Posts Tagged ‘maureen johnson’

13 Little Blue Envelopes

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

Seventeen-year-old Ginny receives a package full of little blue envelopes from Aunt Peg, leading her from place to place through Europe, following in the footsteps of her aunt. The only problem? Aunt Peg is no longer alive.

13 Little Blue Envelopes, by Maureen Johnson

13 Little Blue Envelopes, by Maureen Johnson

Ginny follows her aunt’s directions, opening only one envelope at a time, in order, and following the instructions in the previous envelope before opening the next one.

Reading 13 Little Blue Envelopes was an adventure. Maureen Johnson’s writing is, as always, fun, quirky, and humorous. Ginny reminded me a lot of my younger self: shy, not adventurous, and obedient of anything asked of her. It was really cool to see her grow into a person more outgoing and adventurous because of the little blue envelopes.

I liked that, as the story unfolded, I learned more and more about Ginny, her aunt, and their relationship. None of the breadcrumbed details seemed random. It was nice to learn more as I read.

Maureen Johnson is really good at creating interesting, three-dimensional — and sometimes four-dimensional! — characters. She didn’t let me down in 13 Little Blue Envelopes.

SPOILER AHEAD! (more…)

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?

The Bermudez Triangle

Monday, January 18th, 2010

What’s worse than coming back from a summer long program to find that your two best friends have all kinds of inside jokes? Finding out they’re dating — and that you might be gay, too.

The Bermudez Triangle, by Maureen Johnson

In The Bermudez Triangle by Maureen Johnson, Nina’s best friends Mel and Avery start dating, posing all kinds of questions: Is Nina gay, too? Do they have crushes on her? Is she homophobic for feeling weird that they’re dating?

The book explores the relationship between the three best friends, dubbed the Triangle by a childhood acquaintance. I liked that it was open ended; rather than focusing on what happens to them as individuals, the book concentrates on their friendship and the effects of sexuality and dating on that friendship — while focusing on their other, individual problems.

There were a few parts that stood out the most to me. I won’t spoil what exactly happened, but if you’ve read the book, you’ll know what I’m talking about. If you haven’t, what are you waiting for? Are you a Freaking Bookworm or what? ;)

On pages 130 and 131, Nina feels left out because Mel and Avery have a date, and she isn’t invited. I think most people can relate to feeling excluded because two of your friends are dating.

When Mel’s father holds her on page 331 because of the conversation she has with her mother, I simultaneously felt awful for Mel but loved her father so much for being there for her.

Maureen Johnson has a way of incorporating her own personal sense of humor into the narration of her stories, and on page 335 she makes the BEST Seventh Heaven reference/joke EVER. (Man, how I hated that show.)

Another thing I loved about this book was the rich teenage “indie scene” culture. The characters hang out at coffee shops, play in disorganized garage bands, wear thrift shop clothing, and aspire to save the world and go to music school. (Speaking of saving the world, I so hated Steve. I don’t know why, but I also hated the main love interest in Suite Scarlett. I guess Maureen Johnson and I don’t have the same taste in men — or at least, mine is different from her leading ladies’.) The world that the characters lived in seemed so real. Maureen Johnson definitely has a knack for that, and is quickly becoming one of my favorite authors.

So, that’s one book down out of at least four for the GLBT Challenge 2010. To jog your memory, I’m going to read at least four LGBT-themed works of fiction throughout the year. If you have a book you’d like me to read, leave a comment and let me know!

If you read The Bermudez Triangle, let me know what you thought of it. Leave a comment and answer some of the following questions:

  1. What was your favorite part? Your least favorite part?
  2. Who was your favorite character? Why?
  3. Did you think that Nina could have acted differently when she first found out that Avery and Mel were dating?
  4. Did you like Steve? ;)

PS: I found a list of what other people doing the challenge have read so far.

PSS: I’m currently reading Fray, a graphic novel by Joss Whedon, set in the Buffyverse two-hundred years after Buffy and Faith. I’m also reading the second Wormwood graphic novel, so you can expect a couple new graphic novel reviews very soon!

Let the GLBT Challenge begin!

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

The Bermudez Triangle, by Maureen Johnson

So now that it is officially 2010 and I have fallen in love with Maureen Johnson, it’s time to kick off GLBT Challenge 2010!

The challenge is to read at least four LGBT books this year. My plan is to start with four, then to see if I can do eight. (My main problem is coming up with titles. I just added Tipping the Velvet to my list, which makes two whole LGBT books on my list. This is bad.)

The first book on my list is The Bermudez Triangle. It’s about three best girl friends who are entering their senior year of high school. While one of the three is away at a summer program at a university, the other two start dating. It looks as though it will deal with a few issues:

  • Coming of age and choosing a post-high school path
  • Feeling left out of the loop
  • LGBT acceptance
  • Sexual identity
  • Friendship

In high school, I discovered that there was an actual word to describe my sexuality, and that I wasn’t the only bisexual person on the planet. I attended what we dubbed Gay Group and learned a lot of things about myself. Although I have found my soulmate in a dude, I can still appreciate a hot chick. And I can definitely appreciate a book that explores these issues. High school was so freaking confusing.

As a sidenote, I’ve been meaning to start including questions with my posts. So here are some pre-reading questions for ya, if you’re planning on reading along. (Or if you’ve already read The Bermudez Triangle and can remember what you were thinking before reading it.)

  1. Have you ever had two best friends who started dating each other? How did you feel about it?
  2. Do you think Nina will be initially accepting of Avery and Mel dating?

Leave a comment with your responses!

PS: If you’ve joined the Freaking Bookworm Facebook Page, come join the LGBT book discussion!

What's next? (Poll!)

Monday, January 4th, 2010

I have a dilemma, ladies and gentlemen. I am almost done with Under the Dome, but I don’t know what to read next. This is where you come in. Below is a list of the books I want to read, with links to their synopses. Just comment and tell me which one you think I should read next!

My future is in your hands.

Guest Post: The Key to the Golden Firebird (Video!)

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

My friend Elizabeth V. has started doing book reviews on YouTube! I posted her review of Looking for Alaska a few weeks ago. (If you haven’t, go check it out!) This week she did a review of another Maureen Johnson novel, The Key to the Golden Firebird.


Want to post your own book review here? Email me!

Suite Scarlett

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

I finished Suite Scarlett early this morning (at about 2 or 3 am). Knowing that there is a sequel made it a lot easier to finish; I would be very, very sad if there was no sequel.

Initially, I thought Marlene was a brat and that Mrs. Amberson was a crazy bitch. I like how Marlene has come around. I still think Mrs. Amberson is nuts, and I think Scarlett is crazy for agreeing to work with her again, but I’m sure it will provide for an interesting premise of the next book.

I love that this book is divided up like a play, while the characters are actually putting on a play. In Act I, we get a description of the hotel before diving in. It’s Scarlett’s fifteenth birthday, which is the age when all of the Martin children get a room to maintain in the hotel they live in and run. In Act II, we learn about the Empire Suite, which is the room that the conniving and dramatic Mrs. Amberson stays in. The description before Act III tells us about hotel ghosts and the possibility of one in the Hopewell Hotel (the hotel Scarlett’s family runs). I’m not exactly sure how this is relevant, since there were never any ghosts mentioned in Act III, but it was still cool to read more about the hotel’s history.

Before the final act — Act IV — we learn about the hotel’s Depression booze brewing days. This is appropriate because the characters are throwing a play in the hotel behind the owner’s backs, and also because Mrs. Amberson orders a whole lot of champagne for the play.

I like that Maureen Johnson left the book open ended; we don’t know if Eric and Scarlett work things out (although I think he’s a douchebag and she should move on), we don’t know what happens with the casting call Spencer got invited to, and we don’t know if Lola and Chip get back together.

There were a lot of one-liners and situations that made me laugh out loud in this book, which I like in a book. I’m definitely excited for the sequel, and definitely looking forward to reading more of Maureen Johnson’s work.

Suite Scarlett: Act III

Monday, December 14th, 2009

I can’t decide if I like Mrs. Amberson. One minute she’s interesting, the next she’s a selfish bitch. I can’t figure her out. Last night, while reading her cook up and force Scarlett, Spencer, and Eric to execute that prank on that poor actress, I hated her. “She took advantage of you,” I told the empty room.

Spencer is mad about Scarlett and Eric, which I think is the brotherly version of when fathers get mad about their daughter’s first boyfriends. I think he’ll get over it.

I’m loving Maureen Johnson’s words; there is nothing cliche in this book, at all. Every sentence feels fresh and new. It makes me want to do some writing.

I will probably start Act III this afternoon, and should be done with the book itself in a couple of days (curse you, busy schedule)!

Have you read Suite Scarlett? Do you like Mrs. Amberson? (Don’t spoil me!)

Suite Scarlett pretty sweet so far

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Say that five times fast.

Hell, every time I type the word “Scarlett,” I want to add an “e” to the end because of the word “Suite.”

Anyway.

As I’ve said before, I’m a closet reader of Young Adult fiction. In the past, I scoffed at it. “Lame,” I’d say. And then I read the Twilight saga. And the Gemma Doyle series. After I finished Accidents of Nature, I became a full on junkie.

Combine that with following Maureen Johnson, YA author extraordinaire, on Twitter and you have dangerous stuff. Maureen’s tweets are awesome. She’s witty, cute, and she actually TALKS to her fans — unlike some other “big wigs” on Twitter. So I came to love her, and consequentially had to check out her books.

Since I’m waiting to read The Bermudez Triangle for the GLBT Challenge 2010 — which doesn’t start until January — I had to ignore all urges to check that book out while browsing the shelves at the library. I ended up stuck between “Scarlett” and Girl at Sea. 13 Little Blue Envelopes also looked slightly interesting. Honestly, I was a little afraid to read any of them. The synopses seemed geared toward the teenage girl that I never was, so I couldn’t really see myself relating to any of the characters.

(I was the token goth chick in my high school class. You know, the one who sat alone at lunch, wore black lipstick, and listened to heavy metal.)

But the synopses did sound really cute, so I chose the cover with the cute blond and checked out.

Suite Scarlett is about a fifteen-year-old teen whose family runs a hotel (think Tipton, only more run down and less occupied). Each member of the family gets a room to take care of (not live in, as I’d originally thought) when they turn fifteen. The day after Scarlett gets her room, the hotel gets their first guest in a long time — and this guest takes Scarlett’s room, expecting her to wait on her hand and foot. Which, of course, she has to. What a birthday present.

Right now I’m on Act I and just finished the chapter where Scarlett takes her little sister Marlene to the TV station to watch some cooking show. Marlene is insisting she go to lunch with Scarlett and Scarlett’s guest, which should be fun since Marlene is a total brat and the guest is a cool, slightly-hippy lady.

So maybe I’m not fifteen anymore, and maybe I’m not blond and beautiful like Scarlett, but this book is fun. As in, a LOT of fun. It’s written just as cleverly as Maureen Johnson’s blog posts and tweets. I am so glad that I took the chance.

Have you read any of Maureen Johnson’s books? What did you think?

GLBT Challenge 2010

Friday, November 27th, 2009

I’ve been looking for an excuse to pick up The Bermudez Triangle by Maureen Johnson. I’ve been holding off because, hello, the holidays are here and I should be spending money on books for other people rather than myself. Right? (If you can think of a good reason why I should also buy myself a book, let me know!)

The Bermudez Triangle is about a group of BFFs — I think the kids say “besties” these days, but whatever — that becomes pretty damn compromised when two of the three friends start dating. Did I mention the three friends are girls?

So, A, Nina’s two best friends are dating. B, they’re gay. And, C, they have all kinds of inside jokes that she’s now left out of. That is quite a lot for a teenager to chew on.

You’re probably wondering why I’m babbling about this book if I won’t let myself buy it.

Well, I’m gonna let myself buy it now, because I’m gonna do the GLBT Challenge 2010!

The GLBT Challenge is a reading challenge where you read books about LGBT issues or written by LGBT authors. (Is LGBT still the way to say it, or is GLBT now the official way? I used to be in an LGBT support group in high school [hi, I'm bi], and we said LGBT.)

Anyway, the challenge has three levels: Lambda, where you read four books; Pink Triangle, where you read eight; Rainbow, where you read twelve or more.

I’m going to start off small and try to read four (especially since my list right now consists of one). I’d like to kick ass at this and read twelve or more, which is where you come in!

Please leave your suggestions in the comments below, and I will add them to the list. You can also leave suggestions for Sasha on her blog, who is my Twitter friend and is also participating.

Thanks, and happy reading!