As You Wish by Cary Elwes (2014)
Absolutely charming memoir about making The Princess Bride, subtitled "Inconceivable Tales from the Making of The Princess Bride."
A fun look at all the ins and outs of movie making, from casting to promotion, written with lots of love and fond memories. Memories by other cast members are interspersed within the narrative, lending a little different view to the proceedings. And who can ever get enough Andre the Giant stories? Not me for sure.
Elwes is humble, grateful, and marvelously charming. Just adorable.
Sweetshop of Dreams by Jenny Colgan (2014)
I warn you: I'm about to use the word "sweet" WAY too many times. The word totally looks like gibberish to me now. But it's the perfect word.
Sweetshop of Dreams is a typically charming novel by Colgan, who used to write witty chick lit, but who has now taken to writing
sweet (but not sickly sweet) novels set in various sweet locations (cupcake
cafes, chocolate shops, and now a sweetshop).
The story: Rosie's mother asks her to go and visit her great aunt and sell her defunct
sweetshop and pop her into a home. Rosie
meets a whole bunch of interesting characters and finds her way to romance
(leaving behind her non-committal, mama's boy, but sweet longtime boyfriend,
who recovers quickly.)
Very sweet. Not life-changing but full of wonderful characters, and lots
of charming meditations on the emotional, nostalgic response that people have
for sweets. As someone who definitely has those, it hit the sweet spot for me. (Hee.)
The Silent Land by Graham Joyce (2010)
I loved this book so much that I was searching for books by Graham Joyce before I'd even gotten halfway through this one.
From the beginning to the ending, this is a practically perfect novel--one that I wanted to prolong reading as I was enjoying it so much.
Jake and Zoe are skiing at a resort when they are caught in an avalanche. And the description of Zoe trapped under snow is one of the scariest things I've ever read. Ever. When they finally dig out and return to the resort, everyone is gone, and they can't seem to leave the village. Not only are they trying to figure out what's happening, they're also working on some issues in their marriage.
This novel is subtle and realistic, and beautifully done to the very last page. Everyone I've recommended it to has loved it as much as I have--about six people to date. Yay!
Horrorstor: A Novel by Grady Hendrix (2014)
Horrorstor is so cool, it should have its own theme song.
And yes, as you may have guessed from the cover, it's a horror novel set in the big-box semi-Swedish
home furnishing retailer Orsk. The fabulous book design by Andie
Reid hilariously replicates the iconic IKEA catalogs.
Some strange things have been happening at
the Orsk store and a few employees have been enlisted to stay after closing and
keep an eye out. Another couple of
employees are conducting their own ghost hunt and when they get together to
have a seance, all hell breaks loose.
In
addition to the great, realistic characters, this novel has a great in-depth
backstory that is beautifully supported by the book design. And it actually had me at the edge of my
seat--I was genuinely biting my nails to see if the characters would make it
through. Beautifully done.
If I Can't Have You by Gregg Olsen and Rebecca Morris (2014)
Eventually the husband and children show up, but without the mother and the husband is acting most suspicious. The characters in this book (particularly the husband's family) are as chilling and creepy as in any good suspense thriller. It's also a fascinating look at the complexity of marriage, the Mormon faith, and the tenacious struggle for Susan's family to find out what happened to her.
Despite the spoilery subtitle, this book is incredibly gripping, and one of the best true crime books I've ever read. I still get the creeps when I look at that book cover photo.
Not That Kind of Girl by Lena Dunham (2014)
Most actress's memoirs--particularly if they are comic in tone--I find a bit facile and uneven. They tend to be loosely strung together collections of anecdotes.
However, you have to hand it to
Dunham: She tells it like it is. I love the subtitle: A young woman tells you what she's "learned". She tells it warts and
all, no writerly airbrushing or image enhancement to make her sound better.
She's amazingly
insightful but also amazingly self-aware. I can't help but like and admire her. This was a wonderfully enjoyable book. Also, there are
little sketchings in the book that give it the feel of a midcentury book on
etiquette or relationships--and at the end, you find out the artist is her good
friend that she refers to through the book. And it's funny:
"When I was born I was very fat for a baby--eleven pounds (which sounds thin to me now). I had three chins and a stomach that drooped to one side of my stroller. I never crawled, just rolled, an early sign that I was going to be resistant to most exercise and any sexual position that didn't allow me to relax my back."
How can you not love that?
The Harrowing by Alexandra Sokoloff (2006)
My bar for horror novels is pretty low. But I can't resist a good ghost story/haunted house novel, so when this crossed by desk, I gave it a try.
Five students are left alone in their college dorm over the holidays, they get in touch with some scary spirits, and mysterious and spooky things begin to occur.
I was pleasantly surprised by how much I liked it. Sokoloff created rich and complex characters, and I like that the backstory and mythology was quite in-depth. I have the attention span of a distracted gnat, but even after reading it six months ago, I can still picture some of the characters and settings.
Must check out more of her work! Yay, excellent horror novels by female authors!
What We See What We Read by Peter Mendelsund (2014)
Utterly loved this nonfiction book which deconstructs 'what we see when we read': the physical and emotional act of reading.
Absolutely fascinating, marvelously designed. So many keeper quotes. Like:
"One should watch a film adaptation of a favorite book only after considering, very carefully, the fact that the casting of the film may very well become the permanent casting of the book in one's mind. This is a very real hazard."
"When I read, my retirement from the phenomenal world is undertaken too quickly to notice. The world is in front of me and the world "inside" me are not merely adjacent, but overlapping; superimposed. A book feels like the intersection of these two domains--or like a conduit; a bride; a passage between them."
This is a book to buy and refer to often. Fascinating.
The Cinderella Deal by Jennifer Crusie (1996)
Another utter love. Picked this up at a used bookstore out of a remembered fondness for Jennifer Crusie and she did not disappoint.
Daisy is a scattered, free spirit artist trying to make her living through her art. Her neighbor, Linc, is a straitlaced English professor who is angling for a job at a prestigious school but needs a fiancee to complete the picture.
Crusie creates a charming story out of this familiar premise, thanks to her vivid and realistic characters, her humor and her ability to create real chemistry and believable romance for her characters. Beautifully done as always.
The Ghost Bride by Yangsze Choo (2013)
Oh my gosh, I LOVED this book. I have no idea where it came from, why I requested it but it's marvelous.
Li Lin lives in colonial Malaya with her opium-addicted father and her beloved Amah. All is satisfactory pretty much until she receives a marriage proposal from the son of an influential neighbor. However, the son is dead and the proposal is for Li Lin to be his ghost bride. When her intended haunts her in her dreams and she falls in love with the new (live) heir to the family, Li Lin embarks on a fantastical voyage among the dead.
Choo creates a marvelously rich and detailed world of the dead, from paper funeral offerings and hell money, to the Plains of the Dead and the afterworld bureaucracy. Along the way, she meets Er Lang, a guardian spirit who is not at all what he appears to be.
This novel is utterly original and impossible to label in a particular genre. It's historical fiction, and fantasy, and a bit of horror, and a bit of romance as well as being wonderfully suspenseful and beautifully written. Much of the mythology is based on Chinese folklore, and Choo's notes section outlines the original stories and her own creations. CRIPES, I loved this book.
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