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Book Review - David Kukoff's Children of the Canyon

PLOT- David Kukoff's Children of the Canyon, is a coming of age story set in the Laurel Canyon neighborhood of Los Angeles during the 1960's and 70's. David, a bright student with aspirations of being a physicist, must first survive adolescence. His divorced parents are a mess, too wrapped up in their own lives to worry about their son. His father, Phil, is a music producer and alcoholic. Carole, his mom, is always on a quest for self-discovery, which ranges from living in an ashram to marrying a republican businessman. David is basically screwed when it comes to decent role models, making growing up; navigation friendships and discovering girls, a very scary proposition. 

LIKE - As I sit here in the rainy Pacific Northwest, feeling homesick, I'm desperate for anything that will transport me back to my beloved Los Angeles. In Children of the Canyon, Kukoff has turned the city of Los Angeles, in particular Laurel Canyon, into a distinct character. This story is so rooted in place, that it couldn't exist anywhere else. 

After his story, Kukoff has included a series of interviews with local California authors or authors that write about the city. The interviews explore what it means to write about California, especially Los Angeles. These interviews were so insightful and interesting, that I could have read an entire book comprised of them. It was a wonderful bonus that worked with the themes in, Children of the Canyon. 

I like stories that take me out of my comfort zone, stories that are dramatically different from my own life, Children of the Canyon, fits the bill. Experiencing David trying to fit in, is cringe worthy. Surprisingly, it was even more so, when he is attempting to bond with male friends, than it was when he is navigating relationships with girls. As a female reader, I found that refreshing, "the teenage boy awkward around girls" is a bit of a cliche. This isn't to say that David has girls all figured out, he doesn't, just that relationships as a whole are elusive to him. He is an only child, so there is no sibling support. As a fellow only child, I could relate to his sense of isolation and being the only person to understand his unique family dynamic. 

David also has trouble fitting into places. In Laurel Canyon, he is surrounded by musicians and the counter-culture element. He has a rough time relating to most of the boys who live on his street. The tenuous neighborhood friendships are strained further, when he is sent to a school for gifted children, where the other kids are odd-balls. When David moves into a master-planned community with his mom and step-father, he has a similar disconnect from the kids in this new neighborhood, which is taken further when he meets poor kids who live on the fringe of the community. The driving hope that I had for David during the entire novel, is that he would find his sense of place, both physically and emotionally. 

DISLIKE- This is going to sound silly, but there is an factual error in the story that drove me nuts. It's minor and I bet most readers wouldn't catch it, but it ripped me right out of the story.

Early in the book, David's mother takes him to Disneyland, and they have lunch at the Blue Bayou, a restaurant in New Orleans Square, in the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction. Carole has wine with lunch. Wine has never been served in the Blue Bayou. I'm a Disney fan, this jumped out at me. Also, as a Disney fan, this scene just felt under- developed. I understood where they were, but it wasn't well-rendered, making me wonder how well Kukoff knew this particular setting. Although this is minor, the problem is it distracted me for a good portion of the story, wondering what else was accurate, taking me out of the story world.

RECOMMEND- Yes. Children of the Canyon is an engaging story of finding ones place in the world. Kukoff has a strong literary voice, and if you love Los Angeles, this is a must. 

tags: Children of the Canyon, David Kukoff Author, David Kukoff Book Review, Children of the Canyon Book Review, Stories Set in Laurel Canyon, Novels Set in Los Angeles, Los Angeles 1970's, Music Scene Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles Authors, Los Angeles 1960's, Novels Coming of Age in Los Angeles, Stories About Only Children, Only Children Isolation, Blue Bayou Disneyland Alcohol, Does the Blue Bayou Serve Alcohol, Restaurant in Pirates of the Caribbean Disneyland
categories: Read
Friday 10.28.16
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review- Kyle Minor's Praying Drunk: Stories

PLOT- Kyle Minor's, Praying Drunk: Stories, is a collection of related tales on the topics of faith, death, and everything else in the universe. It's so much more than I can possibly summarize, so I'm going to stop and jump right into my thoughts.

LIKE- Minor issues an instruction at the start of his collection, the stories are intended to be read in order. Although, they have been previously published as solo works, this collection should be read as a novel. As someone who is excellent at following instructions and hates doing things out of order, I happily complied. What I didn't realize is the brilliance in which Minor has ordered his stories, creating layers of depth. 

For example, the reoccurring story of Danny, the nephew who commits suicide, a story that reoccurs at many points in the collection, giving the reader different angles on the same situation. In The Truth and All Its Ugly, the narrator is Danny's father, who admits his own culpability in Danny's death. The father is pill addict, passing along his addiction to Danny, teaching his son to snort pills. In future stories, we hear the scenario from Danny's uncle by marriage, as he sees the fall-out in the family, including attending Danny's very awkward funeral with a minister who uses a baking demonstration to explain the grieving process.

Praying Drunk: Stories, is an incredible collection, but the reoccurring stories of Danny made the biggest impression. I finished the book days ago and I can't stop thinking about it. I believe the reason that they made such an impression, is due to a mind trick that Minor plays with his readers.

His story called Q & A, is set up as a question and answer style interview, and it seems to be that Minor is answering as perhaps himself, or as the creator of a universe, which I took to be a God or maybe a writer (Minor), a god of their own universe of stories. This section guided how I read Minor's entire story collection - 

Q: On the cover of this book, it says "Fiction."

A: That's what people write when they want to get away with telling the truth. When they want to convince you of a lie, they dress up some facts and call it "Nonfiction." Either way, people from the past send angry emails. 

Does this mean that Danny was real? Did biscuits really get baked at a funeral? This seems too bizarre to be false. We are told this is Fiction, but this section in Q & A, blurs the lines. It's a very automatic human response to want to know if something is real or not, however, should that even matter to the reader? Whether or not Danny was real, this theme is clearly coming from something deep and personal.

Minor's is a gifted writer and I was left with a huge impression of Danny, making him feel very much a real person in my mind. I found this collection to be haunting, chilling, and affecting. It was impossible to put down and refused to leave my mind for days; it's still there. 

DISLIKE- Nothing. Just be prepared to be taken to dark places and to be affected. Sobbing may occur.

RECOMMEND- Praying Drunk: Stories, is a must-read. Set aside an afternoon with zero distractions and immerse yourself in Minor's world. Don't skip ahead! 

 

tags: Kyle Minor Author, Sarabande Books, Praying Drunk Stories Review, Praying Drunk Stories Kyle Minor, Chilling Short Stories, The Truth and All its Ugly Kyle Minor, Danny in Praying Drunk: Stories, Kyle Minor Q & A
categories: Read
Monday 10.24.16
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review - Stephanie Gangi's The Next

Thank You to St. Martin's Press for providing me with an advanced copy of Stephanie Gangi's novel, The Next, in exchange for an honest review.

PLOT - After a long battle with breast cancer, Joanna DeAngelis has just died, but unfortunately, she cannot rest in peace; Joanna has unfinished business. Before she can move on with her afterlife, she must return to earth in her ghostly body and make things right with her past. 

LIKE- The Next is part revenge story and part family drama. The revenge part is a fun ride, as Joanna's ghostly form becomes a physical energy for destruction aimed primarily at her much younger former lover, who abandoned her while she was dying and is now expecting a child with a gorgeous "celebrity-dermatologist". What woman wouldn't want revenge? The revenge is brutal, relentless, and highly imaginative. Gangi is adept at writing these fantasy elements and high action sequences.

I was caught off-guard by how much the mother-daughter relationship, especially with the sisters coming to terms with losing their mother, would affect me. Yes, I cried. Buckets. One of the reoccurring themes is how people see one other. Does anyone really see the true you? Toward the end of the story, Gangi has written several stunningly beautiful paragraphs about the moments that Joanna has imprinted in her memory regarding her daughters, how she sees and remembers them. It's got me in the heart. I can't imagine any mother reading this story not becoming inspired to write a similar letter to their children. 

I loved the dog and the idea of Joanna trying to keep hidden from her dog, who is able to see her ghost and goes nuts. The overall storyline for the dog ends in a beautiful way that will give animal lovers the warm fuzzies.

DISLIKE- The story was uneven and didn't really pick up steam until the last half. The first half, is very sluggish. If I hadn't been reading this for a review, I'm not sure that I would have continued reading. It took a long time for me to feel a connection to Joanna and her daughters.  They have tough exteriors, with the vulnerability hidden until much later in the novel. 

RECOMMEND- Maybe. There is much to enjoy in The Next, and Gangi proves that she is an affecting and gifted writer. She is an author that I will keep my eye on and will definitely read again, but this particular book, I'm on the fence about recommending.

On a side note, the publication date for The Next, is October 18th, which would have been my mom's seventy-seventh birthday. Reading The Next, brought up many memories of my mom, especially when she was ill with cancer and passed nearly nine years ago. Being an only child, I was a rather envious of the sisters in the story, but I also liked seeing them come closer together over a shared loss. I became very close to my aunt, my mom's only sibling, after my mom died. 

 

tags: The Next Stephanie Gangi Book Review, St. Martin's Press Stephanie Gangi, Stephanie Gangi Author, Joanna DeAngelis Character, Ghost Stories The Next, Stories About the After Life
categories: Read
Tuesday 10.18.16
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 
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