Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore

It’s been crazy busy again, so I will just mention in passing that the Cybils and the Amelia Bloomer Awards, both some of my favorites, have been awarded and you should go find them and read more books.

mrMr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan
Clay Jannon, unemployed former graphic designer, wanders into Penumbra’s 24-Hour bookstore and asks for a job. It’s a tiny footprint with soaring ceilings, filled all the way to the top with books on long ladders. In front is an odd, seemingly random collection of modern books, but the heart of the collection is in the next room back, where old-fashioned, solid-colored books are filed seemingly randomly. Clay sets himself to the mystery of how the store stays in business. Paying customers, who buy from the selection in front, are random and very occasional. More often, but still rare, are visits from a group of older people, all working through what Clay dubs the Wayback list. None of these people pay, and Clay is instructed to write down everything about their words and appearance in a journal. As a first step towards gaining more customers, Clay takes out a tiny, targeted Google ad, which brings in a hot young Googler named Kat. Partly in an effort to impress her and turn a first date into a relationship, Clay starts telling her the mystery of the bookstore, even going so far as to make a 3-D computer rendition of the store, complete with an animation of the books as they are borrowed. Clay’s best friend from high school, Neel Shah, is now a wealthy tech business owner. They bonded in high school over role-playing games and a love of The Dragon-Song Chronicles by Moffat, an epic fantasy. When Clay’s innocent explorations cause Mr. Penumbra to go missing, he goes to Neel and Kat for help finding him, and exposes a cult devoted to ancient masters of print Geritszoon and Manutius. It’s an adventure, but one that happens with mostly reputations at stake rather than lives. It’s set very much in our world, and while some people believe that there is magic and others don’t, it’s not entirely clear who is imagining things. Underneath it is a love letter to print books from someone still excited by modern technology, clearly hoping for a happy marriage between the two. It might or might not count as fantasy, but it was definitely delightful.

On a lengthy road trip, Clay finds himself listening to an audio version of his favorite series for the first time, and has this to say about it:

“When you read a book, the story definitely happens inside your head. When you listen, it seems to happen in a little cloud all around it, like a fuzzy knit cap pulled down over your eyes[.]”

What a great description of audio books! I often struggle to describe to people who only read books in print that while I, too, love the feel of the book and look of the type, there’s something about listening to a book well done that drags me in and brings the characters to life in a way that imagining their voices doesn’t quite do. I often think back to a patron I had a while ago who, when asked if s/he wanted the audio or print version of a book said, “Oh, print, of course. Audio books are cheating.” So many places to go with that! But for now, I’ll go with: I have way more books to read than I can get through in my lifetime. If cheating is what it takes to be able to read a few more, then by gum, I’ll go on cheating.

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Libriomancer

Jim C. Hines is a Michigan fantasy sci-fi author whose previous work on the Princess series I’ve enjoyed (I must have read them at stressful times, for though I’ve read all but one of them, I don’t seem to have reviewed any of them. Urg.) I also go back to his blog post highlighting the sexism and body-torturing nature of poses on urban fantasy covers on a regular basis. So I was very excited when I started hearing good things about Libriomancer from multiple quarters.
LibriomancerLibriomancer by Jim C. Hines.
The basic premise: if enough people read the same edition of a book and find it compelling enough, someone with the right magical gifts – a libriomancer – can pull things out of the books into the real world, as long as they fit through the book. For example, Lucy’s cordial from The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. There are limitations both on what can be brought through and on how frequently a libriomancer can work the magic before sanity becomes an issue, but to keep this potentially catastrophic power in check, Gutenberg himself founded the order of Die Zwelf Portenare. They monitor libriomancers and put seals preventing such use on books with especially dangerous premises, such as earth-destroying bombs or time travel devices. Isaac Vainio, our librarian hero, used to be a libriomancer with this organization before he was kicked out for failure to control his magic. Now, however, a diverse population of vampires from different books have banded together to destroy the whole organization and its archives – and somehow Isaac got on their list. In between attacks at work, Isaac is joined by the intelligent, powerful, and curvy nymph Lena Greenwood. Her lover and his former psychotherapist has been taken by the vampires, and she needs Isaac’s help to find out what happened to her and stop the attacks. However, there’s more than one enemy at work here, and Isaac will have to go deeper into libriomancy than he’s ever gone before to find them all.

There’s some ethical dilemma here, as Lena is a nymph who was written (in a bad 1960s fantasy book) both to need and to be incapable of disobeying a lover, though she’s naturally very strong woman, both mentally and physically, who would like some more self-determination. Most of the book, though, is one action scene after another as Isaac, Lena, and Isaac’s cute little pet fire spider, Smudge, race from one disaster to the next, battling vampires and giant automatons along the way. It was a little too much on the plot-based roller-coaster for me to love, but I enjoyed the ride a lot. The magic pulled from familiar books, as shown so beautifully on the cover, is pure geeky glee,as is Hines’s scientific classification of vampires as described by different authors. He even helpfully includes a bibliography at the end, where he shares which of the books cited in the story are real and which imaginary. If you’re in the mood for a fast and fun fantasy action adventure with a little romance thrown in, this is the book for you.

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The Borrowers

I think on principle that I ought to make my son read the book before we watch the movie… but the dvd at the library was just so tempting. We had family movie day with “The Secret World of Arrietty”, after which he was excited enough to want me to read him the book. Yay!

borrowers
The Borrowers by Mary Norton.
The Borrowers was a family favorite growing up. We read the whole series aloud at least once, and I know I read all the books to myself even more often. It’s always a little worrisome reading books like that to my son: what if he doesn’t love them as much as I do? I remembered the first chapter, which sets up the frame story and has no Borrowers in it, as the Most Tedious First Chapter Ever, and warned my son of this when we started. But neither of us found it so bad this time around. For anyone who isn’t familiar with The Borrowers, it tells the story of a family of tiny people who live under the floors and in the walls of houses, living off of the small, easily lost things that they “borrow” from the humans around them. Although the story is set a century ago, the details of their daily life are described so carefully that it doesn’t seem like fantasy. Having Borrowers in the house explains perfectly all the small things that go missing, all the time. I could see my son paying close attention to the details of things like the construction of their stove and the multiple safety gates keeping their living quarters safe from things like mice. This first book in the series is different from the rest of the series in that the Borrowers are treated as possibly imaginary in the frame story – an older lady telling of the adventures with Arrietty which her brother claimed to have had as a child, and which she is still not quite sure really happened. The rest of the series, as I recall, focusses just on the Borrowers and leaves the humans out altogether. borrowers2But here, The Boy’s friendship with Arrietty provides the catalyst for the rest of the story, as well as balancing out the genders of our main characters for great cross-gender appeal. The Boy and Arrietty form a forbidden friendship, which causes trouble when the Boy, encouraged by Arrietty’s mother Homily, starts “borrowing” more and more things from around the house for them. However, his midnight delivery expeditions are eventually found out, leading to the discovery of the Borrowers and attempts to exterminate them. I remember Madeline L’Engle once said that nearly all of the conflicts in good literature come from the characters breaking at least one of the Commandments, and here, it’s definitely greed that gets the Borrowers into trouble, though Arrietty’s insatiable curiosity is a large contributing factor as well. The excitement builds slowly but steadily, with well-drawn characters and a setting that brings the early part of the last century to life again. The boy gave it a “thumbs up”, and I found it every bit as delightful as I remembered it. I’ve included both the rather dull cover of the edition we read and the more brightly-colored cover of my childhood edition.

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Lovabye Dragon

All children should have more dragons in their lives, right? Of course right!

Lovabye DragonLovabye Dragon by Barbara Joosse. Illustrated by Randy Cecil.

Lovabye Dragon is an oddly sweet picture book. It starts on an unusually sad note – a girl in a castle (never called a princess, but who could be one) who cries and cries because she wants a dragon of her own. She cries a silver stream of tears, which finds its way to the cave of a dragon who wants a girl, and is able to follow the tears back to her. Finally together, they are immediately fast friends and have a wonderful time together before snuggling up for bedtime. It’s rare for picture books to start on such a sad note, rare for a dragon book to have a girl rather than a boy as the protagonist. This is a story of friendship rather than dragon adventure, a story of finding your heart’s desire. It’s illustrated with angular, chalky-looking oil paintings, filled with personality despite their muted colors. The language is lyrical and poetic without being forced into rhymes, making this a perfect bedtime story for boys and girls ages two and up.

Here’s another favorite dragon picture book, The Knight Who Took All Day, from when my son first discovered dragons and knights.

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Spirit Gate

I really enjoyed Kate Elliott’s steampunky fantasy Cold Magic, and thought I’d explore some of her earlier work while waiting for the third book of that series to come out.

Spirit Gate
Spirit Gate. Crossroads Book 1. by Kate Elliott

The Crossroads Trilogy is a newer take on the classic epic fantasy. It’s a traditional fantasy epic in that there’s an enormous struggle affecting everyone in one kingdom as well as people in the surrounding kingdoms. It’s much denser than Cold Magic – the books are 500 tall, closely printed pages long apiece. Each one took me a good two weeks to read, when I’m used to reading a children’s fantasy in a day or two and adult books in a week. (Immersing myself into a long book or series is a wonderful thing. But I build my library request list expecting faster turnover, and can get a little stressed as my pile of checked-out books gets taller and taller and taller…) This is detailed world-building, with the close attention paid to the religion, sexual and marriage customs, treatment of women, and slaves in each of the three major cultures we’re exposed to. Rather than the traditional quasi-northern European setting, the story is set in a region where people are several different shades of brown, and the one blond, blue-eyed character is considered by most of the others to be a demon. The world, the culture, the big struggle are all fantasy – but the characters are real people with real world issues.

Long ago, in the kingdom of the Hundreds, the gods created Guardians to watch over the land and sit in judgment. The more hands-on, day-to-day watching was to be done by the reeves, with life-bonds to the giant eagles who chose them, and who would fly them over the land in search of injustice. But the Guardians disappeared a generation or two ago, and without them to back up judgment, the peaceful reeves struggle to keep hold of the respect they need to keep the peace. A Shadow has fallen over the land, and no one knows what it is or what to do about it. At first, the Shadow is just a few people missing here and there, but soon there are armies of criminals marching across the land, raping and killing everyone they meet, all wearing a cheap tin star around their necks.

We are introduced to many people whose fates will eventually intertwine, but who don’t know each other at all when we first meet. The reeve Joss, who tries to drink away the dreams of his murdered lover, still works for justice in an increasingly corrupt world. A merchant’s slave, sold into slavery when he was orphaned as a child, hides a treasure he hopes will buy both himself and his sister their freedom. In a faraway kingdom, Mai, a merchant’s daughter in a small town, is given an unexpected offer of marriage by Captain Anji, senior officer of the local Qin overlords, just before he’s transferred out. Although her family members think she’s stupid, she’s an excellent salesperson who has worked hard to be happy, no matter what life gives her. Anji – his own history a complicated secret – is the first person who doesn’t underestimate her. With Mai come her slave Priya, former nun of the Merciful One, and Mai’s only slightly older cousin Shai. Only Mai knows that Shai has the shunned ability to see and hear ghosts. He brings with him his slave, Cornflower, the blue-eyed blond girl that only Mai can’t believe is a demon. While the bad guys are very, very bad, and we never really see into their heads, none of our protagonists is perfect. Elliott does a fabulous job of making all of these characters come alive and keeping them straight, a challenge in a work of this scope.

There is both sweet, slow-budding romance and some straight up sex, mostly all with the bedroom door shut in our faces, as it were, none of it offensive to me. The violence levels, however, were another matter. That wayward army does every horribly ugly thing I’ve read about unofficial armies doing, most recently in Africa, though really throughout history. People are maimed, tortured, raped and killed every time they come in contact with the army. Mostly we see our characters finding the victims afterwards, but it’s still plenty brutal. Poor Cornflower gets raped repeatedly, as she is both a slave and not considered human. It was too much violence for me, both stomach-turning and repetitive. That being said, most of the characters that we care about and their loved ones stay safe, so Elliott isn’t jerking the heartstrings by torturing her main characters. There are readers less sensitive than I am who will not be bothered by this at all, but right now, I’m seriously considering not finishing a trilogy I otherwise enjoyed, the fate of whose characters I am quite concerned about, because I’m not sure I can take it for another book. My other issue – much less serious – is with the shadowy enemy controlling that army. They are extremely nebulous in the first book, and while we meet them first-hand in the second, I still don’t see how they could have turned to the Dark Side (not the book’s term) as they did.

Spirit Gate is an immersive fantasy experience, with a good vs. evil multi-stranded plot, strong characters, beautiful world-building, and a thoughtful look at issues of race, class and gender. Read it if you can deal with the violence and are up for the commitment its length and depth call for.

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Rabbit and Robot: The Sleepover

Rabbit & RobotRabbit & Robot: the Sleepover by Cece Bell.

Rabbit is planning a sleepover with his friend Robot. He has made a list of everything that he plans for them to do together. This list both appears in the text and as the chapter headings of this very early chapter book. What will happen when Robot doesn’t agree with everything on the list? Kids who like to be in control (those would be mine) will easily sympathize with Rabbit’s horror when his carefully-made plans start going awry. Robot cheerfully works to find a compromise between Rabbit’s plans and what he wants, while Rabbit panics each step of the way. In Chapter 1, Rabbit planned pizza for dinner – but he only provided carrots and lettuce as toppings, while Robot wants nuts, bolts and screws. I love that Robot a) eats and b) is OK with the bread and cheese part of pizza, just not the carrots. Robot’s solution is to take apart Rabbit’s table and use its hardware as pizza toppings, leading to another meltdown as Rabbit realizes that they no longer have a table to eat at. The simple but expressive line drawings are a wonderful synthesis of retro and modern – Robot has a single wheel underneath and coils of wire that give him a 1950s robot feel, while Rabbit’s TV both sports a bunny-eared antenna set and a remote control. The text is about on par or maybe just a touch more challenging than Arnold Lobel’s Frog and Toad books. Really, this is everything you could want in a book to coax a new reader: appealing characters, humor, and the perfect balance between familiarity and novelty. My son read it himself, enjoyed both by him and the adult he was listening to.

I’m submitting this as part of the Kid Lit Blog Hop. Hop on over and see what everyone else is posting!

Kid Lit Blog Hop
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Bowling Avenue

Bowling AvenueSometimes, I think, my love and I are reduced to one brain that we have to swap between us. Maybe that’s why it took me a couple months to realize that I could actually lay my hands on the new novel by one a blogger I’ve been reading for maybe eight years or so. (And look! I read two contemporary realistic fiction books in a row.)

Bowling Avenue by Ann Shayne.
Ann Shayne is half of the voice of the blog Mason-Dixon Knitting, and of the two Mason-Dixon Knitting books, both of which I own and adore. Here, she takes a break from writing about knitting to write a novel around the Nashville flood of 2010. Younger sister Delia escaped from Nashville to Chicago years ago, but is forced to return when her sister Ginna dies, leaving Delia the house. Delia has no use for a massive brick house, but is determined to save on the realtor fees and stick around to sell the house herself. Surrounding her are the cast of colorful characters, all described next to their silhouettes on the back cover: “Bennett, wretched brother-in-law; Judge Ballenger, maddening mother; Angus, peculiar neighbor; Shelly, watchful housekeeper; Amelia and Cassie, teenage nieces; Henry Peek, charming realtor.” Nearly all of the characters start out as annoying obstacles for Delia, but as the story progresses – and as the flood forces everyone else out of their houses and into Ginna’s house – Delia is forced both to be honest with herself and to find the real people under the puzzling facades. The less-than-pleasant sides revealed help keep the story honest – how much easier it is to get along with people if we’re not all pretending to be perfect! It’s heartwarming but not gooey sweet goodness with a touch of romance. There is less knitting in the book than I might have expected – Ginna was a hard-core knitter; Delia and her mother know how to knit but mostly don’t – but there are still Secrets in the Stash. The whole story is told in the first-person present-tense quirky down-home voice I love from Mason-Dixon Knitting. I feel like I ought to have some deep and thoughtful negative criticism here, but I just can’t find it in me. This is a perfect treat to read when you need a little something for yourself.

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Fantasy for Music-Lovers

I’ve been reading more about people reading or re-reading Anne McCaffrey’s Harper Hall series, which reminds me how much I love fantasy books that feature music or musicians. Here is my List. I’ve included a few that I found in in the library catalog but haven’t actually read; if any of you have read them and want to share opinions, or if you know of others that I missed, please let me know!

Youth
The Seven Tales of TrinketThe Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander
The Grey King by Susan Cooper (book 5 of series)
Igraine the Brave by Cornelia Funke
The Seven Tales of Trinket by Shelley Moore Thomas
A String in the Harp by Nancy Bond.

Teen
Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale
DragonsongDragonsong by Anne McCaffrey
The Naming by Allison Croggon
Seraphina by Rachel Hartmann
The Singer of All Songs by Kate Constable

Still Need to Read
The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents by Terry Prachett
Pay the Piper by Jane Yolen
Wind Singer by William Nicholson

Adult

Bards of Bone PlainThe Bards of Bone Plain by Patricia McKillip
Peter & Max : a Fables novel by Bill Willingham ; with illustrations by Steve Leialoha

Still Need to Read
Bedlam’s Bard series by Mercedes Lackey
The Gutbucket Quest by Piers Anthony & Ron Leming
Harpist in the Wind by Patricia McKillip (book 3 of series)
The Hum and the Shiver by Alex Bledsoe
The Robin & the Kestrel by Mercedes Lackey
Songs of the Earth by Elspeth Cooper
Soprano Sorceress by L.E. Modesitt Jr
The Stoneholding. Legacy of the Stone Harp book 1 by James G. Anderson and Marc Sebanc

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The Fault in Our Stars

I’d avoided this book as being too sad, until S.M. put it on my desk and told me I had to listen to it. I did. It was worth it.

The Fault in our StarsThe Fault in Our Stars by John Green. Read by Kate Rudd
Before you read this book, make sure you have a good supply of hankies. You’ll need them for more than one reason – in the first part of the book, because Hazel, our narrator, is just so darn funny. She’s 16, and her death by what’s now mostly lung cancer has been delayed for a few years due to an experimental miracle drug. Mostly she deals with her impending mortality by watching bad TV with her parents and re-reading her favorite book, An Imperial Affliction by Peter van Houten. Hazel’s mother is convinced that she needs to get out and meet other kids. She takes Hazel to a “kids with cancer” support group that meets in a church basement, which the leader describes as “the literal heart of Jesus.” It’s usually a depressing experience, but one day, her friend Isaac-with-eye-cancer brings his friend, handsome Augustus Waters. Augustus is missing a leg due to his cancer, which is now in remission.

The basic plot is simple: two teens with cancer fall in love. But if it were either just a sob story or an Uplifting Tale, it wouldn’t be nearly so successful. Though Hazel converts Augustus to her love of An Imperial Affliction, there’s a lot of looking at the different ways that they deal with the knowledge that death is coming. Hazel cries foul on Maslow and his hierarchy of needs, saying that the idea that you only have energy to pay attention to self-actualization and beauty if your basic needs, such as health, are met, is false and insulting, making ill people seem less human than healthy people. (I found this particularly interesting as a person whose basic need for sleep has not been met for several years now – yet look, I go on reading and writing about it. Even as I place my need for more sleep above my child’s desire to do more activities.) It’s an intimate look at the pediatric cancer world, the kids who live there, and the humor and love it takes to bear the unbearable. Kate Rudd does an amazing job reading. It won this year’s Odyssey award (and was the only one among this year’s finalists I’d listened too.) The book feels like watching bubbles or the slanting golden sunshine on an autumn day.

The Fault in our Stars hit especially close to home for me. I haven’t lived in the pediatric cancer world, or even the adult cancer world (knock on wood.) But I have spent quite a bit of time at this point in the pediatric liver transplant world. This world of medicines and tubes, taking things one step at a time, overhearing the 6 am calls in the hallways from parents with horrible news that came in the night, and the sick kid perks. At my daughter’s hospital, I had to start asking them not to give us the free handmade blanket with every admission, because we had more than we could use at home already. The book cart came by with a free book (at least one for each patient and any siblings) every week; there were toys and games and gift baskets. Even though the book is written from Hazel’s perspective, I felt deep empathy with Hazel’s parents. And if Green hadn’t have managed that perfect balance of that wry humor and the serious subject, I wouldn’t have been able to do it.

Other John Green books I’ve read (just a few of the many):
Looking for Alaska (before I started reviewing, it looks like. But it was still good.)
An Abundance of Katherines

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A Wrinkle in Time: The Graphic Novel

I might have mentioned once or twice that Madeleine L’Engle is one of my all-time favorite authors, and I heard such good things about this from so many places that of course I had to try it.

A Wrinkle in Time
A Wrinkle in Time: the Graphic Novel by Hope Larson
It’s always dicey making a graphic novel adaptation of a well-loved book – really, if the author wanted the book to be a graphic novel, why wouldn’t she just have written it that way to begin with? But this is clearly a love letter from someone who loves A Wrinkle in Time just as much as me, expressing this in a graphic novel rather than, say, a book review or knitting, as I might. (Though I’m not sure what I’d knit as a Wrinkle homage piece.) Larson does not cut out any pieces of plot or characters, and even the dialogue was left intact. She keeps the famous opening lines, but mostly her artwork replaces the descriptions from the book. Her illustrations show incredible attention to all the details in the book, keeping them all straight better than my own head does while I’m reading. There were funny details, like the stairs drawn with an arrow pointing out the creaky step and a little knife flying out from Meg’s eyes, without saying in words that she’s looking daggers. There’s also Meg’s somewhat straggly short haircut, and the black eye that she gets in the first chapter. I had never thought about the bruise after her mother looks at it, just before Mrs Whatsit’s midnight arrival, but naturally, as the book happens over the course of just a couple of days, it wouldn’t have time to heal. Larson keeps this in mind, and shows Meg with that bruise all the way through. The pictures are lovingly drawn, and everything comes together beautifully to bring this beloved story to life visually. Of course, Wrinkle can stand on its own, but this is a well-done and enjoyable addition.

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