Wednesday, 29 July 2009

The Bermudez Triangle - Maureen Johnson

Oh goodness, I finished this book this morning before I got up and should really have reviewed it then but I've left it once again till later.

I feel lately, although I've started books, I've still not had the passion to finished them.

Anyway.

I give this one 3.5/5.

It was sweet and quick and fun and quirky.
I really like the way Maureen writes when there is something Very Important you can tell because she emphasises it with Capital Letters.
I think with any other author this would irritate me but I know it's because that's how she is in her blogs and tweets and such like.

The book didn't really have an end though, it was hopeful but not succinct.

I might read it again but not in a hurry.

Friday, 3 July 2009

Boy Meets Boy - David Levithan

This book means so much to me. You wouldn't understand.
It isn't really the content of it more than the bits of my life that link to it.

I'm not sure what year it was. I suppose I was in year 8, aged 13, (after note actually I must have been 14 because I had a mobile) we were at Salt's Mill with the family. They have an amazing bookshop there and each time we go I always spend ages looking at every book on the shelves because it's a different sort of system to somewhere like WHSmiths or Waterstones that have more "best sellers". Well, the 'rents always go to look at the design shop bit at the other side of the restaurant and I was drawn to this book. It was the hearts on the front and I read the blurb and was intrigued.
By the time I was found, sat on a chair at the edge of the shop, I was half way through and addicted.
I begged Mum to buy it and finished it in the car on the way back to Grandad's.

I fell in love with every character. The writing was fantastic. I felt connected to this ridiculously idealistic world where Levithan tries to make a complex and simplistic world all at once.

Possibly 2 years after this I lent this book to David, I thought he'd enjoy it, not just because he's gay but because it was a great shortish book that just made me feel good when I read it.
I only ever saw David at cadets and not long after I lent him the book he had a fall out with his Dad and moved further south to live with his Mum.
I never saw that copy of the book again but I never forgot it.

I kept thinking I'd lend it to Ross all through the last few years, this time because, yeah he's gay and two because he rarely reads and I wanted to share a beautiful book with him.

Last weekend Hazel went to a fayre thing and one of the stalls had this book for, I think, 10p.
Whatever it was as soon as she gave it to me when I got home I felt so happy. Haze knew how much it would mean to me to have one of my favourite books back. Making it even more personal and amazing.

To the actual text itself.
Reading it this morning was a completely surreal experience; both the same and different to the first time.
Back then I couldn't put it down, I read and absorbed and loved it. Same this time, but now I see that it's simplistic but greatly metaphorical.
This guy adores to manipulate language with short, sharp ideas and sentences, the way I sometimes write and more like thinking. A gradual personality is shown and I adore it.

With some books authors seem to only want to tell the story, not really bothering to craft. Now, despite loving Horowitz he is a key player of this style, it doesn't ruin them, no, I still really enjoy them but for a completely different reason.
Similarly over explanation of surroundings or details is horrible, it's one of the things that really really annoyed me about the Twilight saga. Meyer is just so faffy and keeps describing things to a crazy unreasonable degree. For her it isn't all beautiful metaphors either.

Levithan gets the balance perfect I think.

I know it isn't strictly allowed to give 6/5 so I'll give it a 5/5 and a BONUS mark for becoming a book that is so much a part of me.

I also realise this is the most in-depth review I've given so far and it was great to do so, this is what I planned to do when I set up this blog but I've not really got around to it yet.

:)

Thursday, 2 July 2009

Bridget Jones's Diary & Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason Omnibus - Helen Fielding

So I finished the first half of this a while ago and didn't know whether to post it as a separate book but as it's an omnibus I thought I'd just do both at once.

Even though I've been off school for actually ages I still haven't managed to spend nearly enough time just reading.

I feel I should carry a book with me everywhere to read on the bus and such, BUT I actually cannot afford the bus and should get the exercise by walking to town. That means no need for book times and more need for music.

This would be solved with an abundance of mp3 based books but I don't have them.

ANYWAY, onto the review.

3/5

Really I quite enjoyed this book even though bits of it were actually uncomfortable to read because of the cringey actually scary real-life-y-ness of it.
It was clearly easy reading but nice simple trashy reading.

When I saw the film, what, 5 years ago I really did not enjoy it but the book redeemed itself!

Well, now that's over I have a pile about 100 deep to plough through!