Thursday, August 31, 2023

"Nic Blake and the Remarkables: The Manifestor Prophecy" by Angie Thomas

Nic Blake and the Remarkables: The Manifestor Prophecy (Apr. 4, 2023) by Angie Thomas.
<This is the first novel in a projected trilogy.>
<Warning: Casual spoilers included.>
In a world of Remarkables (those with the Gift) and Unremarkables (regular humans) who are typically unaware of Remarkables, Nichole (Nic) Blake is a Manifestor. Manifestors are considered the most powerful of all Remarkables. The Gift “is more powerful than magic. You see, the Gift is an innate power that lives in us Manifestors. Magic, on the other hand, is a corrupt form of the Gift. It’s hard to control and super destructive. Also, magic in real life can only be performed with a wand, and the magic in wands runs out after a while. We Manifestors don’t need wands” (p. 7). Innate though the Gift is, it requires education; one must learn how to use it. The easiest way is with “mojos and jujus,” mojos being born of good intentions and jujus with bad.
            Nic has just turned 12 and being Remarkable has its perks, like when she receives a pet hellhound pup for her birthday. What Nic really wants is to learn how to use her Gift, but her dad (Calvin/Maxwell) is wary of teaching her. When Nic sneaks out to meet up with her best friend, Joshua Paul Williams (JP), to greet their favorite author, TJ Retro, revelations come to light. Like learning that her favorite author is her dad’s best friend. What?! There are more shocking revelations. She has a frightening and unexpected first encounter with her own mother who calls her Alexis, and she bumps into an invisible boy who turns out to be, Alex, her twin brother. Calvin is accused of stealing the Msaidizi, and Nic is determined to clear his name. Together with JP and Alex, the three youth will go on a quest to find it and hopefully avoid the Manowari, the person destined to destroy the Remarkable world. Can they find it in time to save Calvin from a devastating sentence? And will Nic’s emerging abilities point to greatness of the wondrous or ruining kind?
            Pun intended, but this is a remarkable middle-grade debut from YA author Thomas. She takes African American folklore and sobering history to create a complex novel that is enthralling, numinous, inventive and funny. It confronts fantasy tropes in a fresh, intrepid way. The text is rich with this fantasy world melded into the contemporary one so seamlessly that it feels like we could exist in this Jackson, Mississippi, too. I devoured this fast-reading adventure with its standout characters and on point plot. It’s my newest favorite middle-grade series. It simply dazzles!
            P.S. Uhuru is a Remarkable city, the one Nic would’ve grown up in.
            P.P.S. Giftech is Gift-infused technology and can only be purchased in Remarkable cities.

Monday, August 28, 2023

The Positive Page-turner's Challenge: Take 17

Here’s my second Positive Page-turner’s Challenge of 2023 and my 17th overall. This photo contains 17 books. With 17 books in the photo, I will again donate $5/book. My total to donate this time around is $85. I donated it to the General Fund at my local church.
            Back in June (June 12, to be exact), a box of bar soap that I’d accumulated got sent to Iowa, where it was put on a shipping container with plentiful other donations to be sent to Haiti, including three pallets of meals packed by volunteers with Real Hope for the Hungry (that equates to around 22,000 total meals). I’ve mentioned this before and expect I will many times more, but I buy Ivory soap. However, they will not turn down bar soap donations of any kind. Please remember to package full bars and not the little hotel bars. The box I sent along was smaller. But 23.2 pounds is better than nothing at all!
            A note regarding soap: I prefer to remove the outside packaging on the soap, keeping the soap in their individual boxes/wrappers. I like to pack the soap in boxes that have plenty of space for me to write Bar Soap on multiple sides. I also use a strip of neon colored duct tape after taping up the box to note where it’s going. The soap I send typically goes to the Birthing Center, but has also been designated for the Consolation Center.
            What sorts of compassion projects do you support?

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Trondhjem's Pie & Ice Cream Social 2023

Free Two Ice Cream Cups Stock Photo
Photo by Teejay via Pexels
Trondhjem’s Pie & Ice Cream Social 2023

The day’s coming fast! It’s coming soon
At 5:00 in the afternoon –
Trondhjem’s Pie & Ice Cream Social fest.
Please join us and come be our guest.

Sunday, Sept. 24th, is the day of fun
For you, your neighbors and everyone.
Come hungry. Gobble up a sloppy joe
And be sure to save room for the best in show.

Which mouthwatering pies will appear this year?
Do berries and other fruits make you cheer?
Will pumpkin, pecan or creamy coffee show up?
How about mocha cream or chocolate peanut butter cup?

Before the food or after, check out our bake sale,
Where tasty contributions delectably prevail.
There might be a mix of goods savory and sweet.
Browse early to find taste bud tripping treats!

There will be a Silent Auction, too.
Watch your bids closely for new stuff to accrue.
Quilt raffle tickets are, each, one buck.
With two quilts in the raffle, I wish you good luck!

We look forward to seeing you on 9/24
For a carousel of good times galore.
On your calendars, mark the day and time
And join us for a Social that’s sublime!
 
-LK
August 21, 2023

Saturday, August 19, 2023

"Countdown" by Lynette Eason

Countdown (Aug. 1, 2023) by Lynette Eason.*
<This is the fourth novel in a series.>
It’s been so long since flight paramedic Raina Price has been Brianne, so long that she’s been running. Somewhere still in the world, there is Kevin Anderson, and she knows that’s not his real name. When she sees a national interview of a young, teenage snowboarding sensation, she prepares for her past to finally catch up to her. She’s been training for it all these years, and looking over her shoulder for her stalker has become second nature. She will sacrifice her own safety to protect the son of her abusive ex-boyfriend.
            US Marshal Vincent (Vince) Covelli is a tracker (of fugitives) and a protector (of his assignees). When Raina is almost killed, he vows to protect her at all costs, even taking personal time off in order to do so. It is apparent that someone wants Raina gone, and that doesn’t settle well with Vince, because he wants to build a relationship with her. He wants her to trust him. And he wants her to give her struggles and fears to God.
            Eason doesn’t write idly on. Nope, she catapults readers straight into the high-stakes melee of this cat-and-mouse game. As readers discover, it turns into more of a cat-and-cat-and-mouse game. There is tension and danger, little moments of whimsy, solid faith and shaky faith, friendships so strong that they could move mountains and the tentativeness of new love. Eason is a master raconteur of Christian romantic suspense, and I can count on her stories to be riveting and hold my attention from first page to last. My only wish is that her stories would showcase some racially diverse characters, as all of the main and supporting characters cue as Caucasian. This novel in the Extreme Measures series features a woman determined to put her traumatic past in the past, while I look forward to a future full of many more stories from Eason!
            Book One: Life Flight
            Book Two: Crossfire
            Book Three: Critical Threat

* Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Revell Books. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions are expressly my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Friday, August 18, 2023

"The Left-Handed Booksellers of London" by Garth Nix

The Left-Handed Booksellers of London (Sept. 22, 2020) by Garth Nix.
<This is the first novel in a series.>
It is 1983 in a slightly alternate London where Susan Arkshaw has recently turned 18 and is set on finding her father. Crime boss Frank Thringley might have answers, but Susan doesn’t get to question him before she witnesses him turning to dust at the prick of a silver hatpin at the left hand of the outrageously attractive Merlin St. Jacques/Upbright (FYI: he’s attractive even whilst donning a dress). Susan’s life is changing for the weirder. She learns that Merlin, a “left-handed bookseller” who belongs to an extended family (clan) of magical fighting booksellers (the right-handed are more the intellectual ones), helps police the Old World (mythical) to protect the New World (modern). They also run several bookshops about London. Susan’s search for her father contains pieces of her mother’s memories of first names and surnames, but none which appear to match the other and may be misremembered entirely. Meanwhile, Merlin has his own self-launched quest: to find the entity who had his mother killed. Together with Vivien, his right-handed bookseller sister, the two of them traverse a path with Susan and find that their quests strangely overlap with one another’s. Now that Susan is aware, it’s as though the Old World is suddenly erupting dangerously into the New. Who is Susan’s father? And why do Old World inhabitants and New World criminals keep trying to abduct her?
            What a fantastical, otherworldly journey of imaginative, mythical proportions! My first story from Nix shot me out of a cannon, so involved in the story was I from the get-go. This YA fantasy is immersive, clever and inventive with its melded fey elements and spectacular bookshops. Susan is wonderfully unflappable, and gender-fluid Merlin is deliciously charming. This adventurous romp is diverse, its magic compelling, the world-building exquisite and the varied personalities so entertaining. I love this expansive, magical London. This tale is an experience!
            P.S. I want to be one of the even-handed.

Thursday, August 17, 2023

Rutabaga's Reads 2023: Part 9

Thanks to my local library, I had this compilation in the works last year. (All three are library checkouts.) Now, I finally present my nonfiction compilation for 2023.
Beyond the Wand (Oct. 18, 2022) by Tom Felton.
Known as the bleached-blonde nemesis Draco Malfoy to Daniel Radcliffe’s Harry Potter, Tom Felton gives readers insight into what it was like for him to grow up in the wizarding world and enter life outside of it. His turns in movies like The Borrowers and Anna and the King meant he came into the Harry Potter franchise with some film experience, but nothing could prepare him for what it would really mean to land the iconic role of Draco. Having never read the books and fudging his way through the audition (something Draco would definitely do), he didn’t know the huge pop culture phenomenon it already was and how much more it would be after eight films. Unlike his costars playing Harry, Ron (Rupert Grint) and Hermione (Emma Watson), Tom would attend regular school when not filming. He even worked at Bury Hill Fisheries, Surrey, in the early days of Potter, fitting for someone who loves fishing. He lets readers know some of the magic that went on behind the scenes to create the magical movies so many of us know, but far from them taking away the magic of Harry Potter, those chapters give valuable insight to readers who are part of a dedicated fandom. There is reflection on cinematic experiences with greats like Alan Rickman, Dame Maggie Smith and Ralph Fiennes (including on that infamous most-awkward-hug-ever with Voldemort) to his work with some of the other young actors. Not a spoiler: his love for Emma is real, but it isn’t the romantic love that some may think does or should exist. Then there is Tom’s life post-Potter. There’s some success onscreen, which leads to free designer clothes, being lent swanky BMWs and red carpets, but then there is the lonely, disillusioned part of Tom’s life in L.A. Like people the world over, Tom’s navigating life, but unlike many, he’s weathering the ups and downs of fame, and he invites us to read of his journey.
            Tom Felton’s memoir is actually pretty bloody brilliant. He’s extremely candid, from sharing that his first interaction with nine-year-old Emma was anything but a meet-cute to his youthful antics that lent him a troublemaker status all the way to his initial denial of substance abuse. He thought the intervention was a “massive overreaction to a non-existent problem,” as his vices “amounted to no more than a few beers a day, the odd whiskey and maybe a couple of spliffs.” I never knew that he attended rehab. In that phase of his life, he was far from the shining lights of any film production or red carpeted event and definitely not the “Broomstick Prick” of his Draco Malfoy days. He was a man who’d hit rock bottom, who might have a fortune in his bank account, but was not rich. The depth of this memoir took me by surprise with its Veritaserum honesty. It’s charming and entertaining, captures the growing pains of growing up (albeit on a scale involving fame) and showcases the toll that mental health turmoil can take on a person. There are no spells pouring out of this book, nor any curses to deflect, but Felton’s memoir is its own sort of magical and enchanting.
Uncle of the Year (& Other Debatable Triumphs) (May 16, 2023) by Andrew Rannells.          
The star of Broadway’s The Book of Mormon shares essays on everything from musical theatre (a given) to therapy, ambition, the uncertainty of adulthood, the water bottle tour of L.A. and Mark Ruffalo (he and his wife are, apparently, very kind people). Along the way, Rannells also navigates aging, dating, bad jobs, avoiding the gym, the unglamorous side of performing at the Tony Awards and growing up a little boy in Omaha, Nebraska, wanting Malibu Barbie for his birthday (spoiler: he got Malibu Ken, too). As his title suggests, he is an uncle, though “of the year” may be a bit of a stretch. He has 10 nieces and nephews. He sometimes curses in front of them inappropriately and, due to distance and his can-be-grueling schedule, he’s missed multiple birthdays and holidays. But Uncle Andy is silly, and he can make them laugh. He’s undoubtedly the fun one. His dedication states: “To all the aunts and uncles out there. Especially those without their own children. We are trying our best.” Because he is. And we are.
            I love this nonfiction book. No debate needed; this one is a triumph. I already knew him to be an accomplished performer, but he’s a charming raconteur and witty writer, too. Rannells is candid, which made me laugh out loud many times but sometimes made my heart hurt for him. His book is insightful, hilarious and poignant. If my delight in reading a book could generate sunshine and sparkles, there’d be sunshine and sparkles for days. Anyone reading this likely feels as though Andrew Rannells should be one’s new best friend, so relatable is his writing, even though, in my case, I have no history as a thespian. But the blend of humor and heart, sarcasm and stress hit true. Fortunately, his days of making “tens of dollars” are gone. Now, if only I could say the same for myself!
We Were Dreamers: An Immigrant Superhero Origin Story (May 17, 2022) by Simu Liu.
Marvel’s first Asian superhero, Simu Liu, shares his origin story, one that is its own kind of heroic, but isn’t without laziness and self-absorption. Simu spent the first four years of his life growing up in Harbin, China, with his paternal grandparents. He was happy there and well-loved, learning from his grandparents as his parents pursued their respective careers in engineering. He shares each parent’s story. They both endured hardships, as growing up during the Cultural Revolution and pursuing an education wasn’t merely an uphill battle, but a tooth-and-nail fight. His parents spent time in the U.S. before settling in Canada, where they finally brought Simu. It’s a drastic change for all of them – for his parents, who didn’t apparently realize the work involved in raising a child – and for Simu, who doesn’t truly know his parents. His trust and sense of security and safety in them is shattered at the age of six when he’s locked out of the family’s apartment as punishment. He spends his formative years with them untrusting and fearful while also wanting to gain their acceptance, and he is the “perfect” child and shining straight-A student. As the cultural divide grows within the family and puberty hits, Simu becomes rebellious and even once runs away from home (though his parents don’t bother to locate him for five days). During his years with his parents, it’s also revealed that his parents were physically violent toward him. University is freedom to him, but his lackadaisical attitude toward schoolwork and attending classes catches up to him and almost costs him a decent summer internship. His life really hits rock bottom when he’s laid off from his first job as an accountant less than a year out of uni (he was out of his element and a “chronic slacker”). But it’s this circumstance that also prompts him to go for his dreams, no matter how not-approved-by-parents they are. He shares the ups and downs of trying to make his way into acting, from answering questionable Craigslist ads to eventually landing his role on Kim’s Convenience to slowly-but-doggedly becoming “an alien with an extraordinary ability” in order to work in Hollywood (and the U.S. in general). The rest may be, as they say, history, but can that already be said when Liu’s only in his early 30s and has a long career ahead of him?
            In a world with Asian stereotypes, Liu subverts what it is to be a model minority by focusing on familial and societal pressures rather than polished accolades. As someone who grew up adopted and very well-loved, reading of his parents’ emotional, psychological and physical abuse toward him was tremendously hard. They’ve since reconciled, but overcoming such a tormented relationship took work. Liu’s autobiography is one of success, dogged determination and community (of the Asian actors who welcomed him), but it’s also one of upheaval, struggle and the pressure placed on him by his parents. His story is far more compassionate than many others’ would be, and his ability to forgive would make any inspirational fiction novelist proud. A celebrity memoir this is, but it’s got heart in its arduous path to being comfortable in one’s own identity and a family healing. Liu’s no-holds-barred candor is blunt and sometimes overwhelming, but I wouldn’t have respected the novel so much if it were less than frankly candid. Simu Liu is more than a dreamer. He’s a person who’s embraced extraordinary circumstances, when they’ve been brilliantly good and when they’ve highlighted his flaws. He’s a human being like we are, albeit one with Marvel superhero as a title.​​​
            Favorite line: “I want to be clear here – in no way did I possess a MENSA-level genius brain; there will be plenty of examples of my idiocy in later chapters that will make you facepalm so hard you’ll leave a bruise.” (p. 98)

Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Rutabaga's Reads 2023: Part 8

If you think I regularly read adult fiction since I am an adult, you would be mistaken. It has taken me this long to compile an adult fiction compilation post. Better late than never! For those out there who do read adult fiction on the regular, who are your favorite authors?
The All-American: A Novel (Apr. 4, 2023) by Joe Milan Jr.
<This is a standalone novel.>
Thanks to my childhood friend, Kristi W., for gifting me this novel! It’s written by a Creative Writing colleague of hers. All opinions are expressly my own.
            The paperwork wasn’t filed correctly because the check bounced, so after a fight sends 17-year-old Bucky Yi to the police station, the U.S. government deports him to South Korea. It’s a totally foreign land to him, and he doesn’t speak, read or write the language. He can’t even properly pronounce his own name! (It’s Yi Beyonghak.) All Bucky wants to do is fulfill his all-American goal to get out of rural Washington state and become a college football player. But he doesn’t get scouted, and now he’s stuck in Korea. His raw physical strength gets him a job at an expat bar in Seoul until he gets notices of loans overdue courtesy of the bio father he doesn’t know taking out massive loans in his name and soon enough he’s forced into his mandatory military conscription. There’s more remoteness than his backwoods home, but with extras like an erratic sergeant and North Korean spies (they might be chasing shadows). Bucky has to start from the ground up by learning a new language and figure out how to reformat himself with no guide on how to rewrite the code.
            This unique take on undocumented immigration makes for a strong debut. It’s propulsive and irreverent, bold and dark. It is a story of identity, and Bucky goes through quite the disorienting crisis to find who he is or at least who he can be. There is drama: drama feeding into his desire to return home to Washington, drama when it comes to his sexual desires, drama in his family and drama trying to manage his ego. It’s understandable that Bucky has very strong negative feelings surrounding his deportation when he should’ve, like me, been a naturalized citizen from a very young age. But it’s hard to feel bad for Bucky. He feels powerless to control what is happening, everyone and everything seem to be against him, which is very Kafkaesque, but his ego gets in the way of everything. He so often turns to violence. Mad about this? Fight. Mad about that? Fight. Mad in Korea? Fight. I never connected with Bucky, and he never truly grew as a character in the story. I wanted to be impressed by a young man working without the model minority stereotype to rise above the hand he was dealt. But nope, he remained a jerk throughout the story. Chantal should stay far from him. She has wings to fly, but Bucky’s volatile personality, his quick anger, will box him in.
Murder Your Employer (Feb. 21, 2023) by Rupert Holmes.
<This is the first novel in a series.>
Welcome to The McMasters Conservatory for the Applied Arts. Dean Harbinger Harrow opens with a Foreward and entreats readers not to use this as a guide to the McMasters campus, but “for those engaged in home study.” “There is no more unpredictable force of nature than the sadistic employer.” With that said, the three students featured all look to delete an employer: Cliff Iverson, Gemma Lindley and a Hollywood starlet referred to as Dulcie Mown. Cliff’s perspective features the most with his journal entry chapters. He’s the rare student who has a sponsor, unknown to him. He refers to his sponsor as X. There’s an annual “Track Meet” (“track your quarry, meet your quarry, and delete your quarry,”) that carries grave weight in calculating a student’s average for the term and readiness for one’s thesis. Thesis, in this case, outlines the motivation and justification for deleting someone (deleting, if you haven’t figured it out already, is synonymous with murdering, but murdering is so vulgar, where deleting is classy). A successful deletion equates graduation without any pomp or circumstance, as all who graduate to deletists must never receive the credit they deserve. Those who aren’t successful will themselves wind up deleted. Life isn’t easy, nor is it fair, especially with the likes of Merrill Fiedler, Leonid Kosta and Adele Underton still breathing. Best of luck to those fortunate enough to be admitted. Here, have a sherry. Or maybe not. It’s probably poisoned.
            I thoroughly enjoyed this story! It’s delightfully diabolical and completely compelling in a twisted sort of way. The campus of this “Poison Ivy League” college is expansive, luxurious and killer. The wordplay is jaunty, the writing witty, and the plot is clearly that certain sadistic employers will hopefully cease existing, but with so many chapters featuring Cliff’s journal entries, it reads conversationally much of the time. Details into the master plans of Cliff, Gemma and Dulcie give delicious insight and enable readers to craft credible and detailed pictures in their imaginations. Holmes creates an entertaining and specifically educational story set on the campus of a clandestine college and back in “civilian life” (a.k.a. “the battlefield”). It is cheeky and cleverly wicked. It’s a literary dark comedy. Anyone looking to be admitted to this covert school where you can ”learn to live each day as if it might be your enemy’s last?”
Poster Girl (Oct. 18, 2022) by Veronica Roth.
<This is a standalone novel.>
From a time well before Sonya Kantor was born, the Sea-Port (Seattle-Portland) megalopolis lived under constant surveillance from the Insight, an ocular implant that tracked every word and action, rewarding or punishing according to a strict, static moral code set forth by the Delegation. Offering a handkerchief to an elder would earn you DesCoin, while whistling would debit two DesCoin. 10 years ago, the Delegation fell, and was replaced by the Triumvirate. The Delegation’s most valuable members were locked away in the Aperture, a prison on the outskirts of the city. Where everyone in the Aperture still has the Insight implants, everyone in the outside world does not (supposedly). Sonya, former poster girl for the Delegation, has lived in the Aperture for 10 years. Her parents (August and Julia) and older sister (Susanna) are all dead. Also dead: Aaron Price, once her betrothed. Not dead: Alexander Price, Aaron’s older brother. Alexander comes to her with a deal to earn her freedom. All she has to do is find a missing girl who was “rehomed” (stolen) when the parents had a second child, which was disallowed unless a couple had earned that second child and obtained the proper permit (Exception to Protocol 18A). Her search will bring her in contact with the very leader of the Analog Army, a rogue organization that has gone from threats to planting explosives and murdering others. The path Sonya takes will be dangerous and more illuminating than she could ever have guessed. She’s going to learn that her family’s past has deep, dark secrets. How will this affect her view of the Delegation she grew up under and as the face of it, no less?
            I knew I wasn’t going to purchase this novel of Roth’s, but I happened upon it at my local library and decided to check it out. It’s no secret that Roth has a knack for fascinating world-building, and her plot is intriguing, especially watching as Sonya’s morals shift through the story. Self-awareness comes gradually. Sonya’s lived in a world ruled by technology, which readers may think mirrors our own, but it’s definitely not. You’re not just constantly monitored, you’re potentially, constantly rewarded and punished. Like being graded 24/7/365. It’s alarming only in the sense of how close to reality it could be. The novel is fairly slim, but there’s complexity within. I didn’t love the book, but as someone whose bookshelf once contained plenty of dystopian YA, this dystopian adult novel was interesting. Don’t read this if you’re looking for a happily-ever-after. Do read this if you want a story where privacy’s been, essentially, surrendered (especially for those who still have Insights) and technology has been abused. Do read this if you want to see the revelation of complicity and the terrible outcome that comes of it. The story is cold, but there is fragile humanness beneath the chaos and the guilt.