The Zookeeper’s Wife Review

Cover for The Zookeeper's Wife by Diane AckermanAfter reading Cinder and Scarlet last month, I paused in my reading of the Lunar Chronicles to read The Zookeeper’s Wife by Diane Ackerman. This book has been recommended to me by a few people over the years. I don’t exactly make it a secret that I love World War II books. I got the audiobook out of the library as one of the books advertised for the anniversary of D-Day, and I had to read it before it expired.

The Zookeeper’s Wife tells the true story of a woman in Poland who saved hundreds of Jews during the Holocaust by hiding them in the abandoned animal cages of the zoo. The book follows the woman and her family through the whole of the war, dealing with the invasion and occupation of Poland by the Nazis, the Holocaust, the Polish resistance, and then the arrival of the Russians. Honestly, while I found the story this book told to be incredible, I thought the execution of the book hindered my enjoyment of it.

The subject of this book reminded me a lot of The Assisi Underground, which is about priests in Assisi who hid Jews by disguising them as priests and nuns in the many churches in Assisi. The Zookeeper’s Wife reminded me of the Assisi Underground because of the unlikely and ingenious strategy of hiding people, as well as the leadership of this one woman who took it upon herself to protect all these people and see them on to safety. Most of my World War II knowledge is focused in Italy, France, England, Germany, and America. I don’t know too much about Poland, and I think I’ve only read one other book about World War II in Poland, so I was particularly fascinated by this account.

On the other hand, I found the writing to be scattered and a little tone deaf. The book leapt crazily from descriptions of the cuteness of the critters the zookeeper’s family was saving to the horrors of the war. It was pretty jarring. It also leapt around in time a lot. At one point, I got so confused I thought the main character had been pregnant for two years. There quite a few moments like this where I wasn’t quite sure where I was in space and time in the book, and it felt like the confusion could have been cleared up with clearer writing. I also found the writing to be rather dry, and I was both fascinated and bored at the same time as I read.

Let me be perfectly clear. This was a great story. It was an interesting story, and an important story. It deserved to be told, and deserves to be read. And I’m glad I read it. Unfortunately, I just didn’t enjoy the book that much. I can’t help comparing it to the fabulous nonfiction books I’ve read on World War II in the past, particularly The Assisi Underground, and the World War II books I’ve read since I finished The Zookeeper’s Wife, Code Girls and A Woman of No Importance, which I loved and I’ll talk about here soon.

I have heard good things about the movie for The Zookeeper’s Wife, and maybe when all this bar studying is over I’ll check that out.

Have you read The Zookeeper’s Wife? Seen the movie? What did you think?

Scarlet Review

Cover of Scarlet by Marissa MeyerLast week, I reviewed Cinder, the first book in Marissa Meyer’s Lunar Chronicles series. Today I’m going to talk about the second book, Scarlet. As with my other reviews of sequels, there will probably be spoilers for Cinder, so if you haven’t read Cinder go check out my spoiler-free review for Cinder right over here. Otherwise read on at your own peril.

The Lunar Chronicles has a really interesting format as a series. As I said last week, each book is a retelling of a different fairy tale. The first book is Cinderella, and the second book is Little Red Riding Hood. This means that the main character of the second book is Scarlet, not Cinder. We don’t just abandon Cinder though. She’s still part of the story, and she’s arguably still the main character of the series, but the focus of this book is Scarlet. I loved Cinder so much I was uncertain about this format the first time I read it, but it works really well, and it’s really impressive. Also, I love Scarlet.

Scarlet lives on a farm in southern France with her grandmother. At the same time that Cinder is making her dramatic debut at the Commonwealth’s ball, Scarlet’s grandmother goes missing. The police find no sign that she was kidnapped, but Scarlet is convinced that something has happened to her. Her grandmother wouldn’t just leave. And when Scarlet’s estranged father turns up with claims of being forced to torture himself in Scarlet’s grandmother’s presence to get her to give up some sort of information, Scarlet sets out to find her grandmother herself. She teams up with a strange newcomer in town, a street fighter named Wolf. Wolf has the same tattoo as the people who tortured Scarlet’s father. He says he was part of a gang in Paris but he left, and he agrees to help Scarlet find her grandmother.

Meanwhile, Cinder teams up with another prisoner, Carswell Thorne, and together they break out of New Beijing prison. Cinder does most of the work, actually. Thorne just tags along, but he does have a stolen space ship hidden away, and they go on the run together. Dr. Errland told Cinder to meet him in Africa, but she isn’t ready to accept her role as lost princess. She feels like she doesn’t know who she is and who she’s supposed to be. So she starts practicing her lunar gift, and she uses the information she learned from Kai’s android Nainsi and goes in search of Michelle Benoit, a woman in southern France who Nainsi thinks hid Cinder for years. Cinder thinks Michelle Benoit might have some answers for her. And Michelle Benoit is, you guessed it, Scarlet’s grandmother.

And finally, we follow Emperor Kai as he faces down Queen Levana over Cinder’s escape. Levana gives Kai three days to find Cinder, or she will. And she won’t be nice about it.

And of course everything comes together in a crazy awesome climax.

The first time I read this, I admit that I was kind of bored with Scarlet’s story in the beginning. I wanted to keep following Cinder. On this reread, I was kind of bored with the start of Cinder’s story. Especially once they get out of prison, it feels like a lot of nothing drama. Okay, I like Thorne a lot, especially since I know where his story is going next in Cress, and Iko as the space ship is just great. Cinder’s story is by no means bad—it’s actually really good—but it isn’t her best moment, certainly.

Scarlet, on the other hand, has a great story in this book. Scarlet is a fierce character, and she will do anything to find her grandmother. Also Scarlet and Wolf’s romance is just so adorable! Scarlet’s story follows Little Red Riding Hood a lot more closely than Cinder followed Cinderella, though, so that makes things pretty obvious to everyone but Scarlet, which is a bit unfortunate. She probably has the weakest arc of any of the four main characters who have a book, but I also love her character so much that I don’t care. Like yes Scarlet might be the weakest of the series, but it’s still a really good book.

The other thing I love about this book is how much the international and interplanetary politics ramp up in this book. We see a lot of that from Kai’s point of view, and it’s great to watch him try to navigate this world that he’s really just been thrown into. It’s also great to watch his conflicting emotions about wanting Cinder to get caught so Levana doesn’t declare war but also wanting her to escape because she doesn’t want her to be executed.

I don’t want to say much more than what I’ve already said, because I don’t want to give anything major away. You really just have to go with these characters on this great journey. This is a really great second book in this series. This is one of those series where each book is just as good, if not better, than the last, and the series just builds and builds. It’s so intense but also so fun and adorable. I actually started screaming when I finished this book, because the ending is so crazy.

As I’ve said before, The Lunar Chronicles is one of my favorite series of all time. If you’ve read Cinder and you’re hesitating about going on to read Scarlet, you need to do it. Read it now. If you haven’t read Cinder, I don’t know why you’ve read this far in this review honestly, but you should go do that and then read Scarlet. It is great.

Cinder Review

Cover of Cinder by Marissa MeyerI’ve continued my bar prep rereadathon by diving back into The Lunar Cronicles series by Marissa Meyer. I’ve raved about these books before, and I was so glad that I loved rereading them just as much now as I did when I first picked them up in 2015 (I think that was when I first read them). Today, I’m going to talk about the first book, Cinder, and I’ll go on to the other books in the next few days.

The Lunar Chronicles is a series of retold fairy tales in a sci fi universe. For those who don’t know, I love retold fairy tales to pieces. The Lunar Chronicles was also some of the first sci fi I ever read. I never really gravitated toward it as a genre before, but once I got into it I was just in love. Each book in the series focuses on a different fairy tale. Cinder, the first book, is Cinderella. Except Cinderella is a cyborg, there’s a deadly plague sweeping the globe, a threatened war with Luna (the moon), and so much more. Yes, there’s a ball and sort of a fairy godmother. We even get a pumpkin colored car to take Cinder to the ball, but I’m getting ahead of myself.

Cinder takes place in a future where the countries of the world have united into about seven countries (roughly by continent but Britain is still its own thing). People are also living on the moon, and they have developed from an Earthen colony into something not quite human. They can basically do mind control to mess with people’s emotions and perceptions and even force them to act without their volition. And like I said, there’s a deadly plague sweeping the globe.

Sixteen-year-old Cinder is the best mechanic in New Beijing, but she’s also a cyborg. Cyborgs are generally looked down on by most citizens and actually discriminated against by the government. Cinder is legally the property of her stepmother (her parents were killed in the same accident which prompted Cinder’s cyborg operation when she was eleven). Cyborgs are also drafted every day to be test subjects for plague research, which basically means they’re killed because they’re injected with the plague and then given antidotes to test. In general, people don’t think cyborgs are fully human. So Cinder tries to keep the fact that she’s a cyborg a secret as much as possible. When Prince Kai comes to her booth in the market to have a royal android repaired, she’s not about to tell him. Then things really heat up when Cinder’s younger stepsister, the one she likes, catches the plague and is sent off to the city quarantines and Cinder’s stepmother volunteers Cinder for plague research. Where she finds out that she is lunar and so immune to the plague, Prince Kai wants her to come to the annual peace festival ball with him, and oh yeah, the evil brainwashing lunar queen, Levana, is coming to earth to form an alliance which may or may not involve a marriage with the prince. And Queen Levana does not take kindly to illegal emigration from Luna.

Even after multiple rereads of this series, I still love this book to pieces. It’s fast paced and easy to read. Cinder is smart and resourceful, but also vulnerable in all the right places, and so she’s really likeable. We have both the personal stakes—Cinder wants to save her sister and run away from her stepmother, Cinder has a crush on the prince, and Cinder wants to not be caught by Queen Levana. And we also have these big intergalactic stakes with the plague ravaging the world and the possible alliance with Luna and all that promises and threatens. I feel really immersed in this futuristic world where people travel everywhere by maglev cars and androids and cyborgs and space travel are common. I also love all the little details that connect back to the Cinderella story.

I’ve heard and read criticism that for a book being set in a city called New Beijing, there isn’t enough Asian culture present and none of the characters really look Asian. I’m not going to comment on whether the characters look Asian or not. I have no idea what that even means, and I generally don’t mind if character description in a book is minimal. But as to the Asian culture, I’m torn. I think it’s a valid point, but I also think we’re hundreds of years into the future, countries have collapsed and reformed, and on the whole the world has become smaller. This doesn’t mean that different cultures will have been eliminated, but I feel like it’s fair that cultures we know today would change. So for me, I treated the culture of the Eastern Commonwealth in this book as having roots in today’s Asian culture but having changed into something new and we’re discovering that in the book. But again, I recognize that this could come off as tokenism. Representation in literature is a big deal, especially for books for kids and young adults. And it’s a big deal for a good reason. Having a culture that is nominally Asian and then it’s not really Asian can feel like false representation. I don’t know a lot about Asian culture beyond what I’ve read in books and seen in movies, so I’m not going to speak directly to what’s there and what’s missing in Cinder. I guess just know that this is a potential problem with the book.

Speaking of representation, I love the disability representation in this book. This will come up a lot more when we get to Cress, so stay tuned for my rant about one of the best blind characters I’ve ever read, but to give you a preview of my feelings: I really love how Marissa Meyer has created a world in which physical disability essentially doesn’t exist anymore, but the stigma still exists. It just feels real to me.

On the whole, I still love this book so much. I love Cinder’s journey and character development as she finds out who she is and what she’ll do to protect her friends. Yes, the revelation in the end is a bit obvious once you get there, but it’s really more about Cinder’s journey. And like I said I really liked the twists on the fairy tale. It presented Cinderella in a really new and fresh way.

I could keep ranting about how much I love this book, but I also have to get back to studying because that never ends, so I’ll leave you with this. Rereading Cinder, this might be the third or fourth time, was a wonderful experience. It’s a great start to one of my all time favorite series. If you haven’t read it, I hope I’ve convinced you of how awesome this book is. If you have read it, I’d love to talk about it with you. And I’ll be back soon to talk about the second book in the series, Scarlet, which is a retelling of Little Red Riding Hood.

2019 Check In the Second

Hey there friends. We have reached July, which means we are halfway through 2019, which means it’s time for another check-in on my 2019 goals. I set some pretty big goals for myself in 2019, and while I’ve had a few setbacks, I feel like I’m doing well, all things considered, and I’m confident I will achieve all these goals by the end of 2019. I will certainly start making more progress once I get past the bar at the end of this month.

  1. Don’t freak out.

Okay, so a few weeks ago, I had a minor mid bar-prep meltdown. It was late, I was tired, I was pretty sure I was going to fail the bar and never finish revising my book and be really, really bad at being an adult come September, but this was like a two hour minute in which our fire alarm ran out of batteries and would not stop beeping. I pulled myself together the next morning, and I have since learned not to take practice test scores seriously if I take the practice test after 6:00 PM.

But seriously, I think I’ve been managing all this pretty well. I’m studying for the bar, which is nine or ten hours a day, seven days a week. I’m packing up all my stuff to move out of my apartment at the end of July, and I’m getting ready to move down to Virginia at the end of August. I’m also revising my novel, one baby step at a time. And I’m managing to feed myself reasonably and get a reasonable amount of sleep. A lot has been going on, and I think I’ve been handling it really well.

Oh, and since my last check-in, my stress levels have been helped significantly by the fact that I got a job! I was accepted into the attorney honors program at the Federal Communications Commission, and I’ll be starting in the satellite division (as in satellites in space) in September. This is exactly where I wanted to be, and I am so excited and so relieved.

  1. Get in shape.

I’m pretty sure I’m cursed on this one. Every time I start going to the gym regularly, something happens to bring me to a grinding halt. I got very, very sick three times over the course of spring semester, and then after investing in a summer gym membership and managing to go almost every day for most of June, I tripped down the stairs and sprained my ankle pretty badly. Like I thought it was broken and went to urgent care kind of badly. I swear studying for the bar has diverted important brain function like balance and coordination away from my feet. It’s been a week, and I’m still barely able to walk, so I’m not going to the gym any time soon, much to my chagrin. See what I mean? I’m cursed.

We are still only halfway through 2019 though, and starting in August, I won’t have the bar to worry about. My new apartment in Virginia also has a gym and an indoor pool in the abuilding, so I’m not giving up yet.

  1. Read 100 books.

As of the end of June, I’ve read fifty-five books. So I’m right on track with this one.

  1. Finish the next draft for three projects:

As I said, I’m plugging away at revisions to my middle grade fantasy adventure novel with my agent. I’m also in the middle of writing the climax for my middle grade sci fi novel (admittedly I’ve been in the middle of the climax since March), so I almost have a first draft of that project. So while I haven’t finished a single project yet, I expect to start making a lot of progress on this once the bar is over.

  1. Blog more.

I’ve already been doing a lot of blogging. I’m really enjoying writing book reviews for all of you, but I’ve been missing talking about other things with you all, like my life and writing. So I’ve been making plans for new things to talk about come August, because nothing new is happening until August. If you have any ideas for things you’d like to see me talk about, do let me know.

And that’s where I’m at for my 2019 goals. I hope you’ve all been making as much progress on your goals so far.

I’ll be back  soon with the rest of the book reviews for what I read in June, and in the meantime, I’m off to study study study.

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!