Monday, September 24, 2012

Review: The Peach Keeper by Sarah Addison Allen


The Peach Keeper by Sarah Addison Allen cover art
Genre: Southern Fiction
Series: No
Copyright: 2011
Publisher:  Bantam Books
Buy: Amazon
Reviews of other books by Sarah Addison AllenGarden SpellsFirst FrostThe Sugar QueenLost, Lake, and The Girl Who Chased the Moon

Summary:
Willa Jackson, Colin Osgood, Paxton Osgood, and Sebastian Rogers all went to high school together, in Walls of Water North Carolina and yet they can't seem to live down their past which is exactly what they would like to do. " The Joker, the Stick Man, the Princess, and the Freak" (p. 209). 
The Madam had been built in the 1800s by Willa's great-great-grandfather, the founder of the now defunct Jackson Logging Company. ... The irony was that the Jacksons, once the finest family in town, the reason for the town's existence in the first place, lost all their money when the logging stopped. ... [Willa] got out of her Wrangler and climbed onto the hood, leaning back against the windshield. ... The only thing left to the renovation was the landscaping, which apparently had gotten under way just that day. That excited Willa. ... Most of the activity, however, seemed centered on the area around the only tree on the flat top of the hill, where the house sat. (p. 11-12)
Willa's family has a history at the Madam but she is the only one who had not been inside the run down house as a teenager. She only views it from a distance. Thus when she is caught looking that it by Colin she is embarrassed and hurries off in the hope that he didn't recognize her. Colin is left with the invitation to the gala event being held at the Madam. He goes to return it to her and in a jet-legged state ends up falling asleep on her couch. In high school Willa was the school Joker and she had pinned her pranks on Colin not on purpose to start with but because everyone thought he had done them. Colin is drawn to Willa because of her wild side, but she is not the person she was in high school.

Paxton is having the Madam remolded for the big 75th anniversary gala for the Women's Society Club. Paxton is the president, and she feels that she must be in control. Colin is doing the landscaping for the Madam and when he finds a skeleton under a peach tree his sister feels as though everything is out of her control and she worries that she will not be able to have the gala there. The skeleton belongs to Tucker Devlin a traveling sales man who was in Walls of Water 75 years before. The mystery surrounding his death brings Paxton and Willa closer.

Paxton and Sebastian are very good friends and Paxton is under the impression from being in high school together that he is gay, yet she finds herself sexually attracted to him. She wants more from her relationship with him than just the friendship they have.
"He opened the car door for her and helped her out. 'It's too hot to be sitting in your car. Your hair is wet.' He put his cool hand to the base of her bare neck, which made her want to shiver. It was a base reaction from a place deep within her, a well full of sharp longings and pipe dreams." (p. 67) 
Even the way they interact shows how close they are physically even if it isn't sexual.

Colin and Paxton both need to come to terms with who they are now and what it means for them to be part of their family and an individual. All have to learn to be who they were in the past as well as who they are now to be comfortable, in coming to terms with this they are able to find happiness.

Feelings:
I really enjoyed the mountain setting for The Peach Keeper. The idea of a town of waterfalls seems magical, and the way the mist was described makes the setting magical. The idea of selling jars of fog, because of how think and magical it was seems an odd idea to me, but living in the mountains I understand the kind of fog that is being described. Unlike some of Sarah Addison Allen's other books this one combines a fictional location, Walls of Water, with a real location, Asheville, where the author is from. I liked that touch. Walls of Water is both a small town but also has the feel of a larger town. Through the setting and nature we learn about the characters which is important to the story.

Contrary to the title there were not many peaches in the story. I expected them to play a bigger part in the story but they didn't really. Personally, I had hoped that they would as they are my favorite fruit. Tucker Devlin has peach tree that is growing over were he was buried and there is the smell of peaches sometimes when people think of Tucker and what he did to the town. Mostly though peaches are part of the magical or unknown in this story.

I really enjoy reading Sarah Addison Allen's books but I have to admit that I am beginning to see a similar structure in them. This has not stopped me from enjoying the writing and the story. Almost all of her stories have a strong focus on the past and healing wounds. This story was no exception to this pattern. What makes her books really enjoyable to me are that the characters are strong and easy to like. The romance between characters helps, but I think I would like the story even if there wasn't romance and the characters were just friends.

I would recommend this to anyone looking for a good read over a weekend. It is easy to get into and the characters give in to the superstitions of the town. The town and the characters all have their own personalities that make this a book worth reading.

4 Birds

Monday, September 17, 2012

What I Saw and How I Lied by Judy Blundell

Title: What I Saw and How I Lied
Author: Judy Blundell

Type: Audio Book (Unabridged) Young Adult Novel
Narrator: Catalin Greer
Genre: Fiction, Young Adult
Series: No
Copyright: 2009 (2008 printed edition)

Publisher:  Scholastic Audio
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Summary:
It is right after World War II and Evie Spooner and her mother Beverly are waiting for Joe to come back from the war. They are living with his mother and feel the strain. When Joe returns he starts a business selling appliances. On what seems to be a whim Joe takes the family on a vacation to Palm Beach, Florida. At first they are very excited and the drive is fun but as the temperature rises so does the tension in the car. Bev and Evie do not ask or talk about the war with Joe and there is much they do not know about him. Staying at the only open hotel in Palm Beach they meet Arlene and Tom Grayson who they become friends with. Tom and Joe start to form a shady business deal for buying the hotel they are staying in and Arlene helps Evie start to grow up by buying her clothes that are for a young woman not a girl. Also, staying at the hotel is Peter Coleridge, someone who had served with Joe in the war. Joe has a clear dislike for Peter but it isn't clear why. Evie finds Peter kind, handsome and finds herself with a crush, which she calls love. What follows leads to betray and a taking of sides. Evie must choice what lies to tell and who to betray.

Feelings:
A National Book Award Winner in young adult this book is told in first person (Something I have been noticing, recently is first person narratives. I thought I read only third person. Turns out I was wrong.) from the point-of-view of a 15 year old girl. Evie wants so much to be an adult and everyone is trying to hold her back. This is a coming-of-age novel with a mystery twist. I'm not sure that the mystery is ever really solved at the end because Evie isn't sure what happened. She does grow up in the process and the change in the character is genuine and well worth reading the book to see. In the south after the war Evie does not see the change that she would have expected and racism is present. This bothers her and she doesn't see why there are these kind of rules. She is innocent in a way that draws the reader in and as she looses that innocence through life experiences and her observations of what is happening around her she begins to grow up. The only problem is that once you grow up you can't go back. The setting for the book was good and I enjoyed the post war atmosphere of plenty. While this is definitely a story told from the point-of-view of a teenager there isn't as much dwelling on girly things as one would expect. I would recommend this book to individuals who like a good coming-of-age novel and a bit of mystery mixed in.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Review: The Girl Who Chased the Moon by Sarah Addison Allen

The Girl Who Chased the Moon by Sarah Addison Allen cover art
Genre: Southern Fiction
Series: No
Copyright: 2010
Publisher: Bantam Books
Buy: Amazon

Reviews of other books by Sarah Addison AllenGarden SpellsFirst Frost, The Sugar QueenLost, Lake, and The Peach Keeper

Summary:
This is the story of Emily Benedict and Julia Winterson. Emily Benedict comes to Mullaby, North Carolina, when her mother dies, to live with a grandfather she didn't even know she had. Julia Winterson who grew up in Mullaby, she saw no reason to return until her father dies. Julia is living in Mullaby until she has paid off the mortgage on her father's BBQ restaurant at which point she will return to her life that has nothing to do with her past in Mullaby. When Emily first arrives she finds the difference between her life with her mother and life in Mullaby hard to adjust too.
Emily hesitated, then paid him and got out. The air outside was tomato-sweet and hickory-smoked, all at once delicious and strange. It automatically made her touch her tongue to her lips. It was dusk, but the streetlights weren't on yet. She was taken aback by how quiet everything was. It suddenly made her feel light. No street sounds. No kids playing. No music or television. There was this sensation of otherworldliness, like she'd traveled some impossible distance. (p. 3-4)
At night Emily sees a light in the woods and finds it odd and interesting. Once she ventures into town she finds that her mother's past in Mullaby is not what she thought and many of the things she thought of her mother are not as they seem.
"I'm Julia Winterson. I live over there." She turned her head slightly, indicating the yellow and white house next door. That's when Emily noticed the pink streak in Julia's hair, tucked behind her ear. It wasn't something she expected from someone so fresh-faced, in flour-stained jeans and a white peasant blouse. ... [Of an apple stack cake Julie says,] "It means..." she struggled with the world, then finally said, "welcome. I know Mullaby has its faults, as I'm sure your mother told you, but it's also a town of great food. Your going to eat very well while you're here. At least there's that.".... "My mother didn't tell me anything about Mullaby," Emily said, staring at the cake. "Nothing?" "No." Julia seemed shocked into silence. (p.23-24)
Emily's lack of understanding of the town and everyone else's understanding of what her mother "did" leave her an outcast. Win Coffey is the only one that seems to be interested in her yet he is the only person who everyone wants to keep her away from.

Julia has been back in Mullaby for a year and a half, and she has done everything she can to avoid Sawyer. Until one small slip while she is talking with Stella, her best friend who she lives with, leaves Sawyer wanting to get close to her.
"Don't you want to know what Stella told me last night?" [Sawyer] asked. ... "Stella was drunk last night." "She said you told her that you bake cakes because of me." (p.17)
Julia and Sawyer have a past, and not one that Julia is likely to forget.
She couldn't blame him for being a scared teenager when he'd found out she'd gotten pregnant from their one night together on the football field all those years ago. ... But she resented how easily he'd gotten on with his life. It had been just one night to him. One regretful night with the freaky, unpopular girl he'd barely even talked to at school. A girl who'd been madly in love with him. (p. 20)
Getting over the past is something both Julia and Emily must overcome to find a place where they can fit.

Feelings:
Like with many of Allen's books food plays a big roll in the story. Expect to be hungry when you read this. BBQ and Cakes play a big part in the story and how the characters interact. I really enjoy reading a book were food is an important part of the story. Sometimes when you read a book and you never see the characters eat it makes you wonder if they are real. This makes food seem magical which I really liked.

This is an easy read. I enjoyed the story, a hint of magic and a little bit of tension make it a good read. I enjoyed the characters and how they seemed so real. Yes there were times when you must suspend disbelief but I don't have an issue with this and really enjoyed the magical elements of the story.

As with all of her stories Sarah Addison Allen takes a setting in rural North Carolina and makes it come to life. I like that her setting is real. I'm from North Carolina and while it feels much like some of the places I have traveled in North Carolina it is a setting that is friendly and it is clear that Allen knows what she is writing.

4 Birds

Monday, September 3, 2012

Review: Sapphique by Catherine Fisher

Sapphique by Catherine Fisher cover art
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
Series: Yes, link to my review of Incarceron
Copyright: 2010
Publisher: Dial
Buy: Amazon


Summary:
The Summary and Feelings on this book are shorter because the story is so linked to the prequel Incarceron that to say much about this book is to give away the story of Incarceron. The story is set in both the prison and the realm. It still follows Claudia, Finn, Keiro, and Attia as well as the problems in both the prison and Realm. In this book we see that maybe escape is not exactly what it seems and that both prison and realm have aspects of confinement. We do learn much more about Sapphique in this book and the story of Sapphique's escape from the prison.

Feelings:
This book explained many things that were left unexplained in Incarceron but still didn't do many things that I would have hoped. I doubt there will be a sequel to Sapphique but there are still things that could be cleared up. The book did resolve many things and end nicely but I would have liked to see a little more resolution. I don't trust what happened at the end of the book. To trust the ending is to trust a character who is not trusted. I know that is an odd thing to say but I don't want to give to much away.

4 Birds