Review: Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay

Under Heaven

This was a really different tale than I typically read. Set in what is a fantasy-version of Medieval China, it follows the lives of a number different people who have a huge impact on the course of the empire. The tale starts with Shen Dai who is spending his official mourning period following the death of his father at the site of his father’s worst memory, a battle field at the edge of the empire which was so devastating that many of the slain weren’t even able to be buried. He spends the mourning period burying as many of the dead as he can. This ends up having tremendous consequences for him because he is honored for his work with a gift of 200 of the strongest and most beautiful horses. This is cause for some alarm. He’ll probably be killed for these horses. So, he has to figure out how to navigate the world he’s been out of for two years without getting killed.

Meanwhile, his lover in the capitol has been taken as a concubine by a rival. That rival has moved up in the Palace ranks and is a hugely influential adviser to the king and his brother is that rival’s most trusted adviser. Additionally, his sister has been raised to a princess and has been sent to marry a border tribe leader to cement a treaty.

And, that’s not even half of it. The story follows the lives of Shen Dai, the rival, his brother, his sister, the concubine, an assassin, the heir to the throne, army leaders, border leaders and outcasts and the Emperor’s favorite wife. All of these threads weave in and out of each other in a personal tale about a crisis within the whole empire.

This was an immensely fun listen and I am happy to have read it. Although, it is full of an incredible amount of detail so I ended up listening to some parts of it more than once. (As it turns out, when it snows heavily during your evening commute, you have a lot of time for listening and re-listening to audio books.) If you’re looking for a break from teen romance, I recommend this!

Review: All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr

Featured imageThis is a beautiful book.It really is.  I guess that should be surprised since it has got nothing but good reviews all over the place. It was all *THE* book of the holiday season, as my bookstore I worked at kept running out of it.  Despite all of this, I really didn’t have much of an interest in reading it. It doesn’t fall into my normal fantasy/teen genres but it was the pick of my friend Katy’s book club so I read, I did.  I’m glad I did because it’s beautiful.

It’s about Marie-Laure, a blind French girl and Werner, a German orphan.  That first sounded a little cheesy at first, especially when since the narratives goes back in forth with their childhoods before World War Two and the lives during the war but it isn’t cheesy.  Their stories are intertwined as we watch them grow and at time mirroring each others experiences. In between their stories is the Heart of Flames, a diamond that is housed in the Natural History Museum in France, where Marie-Laure works. The diamond has a curse, the owner will liver forever but their love ones will end in tragedy.  As the Germans take over Paris, the museum intrusts the diamond with her father for safe keeping.  Soon a German Major Sargent, who’s job is to find treasures the the Third Reich becomes obsessed with the Diamond and tries to track it down.

I’ll try my best to spoil but there may be some spoilers behind the cut. Continue reading

Oh My God! This is Huge!

Featured imageAnyone who ever went to high school in the United States and maybe outside the US has read To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee.  It’s considered an American Lit classic and despite it’s success it’s Miss Lee’s only book.  That is until now.  HarperCollins today announced that Miss Lee will publish her first her book in over 50 years Like OMG!  This is amazing.  Not only is it a new book but it’s a sequel. Go Set a Watchmen follows an Adult Scout as she comes cack to Maycomb, Alambama.

The book is set during the mid-1950s, some 20 years after To Kill a Mockingbird. Scout (Jean Louise Finch) has returned to Maycomb from New York to visit her father Atticus and is forced to grapple with issues both personal and political as she tries to understand both her father’s attitude toward society, and her own feelings about the place where she was born and spent her childhood

This is awesome!  It turns out that Go Set a Watchmen is actually Miss Lee’s first book.  When she showed it to her editor, the editor said she should write about a young Scout, so she wrote To Kill a Mockingbird instead.  She thought the manuscript was other destroyed or lost.  Surprise! It was not.

Well it might not be all good news.  HarperCollins only has contact with Miss Lee through her Lawyer and Literary Agent so there are questions about whether Miss Lee has really signed off on this.  It would be sad if that was true and I hope that it is not true.  I’m not sure if this is good or not but for now I am going to be excited about the new release and will wait patiently for July 14.

From Another Perspective: Five Novels and One Play about Supporting Characters in Our Favorite Stories

Earlier this week Beth asked what if our favorite stories were told to us from another perspective. Whose perspective and what stories would we like to hear again? Turning a tale on its ear is a pretty popular literary theme, so with the help of some discussion (both on and offline!), I’ve come up with this list of stories from a supporting character’s perspective.

Gertrude and Claudius

This was suggested by a friend and now that I know it exists I can’t wait to read it. Updike has said, “[he]sought to narrate the romance that preceded the tragedy.” This a prequel that tells us what was happening in Denmark prior to the arrival of the ghost-seeing Prince. Context is everything.

Wicked

Ah, the novel that everyone has been singing for a decade. This is the tale of The Wizard of Oz told from the perspective of the witch. In all honesty, I’ve not read this one. Or, seen the musical. But, I do know this: When we tell stories about “good” and “evil” we are make assumptions about what “good” and “evil” actually are. We know that Dorothy sees the Wicked Witch of the West as evil, but how can we know that Dorothy is telling us the whole story?

Lamb

This is the first novel on this list that takes a new perspective on the bible. We know a lot about the infancy of Jesus (stables, running from Client Kings, Wise men, etc) and we know a lot about the lead up to the crucifixion (fishing for men, flipping tables and beating money lenders, getting arrested, etc) but what do we know about the intervening years? The ones that aren’t really discussed in the new testament? Well, this novel attempts to fill that in providing tales from those missing years from the perspective of Jesus’s childhood friend Biff. Basically everything you need to know about this book is in this phrase: Jesus’s childhood friend Biff.

I’m not a fan of Jane Eyre, I’ll just admit to that now. I think Jane is kinda boring and Rochester is a horrible and stuffy human being. (Sometimes, it’s tough to say which of those is his biggest flaws.) But, my dislike of Rochester boils down to one key fact: Dude keeps a woman in his attic. Wide Sargasso Sea tells the story of Antoinette Cosway, the woman who will eventually become that woman in Rochester’s attic. Set in the Caribbean and drawing on the childhood memory of the author this tale attempts to give the Crazy lady in the attic a little more dimension.

The Red Tent

This is the tale of Dinah and it takes a look at ancient womanhood by exploring the lives of women referenced in the book of Genesis. Everybody knows the stories of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. But, what do we know about their wives and daughters (aside from who they married and who they birthed)? This is an interesting take on a religious text.

I hesitated to include this because I’ve already included Gertrude and Claudius but it is too enjoyable to give it a pass. This is the entire tale told in Hamlet from the perspective of two minor (and utterly bewildered) characters. Of course, we know from having seen Hamlet that this will all end in tragedy, but there’s a lot of comedy on the way to those two open graves.

Midnight Sun by Stephenie Meyer

Twilight came up in the comments so I felt that this needed to be mentioned. Stephenie Meyer posted a partial draft of the first part of Twilight from Edward’s perspective. I have such mixed feelings about these books that it is hard to comment on them. But, this one is up online for free, so that might be a point in its favor.

Do you have a favorite book that re-tells a tale from the perspective of another character? We’d love to hear about it in the comments!