Books read in March 2013

Whew!  A lot of books fiction and non-, and all reading levels this month, thanks to Spring Break.  If you want to check out just my favorites look for Beyond Magenta (nonfiction about transgender youth) Handbook for Dragon Slayers (middle reader that’s full of fun) Rules for Becoming a Legend (novel about a small-town high school basketball sensation and his troubles) and the Warmth of Other Suns (fascinating nonfiction about the great migration of African Americans out of the South to points north and west.)

Young Adult
Insurgent
Veronica Roth
Ah the second book, where the trilogy either comes together or falls completely apart.  It was the latter in this case.  “Really?” I found myself asking multiple times.  I could give you specific examples that would contain spoilers, but I just don’t care that much.

The Port Chicago 50
Steve Sheinkin
Read for Librarian Book Group
Compelling tale of 50 African American Navy men during World War II.  Examines segregation, racism and workplace safety factors.  Well written.  And frustrating.

Charm and Strange
Stephanie Kuehn
Read for Librarian Book Group
I was lukewarm about this winner, especially because it beat out Sex & Violence which was one of my favorite books this/last year.  I found the writing to be claustrophobic, which made me want to keep reading, but I found the back-and-forth between present and past to be confusing and characters weren’t fully developed.  Also, plot points wandered off in places.

Beyond Magenta
Susan Kuklin
Read for Librarian Book Group
Highly recommended!  Interviews with transgender teenagers of all stripes.  Great for educating yourself about how these teenagers navigate adolescence and early adult life, as well as introducing transgender issues.

Middle Reader
Searching for Sarah Rector
Tonya Bolden
Read for Librarian Book Group
This book was confusing, mostly because it tried to tell Sarah Rector’s story, which was interesting. I think the framing device was not right as (this is not really a spoiler) it seems Sarah Rector was never actually missing.  I found it good for details about striking it rich off of oil in Oklahoma, the former slaves of Indians and also the many swindlers who wanted to take the money, but the whole book never gelled.

The Handbook for Dragon Slayers
Merrie Haskell
Read for Librarian Book Group
Great middle reader of a girl (who happens to be a princess) finding her way in the world despite her limitations.  Good setting of somewhat medieval Europe (but with dragons.)  I’ve already recommended to a smart fifth grader who keeps reading YA books I think she would appreciate more in three or four years.  It would also make a nice companion to Amy Timberlake’s One Came Home

Zane and the Hurricane
Rodman Philbrick
Read for Librarian Book Group
Boy from New Hampshire visits his grandmother and gets to battle through the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.  I found this to be gripping and full of rich, vivid detail.  It’s also short, which makes it good for kids who aren’t into the whole book thing.

Grownup
King Lear
Wm. Shakespeare
Ah Shakespeare, how your words don’t move me and instead drive me to a live performance. I wasn’t a fan of Lear, big old meanie, so you can guess how much I liked this.

It occurs to me if someone strung together all my Shakespeare Reviews they would be a prime target for making fun of.  Fear not! I actually enjoy the performances!

Rules for Becoming a Legend
Timothy S. Lane
Our boy Timothy S. Lane has written a firecracker of a book about basketball and small town living and how the two intersect. So maybe you aren’t a fan of basketball?  This book is still for you.  You’ve got three generations of well-written characters to spend time with. You’ve got layers of small-town gossip, rumor and action.  You’ve got a compelling story, not just of basketball, but also relationships and heartbreak and legend.  You’ve also got a great sense of place in “Columbia City” the town standing in for Astoria, Oregon.  Just as Friday Night Lights isn’t just about high school football, and Rudy isn’t just about Notre Dame football and Hoop Dreams isn’t about inner city basketball and The Art of Fielding isn’t just about college baseball, this is about a lot of things besides basketball.  And even if it was just about basketball, it’s so well written, you wouldn’t be too sad if it was.

Hyperbole and a Half
Allie Brosh
The kind of funny that shouldn’t be read on the train because it’s hard to contain your laughter.  I love the internet, because without it, I very much doubt this would have been published in a book.

The Warmth of Other Suns
Isabel Wilkerson
Read for Kenton Library Book Group
Much like the book the Mitfords: Letters Between Six Sisters, I groaned at seeing how very large this book was.  And much like the Mitfords, I loved every minute of it.  Wilkerson tracks the great diaspora of African Americans living in the South to all points north.  Demographically, this happened between 1910 and the 1970s.  Wilkerson interviewed over 1200 people who migrated  and her book combines the personal narratives of three people while she sets the stage with historical data and bits and pieces of other people’s stories.  It’s compelling, engrossing, frustrating and heartbreaking. It patiently makes the point, over and over again how we are not a country that gives every citizen a chance to succeed. And it made me wonder how much more successful we would be if we did give everyone the same chance. This book was life changing and I highly recommended it.

Picture Books
Thomas Jefferson: Life Liberty & the Pursuit of Everything
Maira Kalman
Read for Librarian Book Group
She makes pretty pictures.  And she talks about Sally Hemmings in an age appropriate way.

Little Poems for Tiny Ears
Lin Oliver & Tommie dePaola
Read for Librarian Book Group
I loathed these poems.  And the illustrations weren’t my type either.  Way too cutesy.

Baby Bear
Kadir Nelson
Read for Librarian Book Group
Pretty illustrations.  Text was not fabulous.

Hi, Koo
Jon J. Muth (sp)
Read for Librarian Book Group
Eh.  It bugged me his Haiku were not 5-7-5.  I liked the illustrations.  Cute little “find the alphabet game” incorporated in text.

Dream Dog
Lou Berger & David Catrow
Read for Librarian Book Group
The illustrations were very Seussian (though I found the father to be leaning toward a slightly offensive stereotype) and I liked the dream dog.  I was not at all happy with the ending.

Look what I picked up.

It was on the Max.  I did what it said and picked it up.

It seems there’s a travelling book thing.  And it’s a big thing, with lots of books registered.
I wasn’t interested in reading the book, so I left it for someone else to find, but it was fun to find it.  I’m not one who purchases books often, but when I do, I may sign up for this.

Books read in February 2014

Not a huge turnout this month, due to falling into Veronica Mars, Season 2 and not climbing out until a few episodes into Season 3.  Also not a huge month for really awesome things.  I read some solid reads, but nothing I raved about.

YA Fiction
Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass
Meg Medina
I read this at the same time I was reading Sonia Sotomayor’s book and kept confusing the two, which was both amusing and maddening.  Aside from this book’s awesome title, it really hit on the many ways a threat by a peer can affect a teenager’s life. It was interesting to see how the main character’s responses were interpreted by the adults in her life, as well as the role that social media played in the attack.  Very well done, if hard to read at times.

Dr. Bird’s Advice for Sad Poets
Evan Roskos
Read for Librarian Book Group
I love this title and I love this main character who was so willing to YAWP (as Walt Whitman did) through his troubles.

Midwinter Blood
Marcus Sedwick
Read for Librarian Book Group
This was the Printz award winner and I think I was grumpy when I read it because I kept thinking, “they picked THIS?”  However, grumpiness aside, it’s kind of a cool book which begins in the far future and works its way back to the distant past.  Each chapter is a different era with new characters, however, all the characters are linked.

The Living
Matt De La Pena
Read for Librarian Book Group
This book has everything!  Let’s make a list right now:  class commentary, racial tension, smidgen of romance, strange illness, natural disaster (s!), survivor tale, heartbreaking sadness, corporate malfeasance, horrible destruction, rogue players, and escape.  And it all worked!  At least for me.  It was fast and fun to read and I’ll just tell you right now, there is a second book to look forward too.

Mister Orange
Truus Marri
Read for Librarian Book Group
The story of a boy living in New York City during World War II.  His father is a grocer, and, as delivery boy for the grocery, he makes friends with an artist he calls Mr. Orange.  Nice setting, good insight into living in a large family.

Divergent
Veronica Roth
Expectations were low, and I enjoyed this distopian novel about a girl who must prove herself.  It’s kind of every “good” girl’s dream: to go off and join a band of fighting ruffians who get around town by jumping on and off freight trains.  Plus, there’s a hot guy.  Not the best I’ve read, but not the worst, either.

“Grownup” Nonfiction
My Beloved World
Sonia Sotomayor
Read for Library Book Group
One of the book group participants observed that he never imagined he would read about a Supreme Court justice buying underwear.  This was a very good point, and the charm of this book.  You get all sorts of insights into Sotomayor’s world and I’ve never had that kind of insight into other members of the court.  I especially appreciated hearing her views about affirmative action, which is a topic I feel like I hear white people complain about a lot, but the people benefiting from the programs voices are often squelched.

I was often confused about which person in her life she was referring.  There were a ton of aunts, uncles, cousins and friends that were briefly described and then not mentioned again for some time.

Willy Vlautin author reading at Powell’s

Aside from being the lead singer and songwriter of Richmond Fontaine Willy Vlautin is also an author.  He was reading at Powell’s to promote his new book the Free.  Did I mention he lives in Portland, Oregon?

Mr. Vlautin is a happy-go-lucky sort of fellow, which made for a pleasant evening.  He told us he was a painter (the house kind) for twelve years and the happiest day of his life was the day he didn’t have to be a painter anymore.  “Of course, a couple of years later,” he added, “I had to go back to being a painter, but that wasn’t such a great day.”
My favorite gem I’m taking away from this reading?  Someone asked how he knew when he was done revising.  “I stop feeling sick to my stomach and start thinking about a new book.”

Books read in January 2014.

I had a few gift certificates to the Title Wave Bookstore, which is the place where the library sells the books it has culled from the catalog.  Books are cheap, most are $1.50 (for hardback!) and I had fifteen dollars of credit, so I came home with large stack.  Nearly all of them were YA.  I’m not sure if the publishers went on a books-about-death/dying/dead people streak or I just managed to pick up every single one of them, but this month featured a lot of grief and death.  Which was fine by me, as I think ramifications of death are worth exploring.  I also finished the last of the reading for the Mock-Printz Workshop and began the reading of all the books which won awards which I have not yet read.

Top three books this month:
Two Boys Kissing
Sex and Violence
Sisterland

Picture/Beginning Chapter Books
The Meanest Birthday Girl
Josh Schneider
Read for librarian book group.
Beginning chapter book that is also a cautionary tale.  Funny.

Dream Animals
Emily Winfield Martin
Read for librarian book group
Dreamy illustrations of the modern-version-of-50s-type-illustration.

The Dark
Lemony Snickett
Why shouldn’t the Dark get his own book?  Funny and clever.

YA Books
If You Find Me
Emily Murdoch
I was all in due to the well-drawn characters and the basic premise of the plot. I also thought seeing the exploration of the world after being absent 10 years was done quite well. It was compulsively readable.  However, there were a few too many plot holes nagging at me for this to be a very good book.

Read on for SPOILERS and my quibbling with plot holes.
Media.
I find it hard to believe that two missing girls (or one missing girl and one unknown girl, because the second was born there) could be recovered from the woods and not a single media outlet would catch wind of this.  Here in Portland, Oregon, in real life, a man and his daughter were found living in a park and it was all over the news for some time.  So why did no one seem to be aware of this bigger story in Tennessee?
Birth.  
Where did the younger sister’s birth happen?  Did her mother give birth at the site?  In a hospital?
Small Town.  
This is a town small enough that someone invites the entire sophomore class to her birthday party and yet no one knows that these girls have been living in the woods?  Extremely unlikely.  Especially because the father has been in the media now and then over the years looking for his lost daughter.  When the daughter shows up, towing a younger sister, was not anyone in town interested to hear where she had been?
Police.
The mother has not only stolen her daughter from her ex-husband who had full custody, she has hidden her away for a decade.  And yet no one seems to be looking for her?  Why were charges not filed?
Park Rangers
Only a few hikers came across them over the years?  I’m pretty sure a park ranger would have stumbled across them at some point, especially since they weren’t camping in a designated space.  And hikers can tell the difference between someone camping and someone living.  They would have reported it.
The Camper
Supposedly it was going to be towed, but it never is and then becomes a burned out shell?  They would have had that campsite cleaned up within a week, just to keep the rest of the meth-heads out.
What does her father do for a living?
I really hate it when little details like this are missed.  He’s not a farmer, because he states that the farm is a hobby farm, but he makes enough money to have a big house and property and various farm animals and a wife who doesn’t have to work.  So what does he do for a living?

The Future of Us
Jay Asher & Carolyn Mackler
Two teenagers in 1996 install AOL onto a computer and suddenly can see their Facebook profiles in 2011.  Interesting premise, which played out in a so-so way.  I found the constant 1996 references to be a bit too twee, but they might be fun for someone who was born in 1996.

A Corner of White
Jacklyn Moriarty
Ever since the Ashbury/Brookfield series, I’m a fan of Ms. Moriarty, so I was all-in for this.  And a good thing, too because it took a bit to get really rolling.  Part of the book is set in modern-day Cambridge, England and part of it is set in the alternate world Kingdom of Cello.  The worlds are clearly labeled, but at first I had trouble understanding who went with where and why.  Once that was squared away I enjoyed myself and I’m interested to see where the next book sends us.

Winter Town
Stephen Emond
Evan and Lucy meet up every winter in Evan’s town (and Lucy’s former town) when Lucy comes to visit her dad for Christmas.  This winter Lucy seems different to Evan, but he doesn’t know why.  The book is told in two parts, first Evan’s and the Lucy’s.  I found the transition rather jarring.  Other than that, this was a great book, chock full of fun illustrations, also done by the author.  Which begs the question, why do grown up books not have illustrations any more?  I can recall reading a goodly amount of books published in the early part  of the last century that came with small illustrations.  It would be nice to have that again.  Anyway.  Great contrast between the lives of the two main characters and an overall good book.

YA Books with death
Dead mother:
Shakespeare Makes the Playoffs.
Ron Koertge
Middle school boy who likes baseball (hence “makes the playoffs”) and poetry (hence the nickname “Shakespeare”) has to make a decision between the girlfriend he has and the girl he meets at a poetry reading.  Manages to capture nuances of middle school while being entirely written in verse, from the main character’s perspective.  Loved it!

Dead main character:
The Catastrophic History of You and Me
Jess Rothenberg
Main character dies (heart breaks in two pieces when her boyfriend tells her he doesn’t love her) and goes to the afterlife, which is a pizza place where a cute Tom-Cruise-in-Top-Gun-type guy hangs out.  Main character spends a lot of time scheming to get back at ex-boyfriend and subsequently trying rescue her family from their post-death misery/grief.  I’m a fan of books that imagine the afterlife, so it was interesting from that angle, but main character was wound a bit too tight for me and got on my nerves, though she probably would not have if I were still a teenager.  I read the whole thing and found the plot sufficiently intricate and interesting. If only that main character hadn’t have bugged me so much (much as many people feel about the actress who plays Buffy) I would have actually liked the book.

Dead family members and neighbors:
The Beginning of After
Jennifer Castle
Laurel’s parents and younger brother die in a car crash that also kills the neighbor boy’s mother and leaves his father (the driver of the car) in a coma. We spend time with Laurel and her grief.  I enjoyed this book because Laurel’s grief was incredibly constant and undramatic (probably like that kind of grief actually is: persistent and boring in its pain) and she never really “acted out” in a way that would be easy to plot, but probably less truthful.  Sure, a lot of kids deal with untimely death by drinking/drugging/sexing their way past their pain, but I bet a lot more just keep on keeping on.  This was well written and heartbreaking, in a satisfying, cathartic way.

Dead mother (who died when the main character was 11, six years before the book begins, but whose death is still affecting his life):
Sex and Violence
Carrie Mesrobian
Teenage boy Evan gets brutally beaten for messing around with a girl at his boarding school, so his father moves the both of them back to the Minnesota lake house that was his (now dead) mother’s.  Even spends the summer healing physically and emotionally, making forays into friendship and tentatively investigating relationships.  What made this book excellent was the spot-on boy voice, and the many different settings the author creates.  And how does she manage to handle so many different characters?  It’s also snortingly amusing throughout.  These teenagers drink and drug and sleep around, not to mention swear a lot, but if you are okay with that, read on!  A short excerpt: “Baker grinned and I felt like maybe the weirdness from the summer kitchen had passed and we could get back to our regular setting of me just secretly liking her while dicking someone else and her just being supersmart and unavailable while smelling delicious.”

Quite Excellent!

Dead mother:
The Beginners Guide to Living
Lia Hills
Rounding out our month of dead people, seventeen-year-old Will’s mother was killed unexpectedly and he deals with the loss by studying philosophers and having sex.  I find this to be not the worst combo one could come up with.  I thought the depiction of grief was pretty accurate and the book well written.

Dead narrators:
Two Boys Kissing
David Levithan
“Remember what it was like to have sex and not worry about AIDS?” a friend asked me once in the early 2000s

“Um, no.” I replied.

She was six years older than me, which meant she had a few years of AIDS-free screwing around before even straight people got worried.  I started becoming aware there was such a thing as sex just as Rock Hudson died in 1985 and for years afterward, I saw a parade of sickly dying men succumb to the disease. I knew none of them personally.  There were no gay people in my life then, no uncles, no neighbors.  But I knew who Rock Hudson was, had seen his movies.  I loved Queen and mourned Freddy Mercury’s death my junior year of high school.  I teared up seeing the dedication to Howard Ashman at the end of the movie Beauty and the Beast: “To our friend Howard, who gave a mermaid her voice and a beast his soul, we will be forever grateful.”  My adolescence was spent watching the politics of drug research and approval, the colorful mourning of the AIDS quilt, seeing so much hopelessness, fear, anger, sadness, and dying.

This book is the story of two boys kissing, of two other boys’ life as a couple, of two more boys finding each other, of a boy in crisis.  But this book is narrated by the collective whole of the gay men who have died before all the boys in this book. “If you are a teenager now, it is unlikely that you knew us well.  We are your shadow uncles, your angel godfathers, your mother’s or your grandmother’s best friend from college, the author of that book you found in the gay section of the library.  We are characters in a Tony Kushner play, or names on a quilt that rarely gets taken out anymore.  We are ghosts of the remaining older generation.  You know some of our songs.”

The stories of the living boys are beautiful, because youth and love are beautiful.  That their stories aren’t any longer hidden has to be one of my favorite things about the world we live in today.  The stories of the living are wonderful, and the collective narration is what makes the book sing.  It left me both happy and teary through the novel.  Thank god the dying has slowed.  Thank god people can love who they love.

Grownup Books
The History of Love
Nicole Krauss
Beautifully written, I fell in love with the two main characters.  I wanted it to last longer than it did.
And Goodreads tells me I already read this in 2008.  Ay carumba!  That was a good review I wrote though.  I’ll copy it here:
Most novels I read are stories. That is, they have characters and a plot and plot devices and everything gets wrapped up in the end. They are sort of like real life, but not really. Real life never really wraps up as neatly as novels. You meet the guy, you find each other and pledge love and at the place where the novel of your life would end there comes a whole life of dishes that need to be done and bills to be paid and work to go to. Even on gray rainy days.

I loved this book because it was a slice of life. In real life people may never know what happened to this or that dropped plot line in their life. They may know each other. They may have said goodbye forever only to discover each other, by chance decades later. They may have a chance meeting with a stranger that connects dots for them. Or maybe everything is murky.

I loved this book because Leo Gursky, the character we meet first, is such a force of nature. An old man, retired locksmith in New York City, never married, who carries a note in his wallet explaining he has no family and where to bury him. Seeing the world through his eyes is a reason to read fiction.

Other characters were also wonderful. I can’t say enough about this book. I don’t even resent that someone the same age as me could create such a perfect thing. Read it

As You Like It.
Wm. Shakespeare
The analysis of this book insists that not much happens for most of the forest scenes, but I found myself enjoying this much more than say, Anthony and Cleopatra, which had things happen in every scene, but they weren’t things I much cared about.

Slice of Moon
Kim Dower
Reviewing poetry is hard.  Let’s just say I liked the poems.

Sisterland
Curtis Sittenfeld
It’s fun to read an author’s words as she produces them over the years and then guess at how the progression of the author’s life is affecting her writing.  Judging from the content of this book, I think Curtis Sittenfeld must now have children in her life.  There were a lot of childcare scenes in this that have not been present in previous novels.  This is an observation, not a criticism.

In this book, twin sisters, Violet and Daisy (who changes her name to Kate when she goes to college) have senses, meaning they can see the future, or know things about people.  Violet embraces the senses, Kate rejects them.  Sittenfeld’s grand prose takes us through the lives of Vi and Kate, jumping back and forth from birth to present day when Kate has two children, a husband and a happy home life and Vi is a local St. Louis psychic who is contemplating dating a lesbian.  The plot hinges on Vi’s vision of a tremendous earthquake, which she alerts the press about and then becomes a media sensation.  Meanwhile Kate attempts to skirt the spotlight, look out for her sister and manage her own life.  It’s just as engrossing as Sittenfeld’s other novels and the end particularly grabbed me.  In fact, I would like to discuss. Overall, another tip-top entry.

I mean really, read this paragraph and tell me she’s not fabulous:
“Our windows were open, and the radio had been playing continuously–not one but two Billy Joel songs had come on during our drive–and the air was dense with the humidity of a midwestern summer, weather that even then made me homesick, though it was hard to say for what.  Maybe my homesickness was a form of prescience because when I look back, it’s the circumstances of this very car ride that I recognize as irretrievable: the experience of driving nowhere in particular with my sister, both of us seventeen years old, the open windows causing our hair to blow wildly; that feeling of being unencumbered; that confidence that our futures would unfold the way we wanted them to and our real lives were just beginning.”

General grumbling about the cover.  I’m good with the two girls on the front.  But why make them have different colored eyes, if the eye color of the twins in the novel is never mentioned?  It was incredibly distracting.

Results! 2014 Youth Media Award Announcements!

As discussed in the post about the Mock-Printz, today is the day the Printz Award and many others are announced.  The announcements happen at the American Library Association’s Midwinter Meeting and Exhibition, which this year takes place in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  I, unfortunately, am unable to attend the ALA Mid-winter Conference, but because the ALA is awesome, they are live-casting the announcements.  Less exciting for some is that the announcements are at 8 a.m. EST, which means 5 a.m. in Portland, Oregon.  But I get up at that time anyway and I don’t have work today, so here I am, happy as a clam.
The computer on the right is the live-cast, the computer on the left is me putting things I haven’t read on hold.
You can find a complete list of the results by clicking here.  You can watch the not-live-anymore webcast by clicking here.
Here are the Printz Award Results:
Honor books:
 “Eleanor & Park,” 
written by Rainbow Rowell and published by St. Martin’s Griffin (Macmillan) 
“Kingdom of Little Wounds,” 
written by Susann Cokal and published by Candlewick Press 
“Maggot Moon,” 
written by Sally Gardner, illustrated by Julian Crouch and published by Candlewick Press 
“Navigating Early,” 
written by Clare Vanderpool and published by Delacorte Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House LLC, Penguin Random House Company.

2014 Printz Award:
“Midwinterblood,” 
written by Marcus Sedgwick, and published by Roaring Brook Press, an imprint of Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group.

So, as usual, the results show what a crap shoot it is to choose the 10 books we read for the Mock Printz Workshop.  We had Eleanor & Park (yay!) at the top of our list, but none of the rest of them were on our reading list.  I did read Maggot Moon for the Librarian Book Group.

2013 Mock Printz

I attended another great Mock Printz Workshop where we read and discuss great YA literature and try to guess what the Printz Committee will pick as the best YA book of the year.
Here was our schedule.

Here were my votes.
After a few rounds of voting we came up with the following winners:
Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell with 113 votes
Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock, by Matthew Quick with 86 votes
Boxers/Saints by Gene Luen Yang with 71 votes.

Now we wait for the announcement on 1/27.

Top Books Read in 2013. Part III: Grown Up Fiction, Nonfiction and Graphic Novels.

Wrapping up the books read post we continue up the age spectrum to the grownup books.

Grownup books:
Attachments
Rainbow Rowell takes us back to 1999 and an Omaha newspaper newsroom.  Eavesdrop in on two employee’s conversations via email. You won’t be the only one who is eavesdropping, and it’s fun to find out just what kind of a conundrum the book character is getting himself into by eavesdropping.

Signature of All Things
It’s very long and very good.  Take a journey through the 19th century with the daughter of a wealthy Philadelphia merchant/plant importer.

Telegraph Avenue
Or perhaps you would like to take a very long journey (though a fraction of time compared to the previous novel) through current day San Francisco and a record shop owned by two longtime friends?  Michael Chabon has a way with description and his characters don’t disappoint.

Love’s Winning Plays
Then there’s this brief bit of funny fiction.  If you are into skewering college football and the princely riches that come along with it, this is the book for you.  If you are could care less about college football and the princely riches, but enjoy hilarious novels, (as I do) this book is for you.

White Teeth
Another long book.  It seems when I’m not whipping through YA in a day or two I enjoy a story that spools out over many pages.  This time journey to London and catch some sharp observations.

Grownup–Honorable Mentions
Ash Wednesday
Glaciers

Nonfiction
The Cocktail Primer
Perhaps you would like a clearly written basic book of cocktails?  This, my friend, is that book.

Vivian Maier:  Out of the Shadows
Check out this book of photographs taken over a few decades by a woman who worked as a nanny.  They were discovered after her death and are incredible.

You Can’t Get There from Here
Gayle Forman and her husband traveled around the world for a year.  They went to unique places, and Forman structures the book with each chapter exploring a different unique part of the world. In the interludes between unique parts of the world, and sometimes within each chapter, Forman writes honestly of how the trip is affecting their marriage.

Quality Graphic Novels
Bad Houses
Hang out in Failin, Oregon and see what some of the residents are up to.

Bluffton
Spend several summers with a group of Vaudevillians on vacation.   One of them is a young Buster Keaton.