Archive for the ‘Literary Fiction’ Category

The Great Perhaps

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Joe Meno is fantastic at creating three-dimensional characters with very interesting quirks. For example, in The Great Perhaps, Jonathan is deathly afraid of clouds, Madeline cheats at her pigeon observations, Thisbe wants to learn how to sing but is terrible at it, and Amelia wants to blow up her high school.

The Great Perhaps, by Joe Meno

The Great Perhaps, by Joe Meno

The first time I tried to read this book, it was a two-week borrow only at the library. Since I suck, I waited almost a year to take it out again (instead of buying it), and finished it this summer*.

By the time I finally finished it, I wanted more. I wanted to be sure that Jonathan and Madeline were going to fix their relationship. I wanted to see what happens with Thisbe and Roxie. I also wanted to see Amelia continue to grow up, but also shake things up.

I love that little family, as if they were my own.


*Yes, in July. How did you know?! (;

What did you think of The Lovely Bones movie, compared to the book?

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

I finally saw The Lovely Bones movie, with Mark Wahlberg (Marky Mark, haha) and Susan Sarandon, last night. I read the novel a few months ago and was pretty pleased with the movie.

What did you think of the movie? Discuss your thoughts on the Freaking Bookworm Facebook Page, or, if you don’t have a Facebook account, share your thoughts in the comments below!


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Thaw: A free novel

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Everyone loves free stuff, right? If you’re a Freaking Bookworm, then you love free books even more!

Thaw by Fiona Robyn

Thaw by Fiona Robyn

Fiona Robyn has decided to blog her new novel, Thaw, in its entirety throughout the next few months. Thaw is the diary of Ruth, a thirty-two-year-old woman who can’t decide if her life is worth living. She decides to keep a diary over a period of three months to determine whether she can continue to live.

Ruth’s first entry is below.

These hands are ninety-three years old. They belong to Charlotte Marie Bradley Miller. She was so frail that her grand-daughter had to carry her onto the set to take this photo. It’s a close-up. Her emaciated arms emerge from the top corners of the photo and the background is black, maybe velvet, as if we’re being protected from seeing the strings. One wrist rests on the other, and her fingers hang loose, close together, a pair of folded wings. And you can see her insides.

The bones of her knuckles bulge out of the skin, which sags like plastic that has melted in the sun and is dripping off her, wrinkling and folding. Her veins look as though they’re stuck to the outside of her hands. They’re a colour that’s difficult to describe: blue, but also silver, green; her blood runs through them, close to the surface. The book says she died shortly after they took this picture. Did she even get to see it? Maybe it was the last beautiful thing she left in the world.

I’m trying to decide whether or not I want to carry on living. I’m giving myself three months of this journal to decide. You might think that sounds melodramatic, but I don’t think I’m alone in wondering whether it’s all worth it. I’ve seen the look in people’s eyes. Stiff suits travelling to work, morning after morning, on the cramped and humid tube. Tarted-up girls and gangs of boys reeking of aftershave, reeling on the pavements on a Friday night, trying to mop up the dreariness of their week with one desperate, fake-happy night. I’ve heard the weary grief in my dad’s voice.

So where do I start with all this? What do you want to know about me? I’m Ruth White, thirty-two years old, going on a hundred. I live alone with no boyfriend and no cat in a tiny flat in central London. In fact, I had a non-relationship with a man at work, Dan, for seven years. I’m sitting in my bedroom-cum-living room right now, looking up every so often at the thin rain slanting across a flat grey sky. I work in a city hospital lab as a microbiologist. My dad is an accountant and lives with his sensible second wife Julie, in a sensible second home. Mother finished dying when I was fourteen, three years after her first diagnosis. What else? What else is there?

Charlotte Marie Bradley Miller. I looked at her hands for twelve minutes. It was odd describing what I was seeing in words. Usually the picture just sits inside my head and I swish it around like tasting wine. I have huge books all over my flat — books you have to take in both hands to lift. I’ve had the photo habit for years. Mother bought me my first book, black and white landscapes by Ansel Adams. When she got really ill, I used to take it to bed with me and look at it for hours, concentrating on the huge trees, the still water, the never-ending skies. I suppose it helped me think about something other than what was happening. I learned to focus on one photo at a time rather than flicking from scene to scene in search of something to hold me. If I concentrate, then everything stands still. Although I use them to escape the world, I also think they bring me closer to it. I’ve still got that book. When I take it out, I handle the pages as though they might flake into dust.

Mother used to write a journal. When I was small, I sat by her bed in the early mornings on a hard chair and looked at her face as her pen spat out sentences in short bursts. I imagined what she might have been writing about — princesses dressed in star-patterned silk, talking horses, adventures with pirates. More likely she was writing about what she was going to cook for dinner and how irritating Dad’s snoring was.

I’ve always wanted to write my own journal, and this is my chance. Maybe my last chance. The idea is that every night for three months, I’ll take one of these heavy sheets of pure white paper, rough under my fingertips, and fill it up on both sides. If my suicide note is nearly a hundred pages long, then no-one can accuse me of not thinking it through. No-one can say, ‘It makes no sense; she was a polite, cheerful girl, had everything to live for,’ before adding that I did keep myself to myself. It’ll all be here. I’m using a silver fountain pen with purple ink. A bit flamboyant for me, I know. I need these idiosyncratic rituals; they hold things in place. Like the way I make tea, squeezing the tea-bag three times, the exact amount of milk, seven stirs. My writing is small and neat; I’m striping the paper. I’m near the bottom of the page now. Only ninety-one more days to go before I’m allowed to make my decision. That’s it for today. It’s begun.

You can continue reading Thaw daily at the official Thaw blog.

What do you think of it so far? Leave your thoughts in the comments below.

The Lovely Bones

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

I cannot count how many times I had to look away from the page I was on, drawing in breath sharply as Susie’s pain and the pain of her family and friends burned into me. Alice Sebold‘s prose is powerful; if you’re not careful, The Lovely Bones will knock you flat on your back.

The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold

The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold

There were parts where I could not bear to mark the page and put the book down, which led to me spending a couple of nights reading until four in the morning. I greedily took in page after page, desperate to know whether Susie’s killer would be caught or if her body would be found.

However, there were also long stretches of nearly nothing happening, contributing to making this novel hard to read. While Susie’s thoughts about her heaven and the trains she rode on Earth and the Evensong were interesting, there was little action during these parts. It was during these stretches that I would mark my place and go back to work or whatever I was doing before the siren call of the book made me pick it up.

There were a few things that really jumped out at me throughout reading, and I’d like to share them with you.

On page 249, Ruth writes in her journal that “booze affects material as it does people,” after observing that alcohol stained her black clothing an even deeper black. I thought this was an incredibly interesting perception, adding even more depth to the novel itself and to Ruth’s character.

I liked how Sebold tied together Susie’s and Lindsey’s childhood game of knight and widow with the dynamics of the relationship between Susie’s parents. Susie muses over Lindsey’s favorite line from their game — “How can I be expected to be trapped for the rest of my life by a man frozen in time?” — on page 276.

I did not like Ruth’s out-of-body experience and temporary trade with Susie. I thought it added an ethereal feel to a novel that had, up until then, been mostly rooted outside of fantasy and focused more on what happened to a family after the loss of a child.

I was not at all impressed with the ending. In fact, I was very disappointed by it. I felt that I had stuck with the book through some very painful parts, and that it was a miracle that I had been able to get through those parts. I thought that I deserved a much better conclusion for being so loyal through such grievous subject matter. Susie’s subtle revenge and the final lines of the novel itself were highly anticlimactic for a novel that — for the most part — kept me turning page after page.

Still, it was a great book. Sebold is an amazing writer, evoking your emotions even if you haven’t experienced losing a child. The Lovely Bones is actually Sebold’s first novel, which is surprising because I would have thought — from the expertly paramount writing — that she had written dozens before sitting down to make The Lovely Bones come to life.

What I read in January 2010

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

I read six books in January! I know that Sasha over at Sasha & the Silverfish has me beat (she read twenty-two this month), but I’m still proud.

  1. Under the Dome by Stephen King
  2. The Bermudez Triangle by Maureen Johnson
  3. My Clockwork Heart by Joely Sue Burkhart
  4. Fray by Joss Whedon
  5. Wormwood: It Only Hurts When I Pee by Ben Templesmith
  6. Wormwood: Calamari Rising by Ben Templesmith

This month, I’m going to try to beat my own record and read 10! What did you read in January?

There is nothing like a stack of books waiting to be read

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

Freaking Bookworm Sunday Stack!

I got some new books!

I’m about twenty pages into Cut, and had a really hard time putting it down so that I could get some work done. I’ve read another one of Patricia McCormick’s novels, Sold, which made me fall in love with her writing. Not only does McCormick really research her story, but she also spins very interesting and realistic characters.

Cut is about a young teenage girl who is placed in a residential treatment facility after she begins regularly, compulsively self-harming. I’ve been wanting to read Cut for a while, but every time I visited the bookstore I could only afford one book. Yesterday, I (over)indulged and spent almost $40 on books; in addition to Cut, I also bought The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold and On the Road by Jack Kerouac. I now have plenty of crackbooks to keep me happy throughout the next couple of weeks. (Of course, now that I spent all that extra money on books, I suddenly have a bunch of doctors’ appointments to keep and prescriptions to fill. But I’d rather have books and be broke than be broke without books!)

On the Road is about two friends who take a road trip. During my first semester of college, I had to read an excerpt from it and fell in love with Jack Kerouac’s writing. The professor who taught that class has been trying to get me to read the full book ever since.

I’ve heard lots of good things about The Lovely Bones, so I decided to give that one a shot, too. I scoured the store for a copy with the original blue cover, as opposed to the motion picture cover; I don’t want to be seen as a bandwagon jumper if I’m reading it out in public. ;)

I’m really excited to have three new books to read. I’m also reading Thunder and Blood by Stacy Voss. I’m finding that I really enjoy reading a couple of books at a time.

So tell me, what’s in your “To Read” stack?