Showing posts with label week 11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label week 11. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Book 72: Our Endangered Values by Jimmy Carter

Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter wrote this book in 2005 in response to the Religious Right and neoconservatives taking over the government post-9/11 and destroying our moral standing in the world, both home and abroad. It was a fascinating book to read right now, because it's easy in 2016 to think of Donald Trump as being a nightmare unlike any we've ever faced before. While I do think that's true, it's not like GWB and Cheney were good guys, and we shouldn't forget that fact.

It was also really interesting because Carter and I have similar views on most major issues, but we approach them from different angles. A lot of this book deals with how his religious beliefs as a born again Evangelical Christian inform and shape his political views, and it's a remarkably sharp retort to all those who insist that deeply held religious faith is incompatible with liberal politics. If anything, he makes a compelling argument that liberal policies are the natural result of religious moral values, with the emphasis on helping the poor and caring for our earth. His path to those political views doesn't match mine, but it's still instructive to see how different people can arrive at the same conclusion for different reasons.

The other thing that this book reminded me of is why it has taken so much work and effort to repair what was damaged during the GWB years, and exactly why it's so important to keep pressing forward and to do what we can to ensure that government is actually functional and works for people and their lives. I'm happy to have read this book now rather than back in 2005, but I'm also incredibly aware that we're at another huge juncture in our country's history.

Grade: A

Book 71: Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl

I keep waiting to read the Southern Gothic urban fantasy YA novel that's going to really knock my socks off. I thought that maybe it would be this one! But nope.

It starts off well enough: Lena is the new girl in Gatlin, South Carolina, and the niece of the notorious recluse - the town's very own Boo Radley. Ethan, a basketball player who's desperate to escape this town after graduation, is immediately drawn to her. Weird stuff keeps happening around Lena: massive thunderstorms out of nowhere, shattered windows, and then it becomes clear that Lena is the same girl he's been seeing in a reoccurring dream for ages and also they can hear each other in their minds. Obviously, it's love.

There's a lot of stuff here that I like, mostly related to the two of them attempting to figure out what their connection is and piecing together their families' histories. Lena's uncle has lots of secrets, as does Ethan's grandmother and great-aunts. I was bored by a lot of the high school drama though, and much of the suspense of the book came from characters deliberately keeping information from each other, and while that was always for Reasons I was frequently unconvinced by them. And then we got to the final climax, and I found it both underwhelming and also frustrating, because of course this was another first book to a series, rather than a complete story. I get why people want to read series of books, and why they're so common in YA in particular. But sometimes I just wish that a story could be done in one book.

Grade: C

Book 70: The Stepsister Scheme by Jim C. Hines

I wanted to like this book a lot more than I did.

It feels like it should be right up my alley: a story about Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty and Snow White working together to thwart evil and rescue Cinderella's prince. But for whatever reason the writing never grabbed me, and the characters felt flat. I'm not sure if this is an example of a YA novel that just really isn't for me; it's totally possible that I would have loved it if I had read it when I was thirteen. But unfortunately it didn't leave an impression on me as an adult.

Grade: C

Book 69: The Grand Sophy by Georgette Heyer

What a delightful book.

Somehow I made it to this point in my life without reading any Heyer, and it was clearly time to remedy that. I went into this book knowing that it was a foundational text in terms of regency romance tropes and plots and characters, and it was so lovely reading it and seeing exactly how and why it works so well, now and then.

The titular Sophy returns to England from many years on the Continent to stay with her aunt's family while her father travels to Brazil. Her mother died many years ago and she had been on her own, more or less, from a young age, and has the desire to break lots of rules and the charm and intelligence to pull it off. She completely takes over the household and manages to break some engagements and create others, and by the end of the book everyone is happier and better off for it. She is a truly wonderful character.

The one caveat about this book is that it was written in 1950 and is set during 1816, and it includes a plot point involving a Jewish moneylender which is historically accurate in terms of characters' views at the time but which also took me aback. I wouldn't recommend not reading it because of it, but there is definitely no softening or omission of antisemitism in England during the Regency in this book. Even with that plot point, I enjoyed this book immensely though. It was the perfect vacation read.

Grade: A