Sunday, March 28, 2021

CBR 13 # 5 Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler

 

In this post-apocalyptic novel, there is not single earth shattering apocalyptic event.  Instead, there is just a gradual breakdown of society brought about by climate change, corporate greed and social inequality (all interrelated anyway).    Lauren Olamina is a relatively privileged teenager living in a small walled enclave.  She's privileged in that she has a home, her father still has a job with a salary, and she knows how to read and write.  This is not much, but compared to the thousands, or maybe millions of homeless poor outside a few walled enclaves, this is a lot.  Their community is small and there are some unlikeable characters, but they are close and have not yet succumbed to the barbarism, looting and killing outside the walls.  Lauren's father is a preacher, a professor and the leader of their community.  She has a stop mother and little brothers, a boyfriend, and friends.  But she has some ideas that go beyond the confines of their walls, and a debilitating condition that she keeps secret, and that makes her different.

The novel has a before and after.  Before is the setting up of the world, and the preparations leading up to the destruction of Lauren's community.  The after is Lauren's  and some other survivors' travels to find a safe haven.  A running theme towards the whole journey, from the before and the after, is Lauren's development of a religion that she hopes will guide them into making a life on the destroyed earth, and take their descendants to the stars.

It has been quite a while since I last read a book until 4AM.  Age and eye problems prevented me from doing that.  But this one, I could not put down.  There are a lot of ideas and events that seem to be applicable of prescient to American society these days.  There is certainly a lot of commentary on the black experience.  But not being from there, i don't feel I'm very qualified to talk about it.  I think I learned a lot, and it offered a good perspective.  On the other hand, the story also works purely as a post-apocalyptic adventure, a genre that I am very partial to.  It is very dark and there is a lot of death and some gore.   Considering how much of a post-apocalyptic, speculative fiction fan I am, I am ashamed to admit that this is my first Octavia Butler read. I am excited to read the sequel and all her other books.  Suggestions as to the next one?


Sunday, March 14, 2021

CBR # 4 - The Heir Affair by Heather Cocks & Jessica Morgan (aks The Fug Girls)

I think I have mentioned in numerous comment diversions and facebook threads that I came to Pajiba by way of  GoFugYourself (by way of thefashionspot, by way fansofrealitytv by way of watching america's next top model on youtube).  Needless to say, I have  a soft spot for The Fug Girls.  I don't read the blog anymore because I can't with the interface, but I have read some of their books, which are breezy, light and fun (as far as I can remember them).

The Heir Affair is the sequel to their 2015 book The Royal We.  That book was a quite transparent Will and Kate fantasy with Kate as an American, and a lot more down to earth.  My problem when reading book two, was that I had read The Royal We 5 years ago, and my memory is not it.  So, I had forgotten the specifics of the ending and the side characters, which made it a bit frustrating for me at first.  But the book is not high literary fiction, so things do get explained and recaps are done so it wasn't really THAT confusing.  

This book starts with Will and Kate (not their book names, but whatever) running away from the Harry (the heir's younger brother)-Kate related scandal.  But the Queen is sick (or so they say), so they come back to face the music, and their royal duties. 

The book was long and kinda meandering, but not in a totally bad way.  There was no sense of urgency to the plot and it understandably focuses less on romance.  I think this is because they are already married and it has been established that they love each other and are in it for the long haul.  So the story is more about coming to terms with their life and dealing with frayed interpersonal relationships, especially between the couple and Harry.  Like I said, it's not a bad thing.  I find these long reads covering long periods of time strangely comforting.  But there are a few plot twists and choices that made me go WHAAAT.  There is definitely some soap opera stuff going on. Plus, I can't with Kate.  He's your husband's brother and you know he loves you, NO, you aren't allowed to have a "special" relationship with him!  I don't care if you love him as a friend.  All interactions should purely be within the sister-in-law realm.  Ugh.

Another struggle I have is that these characters are so obviously patterned after the real royals, at least in the initial book, that all the stuff going on with their real versions sort of intrude a little bit with my enjoyment of reading the book.  But, it is an enjoyable and soapy read.  Not world changing and a bit too wish fulfillment-y sometimes for my personal taste but overall worth your time if you're into this kinda thing.  


CBR 13 # 3 My Sister, The Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite


From the first few paragraphs, the book instantly catches your attention.  I don't think it is a spoiler to say that our narrator's sister,is indeed a serial killer. The book opens with Ayoola calling Korede for help in cleaning up a mess -- a bloody mess.  They are sisters living in Lagos, Nigeria.  Our narrator is Korede, she is ordinary looking, fastidious and methodical. A hard worker.  She works as a nurse and is efficient but unfriendly.  In fact, her only confidante is a patient who is in a coma.  Ayoola, on the other hand, is beautiful, confident and manipulative.  She seemingly does nothing but collect boyfriends - and then eventually kill them.  Korede's bond with her sister leaves her with no choice but to clean up her messes, both literal and metaphorical.  Until Ayoola sets her sights on a doctor in Korede's hospital -- who Korede may be in love with.

It is a bit weird to say, since the subject is so dark, that the book was really quite enjoyable, and a quick read.  It is on the short side, page count wise, but aside from that, it is very readable and has its thrills.  This is not to say that it was all easy breezy.  There was an attempt to plumb the origins of Ayoola's (and Korede's lesser) dysfunctions, looking into their shared family trauma in particular, and Nigeria's patriarchal society in general.

I also enjoyed the opportunity to read about a setting that isn't usually used in fiction.  I have not had the opportunity to travel a whole lot outside my country and reading books set in far away (for me) places satiates that itch a bit for me.  It was rural Ireland in the last book I read ( The Searcher by Tana French) and now, Lagos, Nigeria.  

The ending was... a choice.  But I guess, that was the only choice that Korede thought she could make.



Sunday, March 7, 2021

CBR 13 # 2 - The Searcher by Tana French


 In 2020, I was super excited to read a Tana French book I found in my (virtual) bookshelf that I thought I had not yet read.  To my disappointment, it was just one of her (in my opinion) lesser novels, that now, a mere one year later, I have forgotten the ending to again.  This time, I made sure that this wasn't a repeat.  EIther way, I'm sure that this would have been a memorable book because it is the most different from all other books I've read from her.

Instead of being set in the Dublin Murder Squad universe, this one is set in a far more rural place, and the main character is not Irish.  He is American.  Retired AMERICAN detective Cal Hooper moves to rural Ireland and spends his days repairing his dilapidated farmhouse, fishing, taking walks, and talking to his nosy neighbors.  Until he meets a kid (Trey) that would reel him back into a life, a calling that he was trying to leave behind. So Cal is one of those archetypal troubled detectives whose relationship was ruined because of work. He is a bit of boomer (though actually Gen X in age), but inherently kind with a strong moral code.  

I enjoyed the mystery itself, although it was not really that hard to figure it out.  The story moved slowly and I quite enjoyed that.  I enjoyed getting to know the side characters and the little town.  I particularly liked fierce little Trey and felt so sad for them by the end.  The book had some things to say about the poison that infects "charming" small towns where young people are leaving and moving up takes so much effort.  

All in all, this was an interesting and different sort of story from French's usual Murder Club mysteries.  I quite liked this one and I'm excited that I have one more stand-alone book by her that I haven't read yet.