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A Preview of April Releases

April is already racing by so I’m putting out my picks pronto for this month. But before I do that, I wanted to say how sorry I was to hear that author Peter Matthiessen had recently died, and right before his latest novel “In Paradise” was due out. Ugh what a great writer, especially on topics about the natural world. I recall reading his nonfiction book “The Snow Leopard” in my twenties and being quite moved by it. If you get a chance, check it out along with his others. Have you read any of his books? And what did you think?

For April, there seems to be a number of good novels coming out (see list at right). I’m drawn to read “The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry” by Gabrielle Zevin about a bookstore owner on Alice Island (a fictional Martha’s Vineyard), who goes through a transformation of sorts, and redemption. Booklist says the novel’s also an homage to bookstores that “perfectly captures the joy of connecting people and books.” As a former indie bookstore employee, I can’t resist this new well-regarded novel that touches on the ins and outs of bookselling.

Meanwhile, “Be Safe I Love You” by Cara Hoffman is my edgier pick for April about the troubled homecoming of a female U.S. soldier who returns from a tour of duty in Iraq in time to spend the holidays with her family. All appears fine, as she offers to take her brother on a trip to visit their mother in upstate New York, but they wind up traveling to Canada instead. Library Journal calls the novel a searing tale of the “corrosive effects of war on the psyche,” and Ms. magazine says it’s “a riveting suspense story.” So I hope not to miss it.

Lastly I’m curious about Ayelet Waldman’s novel “Love and Treasure,” which weaves a story around the true history of the Hungarian Gold Train in WWII. Apparently the train carried a trove of stolen goods taken from Jews in Hungary and was bound for Germany when Allied soldiers intercepted it. Some of the trove was then re-stolen. The Boston Globe says the “book’s best moments explore subtle ambiguities … the human stories behind the looted objects flicker into life.” I haven’t read Waldman before but have heard good things about her books so I think I should give this one a try.

For movies in April (see list at left), I’m interested in seeing “The Railway Man,” which is based on the book by Eric Lomax, a British Army officer who was sent to a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp in 1942. Years after the war, Lomax set out to confront the man responsible for his torture there, which the movie explores. It stars Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman, which isn’t too shabby. I’ll likely see it if comes out around here.

Another film I’ll likely see is “Hateship, Loveship,” which is based on the Alice Munro short story. Holy smokes I didn’t know this was in the works. It looks like a quaint love story among outsiders, starring Kristen Wiig and Guy Pierce. You can’t go wrong there.

Even Nicolas Cage’s new movie “Joe,” which is based on the novel by Larry Brown, looks to be pretty good. It’s about an ex-con who helps a 15-year-old boy in a rough situation. The trailer reminded me slightly of the movie “Mud,” which I liked quite a bit, so I think I’ll see this one, too.

Lastly for albums in April (see list at bottom right), I plan to check out Joan Osborne’s “Love and Hate.” She’s always had a great sultry voice so I think there will be some songs worth checking out.
How about you — which new books, movies, or albums out this month are you most looking forward to? Continue reading
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Divergent and Rosie

I’ve been AWOL for about two weeks from blogging. I went “Divergent” so to speak. I traveled to the Washington, D.C. and the Northern Virginia area for my adult “spring break,” visiting old friends from when I once lived there and seeing some sights. It was a really fun trip. To the left is a photo of the National Gallery of Art, where I saw an interesting exhibit, a portrait of American life, from the photos Garry Winogrand took from the 1950s to his death in 1984. Check out the exhibit if you get a chance.

Then after getting back home our dog Stella became ill and had to go to the emergency vet hospital, which turned our world upside down. After 3 1/2 days of care there, it appears luckily she’s going to be okay to our great relief. She had tested positive for exposure to an antifreeze-type of toxin, which we don’t know exactly where she was exposed to, but we are taking all precautions and have taken our car to get checked for any leaks. We are so fortunate to have her back from what was a life-threatening situation. I think my anxiety went through the roof, but we were very lucky and now she’s back home being her regular Lab self. Oh thank goodness!

I did read “Divergent” while flying back and forth from D.C. Surely, Veronica Roth’s 2011 dystopian young-adult novel made for a good airplane/spring-break-kind-of read, even though I’m typically not a frequent YA reader. It’s got action, suspense, a little love story and an easy reading level. (Maybe too easy?) Am I the last one to have read this bestseller? Probably. I plan to see the movie of it soon, but I haven’t seen it just yet. The movie took in $56 million on its opening weekend, which isn’t too shabby but is nowhere near “The Hunger Games” box-office haul.
If I were to compare the “Divergent” book to “The Hunger Games,” I’d have to say that I found Suzanne Collins’s book better written, but I still enjoyed “Divergent” and found it somewhat similar; they both have 16-year-old protagonists who must undergo enormous physical challenges in a post-apocalyptic world. “Divergent’s” premise though seemed rather hokey to me that people were divided into factions based on their predispositions to Candor, Erudite, Dauntless, Abnegation and Amity. On their way to building a utopia it seems the survivors must have forgotten their heads, believing that by separating people by character would solve society’s problems. (Good luck with that.) But what the heck, I was going to go with it.
The book gets good though when Tris goes off to undergo the initiation process for the Dauntless (brave) faction. The dueling cliques that form between the initiates and the training scenes are some of the best, as Tris jumps in and out of trains, hurls down a wire from the top of the old Sears Tower, and goes through exposure therapy and simulations to try to eradicate fears. The training reminded me a bit of the book “Ender’s Game.” Though along the way Tris falls for her trainer, which isn’t in that one.
And of course, she has a secret and isn’t solely Dauntless. The ending is an action page-turner as the Erudite faction tries to violently take control and Tris is one of the few who can stop them. I look forward to seeing how the movie handles the book. One movie critic I read said the movie is “more satisfying than the bestseller that inspired it.” Could it be true? Have you seen it and what did you think?

On top of “Divergent,” I just finished “The Rosie Project,” which is a romantic comedy that I read for my book club. We are going to discuss it on Tuesday, so I will gather my thoughts about it and write more later. I did mostly enjoy “The Rosie Project” and thought it was clever. It’s about a socially-challenged man’s search for the perfect wife. By the time Rosie comes along she’s so wrong according to his criteria but so right for him regardless. The story’s both funny and charming.
What did you think? Have you read this one? Continue reading
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This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage

Well the polar vortex ended last Friday and a glimpse of spring has arrived today in western Canada with 55 degree weather. That translates into Miami temps for this time of year here. We’re loving it for sure!
I’ve been meandering a bit with my reading, but just finished Ann Patchett’s nonfiction book of essays called “This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage,” which came out last November. My sister gave it to me for Christmas. I love the title; it makes you want to know if she’s being real, or if she has some secret cornucopia of knowledge about marriage. I was sure I would devour the collection in no time at all, but I’ve been enjoying it this past week more slowly like a glass of fine wine. I find there seems to be more to absorb in nonfiction and it takes me a bit longer than a novel to get through, generally speaking.
But I liked reading it slowly as it’s a great book and I would highly recommend it, especially to people who are interested in writing, or in the aspects of a writer’s life. It’s quite personal and the combined 22 essays flow together almost as if you were reading a memoir. There’s chapters on just about every facet of Patchett’s life including her childhood and family, how she became a successful writer and co-bookstore owner, her divorce and eventual second marriage, and her life in Nashville. It’s all there: her loves, losses and how writing has always been her mission in life, which she’s worked very hard at doing both as a journalist and as a novelist.
The way she writes these essays it’s almost as if you know her and she’s telling you like she would a friend, candidly and confiding. She’s often funny and self-effacing. The essays are a genuine treat to read, her descriptions and observations reveal truths about life in various episodes. I was lured into them eagerly like a bee to a bonnet. It made me wonder if Patchett’s actually a better nonfiction writer than she is a novelist. This collection made me think so. Granted, I have read just two of her novels so far, one of which “State of Wonder” I liked quite a bit; the other “Run” I didn’t care for that much. But I’d like to read her novel “Bel Canto,” which I’ve heard is her very best.
Meanwhile this nonfiction collection knocked it out of the park for me. I especially appreciated her essay “The Getaway Car,” which gives useful advice if you’re interested in writing, and a candid perspective on being a writer. I also found interesting her foray into becoming a bookstore co-owner, which she writes about in “The Bookstore Strikes Back.” And the title essay “This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage” about the long road to love she found with her second husband is a poignant piece that might remind one that sometimes you don’t realize the really good thing or person you’ve got till they’re (almost) gone.
I enjoyed about all of the essays in this book. She even writes about her very dear dog Rose in “This Dog’s Life” and “Dog Without End,” which made me happy being such a dog lover. I guess only one essay “The Mercies” about the former Catholic nuns who taught her school and befriended her I found a bit convoluted and didn’t draw me in as much as the others. But on the whole, I was quite taken with this volume and will keep it to reread pieces again in the future.
What about you — have you read this book or others by her? Or do you plan to? Continue reading
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March Preview
March has arrived but you wouldn’t really know it because the temperatures have been so cold across Canada. Blah. But I can still dream of spring. And now that the Super Bowl, the Olympics, and the Academy Awards are over, we can get back to regular programming so to speak.
Speaking of which, I’m still surprised that “Gravity” won seven Oscars on Sunday, and “American Hustle” was completely shut out. Of course I agree “Gravity” had stunning visual and special effects but I didn’t think there was much of a story, other than hurdling through space and trying to get from point A to point B by your untethered self, which seemed pretty unlikely or unrealistic. Oh well, give space movies a break. It’s cold and pretty out there.

Moving on to March releases, there’s not a huge amount to snatch up this month, which surprises me a bit after the onslaught of good releases the past two months, but a few did catch my eye. In literary fiction (see list at right), I’m picking “Roosevelt’s Beast” by Louis Bayard, which looks to be a fun adventurous read if you’re up for a jungle excursion. It’s a reimagining of Theodore Roosevelt and his son’s ill-fated 1914 expedition to the Amazon. It sounds like a journey part “King Kong” and part “Heart of Darkness” with its psychological twist, but I’ll have to read it to see. I have not read Bayard, who’s know for his thought-provoking thrillers, before so that’s enticing, too.

I’m also picking Rene Denfeld’s debut novel “The Enchanted,” which is receiving a lot of high praise. I’m usually not into novels set in prison such as this one is, but it sounds quite different and a bit magical — about a prisoner and a death row investigator who uncovers some wrenching truths. Fellow author Erin Morgenstern says it’s “a wondrous book that finds transcendence in the most unlikely of places . . . So dark yet so exquisite.” And author Katherine Dunn calls “The Enchanted” “contagious” and “seductive” … “unlike anything I’ve ever read.” Along with other praise, I’m quite curious about this one, so sign me up!

As for March movies (see list at left), I’ve got to pick “Divergent,” based on the hugely popular young-adult novel by Veronica Roth. Oh yeah I’ll be there in the box office line, but first I still have to read the dystopian, sci-fi book that spawned the movie and trilogy. Yep I’m behind the times. But how much more dystopia can I take? Oh well, at least another. I hope to devour the book, and by then I’ll need to know if Shailene Woodley will deliver as Tris, and if the movie will be any good. What do you think?

Lastly in album releases for March (see list at bottom right), I’m most looking forward to indie band Foster the People’s album “Supermodel,” which is the follow-up to their successful debut “Torches” from 2011. One of the singles off “Supermodel,” “Coming of Age” has a cool sound and vibe to it, so I think the album should be a great release. I’m planning to check it out in full when it comes out mid-March.
How about you — which new books, movies, or albums out this month are you most looking forward to? Continue reading
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The Academy Awards Night

Happy Sunday, or maybe not. We are under an extreme wind chill warning of -40F and here it is March now and the Academy Awards are on tonight. If Oscar were here, his privates would shrivel considerably. So I will make some cocoa, do some reading today and make my picks for the big night.
There’s been a strong field of movies this year on a wide variety of subject matter, from space to slavery, to pirates, AIDS, sting operations, war, lost babies, breakdowns and heartbreak. I’ve seen quite a few of the nominated ones. Here’s a list of the films I’ve seen so far:
The Great Gatsby
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Saving Mr. Banks
Blue Jasmine
All Is Lost
Gravity
Captain Phillips
12 Years a Slave
American Hustle
Philomena
Lone Survivor
Her
Dallas Buyer’s Club
Frances Ha
And here’s a list of films I haven’t seen but still hope to in the future:
Inside Llewyn Davis
Labor Day
The Wolf of Wall Street
August: Osage County
Nebraska
The Book Thief
I’m sorry to say I also haven’t seen any of the foreign film nominees this year, or the documentaries either, which is a bit surprising, but I hope at least they become more readily available after the awards.
Of the films I’ve seen, it’s hard to say which one I liked the very best. Quite a few of them had moments that blew me away. “Captain Phillips,” “Philomena,” “Saving Mr. Banks” and “Her,” particularly struck me, and I was haunted for a week after “Lone Survivor” and “12 Years a Slave.”
I actually liked all of the nominated films I saw and wouldn’t be surprised if “12 Years a Slave” won for Best Picture and “American Hustle” won for Best Director, or vice versa, and the rest of the awards were sprinkled about. “Her” seems a good pick for Best Original Screenplay as I enjoyed its creativity and explorations of the heart and feelings of alienation.
The performances by Cate Blanchett in “Blue Jasmine” and Matthew McConaughey in “Dallas Buyer’s Club” are hard to argue, though it would’ve been nice if Emma Thompson in “Saving Mr. Banks” or Robert Redford in “All Is Lost” hadn’t been passed over for nominations. Still the categories are tight with some excellent performances. The winners for Best Supporting roles always wind up a bit interesting or surprising. And hopefully there will be some surprises tonight. If it’s the same winners as the previous awards’ shows, it’ll be quite dull, don’t you think?
What about you — which movie did you like best this year and which ones are your picks for tonight? Continue reading
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Oryx and Crake

Wow is Margaret Atwood’s “Oryx and Crake” from 2003 a wild, dark read. I had been bemoaning the choice of it which a member of my book club selected for us to read this month. I had put it off and put it off till the last possible minute, not wanting to read another dystopian futuristic novel full of gobbledygook and destruction. And the first 200 pages I stayed bemoaning it, but then I latched on to the story and the last 150+ pages flew by quickly. Now I’m looking to read her two others sometime in this trilogy: “The Year of the Flood” (2009) and MaddAddam (2013). So much for bemoaning it; I ended up enjoying its strange imagery and story.
I guess that’s what’s great about a book club; you read selections you might not otherwise read and it broadens your reading scope. I’m glad now to have read “Oryx and Crake” although it’s not necessarily an easy read. It challenges you in ways. It’s often harsh-mouthed and graphic, critical and over-the-top, but that’s Margaret Atwood for you — strong in her convictions, especially concerning science, the environment, and politics.
But how can I explain “Oryx and Crake,” which Atwood disputes as science fiction and calls speculative fiction because she says it doesn’t deal with “things that have not been invented yet.” Set sometime in the future, it’s about a survivor named Snowman (originally named Jimmy) who’s seemingly the last human on Earth after a virulent pandemic strikes the world. He’s left to dodge unfriendly predators and weather conditions and take care of some bioengineered humans his friend Crake once pioneered. He has painful memories of what transpired on Earth and how everyone died.
The narrative shifts back and forth from his present bleak state as a survivor to decades earlier when Earth was populated and Jimmy met his very intelligent friend Crake in grade school in the secured compound where their families lived. The story follows their lives thereafter in college and then getting jobs in corporations and their love for the same girl named Oryx, who they first saw on a porn website. I didn’t say this story would be normal, did I?
It’s a world in which biotech firms like Crake’s are creating super pills and experimenting with genetically engineered humans, and where global warming and overpopulation have taken a severe toll, especially on the pleeblands outside the secured compounds. The narrative leads up to what happened on Earth and the roles Jimmy, Oryx and Crake play. It’s suspenseful in a “Walking Dead” kind of way as the doomsday unfolds.
Although at first I feared the novel would be too dense or strange, I got into after awhile with Snowman (Jimmy) as the narrator. It turned out not to be too hard to understand or wacko. Its underlying message of the destructive direction our society is headed gets a bit heavy at times but not so far-fetched as not to be believed. Who’s not to say humans will hasten their own demise.
Apparently Atwood was in the midst of writing “Oryx and Crake” around the time of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, which made her stop for a few weeks. No wonder: its negative scope. By the end though I was entangled in its web and left wanting to find out more in book two. I’m sure “Oryx and Crake” will make for an interesting discussion for my book club this Tuesday evening.
How about you — have you read this novel or any of this trilogy? And what did you think? Continue reading
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The Fault in Our Stars

Yes, I finally got on the ball and read John Green’s 2012 young adult blockbuster “The Fault in Our Stars.” I’m probably one of the last in blogger-land to have done so, and it came at a good time when I needed a quick, easy read after some of the denseness of the last novel I read and another dense one for my book club to follow.
And yes, I’m in the majority when I say I really liked “The Fault in Our Stars” and it’s a wonderful, stunning read. Even though it’s sad about two high school kids who have cancer who meet at a support group and fall in love, it’s also very beautiful and moving without being overly sentimental. Author John Green captures the teenagers and their dialogue seemingly to perfection. And the characters, Hazel and Augustus, express plenty of sardonic wit and intelligence to keep the story from falling into a depressing or cheesy hole. Green brings these characters to life and I really felt they were real people by the end who I knew and would miss.
“The Fault in Our Stars” is a book about living and dying and questioning whether one has meaning. It makes you feel what it’s like to be in a cancer kids’ shoes but it also gives them dignity and humanness too. I also liked the book’s side plot of Hazel’s quest to try to contact the author of her favorite book to find out what happened to its characters after an ambiguous ending. The quest takes Hazel and Augustus on a whirlwind adventure to Amsterdam where their connection blossoms.
I rarely read young adult novels but this one was really worth it, even though a tissue or two was required. It’s hard to really say too much about the story, other than to just rush out get the book and read it, which you must if you haven’t already. It’s made me want to read all of John Green’s other novels, too. I’m a convert now to his talent.
And I’m already thinking of the movie adaptation of “The Fault in Our Stars,” which comes out June 6. I’ve seen the trailer and I’m a bit worried it won’t be able to capture the right tone without being cheesy or fake-ish like the book does. Uh-oh. Will it live up to the book? Will the actors meet the expectations for the characters? The odds are against it, but I’ll likely see it anyways. It’s quite amazing that Shailene Woodley will play the lead roles for both upcoming movies “Divergent” and “Fault in Our Stars.” Wow she’s on a roll. I thought she was quite good in the 2011 movie “The Descendants,” so we will see if she can rise to these roles as well.
What about you — what did you think of this novel and do you plan to see the movie? Continue reading
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On Such a Full Sea

I was game for another dystopian futuristic novel and I hadn’t read the acclaimed author Chang-Rae Lee before so I eagerly picked up “On Such a Full Sea,” whose title is taken from a line in Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar.”
It takes place in a wasted American landscape where three segments of society exist: the wealthy elite that live in walled-off Charter villages; the service workers in labor settlements that support the Charters; and the less fortunate who vie for survival in the open counties where it’s dangerous and difficult to get by.
The story follows a 16-year-old girl named Fan who lives in the labor settlement B-Mor that was formerly Baltimore. She’s a well-skilled tank diver who takes care of the fish supply sold to the Charters. But one day her boyfriend, Reg, who has an immunity to C-illnesses that the population doesn’t, goes missing. Soon after, Fan leaves B-Mor on a dangerous journey into the open counties to find Reg. Along the way she meets various odd characters such as Quig, a vet-turned-doctor living in a compound who barters away his patients; a murderous acrobatic family; and Miss Cathy, a wealthy woman who holds a troupe of young artistic girls in a room at her house.
But will Fan persevere and find Reg? And what happened to him? The novel reads like a tale about two folk heroes who become symbols to the troubled workers of B-Mor, which is undergoing a decline and crackdown.
You won’t find out about Fan’s and Reg’s fates till the end, but I almost wasn’t sure I was going to make it there, even though the novel is a normal 352 pages. “On Such a Full Sea” took me quite awhile to read. It’s challenging and dense on the whole and many pages don’t have any paragraph breaks.
The book’s narration by a B-Mor resident, who tells the tale of Fan, drove me crazy. At times he’s actively telling her tale, which is interesting to follow, but at other times he’s musing philosophically about this and that, which hindered the story and was generally boring to stick with. I kept wishing that Fan had narrated her own story so that it would come more to life. As it is, she is quite distanced as this folk hero, and you don’t really get to know her well.
Although the author conjures some vivid passages and images of a futuristic world in trouble, I came away from the novel feeling that it was a bit of a slog to read. The narration muted its suspense and I kept wanting it to deliver more. I had set my sights high for this novel but on the whole I was rather disappointed.
How about you — have you read this one? Or do you plan to? Continue reading
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February Preview
Happy February everyone and happy Super Bowl Sunday. I hope you enjoy the Big Game and the parties, and of course the amusing commercials.
February will be a busy month as the Olympic Winter Games take place Feb. 7-23 in Sochi, Russia. Go Team USA and Team Canada! So I will be watching quite a bit of those. Who knows how many books I will be able to get through, but this month is loaded with some great literary fiction coming out (see list at the right). I’ve picked six that I’d like to snatch up sometime; three of these are authors putting out their debuts.

“The Wives of Los Alamos” by TaraShea Nesbit is one that comes highly praised; it describes the lives of the women who accompanied their scientist husbands to the desert to work on a secret project that turned out to be the making of the atomic bomb. Author Paula McLain calls the novel a “fascinating and artful debut” and one of “consequence,” while Gail Godwin says she’s in “awe” of it.

Another debut that likely shouldn’t be missed is Molly Antopol’s short story collection “The UnAmericans.” Antopol is an honoree of the National Book Foundation’s “5 under 35” picks, and a “writer of seismic talents,” says Pulitzer Prize winner Adam Johnson. She’s quite the talk of the town so to speak so I need to check this out.

Andy Weir’s “The Martian” is another praised debut that I hope to read. It looks like a fast-paced thriller about an astronaut who’s left by his crew for dead on Mars. Will he be able to overcome the odds against him? Even astronaut Chris Hadfield says he couldn’t put the book down.

The next two February novels on my list are from Canadians. “Caught” by Lisa Moore, which came out in Canada in May 2013, is now releasing this month to acclaim in the U.S. It’s about a Billy-the-Kid-type character who busts out of prison to embark on one last great heist and win back the woman he loves.

The other novel “The Bear” by Claire Cameron is described as a harrowing suspense story that’s narrated by a five-year-old girl who must fend for herself and her little brother after a brutal bear attack. It sounds quite scary but also moving about the bonds between mothers and children.

Lastly in February novels, I can’t help but want to read “Wonderkid” by Wesley Stace, which looks quite fun. It’s being hailed as a rock-and-roll novel written with an insider’s knowledge of the music biz about a British band that takes America by storm until things start to go wrong. Colin Meloy of the Decemberists says it’s “at turns illuminating and heartbreaking — but always funny.” “Wonderkid” looks to be a sure winner.

For movies this month (see list at left), I’ll pick George Clooney’s “The Monuments Men” about an Allied WWII platoon trying to rescue stolen art from the Nazis. It’s based on a true story, and although the trailer makes it look a bit like a humorous affair of loopy characters, I still want to see it. The movie’s release was delayed from December as fixes were made to it, so hopefully the result will be good.

Lastly in albums this month (see list at bottom right), I’ll pick Beck’s latest “Morning Phase” because he has a good voice and usually has some interesting songs. And if you liked his 2002 album “Sea Change,” you might also enjoy this one, as I hear it has a similar style.
How about you — which new books, movies, or albums out this month are you most looking forward to? Continue reading
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Labor Day

I read Joyce Maynard’s novel “Labor Day” this week, so I could be ready for the movie adaptation of it, which comes out on Friday. Apparently the author loves the movie made by director Jason Reitman, who also did “Up in the Air” and “Juno,” so that’s a good sign. It also stars Josh Brolin and Kate Winslet, who earned a Golden Globe nomination for her role in the movie even though it wasn’t out then.
My husband actually got the novel in 2009 when we met Joyce Maynard at our city’s annual book festival called WordFest. Joyce did a reading from the book then, which we heard. We talked to her after and she inscribed it for us: “To Robert & Susan with undying faith in the power of love, Joyce Maynard.” Her inscription likely refers to the theme in the book, or perhaps it was because I had recently moved to Canada to be with Robert, which we might have talked about. I guess I like to think it was a bit of both, even if that’s sort of wishful thinking.
In any case, it was nice meeting Joyce Maynard. I did not bug her by asking her about J.D. Salinger, which I know now she hates getting asked about — her brief relationship when she was 18 with the reclusive author of “The Catcher in the Rye” who was 53 at the time. He had crushed her early young life then, and also was known to have taken up with a dozen other young teens, she says. Yikes, the more you know about Salinger the less you want to. But at the time that’s what I knew mostly about Joyce — that she had this thing with Salinger. Which is really too bad because she’s a talented writer in her own right and shouldn’t always be associated with this painful experience she had so many decades ago.
Anyways “Labor Day” is my first novel of hers that I’ve read. It’s about a divorced, depressed single mom and her lonely 13-year-old son living in a small New Hampshire town. At the start of Labor Day weekend they come to give a lift to an injured, escaped convict who talks his way into staying at their house. Over the next few days, they get to know the man, learning his story and finding out he’s not at all like the murderer he’s portrayed as. Among other things, the man shares with them the secrets of how to bake a good fruit pie, repairs their house, and teaches the boy how to field and hit a baseball.
But the adolescent son who’s going through puberty comes to believe his mom and the man, who are falling for each other, are going to run away together without him, leaving him with his father’s new family. This ends up starting the ball rolling towards a conclusion that will affect all of their lives.
“Labor Day” is a fast, dramatic read, told from the boy’s point of view. It was easy to slip into the characters and to imagine their circumstances and the small town they lived in. Just when I got to know and like them, their situation gave me an awful pit in my stomach that things would come crashing down soon and I didn’t like where that was heading. Fortunately it didn’t end all doom and gloom. It’s a moving story with an “undying faith in the power of love,” among characters that don’t have a whole lot left to lose. Just read it and you’ll see.
How about you — have you read this novel and what did you think? And do you plan on seeing the movie? Continue reading
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