Showing posts with label 2013 Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013 Books. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Cross posting - Reviews and a Request

I've been writing at freezedried.wordpress.com.
The latest - a Review of a Short - Together Forever.

And since I'm mostly going to be there from now on, will you pretty please change your bookmarks and follow me there too? Thank you!

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Review: Rajdeep Paulus', "Swimming Through Clouds"

First, a confession: I rarely, if ever, read within the romance genre. And the only Young Adult reading I've done in the recent past has been SF/F. So Rajdeep Paulus' debut novel, "Swimming Through Clouds", a contemporary teen romance, is as out of zone for me as it gets. I picked up the book almost entirely unsure of what to expect - both in terms of style and story. And, okay, I freely admit to starting with a terribly high number of preconceptions about the story arc. Among other things, I expected book filled with teenage angst, bff problems, and the ecstasy and trauma of romance-as-a-teenager. Seriously, ("Come On!" as Job would say), what else is there to a teen romance?*

Um, a fair bit, apparently.
Paulus' debut novel is indeed a boy-meets-girl story. But one that is delightfully devoid of the tropes that have been done to death by every high-school movie ever made. Sure, Talia is the quintessential outsider-looking-in lead character. But instead of secretly aspiring to be beautiful and part of the 'in' crowd, she is a teenager working actively to stay out. In the place of clique-based drama, the novel relies on Talia's life, with its particularly dark past and excruciating present, and on her relationship with the beautiful Lagan Kumar Desai to engage the reader. And in the place of fluffy bff issues, Raj Paulus takes on some serious, painful, heart-wrenching and problematic ones - domestic abuse, child abuse, sex trade (which I certainly did not expect out of a teen romance).
In the process, Swimming Through Clouds, becomes a very real, believable and touching story.

Paulus' is a very compelling storyteller. The characters - all the characters - are beautifully fleshed out. Stylistically (going by the foreword and lead in), Paulus' authorial voice is a perfect fit for the story that she's narrating. The romance between Talia and Lagan is delicate (given all the big issues with which they're dealing) and on the whole, rather adorable. At the same time, the narrative is also successfully poignant and poetic.

A few of things that I've been thinking about - first, there is the suggestion that Lagan's personality, his ability to be a pillar of strength and support to Talia, is driven by a deep and unshakable faith in the Divine. But I love that the treatment of Lagan's spirituality and its role in his life is not ham-handed.

Second, there are hints of Indian identity and third culture upbringing in the novel (Talia is half Indian, Lagan is of Indian origin). I'd have liked to see these fleshed out in more than cursory ways. But I can see how that would take away from the crux of the story as it stands.

And finally, I've been thinking about the whole "boy-rescues-girl" situation - specifically, about why I wasn't as troubled as I thought I would be with that construct in the novel. In general, I prefer female teenage protagonists who are more Willow Rosenberg and less Bella Swan. Talia Vanderbilt is somewhere in between. Despite the rescue motif, the novel is redeemed because Paulus writes Talia as a strong, determined girl caught in a bad situation (rather than, say, a hapless gel awaiting prince charming). In fact, the women in the novel, are layered, multi-faceted people, even if we don't always know everything about them. Like I said, Paulus' character building is very masterful and goes a long way to making this novel as powerful and irresistible as it is.

The short take: Read it. It's delightful, surprising and moving.

*Okay, I realize I sound(ed) like a complete ass. And especially after reading "Swimming Through Clouds", I stand suitably chastised. 

Monday, July 1, 2013

Reading List

I've been a little preoccupied (as hinted at in earlier post). But just in case you were wondering, here's a list of books I've read and been meaning to review (for SAWWC or otherwise)

1. Rajdeep Paulus' debut novel, "Swimming Through Clouds"
2. Samhita Arni's, "Sita's Ramayana"
3. Samhita Arni's, "Missing Queen"
4. Saladin Ahmed's, "Throne of the Crescent Moon" (not for SAWWC, but a fantastic read anyway)
5. Kuzhali Manickavel's, "Eating Sugar Telling Lies"
6. Kuzhali Manickavel's, "Insects Are Just like You and Me except Some of Them Have Wings"

Reviews to follow, shortly.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Review: Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) - Mindy Kaling

I have to open by confessing a very deep and unshakeable personal bias against event looking at memoirs of famous folk, epseically if they're in the entertainment business. I'm not even sure when, where or how I developed this bias. (And it probably has to do more with snobbery than with any other, more lofty reason.) All I know is that when I see anything marketed as a biography / memoir of an even marginally famous person, my bullfighting hackles go up, my eyes, of their own volition, roll all the way to the back of my head (making, as you might imagine, for a very uncomfortable visual experience) and I have to shake my head peremptorily because it is so hard to be all rich and famous and under-doggy all at once and still to still write about yourself in a non-self-aggrandizing way.

This, mainly is why I kept ignoring Mindy Kaling's, Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?
Until last week.
While working on the South Asian Women Writers project, I ended up stalking this Aishwarya's blog (that's not me, y'all! That's a younger and so much cooler friend) and as it turns out, she said this about the book:
Unlike Fey and Moran, Kaling never actually mentions the word “feminism”, but there’s an implicit political stance in sections like these, and the book is all the better for them. 
After that, I had to read the book. (South Asian Woman Writer, Political Stance, Comic - totally outweighed celebrity memoir.)

Kaling's book is a quick and entertaining read.
She writes from the perspective of being South Asian in the United States. And (as someone thinking about raising a third culture child) I'm quite amazed at how easily she wears this aspect of her personality. I love that this doesn't dictate her tone or outlook. But it also does, y'all - I mean, being a child of immigrant professionals is a thing that frames Kaling's views without overpowering them.

All the stories that mention her parents and family make me want to meet them. Seriously. I'm not saying I'd take notes or anything from them, but I *do* want to meet the people who raised this brown kid to be so self-assured.*

Her stories made me laugh out loud more than once. She's funny and self-reflective, but almost never self-deprecatory. And the thing that I love the most - her stances. As Aisha points, she never says feminist, but devotes entire sections to the female body, strong women in television entertainment (Amy Poehler is, according to Kaling, every bit as cool and warm as she seems). The tone stays consistently sassy - yep,  even when she's narrating her "Poor in New York" stories and "I dated a Crappy Human Being" ones.

Towards the end, the book does taper off in terms of content. But really, I get the impression that she's said all she wants to say for now. I would like to see her revisit some of these sections in say, seven or eight years from now - I'm not sure that merits a book, but I'd love to hear whether ... you know she does the Poehler thing and calls her husband by his last name, or if she finds a person that she wants to be friends with. Or... you know, stuff about her life post Rainn Wilson and the Office, post The Mindy Project.

If nothing else, you should read this book to find out how Mindy Kaling is different than her on-screen role, Kelly Kapoor (from The Office). I still wouldn't buy it and store it for posterity. But I sure as hell recommend reading it.

Footnotes
*(I know, I know parents can only do so much, but when I meet particularly resolved-seeming foreign born desi kids, I want to, almost immediately, atleast watch their parents from a discreet distance to see what role they're playing, exactly.)

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Saga (Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples)

You know how, sometimes, you find a book that is so delightful, so compelling that it simply must be read, like right now? Saga is one of these books.

After hearing Tansy talk about the book on the Galactic Suburbia Podcast, I could not resist picking it up (New parents, warriors, warring alien races - Come on!). I say "pick it up" to mean "I put aside everything else I am reading to go through ten issues of the graphic novel in one night.


There is so much that I absolutely *love* about this book.
Fiona Staples' illustrations are brilliant. They're bold and engaging without being over the top.
The cover of the first issue (below), whatever the Dave Dorman story, is brilliant. I'm both surprised and appalled that breastfeeding would be construed as vulgar and / or unnecessary. The cover beautifully captures the Epic nature of Saga (how cool is it that we can say that and not be entirely circular!).




The other art in the book that completely swept me off my feet is from Issue #7 - a 'memories of the soil' sequence. Woo! Spectacular!
Best of all, though, Staples' work and BKV's speak to each other so perfectly (seriously, get to #8).

And starting the readers out in the middle of the war, at a childbirth - well played, Vaughan. The rest of the series, so far, has followed through on this compelling opening issue. The characters are delightful -

I love that all the women so far as smart, competent, and  awe-inspiring. They're real and their equal footing (so far) is not at all forced or self-conscious. And Best of all, they're not infallible.

For me, the realness of these characters along with the meta fiction at work (the D. Oswald Heist novel-in-a-novel) refresh even themes (war without purpose, star-crossed pairs) that have been hashed to shreds by now. It helps, I think, that the graphic novel itself is self-referentially sardonic with these ideas.

For now, the thing that I don't like about Saga is that it is a new graphic novel.
Let me rephrase that. It is an ongoing graphic novel which means I have to wait patiently for the next issue to be out.



And while I do that, I insist that you wait with me. So go, go read this. Now!