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Book Backlog Round Two: Grown Up Reads

I hate to say adult books…..it sounds so dirty!  Anyway, I finally managed to find time to briefly review the adult fiction/non-fiction I’ve been reading.  I still have quite a few more to review and I am working on gathering my thoughts on yoga competition this year.  More to come soon!

15994634Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald, by Therese Ann Fowler:  This moving novel follows the life of Zelda Fitzgerald, wife of F. Scott Fitzgerald, as she goes from southern belle to high New York, European society girl.  The Fitzgerald’s marriage had it’s ups and downs (to put it nicely), and that alone makes for an interesting subject, but adding in the artists, writers, painters and poets with whom they spent their time in France, Italy and New York add so much interest and history to the novel.  While it is fictionalized, the writer clearly did her research and felt a need to share Zelda’s unique voice.  Zelda was spirited, but also intellectual.  She was a writer, painter and ballet dancer in her own right.  I listened to this on audio, and the reader did a wonderful job of capturing Zelda’s Alabama accent as well as the European accents of their friends.  The novel is beautiful, moving and heartbreaking.
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16103129Apocalypse Z: The Beginning of the End, by Manel Loureiro: Zombies!  A strange occurrence in Russia, leads to quarantines, and media blackouts.  Soon, reports of strange illnesses and behaviors filter out from places that have had contact from Russia.  The situation gradually becomes worse and news reports become stranger, scarier, and violent.  Watching and recording this from the safety of his home is our narrator, a young lawyer grieving his wife’s death, accompanied by his faithful feline Lucullus (I love a hero who loves a cat…).  At first he blogs about the situation, but as the world and society deteriorate, he switches to a journal.  He records the events of his inevitable escape from his house and the survivors and horrors he finds afterward.

  I get excited about every zombie book I pick up, and Apocalypse Z did not disappoint.  The book never wants for dull moments, Loureiro jumps right in, sets the stage, introduces thecharacters and gets the action moving.  Granted, there were a lot of factors in our narrator’s life that were really quite convenient for surviving the apocalypse, but I can let that go because I he was well developed as a character.  Originally published in Spanish, this is a translation, but the translation is smooth (the last couple translated books I read were a bit clunky, so it’s always worth noting).  It had action and gore, but without that feel of gore overload.  Most important, it had heart to accompany the strong, brisk moving plot.  This was a really great zombie adventure, a must read for fans of the genre.
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Will I Read the Sequel? Absolutely!
Bonus Points for Cat Loyalty!Army_Cat_by_crazyhobo

16087840Night Terrors: Sex, Dating, Puberty and Other Alarming Things, by Ashley Cardiff:  All topics mentioned in the title are very alarming things, and Cardiff handles them with honesty, humor and wit.  She discusses the dreaded, meeting of parents, where, in her case, she found constant judgement and comparison.  Public hair, or lack thereof, meeting creepers in bars, and other entertaining stories and anecdotes I can see being told on a girls night out – with the right girls.  She captures the awkwardness of dating and relationships, and everything else they entail, while offering wit, snark and opinion.  This isn’t a book of rants and stories, Cardiff offers a little more and digs a little deeper, offering insights and thoughts that only come through hindsight and reflection.
Interesting, humorous and thoughtful collection of essays that make for an enjoyable read.  Towards the end I was getting ready for things to wrap up, there was a little bit of tedium and repetition, but not enough to detract from the overall book.

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10767466Hark! A Vagrant!, by Kate Beaton:  This graphic novel has been on my list for ages, and after many library checkouts and returns, I finally checked it out and read it.  As usual in cases like this, my first thought was, “Why did I wait so long?”  Hark is fun comic romp through history and literature, along with Beaton’s own characters along for the ride.  The entire book isn’t a continuous story; some stories are spread over multiple pages, others only a strip or two.  However, this still feels like a book, rather than a collection.  It feels full and cohesive, with the added bonus of being able to read a strip, fold some laundry, come back read another couple pages, then load the dishwasher.  Beaton’s illustrations are charming and delightful and the stories are goofy, fun and smart.  Absolutely fantastic.

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17258657Beautifully Unique Sparkleponies, by Chris Kluwe: Another essay collection, this time by Chris Kluwe, punter in the NFL.  Kluwe’s essays range from gay rights, to time travel, the Pope and Twitter, the second Amendment, and anything and everything in between.  His essays are funny, articulate and passionate, with some profanity sprinkled in just to keep things entertaining.  Since I agree, for the most part, with his opinions, I found most of his essays entertaining and agreeable.  Those who don’t agree, will, with an open mind, be entertained and hopefully informed, because, Kluwe comes across as well informed and read in topics he is passionate about.  Like Night Terrors, I did wish the book was a little shorter, because the essays did become a bit repetitive after a while, but perhaps it felt that way because I’ve been reading lots of essay books lately.  Also, as others have noted, it is quite refreshing to see a football player in a different and positive light.
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