Posts tagged ‘historical fiction’

May 14, 2012

Book Review: #28 – Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith (audio)

Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith

Narrators: Scott Holst
Source
: Audible
Finished: 5/10/12
Rating: 8 out of 10
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Length: 10 hours, 14 minutes
Pages: 336 (print version)
Published: 2010
Challenges: 2012 Audio Book Challenge

Synopsis (from Booklist): Everyone knows that Abraham Lincoln freed the slaves and saved the country from disunion, but very few were privy to the fact that Honest Abe was an honest-to-goodness vampire hunter; that is, until Grahame-Smith unearthed Lincoln’s secret journal, an intimate document detailing the lifelong battle he waged against the undead. Motivated by the vampire-initiated death of his mother, 11-year-old Abe vowed to “kill every vampire in America.” True to his pledge, he spent the next 50 years honing his skills and stalking his prey. Recognizing an inextricable link between slavery and vampires, he expanded his mission to include destroying the “peculiar institution.” And the rest, as they say, is history.

Overall Impression: Grahame-Smith managed to capitalize on the vampire hysteria right before it started to fade (and be replaced by fairy tale hysteria). I’m reading it two years later, and while I never really got the whole vampire thing, there is a lot to like about the irreverent Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter. While some readers might find the dry, traditional biographical narrative boring, I thought it was very clever (and I like biographies, so I didn’t mind). Grahame-Smith managed to take Lincoln’s actual biography and insert vampires in it in a totally (yet not-at-all) believable way. He took all the prominent events of Lincoln’s life and modified them slightly so that vampires would seem totally reasonable. Grew up in a log cabin? Actually a cover for a secret underground vampire lair. Lincoln’s skill with an axe? The perfect weapon with which to slay a vampire. John Wilkes Booth? A vampire who wanted the vampire-controlled South to rise again. I thought the whole thing was decidedly ingenious. Also, I learned a lot about Lincoln’s actual biography, since so much of what Grahame-Smith wrote was actually true!

Positives: It was just a lot of fun — gimmicky, but not in a bad way.

Negatives: Reducing the slave population to only a feeding source felt a little shallow. I wish he’d also addressed that there were other, more traditional causes for slavery. It made the entire slave population feel very one-note.

Narration: Holst did an excellent job, especially with Abe’s slow, deliberate speech. I do wish there had been more distinction between the other characters, though.

Other books I’ve read by Seth Grahame-Smith: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (review)

Other books I’ve listened to narrated by Scott Holst: none

Other blogger opinions:

Steve Betz: “Yes, this book is a lark, and I’m really not going to line up to read all the knock-offs, but if you want to take a stab at this mini-genre, this one is pretty fun.”

Budd at Scifi Media: “I actually learned quite a bit from this book, which is strange because it is about fighting vampires.”

All Things Writing: “I know that some people are offended by the idea of one of our most beloved presidents being portrayed this way, but personally, I think it worked.”

August 30, 2011

Book Review: #72 – Daughter of Fortune by Isabel Allende

For August, I’m participating in Read My Own Books Month, hosted by Michelle at That’s What She Read. 

This book is the first this month that doesn’t qualify for Read My Own Books Month. And I was so close!

Daughter of Fortune by Isabel Allende

Narrator: Blair Brown
Source
: Sacramento Library
Recommended: by my SIL Alicia
Finished
: 8/24/11
Rating: 8 out of 10
Publisher: Harper Audio
Pages: 432 (print version)
Published: 1999

Synopsis (from School Library Journal): An orphan raised in Valparaiso, Chile, by a Victorian spinster and her rigid brother, vivacious young Eliza Sommers follows her lover to California during the Gold Rush of 1849. Entering a rough-and-tumble world of new arrivals driven mad by gold fever, Eliza moves in a society of single men and prostitutes with the help of her good friend and savior, the Chinese doctor Tao Chi’en. California opens the door to a new life of freedom and independence to the young Chilean, and her search for her elusive lover gradually turns into another kind of journey. By the time she finally hears news of him, Eliza must decide who her true love really is.

Overall Impression: My SIL has been encouraging me to read Allende for years — she’s one of her favorite authors. I can see why! Allende’s grasp of historical events, her ability to bring those events to life, and the depth in her descriptive writing combine to create a very beautiful novel. While the plot was perhaps so-so, I thought her characters were fascinating, and I didn’t feel like I’d read them before (which is always nice). She also killed setting. It was like I was there.

And I kind of was. Growing up in gold country (gold was discovered just up the hill from me) meant that I already had a lot of background for a novel set during the Gold Rush (students in the Sacramento area go gold panning in school…or at least we did…not sure what kids do these days during budget cuts). I loved that so much of this book took place under my feet, and as I drove through Sacramento, I found myself wondering what it looked like 150 years ago, when it was full of prospectors and prostitutes. My city of a million people started out a very different place.

As much as I enjoyed it, Daughter of Fortune wasn’t perfect. It had one of the most abrupt endings that I can ever remember in a book — I thought the CD skipped or I missed something. I was brushing loose ends out of my way for the rest of the day. Not that I need everything wrap up neatly into a nice little package, but I thought there was far too much left undone. Or maybe there is a sequel I’m unaware of? I also wished the main character spent more time finding herself than her love.

Narration: Blair Brown did an incredible job of capturing half a dozen different accents, and bringing the sights and sounds of Chile and California to life.

Positives: Gorgeous writing — Allende’s ability to create setting is something every writer should strive for.

Negatives: The ending. It ended so abruptly that I thought I’d missed a CD.

Other books I’ve read by Isabel Allende: none

Other books I’ve listened to narrated by Blair Brown: none

Other blogger opinions:

Books Like Breathing: “Writers should really take a good look at Isabel Allende’s books to learn how to write a good description.”

Book Maven’s Blog: Ultimately, at the end of the novel, I felt it was an okay book. Not great. I didn’t necessarily feel as though I’d wasted my time. But I wasn’t nearly as excited about it as I had been when I first opened the book.”

Books for Breakfast: “Allende has such an enormous grasp of historical events, places, and people, and she blends them seamlessly into her narrative.”

August 16, 2011

Book Review: #68 – March by Geraldine Brooks (audio)

For August, I’m participating in Read My Own Books Month, hosted by Michelle at That’s What She Read. 

March by Geraldine Brooks

Narrator: Richard Easton
Source
: I’m not sure. It’s been on my TBR shelf for a few years.
Finished: 8/9/11
Rating: 8
Publisher: Penguin Audio
Pages: 288
Published: 2005
Awards: 2006 Pulitzer Prize for fiction

Synopsis (from the product description): From Louisa May Alcott’s beloved classic Little Women, Geraldine Brooks has animated the character of the absent father, March, and crafted a story “filled with the ache of love and marriage and with the power of war upon the mind and heart of one unforgettable man” (Sue Monk Kidd). With “pitch-perfect writing” (USA Today), Brooks follows March as he leaves behind his family to aid the Union cause in the Civil War. His experiences will utterly change his marriage and challenge his most ardently held beliefs.

Overall Impression: When I was at grad school in Boston, I took a travel writing class. Our class was divided into thirds, and each third wrote a travel guide to an iconic Massachusetts town: Salem, Plymouth, and Concord. Our group selected Concord, home of “All The Transcendentalist Writers Ever (and Gregory Maguire)” and decided to create an “Author A Day” guide. Spend a day with Thoreau, Emerson, or Hawthorne, exploring their homes and their favorite locations around Concord. Great idea, right? We were brilliant. My authors were Louisa May Alcott and her father Bronson Alcott. My more intimate knowledge that I gained of these two writers during that project really informed this book for me, and I think I enjoyed it more than I would have without that background.

I immediately recognized Mr. March as the odd Bronson Alcott — vegetarian, abolitionist, utopia-builder, and kindergarten-and-recess-inventor. I thought it was a smart choice of Brooks to model March after Alcott, especially considering Louisa May Alcott modeled the March sisters after herself and her sisters. It also gave her a solid base on which to build the character and the plot, both of which I thought were very good. The plot wrestled with many (maybe too many?) different issues: slavery, incest, affairs, murder, love, abolition, child-rearing, sacrifice, war, plantations, healthcare, and all sorts of other things. But it’s all wound into a beautiful story that, for the most part, remains true (although less idealistic) to Little Women.

Narration: Richard Easton did a lovely job during the portion of the book narrated by Mr. March, though there are a handful of chapters toward the end narrated by Marmee…and his voice didn’t change a bit. A big gruff voice on such a woman was…tragic. Other than that, it was excellent narration.

Positives: Lovely portrait of the absent Mr. March, and his struggles while he was away from his family.

Negatives: Sometimes I thought March’s internal dialogue and thoughts were too feminine. I think he sometimes thought things that men just don’t think about.

Other books I’ve read by Geraldine Brooks: none

Other books I’ve listened to narrated by Richard Easton: none

Other blogger opinions:

Devourer of Books: “Although some parts of March were so Bronson that I didn’t feel they quite fit into Little Women, I still really enjoyed where Brooks took the story. Recommended.”

Small World Reads: “There’s a reason Geraldine Brooks won the Pulitzer for March. Highly recommended, even if you’ve never read Little Women. “

Fat Books and Thin Women: “…Brooks tries to paint with too broad a brush, to encompass too many aspects of the war and life during and before the Civil War.”

August 8, 2011

Book Review: #65 – Doc by Mary Doria Russell

Note: This is my final review from July before I get to my Read My Own Books Month reviews. Enjoy!

Doc by Mary Doria Russell

Source: The Sacramento Library’s “Lucky Day” shelf*
Finished: 7/31/11
Rating: 9 out of 10
Publisher: Random House
Pages: 416
Published: 2011

Synopsis (from Publisher’s Weekly): After a tense childhood in Civil War torn Georgia and the loss of his beloved mother, young John Henry “Doc” Holliday moves west in hopes of ameliorating the tuberculosis that would eventually kill him, relocating in the late 1870s toKansas, where he divides his time among his poorly paying vocation of dentistry, lucrative gambling, and his fractious relationship with Kate Harony, a cultured, Hungarian-born prostitute. In a tale notable more for a remarkable cast than orderliness of plot, the rising tension between the corrupt, carousing, and well-armed inhabitants of Dodge and the forces of law represented by the moralistic Wyatt Earp and his brother, Morgan, makes a spectacular background to a memorable year-in-the-life tale of a fiery young Southern gentleman whose loyalty to his friends and love of music outshine even his fragile health and the whiskey-soaked violence of the western frontier.

Overall Impression: I will read anything and everything this woman writes. And I almost have, with Thread of Grace being her only novel I haven’t read. If you haven’t read The Sparrow, stop whatever you’re doing right now and do it. I’ll wait here.

*Jeopardy music*

Amazing, right? Probably one of the best books you’ve ever read? I told you so. You’re welcome.

Now you can read another fantastic book by her: Doc. Doc Holliday (like so many of her perfectly drawn characters) leaps off the page, becoming so real in the reader’s mind that it’s hard to imagine him any other way. Even with the consumption, drinking, gambling, and fiery temper, Doc is portrayed as the truest of Southern gentlemen, and the reader just loves him for that. She accomplishes this through some of the best dialogue ever in the history of words coming out of people’s mouths. Sometimes it’s not even in English and I’m not positive what they are saying, and I still loved it. And it’s not just Doc — I ended up loving Wyatt and Morgan Earp, Johnny Horse Sanders, and Father Alex, among others. To learn and love all of these characters, even with all their faults, in the time before the shootout at the OK Corral was nothing but joy.

And there’s a scene with a piano toward the end of the story that is some of the most beautiful literature I’ve ever read. Gorgeous!

Positives: Plot, while interesting, was not central here — it was truly characters and dialogue. I think it’s impossible to not walk away from this book loving Doc and his gang.

Negatives: The chronology sometimes got muddled for me, and because I wasn’t super familiar with the OK Corral, I wish she’d actually included it in the book.

Other books I’ve read by Mary Doria Russell: 

Children of God (review)
Dreamers of the Day (review)
The Sparrow (review)

Other blogger opinions:

Hardkover: “Doc is one of the wittiest, engaging, and heart-breaking novels I have read all year.”

Devourer of Books: “When I finished it I was ready to drop everything else and read every word that Mary Doria Russell had ever written.”

books i done read: “I would never be all like, I love westerns, but I love Tombstone and Lonesome Dove and now Doc SUPER-HARD so I’mma have to amend that to: I am not opposed to westerns.”

That’s What She Read: “Focusing on his childhood and life prior to moving to Tombstone, AZ, the reader gets a comprehensive picture of the man behind the myth, as well as realizing just how much myth there is around the man.”

* The “Lucky Day” shelf is amazing. The Friends of the Library started this program to bring back the joy of actually going into a library and browsing the shelves. They select new titles and label them Lucky Day. These copies can’t be put on hold, nor can they be renewed past the initial 3-week check-out period. But trust me…when you’re hundredth in line on the hold list and you find the book just waiting for you on the shelf in the library…it’s truly your lucky day!

May 6, 2011

Book Review: #40 – World Without End by Ken Follett

World Without End by Ken Follett

Narrator: John Lee
Source
: Bookins.com
Finished: 4/25/11
Rating: 7 out of 10
Publisher: Penguin Audio, 36 CDs (!!)
Pages: 1024 (print version)
Published: 2007

Synopsis (from Publishers Weekly): Eighteen years after Pillars of the Earth, bestseller Follett returns to 14th-century Kingsbridge with an equally weighty tome that deftly braids the fate of several of the offspring of Pillars families with such momentous events of the era as the Black Death and the wars with France. Four children, who will become a peasant’s wife, a knight, a builder and a nun, share a traumatic experience that will affect each of them differently as their lives play out from 1327 to 1361. Follett studs the narrative with gems of unexpected information such as the English nobility’s multilingual training and the builder’s technique for carrying heavy, awkward objects. Fans of Follett’s previous medieval epic will be well rewarded.

Overall Impression: There’s one thing I learned while reading World Without End. The size, weight, and firmness of every woman’s breasts. Every single man in this book, if given the opportunity (wanted or unwanted), would grab and squeeze. And what was felt was fully chronicled across the thousand pages of this book.

Outside of the unnecessary boobage, it was a pretty good book. I did learn a lot of other things — more about the plague (fascinating), about daily life in the 1300s, about building, and about nunneries and monasteries. And while I probably shouldn’t compare this to Pillars of the Earth, I can’t help it. World was more about relationships (many of them physical…boob grabbing almost always led to sex or rape) while Pillars had more history. At first I thought his characters were too similar to the characters in Pillars (a prior, a builder, an modern woman, etc.), but the characters came into their own nicely, and I really ended up liking the majority of them. The plot chugged along like in Pillars — slow, but entertaining. The only points in the book that really bogged down for me was when they were off in France, fighting the Hundred Years war (war usually makes me snooze), and toward the end…when I was just ready to move on to something else.

Narration: John Lee is an excellent narrator, although, as with most male narrators, the women weren’t the best. His skill with foreign languages was very deft.

Positives: Tons and tons of research on Follett’s part. Entertaining characters

Negatives: An overabundance of breasts. Though this might not be a negative for everyone.

Other books I’ve read by Ken Follett:
Pillars of the Earth (review)

Other blogger opinions:

Book Banter: “ But when you get to the last page, you’ll wish it had never happened; you’ll wish for more story, for more characters; you’ll wish to remember this incredible tale for a long time.”

The Mystery Bookshelf: “The middle part of the book was engaging but by page 800 I was worn out. World Without End became a book without end.”

In Search of a Hero: “I would say that Follett gets the historical details right, except it doesn’t take long to realize that the characters here have been transplanted from a very, very long episode of Sex and the City.”

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