Tuesday, August 16, 2011

On Excused Absences

Hello Friends and Fellow Bloggers -

You may have noticed that my posts are not coming as frequently as they once were, and for that I apologize, but I thought I would offer my justifications (and hope you will deem them excusable) and some teasers for what's in store when I return in full force!

1. The Fall school semester has begun, which means my days have been full of lesson planning, course schedules, and fielding questions about financial aid and registration (in that order).  This change of events leaves little time for non-course related reading and blogging.  While I am saddened that my summer reading time has come to an end, the following anecdote lifted my spirits: 

A student from one of my classes last Fall stopped me in the hallway today and told me that she recommends my class to all of her friends who need ENG 111 because I am one of her favorite instructors.  She said, "Your assignments were more fun because you put more thought into them."  She also expressed an interest in transferring to my alma mater.  Although faithful readers of this blog know my current feelings about Peace College, posted here, I told her I would be glad to discuss all of her options with her.  THIS is what my job is all about, and it is moments like these that warm me all the way to the cockles of my heart.

2. Despite my busy schedule, I have been reading, but the book I am reading is very long and very involved to say the least.  I have been reading it for weeks, and my Kindle still tells me I am only 35% through. Gah!  What is this gargantuan volume I am dedicating my time to?  I squirm a little as I write this: Stephenie Meyer's The Host.  I read Twilight because of all the hype surrounding it, and I was interested to see what she would do with an "adult" novel.  I must admit, the premise is intriguing - a collection of "souls" are populating Earth and injecting themselves into humans and taking over their bodies.  It's all done very peacefully, but of course, the humans are incensed that their very thoughts and memories are being stolen out from under them.  The novel follows the life of one soul in particular - Wanderer, or Wanda for short.  I am attempting to reserve judgement for later (although Meyer's over-reliance on metaphors like "his touch ignited a fire in me" is really grating my nerves), but 35% into this novel, and I still don't know the backstory of these souls.  What makes them different from human souls?  They seem to function in most of the same ways.  I hope this is a question Meyer answers in the remaining 65% of the book.

3. Finally, I have been intrigued by all of the hype surrounding Kathryn Stockett's The Help, and a dear friend of mine from Peace approached me about starting a mini book club and reading that book.  I immediately jumped at the chance to share time and reading material with some of my friends I see far too little of, and I will be sure to post all about the novel and our group discussions when they occur.  Maybe I can get my friends to guest blog their thoughts about the novel - it's worth asking!

So that's what's on my plate - What's on yours?  Do you ever start reading novels that you think you will NEVER finish?  What's your protocol for those types of books?  Any book club experiences you would like to share as I delve into this world for the first time?  Those of you who have never read The Help, care to join me?  I look forward to hearing your experiences and advice.

Happy Reading!

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Review: Forever by Maggie Stiefvater

Forever is the final novel in Maggie Stiefvater's The Wolves of Mercy Falls trilogy.  I have been anxiously awaiting its publication since I read Shiver and Linger in quick succession last summer.  The trilogy chronicles the lives of a group of werewolves in Mercy Falls, MN as they alternate between their human forms in the summer and their wolf forms in the winter.  Like most young adult paranormal literature, the series focuses on the intense love affair between sometimes werewolf Sam and werewolf at heart Grace.  Unlike most young adult paranormal literature, the teens are interested in more than pre-marital sex, and Stiefvater's writing style is eloquent and educated.  Larger themes throughout the trilogy include parental authority and teen responsibility, human versus bestial personalities, abuse, and identity - all themes that teens experience and relate to (even if they are not turning into a werewolf when its cold outside).

Despite the fresh premise and writing style, Forever suffers from the same ailment that afflicts many trilogies - it is the last of the series, and therefore, the characters and plot remain where the author has left them.  There is no hope for change or reconciliation because this is the end.  I have read several conflicted reviews of Forever since its release, and unfortunately, my review will join those ranks.  It pains me to say that because I do love the series and the characters, but in my eyes, the quality of the plot has greatly diminished from the first novel, Shiver, to the final, Forever.  In fact, I will go so far as to agree with several other reviewers who professed Shiver may have been better as a stand-alone novel.  *Note: There are potential spoilers in this review.

Since I am being honest here, I picked up Shiver several times because of its beautiful cover but always put it back after reading the book summary blurb.  I was only marginally interested in the werewolf sect, and the plot hit a little too close to the Twilight home for me to want to read it.  However, after about the fifth time I picked it up (curse that beautiful cover design!) I said, why not, bought it, read it....and I loved it.  As I have already pointed out above, Stiefvater has an eloquent and persuasive way with words.  Her characters are real teens, dealing with real issues and emotions, who just happen to turn into werewolves in the winter, and even that struggle becomes poetic.  For example, Sam has a hard time relinquishing his humanity while Shelby, Cole, and even, it's hinted at, Beck see being a werewolf as an exit, a way to avoid the pain that invades their human lives.  I didn't read Shiver until Linger was already published, so as soon as I finished Shiver, I opened up my Kindle and immediately downloaded Linger.  While I found Grace's struggle with the wolf inside of her to be a bit drawn out and overwrought compared to the simple longing of Shiver, I was still moved by the book and frantic with worry about how Sam and Grace's future would play out in Forever.  I anticipated that I would speed through Forever like I did Shiver and Linger, but it actually took me several days to finish the book.  I had to keep putting it down because of the intensity of emotion and conflict expressed by the characters.  I found myself flipping to the end of chapters to see what was coming next, a reading trait that is completely uncharacteristic for me, because I was bored with what was happening now.  Where the introspection of Shiver moved me, the constant wondering about what to do next instead of executing a plan of action in Forever irritated me.  I love the series, but I was unsatisfied by its conclusion in Forever.  To make sense of this conflict, I have created a pro/con list, detailing what I see as the novel's strengths and weaknesses.

Pros
  • Each novel is narrated from multiple point-of-views.  Shiver alternates between Grace and Sam and highlights the change in temperature with the change in chapter and perspective.  This technique is effective because it emphasizes the intimacy of their relationship as well as its biggest threat.  Linger adds two new narrators, Cole and Isabel.  The addition of Cole and Isabel as narrators demonstrates the widening of the world of the werewolves and the world of Grace and Sam.  They must begin to consider how their lifestyle is affecting those around them.  These four narrators remain in Forever with the exception of a brief prologue narrated by Shelby, another werewolf.  Shelby's prologue offers sinister foreshadowing and narrates a pivotal event of Forever that puts all of the werewolves in danger.  At a recent singing at Quail Ridge Books, Stiefvater was asked why she chose to narrate the series from multiple points-of-view, and she replied that she felt that certain characters needed to narrate certain scenes - ones where they changed or had a revelation - and that sometimes characters lie, and it served the reader well to pull out of one character's perspective and gain a fuller understanding of a situation.  I agree.  Switching between narrators allowed me to shake off Sam's emo funk and Isabel's bitchiness for a few minutes and get a different perspective on the situation.
  • Grace and Sam's relationship may seem overly earnest to some, and I admit, when I first read Shiver, I thought these kids are way too serious, but then I was reminded of my own relationship the summer I turned seventeen to the man I am now married to, and I remember that it is perfectly likely that you will find your soulmate at that age.
  • To me, one of the most poignant scenes of Forever occurs towards the end of the novel when Grace and Sam are both wolves together for the first time.  The joy they experience when sharing their wolf skins and the natural way they communicate and enhance the pack's dynamics is so effervescent I was moved to tears.
  • Another scene from the novel that I loved is the scene where Cole drives the black, Mustang die-cast car Isabel gave him up her arm.  I tend to picture Cole as older than he really is because of his "been there, done that" personality, but this sweet moment reminded me vividly that he is only eighteen or nineteen and that his lifestyle choices have caused him to grow up too fast.  It was nice to see him regain some of his childhood.
Cons
  • I know you are thinking, didn't this plot point just appear in the "pro" list, and it did, but I also have some problems with Grace and Sam's relationship as it is portrayed in Forever.  In between the end of Linger and the beginning of Forever, Grace and Sam are separated for several months because she is a wolf and he is not.  As the weather begins to warm up, there are some near misses where Grace becomes human for a few minutes or a few hours and calls Sam, but she returns to her wolf body before he arrives to see her.  When the two are finally reunited, their meeting is anti-climatic.  It seems unrealistic to me that two lovers who have been separated with very limited communication for such a long period of time would merely hug and have a mundane conversation upon their first meeting.  This lack of physical intimacy continues throughout the course of the novel with the notable exceptions of the white dress scene and the scene where they are wolves, which I described in my "pro" column above.
  • As I have already indicated, Forever is slow going.  The reader is stuck in the characters' heads suffering through their internal conflicts for so long that he/she finally wants to side with Isabel and shout, "Why the hell aren't you doing anything?!?"  The action picks up in the last fifty pages or so, but decisions should have been made and decisive action taken long before that.
  • Finally, Forever leaves me with some unanswered questions that will remain unanswered because Stiefvater has vowed that this is the last book in the series.  I am not a reader that needs to have everything spelled out for her, and I can even enjoy an open conclusion if the author has given me all of the pieces along the way to fit the puzzle together for myself.  However, Stiefvater drops hints about several key aspects of the plot throughout Forever but fails to provide the reader with the thread needed to connect the dots.  Thus, here are the notable plot sinkholes:
    • Beck's history remains a mystery even after Cole turns him back into a human to set the record straight.
    • The use of a meningitis "vaccine" is considered a cure in Linger, then a masking of the symptoms in Forever, before being offered as a cure again.  Is it a cure or not?  The answer to this question is very important to understanding the novel's conclusion.
    • What does it mean for the werewolves that the wolf toxin acts like malaria?
    • Is Sam fully cured, or will he suffer from the same disease as Grace in Linger and be forced to shift again?  If he shifts will he be able to shift back?  
    • Who were the other wolves that died?
Despite my qualms above, I recommend this series for teen readers.  The defining factor in all teenagers' lives is their inability to fit in.  They are no longer children, but they are not quite adults either - an issue Grace and her parents struggle with continuously.  Yet, occasionally, they must assume adult responsibility, like Sam does in Beck's absence.  The characters in The Wolves of Mercy Falls trilogy are straddling the same line of liminality that defines the teenage experience.  They hover between human and wolf, summer and winter, hot and cold, love and hate, child and adult.  Their experiences can be a very compelling example for other teens who are struggling to figure out who they really are.

Best matched with an appreciation of poetry and aesthetics, a cursory interest in science, the paranormal, and animals, and an investment in the series.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Recommendation: Sloppy Firsts by Megan McCafferty

Megan McCafferty's Sloppy Firsts series is not your typical teenage-drama.  Jessica Darling, or as her father not-so-affectionately calls her Not-So-Darling, and her biting realism are a far cry from the fluff and filler of contemporary teen chick lit on the market today.  Jessica's journey from high school horror to post-graduate professionalism gives McCafferty's novels a staying power that continues to attract new fans of the series ten years after Jessica Darling and Marcus Flutie make their appearance in Sloppy Firsts.  In celebration of a decade of angst-ridden high school humor, I am highlighting ten ways that Megan McCafferty's Sloppy Firsts series has impacted my life.


1. I named my iPod "Chaos Called Creation" after a poem bad-boy Marcus Flutie writes for Jessica in Sloppy Firsts.  His way with words will make even the most straight-laced, do-gooder swoon at his feet.

2. When Perfect Fifths was published in the spring of 2009, I forwent studying for my final exams and instead re-read Fourth Comings before immediately devouring Perfect Fifths.  (Don't worry; I still passed my exams!)
3. Marcus Flutie's ironic wearing of a Backstreet Boys t-shirt made me feel slightly less embarrassed about blasting the boy band in my car.
4. Jessica and I were united in the war against teen angst and acne.
5. Beginning with Sloppy Firsts, I was introduced to teen lit encouraging me NOT to conform - a message I was only too happy to comply with.
6. Jessica made it okay to quit the activity you were good at but you hated - for her, running - for me, Math Counts (Yes, once upon a time, I, the English teacher, was part of an organization that called its participants "mathletes" - I shudder at the memory.)
7. Perfect Fifths taught me to find the perfection in the imperfect moments.
8. My best friend Bonnie and I are an abstract version of Hope and Jessica.  Bonnie is a creative artist, a la Hope, yet cynical, like Jessica.  I am more of a hopeful (Hope) do-gooder (Jessica).  We have been inseparable since 8th grade, and lived together for five years until I got married last November.  Looking back on Jessica and Hope's sophomore separation gives me hope for our friendship now that we are learning to live apart.
9. Older and wiser Kristin has learned from younger and more naive Jessica (circa Sloppy Firsts) to look beyond stereotypes.
10. Marcus, Marcus, (marred kiss) demonstrated that not every marred kiss is a marred opportunity.

This series is witty and engaging, and Megan McCafferty has a way of making you feel like she is writing for you. yes. you.  This is one of the few series where I find the final book to be as compelling, interesting, and well-written as the first.  I think that is because we as readers get to grow with Jessica.  I picked up the series when I was in high school, and the subsequent books about Jessica's college and post-college life came out as I was navigating my way through college, the workforce, and a committed relationship.  Unlike a lot of the "Bubble-Gum Bimbo" voices on the market today, Jessica Darling offers a very real, very honest, and very raw look at the world that 99% of teens and twenties can relate to because they too, at one time or another, have felt like an outsider with sarcasm and cynicism as the only weapons in their arsenal.  If you are looking for a saucy, smart heroine and her mysterious, slightly troubled counterpart to help ease you into the new school year, I urge you to pick up Megan McCafferty's Sloppy Firsts.  McCafferty's insight and mastery of teen melodrama is as relevant today as it was ten years ago.

Best matched with bitter high school memories, notes passed in the hall, and reminisces of your own, personal high school bad boy.