II and the devastation to Germany and to the Jewish communities and then onward to divided Berlin and the fall of the Berlin wall.

While this is history, it is also a life's journey of a woman who refuses to allow the horrors of the war and the secret police to destroy her faith in God or her belief in family.

Just as Katia has the answers to some family secrets hidden behind her reserve, so Maddy has much to learn about culture and class and reaching out. Her journey to true adulthood is as compelling as the historic interview she conducts.

I highly recommend this book, for though most of us have studied or read of the Holocaust, few of us have investigated the life behind the Iron Curtain and the sudden changes in Germany after the fall of the wall. This story is frank and funny and definitely heart-rending.

Thumb's up to Bruce Judisch.

Word Nerd: Iron Curtain

This term, iron curtain, was coined in 1819 by CJ Rolo to explain the impenetrable barrier between ego and the unconscious.

After World War II, the Iron Curtain represented the total control of the Soviet Union over its dominion states and its own people.

The Iron Curtain is considered to have fallen with the Berlin Wall in 1989.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Book Look: The Long Road Home

Some readers have fallen into bitter controversy over the reissue of this book. Since I have never read anything else by this author, the debate is not part of my review. If you are a long-time fan of the authors, remember that "The Long Road Home" by Mary Alice Monroe is a rewrite and update of her debut novel from 1995.

There is a lot to like in this book: details of farming, lambing, the motif of art and artists. The beautiful countryside and mountains of Vermont in every season is as much a character as Nora and C.W., Seth and Esther.

The business-people, the Wall Streeters, are not as engaging, and while crucial to the plot, really take some fortitude on the part of the reader to plot through their nefarious schemes.

At the same time, the love affair is pushed at the reader on about every other page. The two main characters, Nora MacKenzie and C.W. (Charles Walker) are intense and stubborn. It just seemed there was too much passion brewing and then averted over and over and over.

I will try a different book by Mary Alice Monroe. She definitely provides intricate plots and characters.

Word Nerd: Lamb

I bring up the word "lamb," which hasn't changed in usage since the 12th century only because the plural has changed.

At one point in Old English, the plural of a word was made by adding n or en:

1 house = 2 housen, 1 lamb = 2 lambren.

Now this archaic ending has hung on in only a few modern words:

1 child, 2 children; one brother, 2 brethren (although brethren has a new meaning than does brothers.)