Friday, April 30, 2010

So, I last week I finished Pearl Cleage’s new book, Till You Hear From Me. I love her books. I love the sense of community all her books pull from. They’re all primarily centered around West End, in Atlanta Georgia. I think I Wish I Had a Red Dress was the first one in this semi-series. I say semi, because although all the books have a lot of same characters, they can easily be read independently and not necessarily in order, but I highly recommend reading them all.

Till You Hear From Me is her most recent novel, and the way she pulls in the events of what’s going on in today’s climate, with Obama and how he became elected and some of the people who helped get him elected is great. The political commentary, without being too political is also very engaging.

The story centers around two main characters, Ida B. (GREAT NAME!), and Wes, the children of two best friends. Wes & Ida B. were on opposite ends of the political fight to get Obama into office, although Ida doesn’t know that about Wes. Ida’s big dream is to work beside President Obama in the White House, and the book is set in the time right after he’s been sworn in.

Ida B.'s father, Reverend Horace Dunbar, is a retired pastor and...GET THIS...one of Jeremiah Wright's (I like when books play off of actual people to support fictional characters) biggest supporters and a good friend of his. Part of the story tells about the civil rights movement, which is great, and also explores the mentality of the "changing of the guard" so to speak between the old leaders as the new leaders emerge. LOVE that vein in the story.

Ida B. has headed home (back to the West End) from D. C. to try to talk to her father.  He's done some seemingly bone-headed, out of character thing that's turned up on Youtube.

Wes is also headed home.  Wes has a way more nefarious purpose for returning home, but a-headed there he is.

The conflict between Wes' horrible aspirations and Ida's more lofty ones is heightened because Ida doesn't even realize she's in a conflict & Wes is seemingly like a wolf in a hen house with no farmer in sight. 

The ONLY thing I didn't like too much about this book is the ending. I'm big on endings.  That is to say, I don't like them.  I don't like everything wrapped up in a nice neat little bow.  I once read something that said that the worst thing a writer can do is to take away the responsibility of it's readers to interpret in their own way, what the message of the book/story is.  I don't like it when the bow on the story is so tight it's pulling it's edges in.  I may be alone in this, but that's how I feel.  Till You Hear from Me isn't collapsing in on itself, but there's a bow there.

All that being said.  I highly recommend this book.  I also highly recommend this author.  I may go back and read and review her others.  Have a good day.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

What I do

I love reading, I've loved reading since I was a child. Reading has always been my primary past time. I read alot. Alot, alot. Sometimes I read a book a week. Sometimes 2 books a week.

I have no degree. I just know what I like to read, and what, in MY opinion makes a book good. To me. Just to me. I value other's opinions what EYE like, but it's not going to change my opinion. I ALWAYS read a book to its end. To keep hope alive.

I ONLY read fiction. I read to escape the craziness in my own life, not get involved in someone else's REAL drama. And if it's a good book, I get INVOLVED in what I'm reading, I think about the characters and situations for days, weeks, sometimes years after. And I don't like being told what to do, so self-help is out.

I read mostly on my Kindle . I'm at the point where if it's not offered on the Kindle, I'm not going to read it. I love my Kindle, I know some purists don't like them, miss the physical aspect of holding a book in their hands, the smell and feel of a page-turning paper book. I'm not one of those people. I have hundreds of paper books all over my house, and feel like I don't need any more of them. I've got too many already. BUT I HAVE to read more, and the Kindle allows me instant gratification, and has significantly reduced the number of arguments I have with my fiance about my books all over the place. Our last one about Douglass' Women by Jewell Parker Rhodes (Douglass' Women : A Novel) "look, I know you like to read in the bathroom, and you know I don't like you leaving books in there (something I ALWAYS do), but I ABSOLUTELY DRAW THE LINE at Frederick Douglass staring up at me while I'm taking a leak!" I couldn't argue with that, & my fiance was more than happy to grant my birthday wish of a Kindle when they came out.

I primarily read African-American literature. Not very much urban fiction. Although, Eric Jerome Dickey falls into that category. I recently picked up one of his books, the LAST book published of the Gideon series, & it was so good that I had to go back and read the rest of the series and THEN went back and am now reading all of the books he's written. That are available on the Kindle.

I read a lot books over and over too. I always find something that I've missed when I read a book again. No matter the 2nd or 10th time.

All that being said, I plan, in the future, in this here blog, to review the books I read from here on out. Horrible, great or somewhere in between. Books I'm reading for the first time or the 30th. I will do my best to do so without revealing too much of the plot *spoilers*. This I will do, I think it's gonna help me, we'll see.