Tag Archives: 48HBC

Death in the Air by Shane Peacock

Book three of the 48-hour Book Challenge binge. You will notice a distinct lack of proof-reading in my blogging today… I am not forgoing sleep or food.But can I just say? Love is when your spouse says, while making a necessary trip to pick up coffee and other essentials, “I’ll drive so you can read.”

death in the air When we left the young Sherlock Holmes at the end of the first book in this series, he had solved the Whitechapel murders (though Inspector LeStrange had claimed all the credit) at a devastating personal cost. The son of a Jewish merchant and an upper class woman cast out by her family, he’s inherited a keen intelligence and love of leaning from both his parents, and as the reader knows, is destined for greatness. At the age of thirteen, he’s not there yet, and is desperately craving acknowledgement and adoration.

His next big case lands at his feet, quite literally. When a trapeze artist plummets to his death at Sherlock’s feet and gasps out “Silence… me…” Sherlock immediately suspects foul play. He’s also in a perfect position, attending the death-defying performance at the Crystal Gardens, to observe the suspiscious marks on the ill-fated trapeze before the evidence is trampled by the circus-going crowds. But the police are ill-inclined to listen to him, and he’s proudly determined to catch the killer and demand a reward. Since the tragic events of the first book, he’s taken on a job and lodgings with an eccentric apothecary, and set his sights on the lofty goal of college.

The trapeze artist survived the fall and is lingering unconscious on the brink of death. His young apprentice seems remarkably unaffected by his master’s accident. There’s a lover’s triangle at work inside the circus, and everyone involved seems to have a mysterious past. Meanwhile, a series of robberies are sweeping London, a large sum of money has vanished from the safe at the Crystal Palace, and the apothecary is on the verge of being evicted.

Now the reward money is crucial. It’s going to take all of Sherlock’s wits and wiles, some skill at interrogation and deception, and information grudgingly extracted from Malefactor, the young gang leader of the Trafalager Street Irregulars, to put together the pieces.

Peacock’s got a lofty style that suits young Sherlock perfectly, and there’s a wealth of tangible detail here about the underbelly of Victorian London, from show business to deadly back alleys and warehouses. The plot’s suitably convoluted, darkly twisted, and full of betrayal. You can already see the pieces fitting together that will make him into the adult Sherlock Holmes we all know. If anything, this one’s even better than the first book. I, for one, am looking forward to book three.

Sea Change by Aimee Friedman

Book two of the 48-hour Book Challenge binge, and I am insane enough to be blogging five books in a row.

sea-change Miranda Merchant is a scientist. The daughter of two doctors, while other little girls were playing dress-up, she was joyfully conducting experiments, mixing baking powder and Mr Clean in water, and taking careful notes. She’s a rational, logical person. Then why is she seriously considering the existence of selkies and mermen?

Miranda is escaping a painful tangle that’s isolated her from her now ex-boyfriend and her best friend, and has left New York beind for Selkie Island in the southern U.S. Her estranged grandmother has just died, and Miranda’s mother needs her organized self to get the summer house she’s inherited into order to sell. Miranda quickly finds herself adrift in the world her mother left behind years ago, of Southern mansions, summer romances, glossy high-society types, sweet (iced) tea and peach juleps.

CeeCee, the daughter of her mother’s childhood friend, has decided that it’s a foregone conclusion that they’re going to be best friends for the summer, and is already angling to set Miranda up with one of the well-off society summer boys. Miranda’s taken aback at how comfortable her mother is in this foreign landscape and is far more in her own element with the newly-opened marine science centre, and the enigmatic local boy Leo.

But Leo’s just as much at home in the ocean and on the beach as in his summer job at the marine centre, and is not without his own mysteries. How does he find her every single time she sets foor on the beach? Why are they drawn to each other so strongly on barely a day’s acquaintance? Miranda finds herself, despite her inherent love of logic and science, drawn back to the small, battered volume of local island folklore in her grandmother’s house. And there are undercurrents running through her own family’s history that she never suspected…

I was a bit let down by this one, but that’s because I was expecting more fantasy than romance, and got more romance and family drama than selkies and magic. I am all for more strong female characters and geeky girls who love science, and Miranda was definitely an engaging and likeable heroine. It was a refreshing change, too, that CeeCee and her friends, though secondary characters, weren’t the flat, mean-girl stereotype I was originally expecting.

The gradual revelations of Miranda’s family history and personal heartbreak before she left home fit in well to the overall plot and tension, but I don’t think the supernatural and folklore elements were as well used as they could have been. The whole mythology seemed like a bit of an afterthought, unresolved, and not really essential to the story in the end. I wanted more of the darker complexities explored of your boyfriend possibly being a freaking merman, and Miranda having been born with webbed toes could have been used so much more effectively if it actually meant something.

However, I think a lot of my dissatisfaction comes from failed genre expectations. It’s definitely a good beach-blanket or hammock book if you’re wanting a summer romance, with likeable characters and a vivid setting. And it left me with a definite craving for iced tea…

Castration Celebration by Jake Wizner

Book one of the 48-hour Book Challenge binge. Let’s start things off with a bang. (Um. Pun intended. Just read the book, you’ll see.)

castration celebration

Olivia was sitting on top of her new suitcase in the courtyard of Yale’s Old Campus writing in her notebook. She had scrawled the word CASTRATION on the top of the page and was in the process of listing genital-based rhymes. So far her list read: menstruation, masturbation, elongation, lubrication, penetration, simulation, fornication, copulation, urination, ejaculation, insemination.

Olivia’s researching castration. Her sudden interest was brought on by the trauma of walking in on her father, recieving a blow job from one of his graduate students. Max, on the other hand, is very fond of his genitals, in their current fully operational condition. Both teens have a quick sense of humour and flair for rapid-fire banter. When they meet up at a summer arts program, a perfect storm of double entendres ensue. Because Max, prone to brief, intense bouts of true love, has decided that he’s madly in love with Olivia. Olivia has sworn off boys and romance–her state of mind is reflected in her summer project, the musical of the title, Castration Celebration. Add some supporting characters to the mix–Max’s stoner roomate Zeke, who has a flair for musical composition, perky queer girl Callie, Olivia’s ditzy but goodhearted roommate Mimi, and the steadfast Trish, who collaborated with Zeke on a school musical last year–and the stage is set for one very interesting summer.

First of all, forget all vestiges of adult (by which I mean grown-up) taste and decorum, and attempt to connect with your fifteen-year-old self. The humour in this book is… well, juvenile. Risque. Lewd. Crude. Offensive. There’s casual, recreational drug use, toilet humour, realistic use of expletives, and oh yeah, an awful lot of sexual humour.

This book is going to offend a lot of people.

However, let’s face it, it’s a totally realistic, uncensored portrayal of a sizeable portion of teenagers, and so, so true to the target age group. Seriously, if you don’t see a couple of teenage boys turning vampires, menstruation, and oral sex into a running joke as realistic, you’ve never encountered teenage boys in their natural habitat. (Likewise, if the concept of the aforementioned offends you horribly, go find another book instead.) Also, as a species, we find sex funny.

The book is a quick read. It spins together the story of the main cast, interspersed with the script and lyrics of Olivia’s musical, which is in turn a riff on The Taming of the Shrew, which is how the couple in the play meet, reading Shakespeare out loud in English class.

Once you’re past the shock factor of songs like “I’m in Love With Dick,” though, sex in general is treated in a fairly reasonable, healthy fashion. When Max, in a fit of jealousy, takes off and has casual sex with a girl he met on the train, he protests that “it didn’t mean anything.” He’s quickly taken to task by the girls for writing off the girl he was with. The characters are drawn in fairly broad strokes, and blurred together a bit at the beginning, but there are some more serious issues behind the masturbation jokes, like Olivia’s family instability, Max’s neediness, and why, exactly, Zeke wants to spend the entire summer stoned in his dorm room.

This book definitely doesn’t come close to Melvin Burgess’s Doing It, and I wasn’t sure if it was anything more than blatant shock tactics at first, but I think that it will find readers. It will be the kind of book circulated under desks and smuggled from backpack to backpack, and no, it’s not great literature, but it’s got more inherent merit than a Will Ferrell movie (yeah, I know, that’s totally a judgement call on my part). There’s nothing wrong with the occasional junk food reading and odds are pretty good at least one or two readers will pick it up and feel like finally they’re seeing something of their own lives and sense of humour. And maybe then they’ll read Doing It

48HBC: Friday

I’m going to make individual book posts in the morning, because I need about ten hours of sleep before I am going to be able to say anything coherent. (I’m also tracking everything I’m reading tagged as 48HBC09 on my Good Reads account here.)

Official Start Time: 10:15 pm, Friday, June 5, 2009.

10:15-11:15 pm: Castration Celebration by Jake Wizner (Unabashedly uncensored, entertaining and enough real substance to hold it all together.)

11:15-11:30 Blogging time

11:30-12:30 Sea Change by Aimee Friedman (a good summer beach-y book, but I wanted more fantasy than romance, and got the reverse. Still, engaging and a surprisingly quick read.)

So far, so good… two books down, thirty-eight to go… I am so not going to make it through all of by to-read pile this weekend. But! That just means I have almost forty books to choose from!

In which I am ambitious, and aim to read. A lot.

I have no social commitments this weekend. I am not working, and have no plans to go anywhere. We’ve finished reading and set the shortlist for the Rocky Mountain Book Award Committee, so I can read whatever I want again! This is a good thing. This is a very good thing.

This weekend is The Fourth Annual 48 Hour Book Challenge.

(Sunday is also International Read What’s On Your Shelf Day, so I am totally counting it as two-for-one.)

My to-read pile, let me show it to you:

The right-hand side is kids’ and YA books (a handful of library books, things I own I haven’t got to yet, and a pile of ARCS I picked up at the Alberta Library Conference that are ultimately destined for the teen program prize bag at my library), the left hand side is adult books (library books, owned books, and a couple books my mom lent me at Christmas.)

Okay. Let the challenge begin!