Monday, February 27, 2012

2012-08 - Plan B, by Jonathan Tropper

08 - Plan B, by Jonathan Tropper, St. Martin's Griffin, 358 pages, 2000
WHY I PICKED IT:  Re-reading a book from a few years ago
ELAPSED TIME: 1 day
RATING: Good

Jonathan Tropper writes like the American version of Nick Hornby (of High Fidelity and About A Boy fame)... a decent guy with a lot of angst figuring out how to be in this world.

In this tale, Ben is a 30-year-old, recent divorce who is getting together this his university friends (including a girl who he crushed on all through school, and who he dated for two years after), in order to intervene on a mutual friend of theirs' drug habit.  The friend happens to be a big Hollywood star, so it's not an easy task!

This book is an entertaining way to spend a few hours.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

2012-07 - Q, by Evan Mandery

07 - Q, by Evan Mandery, Harper Collins, 359 pages, 2011
WHY I PICKED IT:  Saw it at the airport book store
ELAPSED TIME: 3 days
RATING: Not Good

So I must start with an admission: I did not read every page in this book.  The protagonist is an author, and not a very good one... so when Mandery includes chapters from this protagonist's book, I skipped them.

The premise of this story is a good one: A guy is about to marry the love of his life when a future version of himself comes and tells him a story from his future... One that drives him to leave her.  Six months later, a different version of himself (from the new life path), tells him to marry someone else.  A third version tells him to leave her.  A fourth version tells him to write funnier books.  A fifth tells him to go to law school.  A sixth tells him to explore the world.  A seventh to become a Buddhist... and so on and so forth.

But the protagonist isn't a strong character (and as a result, not very engaging), until he starts telling these future versions to stop interfering with his life.  A realization that I made long before him.

In short... I do not recommend this book.  Save your money... and more importantly use your time in a different way.

SPOILER ALERT.  STOP IF YOU ARE GOING TO IGNORE THIS RECOMMENDATION AND READ THE BOOK NONETHELESS

So what would cause a guy to leave the love of his life?  If he married her, and had a son... and they were extremely happy.  They doted on this child who is smart and funny, and well liked.  And they love each other.  But the child gets sick.  And the child ultimately dies.  And their relationship ends because of the strain.

Would you seek to avoid 30 years of sorrow if you knew it was coming after 10 happy years?  Would you give up the 10 happy years to ensure that was the case?  I don't know what I'd do... I like to think that I'd take the happiness, despite the sorrow that was to follow.

Friday, February 24, 2012

2012-06 - The Fault in Our Stars, by John Green

06 - The Fault in Our Stars, by John Green, Dutton Juvenile, 336 pages, 2012
WHY I PICKED IT:  I've read every book of fiction that John Green has written
ELAPSED TIME: 7 days
RATING: Good


16 year old Hazel is dying.  Hanging on with help from a miracle drug and a tank of oxygen she has to drag around, Hazel is waiting for the terminal cancer that she's had for most of her life to ... well to take it.  But when Augustus comes into her cancer support group, Hazel finds her soul mate; a cancer survivor who has lost his first girlfriend to cancer.

An interesting question arises: If you knew of an emotional trauma that is coming, would you avoid it simply because you could see it... despite the fact that the trauma is only as a result of the happiness you're currently feeling?

If you like John Green, you'll love this story... If you don't, you may simply find this to be an engaging tale that sucks you in.  As always, Green writes for young adults, but doesn't write down to them... I continue to be a fan.

Friday, February 10, 2012

2012-05 - Only Time Will Tell, by Jeffrey Archer

05 - Only Time Will Tell, by Jeffrey Archer, Pan MacMillan, 450 pages, 2011
WHY I PICKED IT:  I've read every book of fiction that Jeffrey Archer has written
ELAPSED TIME: 2 days
RATING: Good

This book is classic Archer.  A character that is "good" (Harry Clifton) another that is "not good" (Hugo Barrington) and a tale that spans decades that sucks you into their lives.

Harry Clifton is a lower class-born child in Bristol in the aftermath of the Great War ... his natural talents, great role models and advocates, and hard work all combine to get him opportunities to move up in society.  Hugo Barrington is the father of his best friend... will do anything he can to keep Harry down (despite being the grandson of a dock worker himself).

This is an engrossing story and a fast read.  I can't wait for Volume Two of the Clifton Chronicles.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

2012-04 - The Reluctant Fundamentalist, by Mohsin Hamid

04 - The Reluctant Fundamentalist, by Mohsin Hamid, Penguin, 209 pages, 2007
WHY I PICKED IT:  Book Club
ELAPSED TIME: 3 Days
RATING: Good

This is an engrossing tale... told entirely in the first person.  Changez is a Pakistani living in Lahore... telling the story of his experience in the USA to an American stranger in the market: From Princeton on scholarship, into the Manhattan corporate world, and his relationship with Erica, a girl from the Upper East Side (read: from old money).  The struggle of a man from a formally wealthy Pakistani family, working hard to succeed in the USA, derided and derailed in the aftermath of September 2001 is compelling... despite written in the first person (which you would think would be hard to read).

The tale Changez tells is engrossing, but I am not sure I really understood the underlying "present day" tale that Hamid is telling us.  Who is this American that sits for hours with a stranger and listens to the story?  What else is going on, I really don't follow...?

Thursday, February 2, 2012

2012-03 - Kiss of the Fur Queen, by Tomson Highway

03 - Kiss of the Fur Queen, by Tomson Highway, Anchor Canada, 306 pages, 1998

WHY I PICKED IT:  Recommended by my friend Wendy
ELAPSED TIME: 3 weeks
RATING: Meh

Telling the story of two Cree brothers from Northern Manitoba, Champion and Ooneemeetoo Okimasis... renamed Jeremiah and Gabriel by the Catholics, and raised in a residential school (with all the horrors that entailed)... These two brothers struggle to fit - not able to understand native culture and not able to integrate into White Canada.

Despite the fact that I relate strongly to that experience (the cultural divide)... I just didn't love this book.  Highway's voice as an author is too abstract... the time shifts forward felt choppy.  And the "Fur Queen," as the Goddess watching down on them, was of a culture that I simply didn't understand, and Highway didn't make accessible enough (to me).