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Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

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Book Review- Rachel DeWoskin's Big Girl Small

Rachel DeWoskin's Big Girl Small was a case of picking a book by it's cover. I saw it sitting on the shelf at Vroman's Bookstore and without reading the synopsis, I took a leap of faith and bought it.

The central character of the story is Judy Lohden, a high school student at a local Arts high school. Judy's high school was nearly identical to arts high school that I graduated from in the mid 90's. DeWoskin even had a character that had the same name as one of the teachers at my high school, Gary Sorensen. Unbelievably, when I read DeWoskin's author bio, she had not attended my school, but an arts school in a different state. The similarities are staggering.

Besides her incredible singing voice, Judy is also set apart from the crowd by her diminutive stature. She is a little person struggling to not only prove herself via her talent, but fit in with her peers. Judy is a great character, funny and imperfect. DeWoskin did a great job at writing Judy as an ordinary teenager. Judy's struggles are not over-sentimentalized and the character (also being the narrative voice) never asks to be pitied. This makes it easy to love her and to root for her to win, even when she is making terrible choices. This book is filled with cringe worthy moments.

All of the characters in the book feel very organic. So much so, that it often feels slice of life and is paced a bit slow, especially in the final third of the story. This is my only criticism.

Overall, I very much enjoyed the story and the characters. I am excited to read more stories by this author.

tags: Book Review, Rachel DeWoskin, Big Girl Small, Arts High
categories: Book Review, Read
Thursday 07.26.12
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review- Jen Lancaster's If You Were Here

if you were here.jpg

I have a lot of love for Jen Lancaster as an author and I think that's what has bumped this review to three stars. Lancaster always makes me laugh and when I read her books, I feel like I am hearing a close friend spill about their life. She has a great way of bonding with readers, drawing me in and making me feel like I am a friend. As a writer, I think that this is a wonderful skill and something that a lot of other writers are unable to accomplish.

If You Were Here marks Lancaster's departure from non-fiction, a story about a couple who buy the house used for the character Jake Ryan in the John Hughes classic "Sixteen Candles." The house ends up being a complete renovation nightmare and surrounded by bitter neighbors who didn't want the house sold in the first place. The couple quickly go from bliss to homeowner hell.

As a long time fan of Lancaster's non-fiction books, I had a difficult time separating the two main characters of Mia and Mac from Lancaster and her husband, Fletch. Mia and Mac were just so similar in tone to the way Lancaster has always portrayed her husband and herself. I felt like Lancaster had always wanted to buy the Jake Ryan house, so she inserted herself/her own personality in a fictional scenario. Even though I love Lancaster, I wanted different characters for this story.

Also, with the notable exception of "Ferris Bueller's Day Off", I am not a John Hughes fan. I don't at all relate to his movies and they in no way resemble my teen years. I know that his is a huge icon for many people my age, but I just don't get his movies. This immediately made it difficult for me to relate to the character of Mia in the story and I feel that this was a significant reason for my feeling distant.

tags: Jen Lancaster, Jake Ryan, If You Were Here, John Hughes
categories: Book Review, Read
Tuesday 07.17.12
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review- Jessie Knadler's Rurally Screwed

If you have started Jessie Knadler's Rurally Screwed and have doubts, keep going, it's worth it. The first quarter of the book is slow and even though I am a city girl, I couldn't relate to Knadler. Her behavior and attitude were both irritating. It really wasn't until after she married her cowboy and moved to the country that I began to really like her. By the end of the book, I totally fell in love with Knadler and her family.

This isn't a relationship advice book, but it has a lot of solid advice. At it's core, this is a book about identity and how we perceive ourselves. Knadler wrestles with identifying herself as a city girl and trying to convert to a country girl when she marries. While living in the country, she tries a whole host of activities to acclimate (learning to sew, attending bible study, slaughtering chickens) and eventually has a break down as she feels that she is trying to conform to something that she is not. She often mentions trying to live an "Authentic Life". Knadler is not the only person in the book doing it, nearly everyone is also trying to create what they are supposed to be, through clothes, actions, living situations...all of the time, everywhere, people are busy creating their image of what they feel their life should be. In the meantime, life is happening. All of the effort to "be yourself" is meaningless, because yourself is your day to day and the people that surround you. It's not what you want it to be, but what you already have and it doesn't need to fit into a box. I like how Knadler found an understanding with the women in her bible group, rather than writing them off as being too different to be her friends.

The love letters in the book are beyond sweet. Even though it's bumpy, it's hard not to be envious of the life that Knadler and her cowboy have carved out for themselves.

Great book title, it's what caught my attention in the first place.

tags: Rurally Screwed, Jessie Knadler, Book Review
categories: Book Review, Read
Tuesday 07.10.12
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 
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