With so much going on in my life and other hobbies taking over, it has become more challenging to find time to blog. I do want to keep track of books that I have read though, since reading remains an important part of my life. So as a compromise, it's back to maintaining a list of books that I have read.
A Fortunate Age by Joanna Smith Rakoff, 2009
I had read Rakoff's My Salinger Year (2014) and enjoyed it so much that I reserved A Fortunate Age at the library.
A story of a group of 20-something Oberlin college graduates, A Fortunate Age does a great job of capturing the uncertainties involved in being in your mid-twenties and transitioning into 'adults' for a group of liberal-minded Oberlin graduates living in Williamsburg.
The story and upbringing of this group of friends (one of the characters grows up in Brookline, MA and Newton, MA, my hometown is mentioned)
resonates with the upbringing of so many kids who attend elite liberal
arts colleges and really captures the liberalness of a school like
Oberlin.
The novel revolves around a group of friends: Lillian Roth, Sadie Peregrine, Beth Bernstein, Emily Kaplan, Tal Morgenthal, and Dave Kohane.
The story kicks off with the first symbol of adulthood: marriage. Lil is the first of her group of friends to get married, and the group of friends now need to consider her as a unit along with her husband Tuck Hayes.
Instead of taking her husband's name, Lil and Tuck decide that they will become the Roth-Hayes.
Sadie is the one in the group who has always had it easy with men and relationships. She and Tal soon couple off but as Tal finds success with his acting career, the distance strains the relationship and Sadie finds herself in a relationship with Ed Slikowski, a new media wunderkind who started his own magazine and is constantly surrounded by male groupies basking in his hipness and relevance.
Despite the apparent success of Slikowski (he makes a well-received documentary, he eschews financially attractive offers to only produce things that matter. Not only does his job keep him away from Sadie and their child Jack for months at a time, but it leaves Sadie without the comfortable upbringing that she experienced in the Upper East Side.
She is not poor by any means, but left frustrated by the lack of wealth that other classmates, like Caitlin Green-Gold, enjoy.
Having completed a graduate program on popular culture in Milwaukee, Beth is from Scarsdale, Westchester County and is relieved to find herself back in 'civilization' with her group of friends. She struggles to find a teaching position after not accounting for her credits and pines away for Dave, whom she dated during Oberlin before both went to their respective graduate schools.
Emily is a struggling actress who has the added burden of caring for her mentally ill sister Clara. As others are achieving success, she feels left behind as she struggles in her tiny apartment and works a mindless office job supporting her acting career. She eventually marries Dr. Josh Gitter and gives up acting to start a pre-med program.
Tal is from Brookline, MA and defies his parents expectation of a legal profession by pursuing acting. Despite his success in television and movies, his socially conservative parents never really accept his profession.
Dave is a piano prodigy who is never able to recover from his lack of confidence by going to graduate school instead of pursuing a career as a pianist. He spends his 20s as a waiter and in band and like Emily, is stuck in making progress. The difference between Dave and Emily is that Emily pursues opportunities aggressively while Dave continues to passively sit on the sidelines.
The Best of Times by Penny Vincenzi, 2009
A novel with many characters of different ages and situations woven together by a fateful accident on the M4, The Best of Times is an enjoyable read that explores the lives of many characters.
The novel reminds me of the movie Love Actually, where disparate lives intersect. Another similarity is that Vincenzi is British so the novel is peppered with English-isms, which I always enjoy reading.
Characters include the hero doctor Jonathan Gilliatt and his mistress Abi Scott. The lorry driver who is involved in the accident Patrick Connell and his wife Maeve.
William Grainger, a farmer, witness the crash. Barney Fraser, best man, and bridegroom Toby Weston are heading to a wedding. Mary Bristow is heading to the airport to meet the American serviceman Russell McKenzie that she met decades ago during WWII.
Georgia Linley is an aspiring actress managed by Linda Di-Marcello. Alex Pritchard is an Accidents & Emergency doctor (the equivalent to an American ER doctor), while Emma King is doing her statutory in A&E.
Despite the numerous characters, the novel is extremely readable and I plan to read other Vincenzi novels. (June 2015)
And the Good News Is...: Lessons and Advice from the Bright Side by Dana Perino, 2015
I first heard about Dana Perino's book on NPR. As the first Republican woman press secretary, Perino served under President George W. Bush and is now a Fox News show co-host.
During her interview on NPR, Perino was witty and engaging, and since I have always been interested in biographies of successful women, I decided to pick up her book.
A mix of personal and professional stories, Perino describes growing up in Colorado and Wyoming, and how she ended up in Washington D.C. She requested a job reference from a Colorado Congressman's office and the office ended up offering her a job in their D.C. office.
The professional stories that Perino writes about are light-hearted and reflect her absolute loyalty and admiration for President Bush.
Naturally, there are Democratic barbs scattered throughout the book; although ironically, Perino dedicates a portion of her book on civility. Her message that politicians need to remain above the fray and civil, and not spiral towards the name-calling that politics has become, is heart-felt but the partisanship in Washington is prevalent in even those with the best intentions.
The take-aways from Perino's books include general tips for career women:
* Making Butterflies Fly in Formation - It's ok to be nervous, just channel the nervous energy in a productive way and imagine the butterflies in your stomach flying in formation so that you are in control of your nervousness.
* Find Your Strong Voice - No up-talking? NO up-talking. Speak from your core, stand up straight and open up your lungs to really talk. None of this Valley Girl, teenage way of speaking.
* Always Take Your Husband's Phone Calls - Always take your family's call. It's all about priorities.
* Let It Go - There are no do-overs. When something does not go well, learn from what happened and apply those lessons to whatever is ahead and move on.
Good habits that I already do and plan to pass along to my nieces: share the credit, be wiling to take the blame for your team, and stick up for others - even if they don't know it. (June 2015)
Short Girls by Bich Minh Nguyen, 2009
The story of two Vietnamese-American sisters, Short Girls is a story that I relate to as a 2nd generation Asian-American.
The themes of community and family versus fitting into an 'American' world run throughout the novel.
Van and Linny Luong are sisters. Van is the studious model-Asian daughter who becomes a lawyer while Linny is the assimilated, social younger sister who has dropped out of community college.
Despite her popularity and immersion though, Linny remains on the outside and will never have the ease of 'fitting in' as her brother-in-law, a 4th generation Chinese-American whose parents and grandparents speak English fluently.
Ironically, Linny is the sister who maintains most of her heritage, mainly through cooking. Van was so singularly focused on achieving 'success' that she never spent time with her parents or attending the Vietnamese gatherings her parents and Linny attended.
The story unfolds from alternating point of views of each sister. Both are at a crossroads in their personal and professional lives.
Van's attorney husband has left her without explanation and she has left a job she was passionate about as an immigration attorney to join a firm that processes corporate visa paperwork.
Linny is in a dead-end relationship with Gary, a married man, and has a steady job as a chef for You Did It Dinners providing meals for suburban moms (including her lover's wife), but is restless.
What draws the sister back together is their father's decision to become an American citizen in hopes of improving his chances for success as an inventor of gadgets for short people. As head of a family composed of members 5'2" and under, Dinh Loung is obsessed with the challenges of short people and has buried himself in his basement/lab since arriving in the States.
During the time together supporting their father, the sisters confide in each other (as much as Asians can) and end up being there for each other as they move on from their respective dead-end situations.
Character nuances that I can relate to include a non-communicative father who does not show emotion and a driven mother who wanted to move her family into a house in the suburbs instead of an urban apartment.
The distance between the parents and children is also a theme that I can relate to. Van reminisces about her deceased mother's favorite time of day after the sun sets and the sky turns blue. Her mother had wanted her daughters to sit with her to enjoy, but there was always excuses. Van was studying while Linny was on the phone or with friends. There was always something else to do besides getting to know their parents.
Well-written, Short Girls is an enjoyable novel, regardless if one can relate on a personal level to the characters. The characters are well-developed and the story moves at a nice pace. (June 2015)
The Rum Diary by Hunter Thompson, 1998
During our vacation to Puerto Rico, my husband picked up The Rum Diary, Hunter Thompson's portrayal of Puerto Rico in the 1960s.
He enjoyed how Thompson captured the essence of San Juan and Vieques immensely.
The Rum Diary is a semi-autobiographical story of journalist Paul Kemp who moves to Puerto Rico to work for the San Jaun newspaper.
Drawn in to the Caribbean pace of life with its oppressive heat and soothing clear blue ocean waters, Kemp leads a decadent, transient existence surrounded by other ex-pats; all who have fled to Puerto Rico to reinvent themselves or run away from their failed dreams in the States.
The style and pace of writing is full throttle as Kemp stumbles from one opportunity to another, in search of the next pay check that will sustain the bare necessity of food and rum.
Written in the '60s, it is surprising how misogynist the attitude was. Yeamon, a fellow ex-pat and co-worker, hits his girlfriend Chenault and there is no reaction from Kemp or others who witness the abuse.
Having read a collection of letters by Thompson years ago, I was
familiar with his writing, but had never read any of his actual
novels. If The Rum Diary is any indication, his novels are engaging, manic, concise and never let up, like the man himself. (June 2015)
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt, 2013
I had heard the buzz around The Goldfinch, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and almost picked it up at the bookstore, but the description of the book seemed too dire.
A thirteen year old boy becomes orphaned; and is obsessed with a painting was not a topic I found too interesting.
The novel lives up to the buzz though. The Goldfinch is one of those books in a class itself - an epic story where the reader is completely immersed in somebody else's life.
From growing up in New York City to getting shipped out to Las Vegas to finally returning to NYC, Theo Decker's world is so raw, filled with tragedy and innocence, that I could not put the book down.
The characters are distinct and memorable: Theo's mother Audrey Decker and doormen Goldie and Jose; his childhood friend Andy Barbour and his Park Avenue family; Eli Blackwell, James Hobart (Hobie) and Pip Blackwell; Theo's father Frank and his girlfriend Xandra; and of course, Decker's best friend in Las Vegas, Boris. (June 2015)
The Hot Rock by Donald E. Westlake, 1970
Capers and crime novels are not not my genre, but my husband's. He has a collection of crime novel books so I grabbed The Hot Rock. It caught my interest since it was made into a movie starring Robert Redford with the screenplay written by William Goldman.
The novel centers around John Dortmunder, a charismatic, straight-shooter convict who is hired to lead a gang of criminals to steal an emerald. Despite the execution of intricate plans, the gang finds that they must pull off multiple capers before successfully obtaining the emerald.
Wry with dry humor and one-liners peppered throughout, I enjoyed The Hot Rock although am not sure I will read additional novels by Westlake given that the genre is not really my interest.
A prolific writer, Westlake published over 100 books, including additional novels centering around Dortmunder. (May 2015)
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