Sunday, August 28, 2011

Love, Anger, Madness


Stars: 3/5
Author: Marie Vieux-Chauvet
Subjects: Haiti, military rule, class wars, psychological terror
ISBN: 9780812976922
Copyright Year: 2009
Other Comments: To be completely fair, I only read Anger.  This was a book assigned to me in my global literature class.  I have the translation into English by Rose-Myriam Réjouis and Val Vinokur.  I found this novel truly disturbing but very powerful.  I only rated it a 3 because I was upset with all the unnecessary martyrdom.  Although I understood that anger caused the deaths in the end, I still desperately wanted to save the grandfather, the invalid, and Rose.  Third person omniscient narration gets pretty confusing in the beginning and when the narration switches between characters quickly.  The plot is about a family who suddenly has their land stripped from them by the ruling military regime.  The family each have their own motives for wanting their land back.  Eventually the manipulations of the characters lead to a tragic ending.  This is not a tale for the faint of heart.  There is a great deal of violence.  I did enjoy reading it, however and would recommend it to others.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Animal Farm: A Fairy Story


Stars: 3.5/5
Author: George Orwell
Subjects: Humanity, Power Struggle, Good vs Evil, Corruption of Society, Social Status, Russian Communism allegory, Class conflicts, Socialism, Dystopia, satire, revolution
ISBN: 978-0-547-37022-4
Copyright Year: 1945
Other Comments: The fairytale is a dystopian satire that allegorizes the take over of Russia by the communists Joesph Stalin and Leon Trotsky. The novella follows the rebellion of farm animals against the tyrants called man and their life until everything turns full circle and the pigs become man. The work accurately describes in full dystopian style, the problems in our society corruption and the need for power. The society rids themselves of one dictator, only to fall back in line with another. This work should remind us all that: History tends to repeat it's self. I would recommend the novella, so that we are all aware of the dangers of repeating our past and that we all need to be well aware of the world around us.

The Help

Stars: 4.5/5
Author: Kathryn Stockett
Subjects: domestic help, racial tensions, Jim Crow Laws, African American Women, white women, gender roles, writing, publishing, small town, civil rights
ISBN: 978-0425245132
Copyright Year: 2011
Other Comments: The Help was a fantastic book.  I would have given it a perfect 5/5 stars had it not been for some situations that seemed slightly unbelievable.  The Help is about three women, two of which are black women who work as domestic maids and nannies.  The other young lady is a white woman writer.  Eventually all of them come together to do something no one has done before - write about what its like to serve as the help for white families.  During the civil rights movements and the Jim Crow Laws, this was a dangerous idea for all of them.  However, against all odds, they manage to write the book and publish it.  They then begin to watch as the town around them starts to change.  The Help is widely popular right now and a movie has just been produced based on the book.  I would suggest reading the book first and then seeing the movie.  Both are excellent works!

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Flabbergasted

Stars: 2.5/5
Author: Ray Blackston
Subjects: Jesus, God, Presbyterians, Church, Singles, Romance, Amazon Basin, Missionary, South Carolina, Ecuador
ISBN: 080073453X
Copyright Year: 2010
Other Comments: I enjoyed Blackston's humor in his novel, Flabbergasted.  I found this perspective on Presbyterian Christians altogether funny, friendly, and quirky.  I am NOT a romance novel fan, but I was happily surprised to figure out this book is indeed contemporary romance.  There was a lot of genuinely good humor.  However, I did find the ending slightly disappointing but I did get the point.  I was not impressed with the subtle inclusion of stereotypes for women and minorities, however.  If it weren't for these blaring realities, I would have rated this book a lot higher.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

The Canopy


Stars: 3.5/5
Author: Angela Hunt
Subjects: Amazon, jungle, God, Jesus, prion diseases, FFI, biology, atheism
ISBN: 0849943450
Copyright Year: 2003
Other Comments: This was my first brush with Christian fiction and I was pleasantly surprised.  I was debating on the score of this book - between a 4 or 3.5 out of 5 stars - but I chose 3.5 because it took me a while to really get into the story.  Once I finally did though, I had a hard time putting it down until I was finished.  The story is about a young woman named Alex who has FFI and is searching for the cure with a group of researchers in the Amazon jungle.  She is an atheist with a genius daughter (who is also on the trip) and an ex-husband who could care less about them.  Then there is Michael, a Christian pediatrician practicing at a free clinic in the Amazon.  When a strange patient is carted in for surgery from a spear wound, Michael finds his brain riddled with prions - and yet he seems to suffer none of the effects of the disease.  He then takes this information to Alex and they seek his village for the cure.  This book was full of battles - spiritual, physical, emotional, verbal, etc.  After reading it, I decided I liked the Christian fiction genre and would continue to read more of it.