What I'm All About

You can never get a cup of tea large enough, or a book long enough to suit me
-C.S. Lewis

Monday, November 4, 2013

A Great and Terrible Beatuy by Libba Bray

This book is one of my all time favorite books. I have read it, and it's sequels several times. It's that book that I revert to when I want to fall in love with reading again.
The book is about a girl named Gemma Doyle who finds she has visions, and then learns she can enter these realms where magic dwells. Of course, there are people fighting against her, and wanting to get the magic for themselves. There is also a tall dark and hadsom man who Gemma finds herself attracted to. Of course their love is forbidden, not only by the society in which they live, but also by the magic society. She's a London school girl and he is a gypsy.
The book is intense, but enjoyable. It is a light read, I finished the first and second while my family was camping for a weekend.
This book is so good, I have a hard time putting it down, no matter how many times I read it. The characters are engaging, the setting is awesome. The writing is clean, but there are some darker aspects to the book.
It is definitely catagorized as a YA fiction book, but I feel it's a great read for anyone looking for some magic and romance all wrapped up into one.
I think one of my favorite things about this book, is how the characters are written. I've grown to love certain characters, but also detest others. Gemma is a great heroine, and her flaws are relateable. She's a teenage girl who is trying deparately trying to fit in. She's lost someone very close to her, and then begins to discover this unknown world of magic, that is both dangerous and exciting.
Then there's Felicity.
I remember hating Felicity when I first read these books. BUT I find that the more I read the books, I grow a little more understanding of her as well. She is detestable at the beginning, but even Gemma grows to love her.
Ann, and Pippa are also thrown into the mix.
Then There is Kartik. Oh boy do I love Kartik. I think I love the romance between Kartik and Gemma becuase it feels real....well as real as fictional romance can be. Neither one of them falls for each other, right at first. If anything, Gemma is scared of him, but as they discover more abour magic and the realms together, and Kartik comes to her rescue (swoon)...they begin to recognize positive traits in eachother. Of course Gemma fantasizes about Kartik, but what girl wouldn't swoon and daydream about a hot hunk of man?
Along with the characters, the story line is engaging and easy to follow.
I easily give this book at 10/10. It has been my favorite, and will probably continue to be one of my favorites. I really can't think of a bad thing to say about this book, or it's sequels, except that they are too short.


The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova

This was a book I picked up at the library because it was sitting in a pile called "books that might scare you." I'm not sure about you, but I like scary books.
So anyway, this book. I picked it up and thought "This should keep me busy awhile, it's like 800 pages!" 
(As a side note, I usually can get through a book within a matter of days... like two days.) 
I checked it out, and when I got home, I cracked it open and started reading. 
While I was making my way through the first few chapters, I started to recognize the story. I'm not sure where I heard about this book, but I remember someone telling me about this book they were reading, and how awesome it was. That was when I really got excited, because, now I had a reccomendation....sort of. 
But, I found that I was disapointed with the first part of the book. I felt like it was moving really slowly, and that the author kept throwing in irrelevent details. I just couldn't get into the story. But, I kept reading. At this point I had had several people say how good the book was, and so I figured it oughta get better eventually, right?
Sort of. 
So the book is set in three different time periods. It follows, through a series of letters and stories, three separate historian's quest to find the truth about Vlad the Impaler, Aka Dracula. 
What was weird to me, was that because the book was set up the way it was, following three different people, in different time periods, I, as a reader, knew that certain characters were obviously okay. This was frustrating, because it took out part of the unknown...the part that is scary. 
On the other hand, following three separate stories was a great way to set up this book, in the historical sense. I really like history, but sometimes it can drag on. I felt like the author did a really great job of switching between the stories, so that when one was getting really deep into the history of something (and I was starting to get bored) a new chapter would bring a breath of fresh air. 
Having said that, however, I feel as though this book could have been cut by 100 pages or more, and still have been engaging and informative. There were times that the book seemed to drag on, and then other times when it was simplified WAY too much. I feel that the pacing of a book is important, and I'll be honest, there were times I felt like the author got bored with her writing. 
For example, the historians were on a quest, right? They would discover artificats and documents, and even people to help them on this quest. I felt like there were times that we really got to tour the whole artifact, or be invited into a new character's life for awhile, and other times, I felt like the author got tired of discovering the new characters, and so it was just "And then they met this person and they were cool and it helped a lot".
The descriptions, for the most part, were really great, and it was nice because I have never been to most of the places described, so reading in so much detail about them was helpful. 
The characters were well-developed and I really enjoyed watching them grow and learn, as I was. I appreciated though, that even though most of the characters were WAY more educated than I was, I didn't feel stupid reading the book. I felt like I was learning all about history too...I just didn't have to write a disseratation like they did. 
My last point, and probably biggest point of frustration with this book was about the ending. 
The ending of this book, for probably the last three chapters, and epilogue, sucked. And I mean sucked like Dracula. 
To preface this, I should explain that I think the ending is one of the two most important pieces of a story. The beginning is THE most important, but the ending is a very close second.  
The ending for this story was SO disapointing to me. It felt like there wasn't a climax at the end, and that it just was. It just ended. It wouldn't have been so bad, except that after reading that much, and investing so much, the ending didn't live up to the rest of the book. If there was anywhere I would have fixed the pacing...if I could only pick one place, it would have been there. 
Over all, I would give this book a 5/10. It was entertaining enough to finish, and it had engaging characters, but I wouldn't read it again, and I would be careful to reccomend this to people. 
If you are looking to a book written at an easy to follow pace, with a little mystery, and a LOT of history, then this is the book for you. If not, well, stick with me, I am reading like a madwoman now. 

Read on. 

H. 

Friday, October 25, 2013

The Devil in The White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair That Changed History by Eric Larson


Woah, talk about a title.
The Devil in the White City, is a book about two men. The first, Daniel Burnham, the architect behind the building The World's Fair in Chicago. The second, and the reason I picked this little gem up, was H.H. Holmes, America's first serial killer.
The book is non-fiction, but it reads like a novel.
I really enjoyed this book. It is set up a little differently, but for the topics, I felt that it was a good outline. Pretty much every other chapter is about one of the two men. It flips back and forth between the different story lines, but every once in awhile the stories cross paths. For example, in one of the architect's sections, there are references to H.H. Holme's "World's Fair Hotel." The flipping can get tiresome, but in some respects it gives a nice change of pace right when it's necessary. I wil be honest however, there were some architecture sections I skipped becuase the murder sections were just too interesting.
Over all I would give this book an 6/10.
It was a great read, and well paced. The language wasn't too elevated, but it was at a competent level.
Every once in a while, the author would throw in a dash of humor, and I for one appreciate that. I really felt like the author and editors did a really great job of crafting each sentence. There were sections that felt a little repetative, almost as if the author had written two paragraphs about the same thing and stuck them in separate sections. I found that frustrating, but it wasn't a problem more than once or twice.
I liked the arcitecture sections, becuase I felt like the people in the section were personable. I really don't know much about architecture, but I do feel like I understand the challenges of building things in the 1800s a little better.
Also, I learned a LOT about the World's Fair in Chicago. Did you know that Shredded Wheat and Cracker Jacks were brought to this fair? I didn't. I also learned about the Ferris Wheel and how it's creator's wife was on the first turn. Pretty cool stuff.
SO back to the reason I picked up this book.
H.H. Holmes, or Henry Mudgett (I'd take an alias too with a name like Mudgett)
Holmes sparked my interest while I was in school working on a YA horror novel. I started doing research on serial killers in history and stumbled across a documentary about him.
He was a creepy dude, but no one figured it. He is now classified as a psycopath, but back in his day people didn't know what that was.
I won't give too much away about his story, but I will tell you this.
I was impressed with the way the author talked about his crimes, without getting super graphic or disturbing. I mean, he was a disturbed young man, but I didn't feel like I had witnessed first hand the crimes, In some cases Larson described some of the bodies found, but he did so with tact, I felt.
Most of the time, since not all the disappearances have been proved to have anything to do with Holmes, Larson just kind of alluded to them.
"Holmes never seemed to mind when the women who worked for him took off, leaving all their belongings in their rooms, and not bothering to call for them." (from a neighbor of Holmes)
I was surprised that the book filled as many as it did, but as I conintued to read, and in the end finished it, I couldn't imagine it taking any less.
I don't know if I would read it again, just based on it's subject. I would read more by this author, however. He is great.
So there you have it.

Read on.

H.

Dear Reader,

Welcome to Carpe Librum, or Seize the Book. Clever Latin.
As some of you know, I just graduated with a BA in English. I'm also reading a LOT of books. If you ask me, what 2+2 is, I'd say "I don't know, math has never been my thing,"
BUT I do know that English plus books equals BOOK BLOG.
So, I am going to be reviewing the books I read, talking about authors, and possibly even posting pieces of a book that I am currently working on. *And there was much rejoicing*
If literature is your thing, but unlike me, you don't have time to scour the library and used bookstores for good reads, tune in for my completely biased and hopefully educational posts about books I've read. Also, if you have books that you've been dying to read...does that happen to other people?....but you haven't had the time to read it, because you are, again unlike me, too busy with an actual life to sit down and figure out if the book is worth it, OR if there is a book you think I absolutely MUST read, let me know and I'll give it a shot and then write about it here. There are a lot of options here people.
In short, requests are being taken, but be warned, I am going to get a life eventually (hopefully) and so it might take me awhile to get there.
But, I figure that I was trained for this sort of thing, so why not share the wealth...besides, I like books, and I like to rant or rave about them when I'm finished. Everybody wins, right?

Read on.

H.