Saturday, November 4, 2017

YA Reading Jungle - "Tell Me Three Things"

When 14 year old Jessie Holmes' mother dies, she feels lost.  Counting each day afterward is her way of marking time, waiting for the pain to ebb.  Her dad is buried in his own grief, leaving her adrift, with only her best friend, Scarlet, to cling to.  Fast forward two years and Jessie is blindsided by her father's announcement that he is remarrying...and that they are moving from Chicago to California.

Stunned, Jessie finds herself in a West Coast mansion, living with her dad, new stepmother and a stepbrother, who wants nothing to do with her.  In addition to mourning the loss of her mom, she is now separated from her town, school, and best friend.  She lands in a private school, populated with veneer-smiled, expensively dressed teens.  This is not a place where she will ever fit in.

When an anonymous male student texts her, identifying himself as "Somebody Nobody", and offers to be her guide through the maze of her California hell, Jesse is suspicious, but decides to accept.   This strange boy becomes a lifeline for her as their virtual relationship grows and she develops coping skills that she never knew she possessed.



I did not expect to like this book targeted at young teen girls, as I viewed reading it as a chore.  The anxious, drama-filled 13 year old in my family circle is in need of appropriate books, so I've taken on the role of designated screener.  "Tell Me Three Things" by Julie Buxbaum is a genuinely surprising read.  The writing vibrates with humor and authenticity.  The young protagonist's struggle to adapt to loss, change, and relationships is spot-on.  It is a New York Times bestseller for good reason and I highly recommend it.  I know our drama queen will love reading it!    

   

Monday, June 26, 2017

THE WAR AGAINST WOMEN







Sometimes the politics of the day really get to me.  Things just never seem to change.  Women still make less than men.  They bear the lion's share of rearing children and family nurturing.  There are still men who want to deny women the choice of bearing children.  When necessary, I retreat to the solace of reading fiction.  It won't solve anything, but it provides a much-needed respite.  The problem is that once I discover a fictional series, I grow to love the characters so much that it is more difficult to say goodbye to them than to those in a single, stand-alone novel.  I felt that way with "Outlander" and then the "Into the Wilderness" series.  It's going to be a while before Diane Gabaldon completes her next much-anticipated novel, so I nosed around to see if Sara Donati had written anything else.  She had, so I took a chance on "The Gilded Hour".




It focuses on the late 1800's and two women physicians, Anna and Sophie Savard.  The depictions of old New York City are fascinating.  Donati excels at historical fiction.  I realized that life had to be difficult for female medical doctors at that time.  The medical profession is changing, but make no mistake, it is still a male-dominated occupation.  Women are still discriminated against more than most people realize.  So imagine what life is like for a woman who is a practicing obstetrician during an era when birth control is against the law.  Even disseminating information about how to avoid pregnancy is illegal.  Childbirth was a very dangerous undertaking at that time, and women were subject to the whims of their husbands.  Most had no idea how pregnancy could be prevented. 


Enter Anthony Comstock, an anti-vice crusader who is determined to extinguish anything considered indecent - including information on preventing pregnancy.   While one sister is determined to help women gain some small bit of control over their lives, the other is dealing with the fallout - the orphans of deceased mothers and family members who, unvaccinated, fall victim to the various epidemic diseases common to those who live in poverty.




Donati delivers a compelling story that is a composite of history, romance and thriller.  You will see the parallels with today's lingering patriarchal remnants.  You will be angry.  You will return to resist the present day.