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luni, 29 aprilie 2013

#readchabon, check-in the third

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
Kim and I are reading Michael Chabon's Telegraph Avenue together this month, along with anyone else who wants to read it with us. Discussions are here at The 3 R's Blog as noted--
  • April 15: Section I (through page 124) 
  • April 22: Sections I and III (through page 250)
  • April 29: Section IV (through page 381)
  • May 7: Section V (through page 465)
and on Twitter at #readchabon.


Last week, I mentioned a few of the questions that this novel was making me ask myself, and before we move on, I wanted to get back to them and share a few of the responses.
"Do I really think that writers should only write from their own personal experiences? No, I don't, unless they're writing memoirs.
So maybe this is the better question: Do I think it's presumptuous for a novelist to write and voice characters informed by a background that he couldn't really know from personal experience? And when I don't have that background or experience either myself, how can I assess its authenticity? Or should that even be one of the things I assess?"
The comments suggested that perhaps it's not really a general matter of a
Telegraph Avenue by Michael Chabon
novelist writing from outside personal experience--as Jeanne noted, this applies to pretty much anything written in genres such as science fiction and fantasy--as it is a more specific response to writing about race, which continues to be a complex and fraught subject for Americans. As Harri3etspy reflected:
"I think the unease is not about the author writing outside his personal experience but about race specifically. I've been thinking about this a lot in the considerable wake of reading Richard Powers' The Time of Our Singing, wrestling with my own expectations. Mostly, I think, it comes down to the thing you mentioned in your last comment above, Florinda -- that I can't imagine asking some of those questions or addressing some of those issues without that experience. And yet as Jeanne points out, why should race necessarily be different than any other type of experience? Maybe because it's so hard to put on? It's not just about who you are and what you do but what people hand back to you about yourself."
I'm not completely done reading Section IV as I prepare this post for Monday morning, but it hasn't raised as many philosophical questions for me. This part's been much more about the story, and as promised, it's also been about spending more time with the women. I still have the sense that Chabon's more interested in Gwen than in Aviva, but we've seen more development of both. I'm less interested in the boys at this point than the writer is.

I'm still loving the writing, and when that's the case, I'm not really a reader who needs a lot of plot. That said, I have a sense that the story is building toward something--but I'm still not sure what, and I have an uncomfortable feeling it may turn out not to be much of anything. I'm thoroughly along for the ride, but at this point, there's not that much of it left, and I'm less certain of where we'll end up than I was last week.

If you're reading--or have already read--Telegraph Avenue, we'd love to have you join our #readchabon conversation. We'll be wrapping things up next Tuesday, May 7.
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duminică, 28 aprilie 2013

Sunday Salon: Right Here, Right Now (April 28, 2013)

Posted on 11:30 by Guy
Seeing Simi Valley (via Zemanta / Wikipedia)
A hiking trail in Simi Valley (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Time: Mid-morning, Sunday. Starting this at 9:40 AM with the hope to be done before 10:30, especially since not much has changed since last Sunday. (Finishing at 11:25 AM, thanks to assorted distractions.)

Place: At my dining room table in Simi Valley, California, where it's sunny and 63 degrees, with a forecast high of 82. (Again, not much change since last week...)

Eating: Toast with Nutella, or Breakfast, Part 2 (not to be confused with "second breakfast."

Drinking: Water and coffee, alternating.

Reading: Section IV of Telegraph Avenue for #readchabon check-in #3 (tomorrow) and starting on the May selection for She Reads (my first with that online book club). I haven't done very well at finishing books this month, but all things in other areas of my life considered, I'm not feeling too bad about my reading pace right now.

42, The Answer to the Ultimate Question (via Zemanta / Wikipedia)
English: 42, The Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life according to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.(Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Watching: Nothing right now, and we're pretty near current on the DVR, so I'm not sure what it'll be later.

Listening: The Hitchhiker's Audio Adventure has moved on to Life, the Universe, and Everything, which was my least favorite of the original Douglas Adams trilogy (when it actually was only three books) and the one I've never re-read until now. I'm curious to see if I like it better this time.

Making: Plans, and backup plans, and contingency plans. They don't affect the blog, but if any of them pan out, they may make me an even more inconsistent blogger than what I've become lately, which leads to...

Blogging: Confession: my blogging is somewhat on autopilot right now, and I'm managing not to mind it all that much. I have so many things going on in other areas of my life lately that I have to choose a few other things not to stress over quite so much, and blogging will just have to be one of them.

Promoting: There's still plenty of time to register for Armchair BEA, and almost 200 people have already done it (although I'm not yet one of them, so I really need to get on that)! The official agenda is now posted, with two daily featured themes; this year, each day will highlight a particular book genre for discussion in addition to a blogging-focused topic.

Tuesday, May 28: Introductions & Classics
Wednesday, May 29: Blogger Development & Genre Fiction
Thursday, May 30: Giveaways & Literature 
Friday, May 31: Ethics & Non-Fiction
Saturday, June 1: Keeping it Real & Children's/Young Adult Literature
Sunday, June 2: Armchair BEA Wrap-Up

(Disclosure: I am a co-founder and current team member of Armchair BEA).

Enjoying: An extended weekend, for no particular reason--I took Friday and tomorrow off from work just because I needed a break from a hectic month!

Avoiding: See above re: "blogging." Confession: I hate when bloggers blog about what they can't talk about ("...but it's really exciting, and I'll have a big announcement soon!"), but I feel like I'm being of those bloggers right now. That said (and as I said earlier), the things I can't talk about don't really have much to do with the blog, so in that context, it doesn't really matter that I can't say much about them; I just feel that I should mention that they're diverting me from the blog these days.

Anticipating: My birthday gift of a spa day will take place tomorrow, exactly a month after my birthday. I am really looking forward to that pedicure!

How's your weekend going?

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joi, 25 aprilie 2013

Featured at Book Bloggers International: Me!

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
Today's one of those days when I invite you to see what I'm doing somewhere else!

Book Bloggers International blog header
So, what is Book Bloggers International exactly anyway?
Well, here's the idea:
There are SO, so, so many book bloggers all over the world and it is impossible for each of us to find each other via links on other people's blogs and social networking sites alone. We thought it would be a practical and fun idea to create a blog specifically for the purpose of introducing ourselves to one another and finding new book blogs to love and book blogging buddies to love, too!
BBI will offer blogging tips, giveaways, and other fun features as it builds a book-blogger database. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, the "fun feature" is a blogger spotlight, and I was honored to be invited to be one of its first participants. My "introduction" is posted today.

Please go visit Book Bloggers International to see how you can be a featured book blogger too, and follow the site--it looks like it could be a great way to expand your book-blogging circle!
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miercuri, 24 aprilie 2013

Linked-Up Wordless Wednesday: A "Fur" Cry from Cotton...

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
...or any other naturally-produced fabric, most likely. (I'm fudging this week's prompt because I couldn't find a satisfactory depiction of "Cotton." I hope the rest of the LUWW gang can do better!)

Stuffed toy alien life forms, Rose Bowl Flea Market
ALF and Friends
Rose Bowl Flea Market, Pasadena CA, April 2010
My photo, edited with Snapseed
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luni, 22 aprilie 2013

#readchabon, check-in the second: I Have Questions!

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
Kim and I are reading Michael Chabon's Telegraph Avenue together this month, along with anyone else who wants to read it with us. Discussions are here at The 3 R's Blog as noted--
April 15: Section I (through page 124)
April 22: Sections I and III (through page 250)
April 29: Section IV (through page 381)
May 7: Section V (through page 465)
and on Twitter at #readchabon.

In the comments on last week's discussion, Kim asked:
"Which of the secondary characters are you most looking forward to (possibly) learning more about?"
At that time, I felt that we really hadn't heard much from, or about, Nat's wife Aviva (business partner of Gwen, wife of Nat's business partner Archy), and I was wondering if she'd become a bigger part of the story as it progressed. That really hasn't happened, and based on where the novel seems to be going, I'm beginning to think it might not.

TELEGRAPH AVENUE, by Michael ChabonIt intrigues me that Chabon is spending much more time with the black characters in Telegraph Avenue than the white ones--it also makes me a bit uncomfortable, given that Chabon is white, Jewish, and much more personally familiar with the Berkeley side of this story than the Oakland side. And when I think about that reaction, I get a little uncomfortable with my own discomfort. Do I really think that writers should only write from their own personal experiences? No, I don't, unless they're writing memoirs.

So maybe this is the better question: Do I think it's presumptuous for a novelist to write and voice characters informed by a background that he couldn't really know from personal experience? And when I don't have that background or experience either myself, how can I assess its authenticity? Or should that even be one of the things I assess?

I'm only halfway through Telegraph Avenue right now, and I'm not prepared to answer those questions yet, but I do think they need to be asked. I am prepared to say that I am still loving the writing, and the wide range of pop-culture nerdery that Chabon brings to it.

This week's reading schedule covered two sections of the novel. One is only eleven pages long...a single sentence, eleven pages long, mostly written from the viewpoint of a parrot. I was seven pages into it before I even realized that it was all one sentence, and to me, that means it worked. When I finished the section, I commented to my husband:
Me: "This guy just wrote a sentence that was eleven pages long."
Tall Paul: "Is that even legal?"
Me: "It is if you do have a license to do literary tricks like that, and this guy most definitely does."
If I forgot to mention it last week, we'd love to have you join our #readchabon conversation if you've read Telegraph Avenue--you don't have to be reading it with us!

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duminică, 21 aprilie 2013

Sunday Salon: Right Here, Right Now...(April 21, 2013)

Posted on 10:24 by Guy
Time: 10:14 AM, as I complete this for posting

Place: At my dining room table is Simi Valley, California, where the current temperature is 67 degrees and today's forecast high is 81. The sun is out and the screen doors are open.

Eating: A mix of oatmeal and Kashi cereal, mixed with lots of sliced strawberries--spring is here and the price of strawberries is dropping!--and Trader Joe's Crumpets with Nutella

Drinking: Water and sweetened, milky black tea, in this cup:

Covered TARDIS mug

Reading: Pretty much the same as at my last report. I'm on schedule with #readchabon, the Telegraph Avenue read-along I'm hosting with Kim, and will work on preparing tomorrow's check-in post after I'm done with this one.

Watching: Later today (probably), last night's Doctor Who on the DVR

Listening: Spencer and I have 40 minutes left on The Restaurant at the End of the Universe audiobook, so we should be moving on to Life, the Universe, and Everything by the end of this week. And I'm not listening to any other audiobooks right now because I'm fixated on TV-related podcasts. The Mad Men Happy Hour does detailed, scene-by-scene episode recaps--it's like vintage Television Without Pity in audio form--plus commentary. I like the recapping, but I occasionally lose patience and yell at my car stereo because the hosts misunderstand references or context and I want to correct them. A Mad Man With a Box has nothing to do with Mad Men; that podcast is for recaps and news of Doctor Who.

Making: Later today, a big pot of albondigas (Mexican meatball soup)--that, and a nice assortment of leftovers in the fridge, may mean not much cooking will need to be done for the rest of this week!

Blogging: I have posts scheduled every day through Thursday this week, which hasn't happened for quite a while--and may not happen again for a while, either. I'm actually not minding the three-times-a-week posting schedule as much as I thought I would.

Promoting: Armchair BEA registration is open! If you won't be at Book Expo America this year, join our concurrent online event (May 27-June 2)...and if Armchair BEA is new to you, check out the new FAQ. (Disclosure: I am a co-founder and current team member of Armchair BEA).

Enjoying: Right now, a quiet morning at home. Trying to stay in the moment here...

Avoiding: There must be something, according to what the fortune cookie told me yesterday:

Fortune cookie says: Decision time!
Hmm, look at the comma, A "long overdue" decision or a "lenghty and late" one?
Anticipating: Scheduling a spa day--my birthday gift from Tall Paul--and hoping to get approval of a couple of days' vacation time in which to do it!

How's your weekend going?
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joi, 18 aprilie 2013

(Audio)Book Talk: GIRL WALKS INTO A BAR..., by Rachel Dratch

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
GIRL WALKS INTO A BAR by Rachel DratchGirl Walks into a Bar . . .: Comedy Calamities, Dating Disasters, and a Midlife Miracle
Rachel Dratch (Twitter)
Gotham (February 2013), Paperback (ISBN 1592407579 / 9781592407576)
Nonfiction/memoir, 272 pages
Source: Purchased audiobook (Penguin Audio, 2012; Audible ASIN B007R6B0AY)
Reason for reading: Personal

Opening lines:
"'Hey, I know you!' said the stranger.
"I was on Third Avenue in New York, emerging from the Starbucks.
"The stranger turned to his friend and nudged him. 'Do you know who that is? SNL! SNL, man!'
"The friend gave a vague, fake nod of recognition. The stranger tried to convince his friend to be more excited.
"'She's funny!' He turned back to me. 'What's your name again?'"
Book description, from the publisher's website:
Anyone who saw an episode of Saturday Night Live between 1999 and 2006 knows Rachel Dratch. She was hilarious! So what happened to her? After a misbegotten part as Jenna on the pilot of 30 Rock, Dratch was only getting offered roles as “Lesbians. Secretaries. Sometimes secretaries who are lesbians.”  
Her career as a female comedian at a low point, she suddenly had time for yoga, dog-sitting, learning Spanish—and dating. Dratch reveals the joys and terrors of putting herself out there in a quest to find love and then becoming a mother in an undreamed-of way. With riotous humor, she recounts breaking the news to her bewildered parents, the awe of her single friends, and romance and coparenting with her baby-daddy, John.

Filled with behind-the-scenes anecdotes from Dratch’s time on SNL, Girl Walks into a Bar . . . is a funny book with a refreshing version of the happily-ever-after story, full of sensitivity, candor, and plenty of comic relief.
Comments: True confession: Not having been a regular viewer of Saturday Night Live in decades, most of what I knew about Rachel Dratch before reading her memoir Girl Walks into a Bar . . . came via her friend and colleague Tina Fey, who had cast her as one of the leads in the pilot of 30 Rock ...and was infamously forced by NBC to re-cast the role. (Now that 30 Rock is TV history, I don't think even Rachel Dratch would argue with that decision, but I digress.) I even shied away from Dratch's book for awhile, fearful that the connection might make it seem like a poor imitation of Fey's beloved (by me, at least) Bossypants. However, Dratch's book covers its own territory, in its own unique voice.

Rachel Dratch: RISK! at 92YTribeca
Rachel Dratch: RISK! at 92YTribeca (Photo credit: 92YTribeca)

Opening by addressing the elephant-in-the-room question, Rachel Dratch assures us that she has worked since she left SNL and lost the 30 Rock gig--just not necessarily in roles that many of us might have seen. And unless you run into her somewhere on the streets of Manhattan, you're unlikely to see her at all in her latest role, although it's one she's sure to keep for years.

Finding herself without steady employment for the first time in nearly two decades, and approaching 40 with the realization that she had no plan to realize her life-long plans for marriage and children, Dratch decides that it might just be the right time to have a personal life. She has no shortage of good friends, but hasn't been in a relationship for a while, and she's really never dated. (And once she makes a few attempts at it, she understands why.) Then, one night, she meets a guy in a bar. John lives in Northern California and is visiting New York City on business, but they hit it off well enough to embark on a bicoastal relationship that neither is in a hurry to define. Six months down the road, however, life defines it for them: parents-to-be. Rachel and John discover that unplanned pregnancies, and the life upheavals that accompany them, aren't just for teenagers.

I didn't find Girl Walks into a Bar . . . non-stop laugh-provoking, but I was pleasantly surprised by how engaged I was by Dratch's story, and I really enjoyed listening to her tell it. Dratch's acting and comedy background is in improvisational theater. Improv is driven by the principle of "yes, and...," in which the actors work without a script to develop a scene from cues and props at hand. It strikes me that she's applied that principle to the last several years of her life as well as to her work, and I find that very inspiring. As someone whose life went through some unexpected reconfigurations after 40, I'm trying to embrace a little more of that "yes, and..." ethos myself.

Rating: Book 3.75/5, Audio 4/5

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miercuri, 17 aprilie 2013

Linked-Up Wordless Wednesday: Yellow

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
Yellow dresses and decorations at the RenFaire
Shades of sunny yellow on a cloudy day at the Renaissance Pleasure Faire, Irwindale, CA

My photos, edited with Snapseed and collaged with PicFrame

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luni, 15 aprilie 2013

#readchabon: check-in the first

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
Kim and I are reading Michael Chabon's Telegraph Avenue together this month, along with anyone else who wants to read it with us. Discussions are here at The 3 R's Blog and on Twitter at #readchabon, although we haven't actually discussed much there yet.

This week's goal was to get through the first of the book's five sections (through page 124), and I was pleased to make it there before the last minute on Sunday night. I was also pleased to notice Kim's profession of love for a particular sentence, which she shared on Instagram:

via statigram.com Instagram link: http://instagram.com/p/X_O0gtGMWD/

Sentence composition is one of the reasons I've loved reading Michael Chabon since his first novel, The Mysteries of Pittsburgh; saying he has "a way with words" is completely inadequate. But since I'm so besotted with the way he writes--and if I haven't gone on record before that he is my #1 Author Crush, consider it done now--sometimes it's hard for me to look past the structure to consider the substance of what he's writing.

Berkeley: A People's Bicentennial History of T...
Berkeley: A People's Bicentennial History of Telegraph Avenue (Photo credit: wallyg)
Section I, "Dream of Cream" (a title that goes unexplained until after more than 100 pages) introduces the major characters and conflicts of the novel. Archy Stallings and Nat Jaffe are co-owners of Brokeland Records, a struggling used-records shop on a street connecting Oakland and Berkeley, California. The store's struggles may be about to get tougher, as an entertainment superstore is poised to move into the neighborhood. Archy's and Nat's wives also work together, as midwives in Berkeley Birth Partners, and Nat's son Julius has a new friend with an unexpected connection to Archy. The relationships between the families are certainly  knotty, but I'm pretty sure we don't know the full extent of that knottiness yet.

I hope we don't know all of that yet, anyway; I'm enjoying getting to know these characters, but I don't really feel like very much happened in this section. This doesn't bother me in the slightest, because I'm happy to luxuriate in Chabon's writing for as long as I can, taking time to get into the story. I'm loving the smart pop-culture references, which cover such a wide range--assorted musical genres, comics, classic science fiction, film theory, television--that even if you don't get them all, your own particular form of nerdery will probably be represented. Granted, I enjoy smart pop-cultural references in most of my entertainment anyway, but I appreciate that they're not just tossed in here; for the most part, I find them to be well-chosen, functional details that help flesh out scenes and characters.

Chabon has introduced a large secondary cast in addition to his main characters. I'm wondering which characters will be under-developed, and if any will get more attention than their role in the story really warrants. I'm curious to see where the plot goes, and not entirely certain that it will even matter. And at this stage, I'm appreciating the way that Chabon's explorations into genre fiction during the last decade or so are coloring this return to more literary fiction.

I'm enjoying my reading experience with Telegraph Avenue so far and eager to talk about it. If you're not doing #readchabon with us but you have read the novel, we'd love to have you join our conversation!


Here's the rest of our #readchabon schedule:
April 22: Sections I and III (through page 250)
April 29: Section IV (through page 381)
May 7: Section V (through page 465)
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joi, 11 aprilie 2013

Currently (or Close Enough): April 11, 2013

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
This format had been appropriated from Kim and Heather, and possibly some other bloggers--I've been seeing it in Sunday Salon posts for a little while.

Time // 8:50 PM, Wednesday, April 10

Place // On the sofa, next to my husband, in front of the TV

Eating // Nothing right now. Had a veggie burger and chips for dinner, and two Reese's Peanut Butter Eggs (Easter treats!) for dessert

Drinking // Water (water everywhere)

Reading // Telegraph Avenue (first read-along check-in is on Monday!), Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women, and nothing for review right now because I just can't keep up!

Watching // I'm excited that Mad Men is back, and for the first time ever, we're watching it in mostly real time (DVR delayed to avoid commercials). I'm also loving the Doctor's new companion, Clara, on Doctor Who.

Listening // The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, read by Martin Freeman. Spencer and I finished The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy last week; Stephen Fry read that one, and the two narrators voice some of the characters differently. Freeman's characterization of Zaphod Beeblebrox sounds like a bit player from The Sopranos. I've also added a new-to-me NPR quiz show, Ask Me Another, to my podcast rotation.

Making // Nothing of note. Maybe some albondigas this weekend...

Blogging // Not much writing, even less reading. But it's only temporary, I swear!

Promoting // E-mail you'll actually enjoy: the Daily Puppy newsletter!

Enjoying // Getting stuff done at work. (Yes, it's come to this.)

Avoiding // As many commitments as possible till I get a few more things knocked off the to-do list

Anticipating // New England in June--our first family vacation since 2010, and possibly the last multi-generational one we'll take.



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miercuri, 10 aprilie 2013

Linked-Ip Wordless Wednesday: Party!

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
So what if it's the middle of the week. Everybody have fun tonight!

party collage  www.3rsblog.com

Photo collage created with PicFrame


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marți, 9 aprilie 2013

Book Talk: OLEANDER GIRL, by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni (via Shelf Awareness)

Posted on 05:00 by Guy
OLEANDER GIRL: A NOVEL, by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni  via indiebound.orgOleander Girl: A Novel
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
Free Press (March 2013), hardcover (ISBN 1451695659 / 9781451695656)
Fiction, 304 pages

A version of this review was previously published in Shelf Awareness for Readers (March 29, 2013). Shelf Awareness provided a galley of this book (furnished by the publisher) in order to facilitate the review, and compensated me for its original publication.

Opening lines: “I’m swimming through a long, underwater cavern flecked with blue light, the cavern of love, with Rajat close behind me. We’re in a race, and so far I’m winning because this is my dream. Sometimes when I’m dreaming, I don’t know it, but tonight I do. Sometimes when I’m awake, I wonder if I’m dreaming. That, however, is another story.

I smile and feel my mouth filling with cool, silver bubbles. Rajat’s fingers brush the backs of my knees. Even in my dream I know that if I slow down just a bit, he’ll grab my waist and pull me to him for a mischievous kiss. Imagining that kiss sends a shudder of pleasure through me. But I don’t want it yet. The chase is too much fun.”
Book description, from the publisher’s website:
Orphaned at birth, seventeen-year-old Korobi Roy has enjoyed a sheltered childhood with her adoring grandparents. But she is troubled by the silence that surrounds her parents’ death and clings fiercely to her only inheritance from them: the love note she found in her mother's book of poetry. Korobi dreams of one day finding a love as powerful as her parents’, and it seems her wish has come true when she meets the charming Rajat, the only son of a high-profile family.

But shortly after their engagement, a heart attack kills Korobi’s grandfather, revealing serious financial problems and a devastating secret about Korobi's past. Shattered by this discovery and by her grandparents’ betrayal, Korobi undertakes a courageous search across post-9/11 America to find her true identity. Her dramatic, often startling journey will, ultimately, thrust her into the most difficult decision of her life.
Comments: Before she died in childbirth, Anu Roy instructed that if her baby was a girl, she was to be named “Korobi,” for the beautiful and unexpectedly resilient pink oleander flower. Growing up in her grandparents’ home in Kolkota, Korobi is well-loved and well-educated, and when the eighteen-year-old orphan gets engaged to prosperous Rajat Bose, adulthood seems to be falling perfectly into place for her. But nothing is perfect, and in both the Roy and Bose households, many things aren’t what they seem; the sudden death of Bimal Roy, Korobi’s grandfather, on the night of the engagement party is the first in a series of cracks in their foundations.

English: A photograph of Indian-American novel...
Indian-American novelist Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Korobi is the title character of Oleander Girl, but in telling her story, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni (One Amazing Thing) also explores the stories of those around her, and it’s the intersections and overlaps of those stories that make this multiple-perspective novel engrossing reading. Korobi is uncovering long-held secrets that will permanently alter her sense of self, but she’s not the only one whose life is on the verge of change. Her grandmother is unprepared for her new widowhood; her fiancé’s efforts to settle his life before the wedding are complicated by his work and his previous girlfriend; and her search for answers thousands of miles from home may cause real harm, both physical and financial, to her future in-laws. All of these characters, and their relationships with one another, will be tested over the course of the three months between Korobi and Rajat’s engagement party and wedding date.

Divakaruni explores issues of class and politics in modern India and immigrant America within the context of Oleander Girl, but family issues are at the heart of the novel, and that gives it cross-cultural appeal. Told with empathy and intelligence, and accompanied by intrigue, the stories--and issues--of the Roy and Bose families should appeal to a broad range of fiction readers.

Rating: 4/5

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duminică, 7 aprilie 2013

Sunday Salon: Another year older, another book unfinished...

Posted on 07:30 by Guy
I wasn't in the Salon last Sunday because I was celebrating Birthday Weekend at WonderCon Anaheim. Here's one of my favorite photos from the event.

WonderCon 2013, photo by Paul Vasquez  www.3rsblog.com
Eat your hearts out, fangirls! (Well, no, don't really. Sadly, these are NOT the genuine article.)
The week after Birthday Week has not been one of the most productive of my reading life. I'd like to say that's because of extended and prolonged celebrations, but sadly, it's mostly been due to work. I think I have four books, not counting audios, in various stages of reading progress right now, and two reviews that need to be written before I forget what to say. I'm hoping to get them done this weekend, but so far, I haven't gotten any further than "hoping to get them done."

The "good news/bad news" about the untimely reviews is that neither of them is for pay, or on a deadline that isn't self-imposed. In fact, I won't have any reviews like that for the next couple of months. This week, I very reluctantly requested a hiatus from my Shelf Awareness reviewing until things slow down at the day job, where it'll be one deadline after another through next month. Since freelancing is not how I earn my living--someday, maybe, but not now--I can accept redirecting that time to the work that actually pays the bills around here...but I don't have to like it. That said, I'll admit that taking those review responsibilities off my plate--for now--has reduced my stress level a bit, so it was probably the right call. Sigh.

I do still have some "scheduled" reading plans this month, but the sense of deadline pressure is much less. I have an online-book-club read for next month's discussion--my first with this group--but with just over 300 pages to be finished by the beginning of May, I'm not feeling overwhelmed by that one.

And I'm excited about #readchabon, the read-along of Michael Chabon's
Telegraph Avenue that I'm co-hosting with Kim. It's pretty informal--there's no sign-up or posting requirements--but if you'd like to read and talk about the novel with us, we'll be reading roughly 125 pages a week and having check-in discussions here on this schedule:
  • April 15: Section I (through page 124) 
  • April 22: Sections II and III (through page 250) 
  • April 29: Section IV (through page 381) 
  • May 7: Section V (through page 465)

    We'll also be talking about Telegraph Avenue on Twitter as the mood strikes--hence the hashtag, "#readchabon"--so you can jump into the conversation there, too.

    Since this is a relatively relaxed approach to "deadline reading," I'm hoping it'll leave me some time to deal with all those reads-in-progress (before I end up with another Historian on my hands). I don't know how it is for you, but for me, getting things done--including getting books finished--tends to be one of the most effective ways to lower my stress level. Also a good stress reducer: reminiscing with another favorite photo from WonderCon.

    WonderCon Anaheim 2013  www.3rsblog.com
    The Eleventh Doctor and His Wife, WonderCon Anaheim, March 2013
    (as if time and space matter to them!)
    Are you de-stressing with a good book this weekend?

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    joi, 4 aprilie 2013

    #readchabon, all along TELEGRAPH AVENUE

    Posted on 05:00 by Guy
    Photograph of author Michael Chabon at a book ...
    Photograph of author Michael Chabon at a book signing at WonderCon in 2006. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
    When I receive galleys that aren't associated with a set review date, I have a bad habit of letting them languish well past their publication dates, no matter how excited I was to get them in hand in the first place. I was pretty darn excited about getting a galley of Michael Chabon's September 2012 novel Telegraph Avenue when he spoke at one of the BEA Book and Author Breakfasts last spring...but I was getting it without a set review obligation. Pub date came and went. 2013 came, and 2012 went. And I still hadn't opened that galley.

    Telegraph's time has come, along with something better than a fixed review obligation--friends who will read and discuss the book at the same time! Kim was there when I got that galley, and since neither of us has managed to read it yet, she proposed a buddy read earlier this year. Lu is planning to join us, too. How about you? Want to read along?

    TELEGRAPH AVENUE, via LibraryThing.com
    Here's the publisher's description of the novel:
    As the summer of 2004 draws to a close, Archy Stallings and Nat Jaffe are still hanging in there—longtime friends, bandmates, and co-regents of Brokeland Records, a kingdom of used vinyl located in the borderlands of Berkeley and Oakland. Their wives, Gwen Shanks and Aviva Roth-Jaffe, are the Berkeley Birth Partners, two semi-legendary midwives who have welcomed more than a thousand newly minted citizens into the dented utopia at whose heart—half tavern, half temple—stands Brokeland. 
    When ex–NFL quarterback Gibson Goode, the fifth-richest black man in America, announces plans to build his latest Dogpile megastore on a nearby stretch of Telegraph Avenue, Nat and Archy fear it means certain doom for their vulnerable little enterprise. Meanwhile, Aviva and Gwen also find themselves caught up in a battle for their professional existence, one that tests the limits of their friendship. Adding another layer of complication to the couples' already tangled lives is the surprise appearance of Titus Joyner, the teenage son Archy has never acknowledged and the love of fifteen-year-old Julius Jaffe's life. 
    Telegraph Avenue is an intimate epic, a NorCal Middlemarch set to the funky beat of classic vinyl soul-jazz and pulsing with a virtuosic, pyrotechnical style all its own.
    And here's our reading schedule, with the dates for check-in posts and discussions (which will be posted here at The 3 R's Blog):
    • April 15: Section I (through page 124)
    • April 22: Sections I and III (through page 250)
    • April 29: Section IV (through page 381)
    • May 7: Section V (through page 465)
    We'll also be talking about the novel on Twitter as the mood strikes, using the hashtag #readchabon. Read Telegraph Avenue with us, and join the conversation!
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    miercuri, 3 aprilie 2013

    Linked-Up Wordless Wednesday: Water

    Posted on 05:00 by Guy
    April showers bring May flowers...but what do fountains bring?

    Getty Center, February 2013

    My photo, edited with Snapseed
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    luni, 1 aprilie 2013

    No (April) Fooling: The Blog, It Is A-Changing

    Posted on 05:00 by Guy
    I've added an extra day to Birthday Weekend, but I'm popping in for a minute to call your attention to some little tweaks and changes I've recently made to the blog.



    I didn't participate in the Spring Bloggiesta, but it did inspire me to make a few updates and changes around here. If you're reading this post via e-mail or a feed reader (have you found one to replace Google Reader yet?), I invite you to visit the blog and see what's new!

    • I've "staked my (blog) claim" with Bloglovin'. You can follow The 3 R's Blog over there, if that's where you're doing your blog reading these days!
    • I've added a new button to my shared-items page on RebelMouse. If you miss a link I've passed along on Twitter or Facebook--and you probably will, because who has the time to keep up with all of that?--most of them are collected right there.
    • I've replaced my "Popular/Favorite Posts" page with a new one called "Posts About Posts," driven by the label "Retrospective." Since I usually link up my most-viewed and personal favorite posts (which don't always match up) in my year-end and Blogiversary recaps, I'm simplifying the process by including those posts under the new label. Please click away and explore! (And since I may not be posting much new stuff during the next few weeks, at least there's lots in the archives...)
    • And speaking of archives, my book review posts finally have one! This page redirects you to a Google spreadsheet that can be sorted on any column and is searchable. Thanks to the awesome folks in the Google + Book Bloggers Community for the tipoff about how to make this happen!

    SheReads.org

     

    I'm also excited to share that I was recently invited to join the SheReads Blog Network and will be participating in the She Reads monthly online book club starting in May. There are some terrific book bloggers in this group--I'm happy to be one of them now, and looking forward to some good reading and great discussions!

    But before that gets going, Kim and I will be reading Michael Chabon's Telegraph Avenue together later this month--details to come, but we'd love to have you read with us, so think about it, won't you?

     

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