Monday, February 29, 2016

Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel

Title: Life Water for Chocolate
Author: Laura Esquivel
Publisher: 7th Dimension Entertainment Co (1989)
English Translation: Carol Christensen and Thomas Christensen (Doubleday)


It's only coincidence that our second title of the year (and the next one coming) are translations but I'm enjoying the very international flair with which Michael and I are starting the year. There's more of that to come, we're spanning the globe throughout the year, though, interestingly, we've yet to hit on a book from my country of residence. But I can't get sidetracked, it's too early to think of next year. :)

For those that are new to our monthly series, this is when Michael reviews a film adapted from a book which gets a review here.


Click here for Michael's film review of Like Water for Chocolate
at It Rains... You Get Wet


Tita discovers young that she has a knack for cooking and a limiting destiny. When first love comes to call she discovers a tradition in her family of the youngest daughter staying home and unmarried to care for Mom until the day she dies. Her reaction to this unfairness spills over into her cooking which starts a lifetime of hidden surprises in some of her meals (told, of course, "in monthly installments with recipes, romances and home remedies").


For one thing, she wanted to know who started this family tradition. It would be nice if she could let that genius know about one little flaw in this perfect plan for taking care of women in their old age. If Tita couldn't marry and have children, who would take care of her when she got old?


And thus begins our narrator's delightful sense of playfulness as regards the absurdities, hypocrisies, and contradictions of life. I quite adored Tita but I think the structure and tone of the novel were a close second if I had to list my favorite thing about the book. The recipes and remedies are perfectly entwined with the story; always including enough reality to tempt you to try them and enough unreality to make sure you proceed with caution (if at all). 

The book chapters are set up in months but the story is far from linear. Information from the past, present, and future is sometimes jumbled together in the telling of one particular story and it's wonderfully done. Rather than being confusing it actually feels like the backbone of the very even and snappy pacing. I was also super relieved that, despite getting info that clearly referred to the future, I wasn't getting all the details and so many characters cropped up again. I'm mainly thinking of Gertrudis here. The cast of characters is so intriguing and fun and she was a favorite. I was super bummed when it looked like she was lost to the family forever. Not so! She just had some adventuring to do.

So it's playful with pacing that pulls you along quickly enough that you almost don't notice how shitty so many of the things that are happening are. There's quite a bit of family drama playing itself out over the years (like, whoa, Mama Elena and Pedro!) and also what seems to be a civil war in progress (I wish my Mexican history was better. Were these true events being depicted? Partially true? I need to do some googling.) The many moments of joy are interspersed with hellish events but seen through the narrator's eyes it never seems as horrible as it really is. 

Speaking of, Mama Elena was pretty horrible (look what she did to Tita!) but I loved that her character wasn't just an over-bearing, screamy, controlling parent. She's written in such a way that it's easy to imagine her being your best friend because you were never in the path of her wrath. In the right circumstances (and by right I mean controlled and approved by her) she'd be loyal, supportive and faithful in friendship.

But (there's always a but isn't there?) I actually didn't end up liking this book as much as it might seem I did. There's a lot about it that's so wonderful but at the end of the day I didn't AT ALL ship Tita/Pedro and so really had a hard time with their love (if you can call it that) being the driving force of the book's plot. I mean, this asshole married her sister (not Gertrudis obv) amongst many other things that really irked me. I really dug Tita so how am I supposed to believe Pedro is good for her? Spoiler alert: he's not! So there I am constantly wanting to shake Tita for not realizing he's terrible and definitely not having any interest in what is arguably one of the most important aspects of the book. Blech, Pedro!

So, come for Tita, Gertrudis, the writing style, the recipes, not to mention Chencha and rebels being dispatched at gun point, and stay despite Pedro because otherwise it's a lot of fun. 


Now about that movie... Don't forget to check out Michael's post. 

 
rating: 3 of 5 stars
 


Coming up next:  
The Laughing Policeman by Sjowall and Wahloo


Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Nature is Cool!

Kudos to this particularly well lived albatross!

Heheh

My favorite game of gender swap in scientists' bios form: click here.

h/t Beth

Friday, January 29, 2016

All You Need Is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka

Title: All You Need Is Kill
Author: Hiroshi Sakurazaka
Publisher: Shueisha (2004)
English Translation: Alexander O. Smith (Viz Media, LLC)


Happy New Year and welcome back to all those joining Michael and me as we approach the end of our sixth year of reviewing books and movies together (just a few months away). We obviously loves us some SF as that is where we started and we keep re-visiting. This time, though, we were directed to this title by our readers' poll. You'll hear no complaints from me when the result is trying out new SF.

For those that are new to our monthly series, this is when Michael reviews a film adapted from a book which gets a review here.


Click here for Michael's film review of Edge of Tomorrow
at It Rains... You Get Wet


Private Kiriya saw the military as the place to do something meaningful with his life. The reality of enlistment and his first battle experience serve to alter his innocent dreams. However, when he finds himself living that first battle over and over again, he begins to think maybe he was right in the first place.

Earth has been invaded by an alien race's colonizing vanguard. These so-called Mimics consume everything in sight and, despite being pretty pitiful in and of themselves, constantly overwhelm human soldiers/strategy with their numbers and tactics. Keiji Kiriya is a Japanese soldier who is part of the United Defense Force protecting Japan from a horde of Mimics. These hapless souls strap into Jackets and hit the field of battle with snark and bravado and are humanity's last hope. Kiriya dies not long into his first battle but wakes up the previous morning with his place still held in his detective novel. The day repeats and he's on to his first battle for the second time... and the third... and the fourth... Live. Die. Repeat.

As he lives his last 24hrs over and over again he becomes more and more interested in an American soldier who seems to have this whole Mimic fighting business figured out. Her name is Rita Vrataski and she's the most famous soldier in the UDF. Eventually he discovers they have one very important thing in common and it just might be the thing that allows them to turn the tide of war in Earth's favor. 

Reading this book was a series of ups and downs. One moment you're up, enjoying the Jackets, the battle, the pacing, the tone and the next moment you're down, getting really pissed at the ridiculous comments about women, the inconsistencies in the rules of the world and the fact that if you think too hard about the Mimic time management business it just doesn't hold together. 

For example, despite Rita developing into a layered individual who just happens to have a natural talent for soldiering, the reader is treated to this gem:
Of the three types of women the human race boasted-the pretty, the homely, and the gorillas you couldn't do anything with save ship 'em off to the army-I'd put her in the... 
And no matter how a woman fitted into the plot or tactics, there's never any doubt about how she looks, whether it's relevant or not (surprise, surprise: it never was). 

Weirdly, the Jackets used in battle (which are awesome, btw) are specifically described as being best controlled by someone with body control not brute strength. (And neither is Rita, the UDF's most successful Mimic killer, anything like a gorilla.) So why the tired old trope of athletic/militaristic women being She-Hulks when compared to their peers?

But then there's the great running gag about the book he still hasn't finished despite repeating the same day 150+ times. His memories are intact and it's obvious he's still reading it so he could finish but, you know, so hard to get to the end when so much is going on. The bond he and Rita form is influenced heavily by the isolation imposed on each of them in their turn. It's touching and, more importantly, exactly where the story and plot take you.

And how can you not be impressed with an author who manages to make a broadsword type weapon the most useful way to tally kills when actual guns and futuristic battle armor exist?

One of my favorite aspects of the story is a bit spoilerish so BE WARNED. BEGIN SPOILERS:
Kiriya eventually jumps ahead in his loop and so his day is not exactly the same as every day has been for almost half a year. The book can be a bit single-minded in its focus so the repercussions of events are sometimes unrealistically limited. However, I appreciated the nod to how difficult it would be to have something different happen when you've become accustomed to every day being the same.
 
*****END SPOILERS*****      


It was disappointing that the English translation doesn't include the illustrations from the original Japanese edition. I highly recommend looking these up as they are very cool. Having seen the movie first I was having a hard time wrapping my mind around how different the Mimics were and so was especially enjoying the illustrations of them. Plus, isn't that cover wonderful?

On a side note, don't skip the author's note at the end. His inspiration and brief commentary on heroes is pretty interesting.


Now about that movie... Don't forget to check out Michael's post. 

 
rating: 3 of 5 stars
 


Coming up next:  
Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel 


Saturday, January 9, 2016

2015 Favorites

Favorite fiction: The Crossroads trilogy by Kate Elliott

Favorite non-fiction: Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13 by Jim Lovell & Jeffrey Kluger

Favorite mystery/thriller: Complicity by Iain Banks
Perhaps not a conventional mystery but my pick all the same.

Favorite historical fiction: Lavinia by Ursula K. Le Guin

Favorite fantasy: The Fifth Season by N. K. Jemisin

Favorite Sci-fi: Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie
This title had been on my TBR since before its release date. I'm in a reading community full of fans of a particular series (they shall remain nameless here) and it took me a while to realize that while we all love this same series it's almost all I have in common with them reading-wise. Neglecting this title is just another example of that. I can't believe I let this sit and sit due to a slightly rubbish review from that community. Ah well, it was wonderful even if I was late to the party.

Favorite Romance: Tie!
Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho
The King's Man by Elizabeth Kingston

Favorite Short Stories: The Thing Around Your Neck by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Kate Elliott's collection was a very close second.

Surprise hit: Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel

Surprise blunder: Foreigner by C.J. Cherryh
I think it's time for me to finally accept that despite almost universal praise C.J. Cherryh and I just don't click.

Favorite author discovered in 2015: Kate Elliott
Technically I didn't first read Kate Elliott in 2015 but if I ever get around to posting about sgwordy's Great Reading Love Affair of 2015 it'll become clear that I did, in fact, discover KE in 2015. :) 

Most re-read book first read in 2015: Jaran

Most re-read author in 2015: Kate Elliott


And since I do occasionally do something other than read...

Movies:
Favorite - The Dressmaker
Surprise hit - The Dressmaker (the ad campaign for this film is so misleading)
Surprise blunder - Inside Out

Video games:
Favorite - Gone Home
SW:ToR and I had a bad break-up. Let's not speak of EA ever again.

Honorable mention to Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries as I'm having so much fun with that TV show





Past Editions: 
2014 Favorites
2013 Favorites
2011 Favorites
2010 Favorites

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Year in Books

I'm loving Goodreads Year in Books summary.


Friday, October 30, 2015

Zodiac by Robert Graysmith

Title: Zodiac
Author: Robert Graysmith
Publisher: St. Martin's/Marek (1986)


As is usual for the last post of the year, we like to pick something appropriate to the month. Unusually, this month's title can't be found on the horror shelf but instead on the true crime shelf. You could argue that this makes it the scariest title Michael and I have reviewed.

For those that are new to our monthly series, this is when Michael reviews a film adapted from a book which gets a review here.


Click here for Michael's film review of Zodiac
at It Rains... You Get Wet


Robert Graysmith was a political cartoonist for the San Fransisco Chronicle when the Zodiac killings started in 1968. The murders were carried out in the bay area and the killer sent letters and ciphers to several local papers. Graysmith became obsessed with the case and with compiling all the disparate evidence and testimony from the various jurisdictions in which the crimes were committed. This book, the result of 10 years of work, is a comprehensive look at the killer who terrorized the region for over a decade.

Despite the horrific contents, Graysmith puts the events of 15 years together seamlessly. It's an odd statement to make but this book is very easy to read. Not content-wise obviously (and, of course, there will be readers who have personal connections to the events and for them these statements are probably spurious) but for pacing and information assimilation it's very well organized. And while it becomes abundantly clear that Graysmith becomes intimately connected with the case (so much so that he is the one to make a few key connections regarding evidence/ciphers), Zodiac never falls into the trap of being about Graysmith and the Zodiac killer. This is clearly one man's passion to bring all possible information to light in hopes of the case being solved.

I found that the book dates itself in an interesting way. At the time of publication, every other show on television wasn't a police procedural. There are pages spent explaining things that would probably go unremarked in a book written now. Just as the general population is much more science literate than ever before (ignoring anti-voxxers and climate change deniers) folks are much more informed regarding forensics and police procedure. Obviously not everything on TV is true (shocking, I know!) but there is a certain level of familiarity that people now have which probably makes certain non-fiction topics easier to communicate these days. 

...made certain that the seminar was a meeting of police professionals only. No psychics, mystics or astrologists were in attendance, as they sometimes were. 

On that note, though, I was personally stunned at some of the things detectives and departments would try in search of the murderer. They literally seemed stolen right out of bad TV plots. I can sympathize when I think they must not have wanted to let even one tiny chance pass by, no matter how ludicrous it might seem to an outsider, if it might close the case and stop a killer.

I also found myself extremely curious as to whether or not the psych profiles from the 70s would still hold true today. I won't go into detail (and obviously don't have the expertise to judge anyway) but if you should read the book and find yourself a little skeptical of the expert in chapter 17 you won't be alone. I assume profiling, as with any field of study, will change as more opportunities are found to scrutinize previous hypotheses.

For those seeking closure this book will not give it. The Zodiac killer has still not been identified. Graysmith ends with the suspect he is most convinced committed the crimes but out of 2500 suspects in the case many detectives associated with the investigation have their favorites. However, I do think he accomplished what he set out to do which was bring together as much information as possible in the hopes that it might one day help someone to finally bring this killer to justice. 
  
 

Now about that movie... Don't forget to check out Michael's post. 

 
rating: 4 of 5 stars
 




Click here for an index of the joint post series

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Socialization is a powerful thing

And we would do well to remember that. It's amazing to me how often people refuse to accept that most behaviors are learned.