The Book Thief Review

Cover of The Book Thief by Markus ZusakThis month, I’m leading the discussion for the book club I’m in with the Cambridge chapter of the NFB. We’re reading The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, which is a reread for me, and which I still absolutely love.

I first read this book back in 2012, when I was studying abroad in Torino. I probably read it three or four more times between 2012 and 2014, especially as I was working on my World War II Italy novella for my senior honors project. I’ve said on countless occasions that The Book Thief is one of my favorite books ever, but I haven’t revisited it since I graduated from college, so rereading it this month was a treat.

The Book Thief is set in a small town in Germany from 1939 to 1943. When Liesel Meminger is ten years old, she’s put into foster care and goes to live with Hans and Rosa Hubermann, who at first seem like complete opposites but are both loving foster parents. But on the way to her new home, Liesel’s younger brother dies, and at his funeral, Liesel steals her first book, even though she doesn’t know how to read. But she learns how to read, makes friends with a host of great characters, and as World War Ii begins, she starts stealing books in earnest. And then her foster parents take a Jew into their home to hide him from the Nazis. Oh, and the story is told by Death.

I still absolutely love this book. It was great to dive in and rediscover this world and all these great characters again, and it’s been so long that it really was like rediscovering them. I  really enjoyed the writing style too. I love how Zusak personifies things like the sky, and people’s expressions, and the words that they’re saying. And this book just gave me so many feelings!

I will say it this pointhat The Book Thief might not be my favorite book ever, but that’s more because I’ve read so many other amazing books since I last read this than because of any fault on the part of The Book Thief. If I had to nitpick, I’d say there were times when the writing style was a little excessive for me, and the discussions of things like the extermination camps felt like token references because they weren’t really part of Liesel’s story. But I felt like I had to dig to find anything negative to say about this book, so I really don’t have strong feelings about either of these criticisms.

On the whole, The Book Thief is an amazing read, and if you haven’t read it, you absolutely need to. I can’t wait to talk about this with my book club this evening, but in the meantime, if you’ve read it, I’d love to know what you think.

Words of Radiance Review

Hello from my couch where I’m busy elevating and icing my foot and studying for the bar. I meant to post this review yesterday, and then I fell down the stairs and landed myself in urgent care with a sprained ankle, so here we are. Other than the perpetual bar studying and the inability to walk anywhere, life is pretty good.

Cover of Words of Radiance by Brandon SandersonI started June with the second book in Brandon Sanderson’s Stormlight Archive series, Words of Radiance. Words of Radiance isn’t quite as huge as The Way of Kings, but it was still a significant time investment. Honestly probably a time investment I didn’t have time to make, but I blew through it in about a week. I couldn’t put it down.

As usual, this review will be spoiler-free for Words of Radiance, but because it’s the second book in the series, there may be some spoilers for The Way of Kings. I’ll do my best, but if you haven’t read The Way of Kings, you should go check out my spoiler-free review over here to decide if this series is for you.

Words of Radiance picks up right after the end of The Way of Kings. Kaladin and the rest of Bridge Four are now working in High Prince Dalinar’s war camp as Dalinar and Adolin’s personal guards, and soon they’re guarding the king too. There’s a lot of political machinations, because Dalinar and Sadeas are both angling for power, and someone is still definitely trying to assassinate the king. Kaladin is being stretched between loyalty to his men and his new duties to Dalinar and the king. He’s also not very good at staying in line in political meetings. And then of course the guy who killed Kaladin’s old squad and enslaved Kaladin shows up as Dalinar’s ally. And as Kaladin’s loyalty is tested, he has to make choices, and the wrong choice might cost him his surgebinding powers.

Meanwhile, Shallan and Jasnah are on their way to the Shattered Plains, and Shallan is starting to learn about her powers, when they are attacked by assassins, and Shallan has to make her way onward on her own, carrying valuable information to the war camps.

Also, the parshendi are up to some really bad stuff in an attempt to destroy the whole Alethi army. Like remember how Shallan and Jasnah figured out the Parshmen were voidbringers? That kind of bad stuff.

Again, this is a huge book, so I’m barely scratching the surface with this description. I’m also probably muddling everything up.

Words of Radiance was slow at first, but once it picked up, it started flying. I just loved learning so much more about these characters and this world. I particularly enjoyed finally getting Shallan’s whole backstory, though honestly I saw some of that coming (but not in a bad way). I also loved that all the characters and storylines came together, and the way everything built toward this fantastic climax.

The only thing I didn’t particularly like about this book was the instalove between Shallan and Adolin, and then what I believe is the beginnings of a love triangle between Shallan, Adelin, and Kaladin, and these dislikes are more because I feel like it wasn’t really necessary to the plot, especially because the book is pretty long. These plots could develop into something I really love in the next book, but right now I’m kind of meh about the idea. I’m also kind of meh about love triangles in general, because they’re so often just ways to insert extra drama into a relationship.

But on the whole, I loved this book. It just blew me away. Pun intended.

And the ending! Oh, the ending!

This morning, I finished the novella that takes place between Words of Radiance and the third book in the series, and I have the third book ready to start after that, so stay tuned.

May Reading Roundup

We’re midway through June, and I’ve finally managed to tell you about all the books I read in May. I’m sorry I got so behind. I was a bit overwhelmed with the first three weeks of bar studying and graduation and everything.

Who am I kidding? I’m still overwhelmed with bar studying.

But I’m caught up with my book reviews now, and it’s time for a quick recap before we move on to the books I’ve read so far in June. (Luckily I haven’t read too many books so far in June so this shouldn’t turn into a spiral of falling behind.)

Collage of the covers of the ten books I read this monthI read ten books in May, and it was a pretty mixed bag both in terms of genre and how I liked them. Five of the books I read were rereads, since this is supposedly the great bar prep rereadathon. One of the books was nonfiction. Three were classic kids books. One was historical fiction, two were fantasy, one was a mystery with some fantasy/sci fi twists (it’s not quite clear which), and two were contemporaries. Here’s what I read with links to my reviews and some quick notes about my thoughts.

First, I finished my annual Harry Potter reread with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J. K. Rowling. I love this book so much, and it always breaks my heart a little when I finish the series. I particularly enjoyed this year’s reread, because I took notes and shared all my thoughts with you. My rambly thoughts on Half-Blood Prince and Deathly Hallows are here. careful, there are spoilers.

Next, I read The Summer Before the War by Helen Simonson. While this book didn’t quite work for me, it certainly wet my appetite for more World War I books. You can check out my review here.

After that, I reread Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor. I read this at the end of last year, but the library finally got the sequel, and I’m on the waiting list for that, so I decided to reread the first book. I enjoyed Akata Witch the first time I read it, but I actually liked it a lot more the second time around.

Next was The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton. I loved so much about this book, and I really, really wanted it to be great. Unfortunately I also felt it had some pretty significant flaws. Here’s what I thought about it.

Then I read Us Against You by Fredrik Backman. This is the sequel to Beartown, which I read back in March and adored. Us Against You was a perfectly good book, but measured against Beartown—and I don’t know how to not measure it against Beartown—it was kind of a let down. My review for Beartown is here, and my review for Us Against You is here.

After that, I read Fly Away by Kristin Hannah, the sequel to Firefly Lane, which I read back in March and did not adore. I wanted more from the sequel, but I think it tripped itself up with its circular structure and by trying to be a stand-alone novel. But I’m also pretty sure that Kristin Hannah’s contemporary stuff isn’t my cup of tea. You can find my review for Firefly Lane here and Fly Away here.

Next, I read Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterley. I talked about this just a couple days ago here. I was surprised by how in depth the book went, and I really enjoyed it.

Finally, I recovered from graduation by spending the last day of May in bed and rereading the books my mom read to us when we were little, Charlotte’s Web by E. B. White, Stuart Little by E. B. White, and James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl. I talk about them all together here, with a shout-out to my mom who is better than any of the audiobook narrators for these books. Charlotte’s Web is a beautiful book and well deserves its status as a classic. Stuart Little is kind of weird, and not necessarily in a good way. And James and the Giant Peach is also kind of weird but also delightful.

And that’s it for the month of May. Have you read any of these books? Do you agree with my opinions? Do you have any other books you think I should read?

Review: Three Kid Lit Classics

A few weeks ago, I graduated from law school. (Yay!) It was a two day affair, and the second day we had to get up at 5:00 in the morning for a full day of ceremonies. So the day after everything, I gave up on any possibility of studying for the bar and just lay in bed and listened to three quick audiobooks: Charlotte’s Web by E. B. White, Stuart Little by E. B. White, and James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl. Coincidently, these were the three books my mom read to us when we were little kids.

No, it isn’t lost on me that I spent the day after graduation listening to all the books my mom read to me when I was three. Personally I think it’s kind of cute.

Also, my mom is a way better narrator than any of the audiobook narrators, and that includes E. B. White himself.

Also, I didn’t realize how much these books are still part of my life. I still think the capital of Pennsylvania is Wilbur, for example, and when anyone in my family is reading something out loud, whenever we say chapter one, it’s always followed by “In the Drink” (a messed up version of the first chapter of Stuart Little).

I don’t have a ton to say about any of these three books, so I’m putting them all together into one post.

Charlotte’s Web

Cover of Charlotte's Web by E. B. WhiteThis book was just delightful. Just as delightful as it was when I was a little kid.

It’s about a young pig, Wilbur, whose rescued by a girl named Fern and then grows up in a barn full of other animals, and all these animals, especially the spider Charlotte, pitch in to help keep Wilbur alive.

There are so many things I loved about this book, both as a child and now rereading it as a newly minted law school graduate. The book ages well. It can be enjoyed by all ages (or maybe I’m just a child at heart). It also doesn’t talk down to kids, throwing out words like “injustice” and “radiant” and “humble,” which I certainly didn’t know when I was five-ish. Actually, Charlotte’s Web is probably how I learned those words. I still equate humility with Wilbur (just like the capital of Pennsylvania).

All the characters and little episodic adventures were just such fun, too. Everybody had their own personalities, and you can see how they all grew and changed over the course of the story.

The only thing that bothered me about this book was how Fern stops caring so much about Wilbur and the other animals toward the end. I get the point is that she’s growing up, but the fact that Wilbur’s life is in danger and she just runs off to ride the ferris wheel with a boy really bugged me.

When my mom first read this to us, I was about five, and my two-year-old brother colored all over the ending, so we never finished it. I picked it up myself some time later and read it on my own to finish it, but I still didn’t remember the ending and was totally surprised when I got there this time around. But on the whole, I think it worked.

I really loved revisiting this book and these characters. If you haven’t read Charlotte’s Web, you need to. If you haven’t read it in a while, it’s definitely worth a revisit.

Stuart Little

Cover of Stuart Little by E. B. WhiteStuart Little is about a mouse born into a human family living in New York City and his adventures growing up.

I didn’t enjoy Stuart Little as much. I liked a lot of the little vignettes in the book, but on the whole, it didn’t feel very cohesive. It was very episodic, and there was a lot of slapstick comedy kind of adventures, but there was very little overall plot, and it ended very suddenly with no resolution. Unfortunately, I remembered it better than it was and I’m sorry I now can’t remember it the way I did before.

James and the Giant Peach

Cover of James and the Giant Peach by Roald DahlThis was a wild book. Very characteristic Roald Dahl craziness. After his parents are eaten by a rhinoceros, James is sent to live with his awful abusive aunts. Then an old man gives James some magical green things that he’s supposed to mix into a potion and it will help him stand up to his aunts. But before he can make the potion himself, he falls over and spills the green things, and the next thing you know there’s a peach the size of a house and a bunch of giant bugs living in the pit. James joins them, and they take the giant peach on a wild adventure. They battle sharks and seagulls and cloud men as they cross the ocean to America.

I never saw the movie, but I’ve heard it was terrifying, and I believe it.

It was a crazy book, but it was a ton of fun, and I absolutely loved it.

So that’s it. If you’re looking to revisit some classic kid lit books, I’d definitely go back to Charlotte’s Web and James and the Giant Peach. Stuart Little was fun but on the whole not as strong of a story in my opinion, but to each their own. So tell me, what books did you read as a little kid that still hold up today?

Hidden Figures review

Cover of Hidden Figures by Margot Lee ShetterleyThis is going to be a short post tonight, because I’m tired and don’t have a ton to say. A couple weeks ago, I read Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterley. This is the book the movie was based on. This is one of those rare cases where I actually saw the movie before I read the book, but seeing the movie first didn’t dampen my enjoyment of the book, because they’re both great in their own right.

The book follows a group of African American women mathematicians working at NASA from World War II through the 1970s. It highlights their work as computers for NASA and their contributions to airplane developments during WWII and then their work on the first spaceships that put men into orbit and then sent them to the moon. But it also focuses on their struggles with racism and sexism throughout these turbulent decades in history.

Hidden Figures is really a fascinating book. It goes in depth on all the topics, but it didn’t feel like it was focusing on too much. The book also covers so much more than the movie. I had no idea Hidden Figures had anything to do with WWII. And that scene in the movie where the main character is struggling to find a bathroom she can use is only a couple of sentences in the book.

It was certainly dry at times, and I admit I struggled to keep all the women straight (I kept mixing up the various women named Mary). And I wish the Apollo 13 incident was given more than a passing reference, but that was probably thanks to the weight it was given in the movie.

The long and short of it is that the book and movie are very different beasts, but I enjoyed them both, and I particularly enjoyed the book. If you’ve seen Hidden Figures but haven’t read the book, or if you enjoy science history books, I definitely recommend you give this book a try.

If Only a Word for All Things to Be Published in Cast of Wonders

Hello friends. Today I write with some good news I’ve been looking forward to sharing for quite a while. The contract is signed, sealed, and delivered, so I can finally tell you that my short story “If Only a Word for All Things” is going to be published by the YA podcast Cast of Wonders. “If Only a Word For All Things” is magical realism, and it’s the only story I’ve written so far that was directly inspired by my year living in Italy. You may remember that Cast of Wonders published my story “The Collector” back in 2014, and I am so excited to hear how they perform this story and for you all to get to experience Annachiara’s journey across Europe to find her runaway mother. I’ll let you know when it’s published, and as always I’ll have more information about the story for you then, too.

 

Back to the studying!

Fly Away Review

Cover for Fly Away by Kristin HannahBack in March, I read Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah. It wasn’t my favorite book in the world, but I was invested enough that I got the sequel, Fly Away, out of the library and read it in May. As I said, I wasn’t a huge fan of Firefly Lane, so the bar for the sequel wasn’t terribly high. Still, I was disappointed. Let me explain.

As with all my reviews, this will be spoiler free, but as with my other reviews of sequels, I might not be able to avoid spoilers from the first book. Fly Away is kind of a strange book in that even though it’s a sequel, it could also stand on its own. So if you want to read Fly Away on its own, stick around, but there will be spoilers from Firefly Lane. At least one very major one, anyway. If you’re interested in reading Firefly Lane without spoilers, this isn’t the review for you. But you can go check out my spoiler-free review for Firefly Lane here.

Fly Away picks up a few years after the end of Firefly Lane. The beginning is pretty cryptic about what’s happened, but since Kate’s death, Tully and Kate’s husband, Johnny have had a falling out; Tully is now addicted to alcohol and narcotics; and Kate’s daughter, Mara, started cutting herself, became a goth and a druggie, ran away from home with a guy, and is basically living on the streets of Portland, Oregon. Then Tully gets in a car accident, and she’s so badly injured that the doctors put her into a medically induced coma. And so everybody comes together around Tully’s hospital bed, and we go back and relive the events of Firefly Lane and then the last four years from Johnny’s point of view, Mara’s point of view, and Tully’s point of view. Tully is having a sort of out-of-body experience and Kate’s spirit is guiding her through her memories. Kind of some magical realism for you there. Tully’s mother comes back into the picture too, and we get the story of her life and Tully’s life from her point of view.

I’m doing a poor job of describing this. I’m sorry. The back cover says the book is about the three women, Tully, Mara, and Tully’s mother Cloud and how they come together, which isn’t much more concrete, and it completely ignores Johnny, who’s a huge part in the book.

As with Firefly Lane, Kristin Hannah’s writing is great. She has such a powerful way of evoking emotions in her scenes. Some of the ambiance of Firefly Lane was lost in this book, because it’s pretty much set in the modern time in a hospital, but the setting is still really strong throughout. I didn’t find the characters to be as compelling as I did in Firefly Lane. Without Kate, everybody just fell apart, and most of the book is them bemoaning the fact that she’s dead. I’m not trying to be unsympathetic or insensitive or anything. I understand that this is a book about grieving. But when it’s coming at you from every character for the whole book, it gets to be too much like whining. Like after a certain point (and I think four years is past that point) you have to pick yourself up and live your life right?

I think part of the problem with the characters, and a big part of my problem with the book, is that it was trying to stand alone as its own book. You could pick up Fly Away and read it without reading Firefly Lane at all. Unfortunately, this means there’s a lot of recap of Firefly Lane, like the first third of the book at least, and it means a lot of the feelings about Kate and her death come off as heavy-handed. If you read Firefly Lane, you grew to know and love her. But if you didn’t read Firefly Lane, then you didn’t get to know her, and her death is only meaningful to the characters. To make up for this, I guess, we get a ton of how wonderful and perfect Kate was and how much everybody loves her. But since I did read Firefly Lane, it felt like Kristin Hannah was trying to force Kate’s wonderfulness down my throat. And I don’t like having anything forced down my throat.

This problem was compounded by the structure of the book. It felt like the book was going in circles. We have a bunch of point of view characters, and we go over the same events from all of their points of view. It’s kind of a cool idea, but it just didn’t work for me. It got redundant.

I will say that I enjoyed Cloud’s section, because I did not expect her story, and she had some great character development. I will say that on top of everything else going on in the book, Cloud’s story, which is tragic, is a little much. Like she could have just had a disagreement with her parents over something stupid. Happens all the time. We didn’t need, well, all that. But finally some character development!

But I wanted to see Tully develop as a character in this book too, because I felt like she didn’t have any character development in Firefly Lane. I do think there is some character development for Tully, but it’s kind of crammed into the ending of the book, and any development she had in the four years between Kate’s death and her car accident, which isn’t much, feels unearned because it’s told in flashbacks.

All this comes down to the fact that I just don’t think the structure of this book worked the way Kristin Hannah intended it to. Or maybe Kristin Hannah’s contemporary stuff just isn’t my cup of tea. But beyond the construction of the book, it was a very heavy book. It felt like we were cramming every bad way to handle grief into one group of characters. This is a grim book. We have addiction, cutting, family estrangement, rape, institutionalization and forced electroshock therapy, and I could keep going. And like I said about the characters grief feeling like whining, it just got to be too much doom and gloom.

Okay, this has become a lot more ranty than I intended it to, so I’m going to stop here. If you’ve gotten this far in my review, you can probably guess that I was not a fan of Fly Away at all. Kristin Hannah’s good writing doesn’t really matter. As I said with Firefly Lane, though, this is not my typical genre of reading, and I’m pretty sure it’s not the genre for me. I know a lot of people who absolutely loved Firefly Lane, and maybe they would like Fly Away too. I hope this review is helpful if you’re deciding to read Fly Away, and as always, if you’ve already read it, I’d love to know what you think.

Us Against You Review

Cover for Us Against You by Fredrik BackmanA few weeks ago, I read Us Against You by Fredrik Backman. This is the sequel to Beartown, which I raved about to you guys earlier this month. In case you couldn’t tell from that post, I absolutely loved, loved, loved Beartown. And I have been dying to get Us Against You out of the library since I finished it. Once I got my hands on it, I plowed right through it in about two days, and that was on top of bar studying. I couldn’t put it down.

And now, finally, I’m passing on my thoughts to you. There won’t be any spoilers for Us Against You in this post, but since Us Against You is a sequel, there may be spoilers for Beartown. I will do my best to keep them to a minimum, but if you haven’t read Beartown yet (and you should go do that right now), you’d be better off checking out that review (over here).

Us Against You picks up right where Beartown left off. Kevin and his family are moving away. Peter has kept his job, for now. Maya is recovering from the trauma of being raped, as much as she can recover from that. But Beartown’s best hockey players have left to join the team in the neighboring town of Hed, and politicians are arguing that the district doesn’t need two hockey teams and they should focus their resources on only one of them. For the people of Beartown, this is taken as a huge threat, because hockey is pretty much the only hope they have as a town. The book really focuses on the growing rivalry between the two towns over pretty much everything, but primarily about hockey.

This was a really good book. The writing was amazing, and there were some really powerful scenes. And I either loved or loved to hate all the characters.

The thing is, for me, the book didn’t have the same power and poignancy as Beartown. I was expecting another slam dunk amazing book. And don’t get me wrong, Us Against You is really great, but it wasn’t Beartown. I’ve been trying to pin down what exactly was missing from this book for the last few weeks, and I’m still not entirely sure why I don’t like it that much (my brain has also been full of contracts and torts, so I’m not at my best for literary analysis right now). The best I’ve come up with is that Us Against You doesn’t feel as focused or pointed as Beartown. Beartown told the story of how the town reacts to Kevin raping Maya, and yes it’s from the whole town’s point of view, but it’s really focused around this single event and its fall-out. Us Against You revolves around the same characters, and some new ones, and many many events as the rivalry between Beartown and Hed builds. As I said, the writing is great, the characters are great, and the feelings are so real, but it felt more scattered than Beartown.

I think another part of my disappointment is that Beartown has such a perfect ending, and I really didn’t need a sequel. And while I was totally willing to stick with these characters and see what happens next, I wanted any sequel to be as amazing as Beartown. A tough act to follow, certainly, and for me, Us Against You didn’t quite measure up.

I want to be one hundred percent clear. I liked Us Against You a lot. It’s a great book. It’s just hard to read it without comparing it to Beartown, and when I compare it to Beartown, I was disappointed. It didn’t add anything to my love of Beartown. In fact, it kind of detracted from my love of Beartown. While I will continue to recommend Beartown to everybody in the world who hasn’t read it yet, but I’m not sure I’d recommend the sequel. For me, Beartown was perfect on its own.

The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle Review

Cover of The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart TurtonA couple weeks ago, I read The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton. This book had such a cool concept, and a great title, and I really, really wanted to love it. Unfortunately, there were a few things that didn’t quite pull together, and it didn’t work as well for me as I wanted.
The book starts with our protagonist waking up in a forest with no memories. He barely has time to orient himself when he witnesses a murder. He stumbles out of the woods and finds an old manor, where he is apparently been staying because he’s been invited to a homecoming party for Evelyn Hardcastle, the daughter of the wealthy family. (No, the dead woman in the woods is not Evelyn Hardcastle.) As we progress through the book, we learn that our protagonist is trapped in some kind of game, masterminded by this really creepy guy called the plague doctor. Our protagonist will live the same day eight times, each time in the body of another guest of the party. His goal is to solve the murder of Evelyn Hardcastle which will occur at 11:00 PM. If he fails to solve the murder, all his memories will be wiped and he will start again. And there are others like him in the manor house, trying to solve the murder. The first player to solve the murder will be released.
See? Really cool concept, right?
So we follow our protagonist—his name turns out to be Aidan—through the eight days as he gains allies, discovers enemies, tries over and over again to just prevent Evelyn Hardcastle’s murder, gets killed quite a few times himself, and investigates Evelyn’s murder. This was a really fast book, and as I’ve already said, I loved the concept. Stuart Turton also had this writing style that personified everything, and it was really cool, and I liked it a lot.
Now to dive into the problems I have with the book. No spoilers, I promise.
First, each of Aidan’s hosts has both advantages and disadvantages. Some are intelligent but not very physically capable. Some are really fit and great for running around the manor, but they have poor impulse control or they’re violent. And as Aidan progresses through the eight days, his hosts’ natural personalities become harder to control. This is all well and good. But one of his hosts (I think it’s the third or fourth), is a person of size, and the fat shaming in the book at this point is really egregious. I understand the need for some physical description, and Aidan is bound to notice some things more in a body type he’s never experienced before. I also understand the point that this character can’t get around as quickly as some of Aidan’s other hosts. This host turns out to be the smartest of them all, though, and I kind of feel like the author was trying to avoid the fat shaming criticism by giving the host a good quality. But the problem is the descriptions themselves. Every time the character does anything it’s described in great detail, and the tone of and word choice in the description is disgusted. Yes, this character might be smart, but the predominant aspect of his character that we’re meant to walk away with is that he’s grossly fat. And this was not okay with me.
Next, the mystery in this book was really complicated, and there were a lot of characters, and a lot of these characters had very similar names. Like there’s a Harper and a Carver and a Carter, and then there’s a Darby and a Daniel and a Doctor Dicky and a Donald (I think?). It got confusing, to say the least. Now I admit I don’t read a lot of mysteries, but when I do, I like to be able to attempt to solve them on my own. And when we reach the ending, I like to be able to look back and say “ah, I see how this works.” I couldn’t do that with this book. We just followed Aidan as he solved the mystery, and then he explained it to us, and even with his explanation I don’t know how he figured it out. This left me feeling kind of disappointed.
Finally, it’s implied throughout the book that Aidan has been trying to solve Evelyn Hardcastle’s murder for years and has been through these eight days many, many times. And each time, even though he loses his memories when it’s over, he grows as a character. It is revealed at the end what the point of the game is, and I actually think it’s a really cool concept. The problem is all of Aidan’s, and everyone else’s, character development happened before the book started, and we’re just seeing the end point, rather than a complete arc. We can’t appreciate how Aidan has grown and changed over the course of the book, because when the book starts he has pretty much finished his growing and changing and now he’s just putting the pieces together.
For me, The 7 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle had a really cool concept some great writing and a pretty solid plot. But the ending really didn’t work for me, and that dragged the rest of the book down.
I know a lot of people really like this book, so as always take my thoughts with a grain of salt. You know the kinds of books you like to read. If you give it a try I’d love to know what you think, and if you’ve already read it, do you agree with me? Or do I just not understand mysteries?

Akata Witch Review

Hello from the land of bar prep, where life has basically become study, eat, sleep, not necessarily in that order. Last weekend at my five-year Kenyon reunion, when I was trying to explain the state of my life to my friends, I accidentally said “I’m a law student studying for the bar. I eat when I’m tired and sleep when I’m hungry.” Yes it’s a funny mix-up, but it’s actually kind of true.

The studying is going well, I think. None of it is particularly difficult—if only all my law school courses had been so clear—but there’s a lot of it. At least that was my outlook until I got my first graded essay back today. Oof. I thought I knew how to write.

I graduated last week too. I’m officially a J.D. I’m excited, but it’s hard to tell because I eat when I’m tired and sleep when I’m hungry and I seem to always be tired and hungry now.

I’m also managing to squeeze in some reading and writing, though less than I would like and probably still more than I should be doing. The bar studying has meant I’ve gotten behind on book reviews. I’m currently reading the second Stormlight Archive book, and that will take me a while and give me time to catch up this week before posting my reading roundup post for May.

Cover of Akata Witch by Nnedi OkoraforA couple weeks ago, I read Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor. This was actually a reread for me, because I read this book back in November or December. The library finally has the sequel, and since I’m supposed to be spending this time rereading books, I thought this was a good place to start.

Sunny is Nigerian, but she was raised in New York until she was nine, and her parents decided to move the family back to Nigeria. Sunny is also an albino, and a soccer prodegy, though she can’t play much because she can’t be outside in direct sunlight. At the start of the book, she’s twelve years old and having social problems at school, because she doesn’t fit in in any way. And on top of that, she’s seeing visions of the end of the world in candle flames, which is just weird, right? Then she meets Orlu, Chichi, and Sasha, and they introduce her to her magical heritage. Sunny, and her new friends, are what are called Leopard People. They belong to a secret culture that practices juju. Sunny’s new friends introduce her to her new world and new powers. They study their magic, have adventures, investigate Sunny’s grandmother—who they think was also a Leopard Person—and get into plenty of trouble. And then they are tasked with finding and stopping a serial killer who has been kidnapping and murdering children in the area as part of a ritual to bring about the end of the world.

When I read this book back in December, I was a little indecisive about how I felt about it. I enjoyed it, definitely, because I put it on my 2018 favorites list. But I also thought it was a bit all over the place in terms of both content and tone, and I didn’t like the treatment of people with disabilities in this world. But this time around, I liked the book much more. Knowing where everything was going helped fit all the pieces together, and it worked really well. I love how down to earth the characters are, and that discovering her magical powers isn’t all fun and games for Sunny. Basically, this book has all the qualities of middle grade fantasy that I love, and now I’m dying to read the sequel.

The treatment of characters with disabilities still bothers me, though. The book makes a big deal about the problem of stereotypes of people with disabilities as people who have secret powers.  and yes, okay, calling attention to a stereotype and saying this is not what’s going on here is cool and important. But you can’t say “this is not what’s going on here” and then it is what’s going on here. Akata Witch still does the thing where if you are a Leopard Person, and you have a disability, you are basically superpowered above everyone else because you have natural abilities that you can use without the ordinary tools of Juju. Sunny, an albino, can turn invisible. Orlu, who’s dyslexic, can intuitively undo any Juju he comes across. This means that in this culture, people with disabilities are celebrated, but it also means that the book is actively fulfilling the stereotype it says isn’t true. And beyond that, once you unlock your Leopard Person powers, your disability disappears. Orlu is no longer dyslexic (would love to know how they explain that to the public school). Sunny can go out in direct sunlight without fear of being burned. And if you don’t already know how I feel about characters with magic or superpowers or cool technology that negates their disability, go check out this post. All this was a pretty small part of the book, and it didn’t really affect how much I liked the book. But it was definitely an issue, and I wanted to flag it.

On the whole, though, this was a fun book with just the right amount of adventure and danger for me, and I’m looking forward to getting my hands on the sequel.

So, have you read Akata Witch? What did you think?