So much on this blog has been about writing, obviously, but a huge part of my writing life is reading—or what I like to call "research." (Mostly I read because I like it, but sometimes I do it to learn.)
Lately, it seems like my interests have been kind of random, but I've had a good run over the last few months and have read several I could easily recommend.
Crispin by Avi. A three-book YA series set in medieval England about a poor, orphaned peasant boy who's on the run. Much of the story happens with him running and hiding in the forest—several forests—starving and cold. After reading this for a while, I got so I was loudly encouraging him to steal and plunder. I just felt so sympathetic. And I slept so much better the night I read that he found a brand new set of clothes on a dead man and stole them. He was finally warm. Avi had me at The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, which I haven't read since I was maybe 12, but I remember absolutely loving it then, and Crispin was fun too.
Extraordinary Knowing by Elizabeth Lloyd Mayer, Ph.D. My dad handed me this book one day and told me I should read it, in case there was anything in it I could use for my book, and I totally appropriated a line from the prologue soon thereafter. I did tweak it, so I don't feel as guilty... But the whole book is fascinating. It's about "anomolous knowing," or knowing something but not having any rational reason why. It discusses ESP, telepathy, government "remote-viewing" experiments (where they had people with these special gifts legitimately finding out classified information for them), and how scientists grapple with these ideas when there is real proof. Some of the medical accounts were especially interesting—doctors who knew special ways to help people but were scared to tell anyone about it because it wasn't "scientific." So interesting to read about this from a scientist's perspective. I really liked the writing—it was indeed sciency but still very readable.
The Summer I Learned to Fly by Dana Reinhardt. This was a fun story about teenage adventure and friendship. The main character's father had passed away and she finds an old journal of his, a book of lists, and one of my favorite parts is how this is the way she comes to know him. Very fun. It was clever and a quick, enjoyable read.
Little Bee by Chris Cleave. This one was great. Some heavy themes and some offensive language, but the writing was especially amazing and made me envious on several occasions It was one of those where you say, "That's such a cool way to say that!" on nearly every page. I learned a lot about dual perspective (and a lot from the author interview in the back, actually), and it has one of the craziest non-linear but sort of linear timelines ever. The way the story unfolds is as clever as the story itself.
East by Edith Pattou. I'm not normally a huge fantasy reader—and, honestly, I think of it as more of a fairy tale rather than fantasy—but I LOVED this book! It's a retelling of the Norse version of Beauty and the Beast, where a girl falls in love with a polar bear. *** Disclaimer: Whatever you do, do not watch a film version of the fairy tale because it is free on Netflix and you have read the book (The Polar Bear King) to your daughter because it is WEIRD. And campy and dubbed and pretty awful. *** But back to the book. I just thought it was a fun story and quite a page turner. A serious page turner. And those are just good fun, sometimes.
So what have YOU been reading lately?
I can't remember if I've recommended these to you before, but Scott's friend from BYU has self-published several books and he's been pretty successful! He's a dentist, but last December he made more from book sales than dentistry. He has two series he's working on. The first includes Psion Beta, Psion Gamma and Psion Delta. They are not quite the genre you're interested in, they're juvenile science fiction, but they're great (they honestly get better with each book).
ReplyDeleteHis second series has only one book at this point and it's called Flight from Blithmore. It's a different genre than his first series. I'd compare it more to the Princess Bride. I think you'd enjoy it.
Anyway I feel like I've been reading and re-reading his books for years because I've been doing the covers for him, I workshop the books before their published, and I read them again once they're done.
Lately I've also been getting back into C.S. Lewis religious books. One of my all time favorite is The Great Divorce. There are so many layers to that book. I also like Mere Christianity.
I love Avi. I love Crispin. I have not read the sequel. But I love Avi.
ReplyDeleteI remember this Psion Beta guy! I think Trevor knew him, and he somehow asked me to edit his first manuscript way back. It never ended up happening, but that's cool that he's been so successful!
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