Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Breaking Stalin's Nose - Review

Title: Breaking Stalin's Nose
Author: Eugene Velchin
Setting: Russia in the 1960s
Source: My library



Goodreads  Summary:

Sasha Zaichik has known the laws of the Soviet Young Pioneers since the age of six:
The Young Pioneer is devoted to Comrade Stalin, the Communist Party, and Communism.

A Young Pioneer is a reliable comrade and always acts according to conscience.
A Young Pioneer has a right to criticize shortcomings.
But now that it is finally time to join the Young Pioneers, the day Sasha has awaited for so long, everything seems to go awry. He breaks a classmate's glasses with a snowball. He accidentally damages a bust of Stalin in the school hallway.  And worst of all, his father, the best Communist he knows, was arrested just last night.

This moving story of a ten-year-old boy's world shattering is masterful in its simplicity, powerful in its message, and heartbreaking in its plausibility.

My thoughts:

Powerful.  Heartbreaking.  These are the perfect words to describe this book.

When I was in college, I fell in love with learning about Russia. I took Russian for a semester, and I wish I had stuck it out (long story I am sure you don’t want to hear).  My dad had just gotten back from visiting Russia with the high school he was the principal of, and was hosting a teacher from the school they had visited. My dad had so many stories, and so did she. I had a million questions for her, but only felt comfortable asking her one, very unimportant question.  But these events began my lifelong interest in the country and its history.  I continued to take classes having to do with it, every Russian history class I could find.  I remember learning about Stalin, and what a terror he was to his country. During Stalin’s reign, 20 million people were exiled, imprisoned, or killed.

The story begins with Sasha at home, in his communal apartment, or kommunalka, waiting for his father to come home. He is writing a letter to Stalin, telling the leader how he, Sasha, is excited to become a Young Pioneer, which was the Communist version of the Boy Scouts. In his letter, Sasha proclaims how lucky he is to be growing up in the Soviet Union, because he is happy, and he knows that children in capitalist countries may not ever realize their dreams – he later in the chapter says that children in capitalist countries may never even have had a carrot, his favorite treat! Sasha also says that the “Soviet Union is the most democratic and progressive country in the world.” Sasha just wants to grow up to be a great Communist, like his father, a hero. 

Click image for original site


 When his father gets home, things start to go south, and quick.  His father is arrested, and the apartment that Sasha and his father shared is quickly taken over by a family in his kommunalka, leaving Sasha homeless.  Sasha can’t believe this has transpired, realizes that this must be a mistake, and that Stalin will free his father as soon as he hears about the error. The book continues with the next day of Sasha’s life, who goes to school the next day as if nothing has happened, because in his mind, it is something that will soon be remedied.

The reader knows what is going on, although Sasha doesn’t, being the good communist that he is, a true believer. My heart broke for him, as situation after situation came up, and you definitely see how things just snowballed.  If you didn’t suspect someone of spying, and couldn’t say without a doubt that they were loyal communists, you must name them as possible traitors, or be labeled a traitor yourself.  Events unravel and keep unraveling for Sasha. I wasn’t sure almost to the very end, how Velchin was going to finish the story.

Velchin references a satirical story by Gogol, entitled “The Nose”, where a nose leaves an officer’s face and goes to live a life of his own.  Sasha overhears a slightly subversive substitute teacher, Luzhko, talking about “The Nose.” He says:
‘What ‘The Nose’ so vividly demonstrates to us today,’ says Luzhko, ‘is that when we blindly believe in someone’s idea of what is right or wrong for us as individuals, sooner or later our refusal to make our own choices could lead to the collapse of the entire political system.’ ”
Later Sasha has a Kafkaesque experience of his own, where a nose smokes and speaks to him, telling him some ugly truths. 

Breaking Stalin’s Nose shows us how anything at all can look good, especially in the eyes of a child. The same could be said of our own country, where we preach the superiority of capitalism and democracy.  What is important is to remember to think for yourself.

If you would like to know more about this book, and the places and events within it, visit Eugene Velchin's site dedicated to the book.



Read and Reviewed as part of the European Reading Challenge. 







And if you haven't already, enter to win a hardcover copy of The Call of the Wild by Jack London in my Literary Blog Hop Giveaway




Sunday, February 10, 2013

It's Monday, What Are You Reading?





It's Monday, What Are You Reading is a weekly blog meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journey where you list the books you read last week and the ones you hope to read this week. 


                                                                Reading Last Week:



Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor: I loved this! Very fun book.

Breaking Stalin's Nose by Eugen Velchin:  I spent a lot of time reading recent Caldecott and Newbery Winners for work last week, and Breaking Stalin's Nose was one of them. It was amazing.

Reading This Week:


Sideways on a Scooter by Miranda Kennedy:  I love memoir books.

Days of Blood and Starlight by Laini Taylor: I loved this first, now its time for the second.

Winter Town by Stephen Emond: I am still plugging away at this one - its not really interesting to me, but I want to finish it.

Coming up this week:

Tuesday: Top Ten Tuesday and review of Breaking Stalin's Nose 
Wednesday: Review of Daughter of Smoke and Bone
Thursday: Review -of Caldecott and Newbery 2011-2012 


And if you haven't already, enter to win a hardcover copy of The Call of the Wild by Jack London in my Literary Blog Hop Giveaway






Horns - Review

Title: Horns
Author: Joe Hill
Source: Library

Goodreads Summary:

At first Ig thought the horns were a hallucination, the product of a mind damaged by rage and grief. He had spent the last year in a lonely, private purgatory, following the death of his beloved, Merrin Williams, who was raped and murdered under inexplicable circumstances. A mental breakdown would have been the most natural thing in the world. But there was nothing natural about the horns, which were all too real.

Once the righteous Ig had enjoyed the life of the blessed: born into privilege, the second son of a renowned musician and younger brother of a rising late-night TV star, he had security, wealth, and a place in his community. Ig had it all, and more—he had Merrin and a love founded on shared daydreams, mutual daring, and unlikely midsummer magic.

But Merrin’s death damned all that. The only suspect in the crime, Ig was never charged or tried. And he was never cleared. In the court of public opinion in Gideon, New Hampshire, Ig is and always will be guilty because his rich and connected parents pulled strings to make the investigation go away. Nothing Ig can do, nothing he can say, matters. Everyone, it seems, including God, has abandoned him. Everyone, that is, but the devil inside. . . .

Now Ig is possessed of a terrible new power to go with his terrible new look—a macabre talent he intends to use to find the monster who killed Merrin and destroyed his life. Being good and praying for the best got him nowhere. It’s time for a little revenge. . . . It’s time the devil had his due. . . .


My thoughts:

I loved it!  I am such a little horror freak.  I have loved Stephen Kings books since sixth grade, and I have never stopped enjoying them.  I didn't want to read this book and think the whole time how Joe Hill is Stephen King's son - I didn't want to compare like that, it seems unfair.  I was able to forget that fact most of the book, with the exception of a few times, when you could just tell he is the King's son.  

Ig's story is a sad one - the girl he loved for most of his life is brutally raped and killed. And he is the main suspect.  Ig had always been a good boy. He was the kid who followed his parent's orders, never caused trouble, was a good Christian who went to church and prayed, and believed in the good in everyone.  After Merrin's death however, he was no longer the golden child around town - people kept their feelings to themselves, but inwardly, they resented and reviled Ig, thinking that he had gotten away with murder. And if Ig was the town's golden boy, Merrin was their golden girl.  

When Ig suddenly wakes up with horns and new powers, he learns truths that had been buried inside people, the things they keep to themselves.  And he learns what really happened the night Merrin was killed. 

This book is not all sadness and horror - there is some levity to the story, although there are two scenes that really bothered me.  One I had to even skip a few pages past. There was a reference to Bangor, Maine, and a reference to Carrie.  And there are a few sentences that to me, smacked so much of King. Ig is talking to his current girlfriend Glenna. He is telling her to leave the town, change her life, make something of herself.  And then Ig says "Go on now, Glenna. Rearview mirror. " I just sounds to me so King-like, perhaps he helped Joe craft it. 

I only had one question that I felt never was resolved enough for me- why did Ig develop these powers and horns in the first place?

I loved this book - I think Hill took this genre by the horns, the very genre his father is master of, and proved himself to be an outstanding author in his own right. 






Don't forget to enter my giveaway, part of the Literary Blog Hop! You could win a hardcover copy of Call of the Wild by Jack London. 

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Literary Blog Hop!!


Literary Giveaway Blog Hop

Welcome!



Welcome to the Literary Giveaway Blog Hop!
The Literary Giveaway Blog Hop is hosted by Leeswammes. Between now and Wednesday, February 13th, you can hop to 40 different book blogs, all offering one or more giveaways of books or bookish items. All books will be literary (non)fiction or something close to that. Follow the links at the bottom of this post to find the other participating blogs.

My Giveaway: For the blog hop I will be giving away a copy of Call of the Wild by Jack London.  All this winter weather and snowstorm after snowstorm makes me feel like reading London, and maybe even a little wild myself! I hope you are interested in reading him as well.


Entries are open worldwide as long as The Book Depository delivers to you.  You can find other blogs participating in the linky below. 








To Enter:

1. You need to live somewhere The Book Depository delivers.
2.  You don't need a blog, just an email.
3.  Enter via Rafflecopter below.
4.  Contest is open until Feb. 13th.
5.  I will notify the winner by email, so make sure to comment and leave your email address! Winner must respond in three days, or I will pick another winner.
6. That's it! Good luck!!








Participating blogs!

Linky List:

  1. Leeswammes
  2. The Book Garden
  3. Sam Still Reading
  4. Candle Beam Book Blog
  5. Ciska's Book Chest
  6. Too Fond
  7. Alex in Leeds
  8. Under a Gray Sky
  9. Bibliosue
  10. The Book Club Blog
  11. Fingers & Prose
  12. Lori Howell
  13. Rikki's Teleidoscope
  14. Girl vs Bookshelf
  15. Lizzy's Literary Life (Europe)
  16. Booklover Book Reviews
  17. The Blog of Litwits
  18. Reading World (USA/Can)
  19. Seaside Book Nook
  20. Curiosity Killed the Bookworm
  21. The Book Diva's Reads
  22. Breieninpeking (Europe)
  23. 2606 Books and Counting
  24. Giraffe Days
  25. Lucybird's Book Blog

  1. Roof Beam Reader
  2. The Relentless Reader
  3. Read in a Single Sitting
  4. My Diary (Malaysia)
  5. Heavenali
  6. Dolce Belezza (USA)
  7. The Misfortune of Knowing
  8. My Devotional Thoughts
  9. Nishita's Rants and Raves
  10. Book Nympho
  11. Kaggsysbookishramblings
  12. Quixotic Magpie
  13. Lost Generation Reader
  14. BookBelle
  15. Under My Apple Tree (USA)
  16. Mondays with Mac
  17. Page Plucker









Friday, February 8, 2013

January Book Club 2.0

Hostess: Alyssa
Book: Horns by Joe Hill
Food:  Crepes, cranberry couscous, King Cake
Month: January
Wine of the Night: Bric de Bersan



Entering Alyssa's house is kind of magical -when you walk in, you are greeted with a profusion of art and cats and puppies and Alyssa's own little imps.  There is always something on the stove top, ready for you to eat.  Last night we all trooped in, and pulled our chairs up to the table, pouring wine all around. (well, into glasses)  We chatted a bit about what was going on in our lives, especially Kelly's upcoming trip to London and what she can bring us all back as souvenirs. Lol. 

After a bit, Alyssa got up and made us our crepes. I love crepes, I could eat them everyday, they are so yummy yummy.  She served them with a side of cranberry couscous, and we all gobbled them down pretty quickly.  The pièce de résistance, however, was the King Cake directly from New Orleans.  Despite having visited New Orleans many times, I have never had King Cake, which is a Mardi Gras tradition.  Alyssa told us that growing up in New Orleans, she and her classmates would take turns bringing in a king cake - everyday! King Cakes have a plastic baby baked inside. If you get the piece with the baby, it is your turn to host the next party. Chrissy and Kelly were super paranoid about this, they thought they were either going to chip a tooth or hack to death on it. Kelly ended up having the piece with the baby, and thank goodness she neither chipped a tooth nor did she choke.  




This time around, mostly everyone had read the book, and loved it!  Alyssa, Chrissy and Mary all had quotes from it that they really enjoyed.  We talked about the meaning of different things, what we liked and didn't like- it was great! (My review of Horns will be up either later tonight or tomorrow morning.)  

Alyssa wasn't able to make the December book club and gift exchange, so we got our handmade gift last night.  They are so cute and clever and I love mine!  Her 7 yr. old daughter painted portraits of one of each of our cats. She did a wonderful job!  I am pretty sure this is a portrait of my cat Miso, my only cat with blue eyes.



We all had a great time last night, although we missed Jennifer who was ill, and Jill, who had to work.  Jill has been so busy between school and work that she has missed the last couple of book clubs, so I pulled up a picture of her on my phone so everyone could remember what she looks like. Hopefully she can make our next book club, at the end of this month.  We are reading Blankets, my choice.  

  

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Top Ten Tuesdays - Bookish Memories

 


Today's Top Ten Tuesday is Bookish Memories



1.  Visiting the library when I was little: This is probably one of my earliest bookish memories.  My mom and I went to the library constantly. In the summer, my mom would ride her bike with me on the back, until I was old enough to ride a bike myself.  We would go to the park afterwards and eat a lunch and look through our books. Once we took a bus there because I was obsessed with buses and really wanted to ride one. The library is the same one I still go to, and up until last year, the librarian was the same librarian.

2.  Reading in my yard in a tent: When I was little, my parents set up a tent one summer that I read in everyday.  I felt very cool and adventurous. That was also the year I read Harriet the Spy, which inspired me to carry a notebook with me everywhere for a while, writing down my observations.

3.  Attending a writing workshop given by Connie May Fowler:  My dad and I are huge fans of Ms. Fowler, and when we saw she was holding a small writing workshop in St. Augustine a couple of years ago, we of course had to sign up. I flew out alone from Detroit and met my dad in Orlando, and we drove from there to St. Augustine.  The workshop was about ten people and Connie May, in a living room at a beach house. It was awesome.  Everyone else seemed to be a serious writer, in the process of writing a book already - except my dad and I.  Regardless, it was an amazing experience, and I learned a lot in case I ever do write a novel. The best part was eating lunch, just hanging out with Ms. Fowler and her husband and the rest of the group, in the beach house kitchen and balcony, looking out at the Atlantic.  I also had my favorite book by her, Remembering Blue, signed.

4.  Starting my book club:  Book club meetings are one of my favorite days a month. Nerdy I know, but it is always fun.  We try to encourage reading out of our comfort zones.  We also spend a lot of time catching up on each others lives.  

5.  The first time I read Prince of Tides: This was before the movie that we will not talk about. I read this when I was in high school, and I faked being sick so I could stay home and finish it.  I cried my eyes out, but it was love at first sight for me and Conroy's books.

6.  Starting my book blog: I have really enjoyed blogging - it is awesome to see what other people are reading and talk about books. I enjoy this community of big time readers like me. I am not always the most consistent blogger, but that is my goal for the year.

7.  Meeting Kim Harrison:  This was such a fun night.

8.   Meeting Jonathan Rand: The school librarian and I arranged for Rand to speak to our students.  He was very cool to talk to behind the scenes, very down to earth and interesting.

9.  Getting my husband to read, and like it:  My husband is dyslexic, and always hated reading. Reading is such a huge part of my life, and when were dating, I really wanted him to love it as much as I do.  I began by reading books out loud to him - the first book was Bag of Bones, and he loved it.  It was kind of a neat thing, to spend time reading together.  After reading a few more though, I started reading Harry Potter to him. And stopped. Before finishing. He wanted to know what happened and wanted me to read more - I said no, if he wanted to know, he had to read it. So he did, and since then he has become a reader who reads everyday.

10.  Seeing an advanced screening of The Hunger Games: This was amazing. My sister-in-law received free passes to an advanced showing of The Hunger Games from Barnes and Noble, something having to do with a Nook. Seating was by bracelet color, and we had the color to enter the theater first. We waltzed in ahead of everyone, picked the best seats, and minutes later the movie was playing. Everyone there was serious about watching, and there were no people talking, getting up, anything. There weren't even any previews. It was super fun.



Sunday, February 3, 2013

It's Monday, What Are You Reading?




It's Monday, What Are You Reading is a weekly blog meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journey where you list the books you read last week and the ones you hope to read this week. 


Read Last Week:

I had total reading A.D.D. last week - twelve of my library holds came in, and I kept hopping around from book to book. I couldn't make up mind about which one I wanted to read.  I am going to focus this week for sure!  We also hosted a dinner party on Saturday that consumed much of my time as well.  I am pretty sure I might blog about it as well this week. 


Horns by Joe Hill: Our book club book for January. My review will be up after Thursday, along with a book club recap post. 


Reading this week:


Radio Shangri-La by Lisa Napoli: I love this kind of memoir. Not so much Eat Pray Love, but most memoirs like this. 

Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor: I keep reading about how good this series is, so I am going to try it out.

Winter Town by Stephen Emond: I read a bit of this last week, I plan to finish it this week.