Happy Friday, My Lovelies! I hope you've had a great week. We had a great time in New Orleans, but Mr. Art @ Home had to visit a Doc in the Box while we were there, and both girls caught the funk. So far I've escaped it *fingers crossed*…
During the road trip, I read two books: The House At the End of Hope Street and Love In the Time of Global Warming.
First of all, the house is the most intriguing character in the book. It provides its residents with encouraging letters and supplies to enable them to turn their lives around. There are also photos of the women who've stayed there lining the walls, but unfortunately the house must not have a fantastic track record because a few of the most outspoken former residents include Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath, and Vivian Leigh. Okay. So these temporary residents are supposed to take advice from these women about how to turn their lives around? Really? (The portraits talk like the ones at Hogwarts.) The women living at the house are underdeveloped, especially the one chosen to be the house's caretaker.
Alba is very young, and she's taken advantage of by a horrible academic advisor who gets completely away with it (complete disappointment). She has a few special abilities that are given less attention than deserved, and there's even a glossary in the back of the back concerning these gifts that aren't fully integrated into the plot. I read the glossary before I read the book, so I suppose I had higher expectations for Alba's gifts being a bigger part of the story.
The main problem I have with the story is that these women end-up at Hope Street because they are stupid: They are not victims. To make matters worse, two of them basically continue with the same behavior that got them into trouble in the first place. Pink's Stupid Girls kept playing in my head during most of this book. I'd skip this one even though it has a high Goodreads rating.
During the road trip, I read two books: The House At the End of Hope Street and Love In the Time of Global Warming.
I received The House At the End of Hope Street by Menna Van Praag for the Books 'n' Bloggers Swap because it was on my wish list. I was interested in it because a blurb written by Sarah Addison Allen (one of my favorite authors) is on the cover, and I like magical realism. I rarely post the Goodreads blurb, but here it is:
Distraught that her academic career has stalled, Alba is walking through her hometown of Cambridge, England, when she finds herself in front of a house she’s never seen before, 11 Hope Street. A beautiful older woman named Peggy greets her and invites her to stay, on the house’s usual conditions: she has ninety-nine nights to turn her life around. With nothing left to lose, Alba takes a chance and moves in.
She soon discovers that this is no ordinary house. Past residents have included George Eliot and Beatrix Potter, who, after receiving the assistance they needed, hung around to help newcomers—literally, in talking portraits on the wall. As she escapes into this new world, Alba begins a journey that will heal her wounds—and maybe even save her life.
Filled with a colorful and unforgettable cast of literary figures, The House at the End of Hope Street is a charming, whimsical novel of hope and feminine wisdom that is sure to appeal to fans of Jasper Fforde and especially Sarah Addison Allen.
First of all, the house is the most intriguing character in the book. It provides its residents with encouraging letters and supplies to enable them to turn their lives around. There are also photos of the women who've stayed there lining the walls, but unfortunately the house must not have a fantastic track record because a few of the most outspoken former residents include Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath, and Vivian Leigh. Okay. So these temporary residents are supposed to take advice from these women about how to turn their lives around? Really? (The portraits talk like the ones at Hogwarts.) The women living at the house are underdeveloped, especially the one chosen to be the house's caretaker.
Alba is very young, and she's taken advantage of by a horrible academic advisor who gets completely away with it (complete disappointment). She has a few special abilities that are given less attention than deserved, and there's even a glossary in the back of the back concerning these gifts that aren't fully integrated into the plot. I read the glossary before I read the book, so I suppose I had higher expectations for Alba's gifts being a bigger part of the story.
The main problem I have with the story is that these women end-up at Hope Street because they are stupid: They are not victims. To make matters worse, two of them basically continue with the same behavior that got them into trouble in the first place. Pink's Stupid Girls kept playing in my head during most of this book. I'd skip this one even though it has a high Goodreads rating.
Love In the Time of Global Warming by Francesca Lia Block is part allegory and part fairy tale. It's about an older teen named Pen who has survived an apocalypse of devastating proportions in Los Angeles not caused by global warming, actually. The title of the book comes from a chapter title in the book. I purchased this book because it was recommended to me by a bookseller at one of my favorite Indie bookstores Octavia Books in New Orleans.
SIDEBAR: Have you noticed how scientist no longer refer to it as global warming but climate change because science doesn't support the global warming arguments according to progressive scientists? But I digress….
Pen survives a catastrophic Earth Shaker that basically destroys all of Los Angeles, yet her home is spared (the reader discovers later in the book why). With her wits, a little help from Homer, and butterflies, Pen set out on a quest to find her family swept away by a tsunami. She quickly notices a parallel between her journey and that of Odysseus's, so she uses The Odyssey as a guide as she faces: giants that caused the Earth Shaker, lotus eaters at the Culver Hotel, a Circe-like witch, and very creepy Beverly Hills sirens.
Allegory aside, this is the tale of four young people with magical abilities trying to not only navigate a post-apocalyptic world, but to develop self-acceptance none had before the Earth Shaker. This story is a great companion for older teens as they read The Odyssey. Block has written a sequel, The Island of Excess Love. In this installment, Pen relies on Virgil’s epic Aeneid as her guide. This is on my To Be Read List.
How's your summer reading so far? Link-up and share!