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Showing posts with label Goldfish Award Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goldfish Award Books. Show all posts

Monday, February 11, 2008

Locke 1928 by Shawna Yang Ryan


Sometimes a book draws you in like a lucid dream. You smell, hear, touch; you see everything before your eyes but printed words on a page. This was the journey I took in Locke 1928, guided by the masterful storytelling of Shawna Yang Ryan. The pages are filled with Chinese folklore, moving flashbacks, and a vivid attention to detail. The narrow streets lined with Old West-style wooden buildings harbor lost souls, broken dreams, and the possibility of ghosts. When three Chinese women float to shore on a dilapidated boat after having been adrift at sea for over a month, the men of the town line up to woo them. The madame of the local brothel begins having visions she takes as a warning. The pastor's wife, the only "whitewoman" in town who isn't a prostitute, takes two of the women under her wing, and it could be a big mistake.

Locke 1928 reveals a real town in the Sacramento Delta very few Americans have heard of. The first town in America built by the Chinese for the Chinese, the city of Locke still exists today, and looks much the same as when it was first built in 1915. I was fascinated by the pictures on the city's website because Locke looks just as Ryan portrayed it in her writing. In fact, Ryan's seven years of obvious hard work on this book gives it such realism it feels as if she walked in the shoes of each and every character herself.

Locke 1928 is breathtakingly haunting. I've ingested the characters and will carry them with me, and for this reason, I am giving Ryan's first novel the carp(e) libris Goldfish Award. A completely moving work worth reading, without a doubt. If you have a to-be-read list, this one must be placed at the top.

Published by El Leon Literary Arts.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

A Highly Placed Source by Michelle Dally


I've read some great books lately, and this next novel is certainly no exception. A Highly Placed Source by Michelle Dally was a fantastic read. John Irving-esque in style, it handles some pretty sensitive subject matter and pulls it off brilliantly. The story line is laugh-out-loud humor blended with sarcasm.

When I say this book is John Irving-esque, it is a high compliment indeed. I'm a longtime fan of all things Irving, and I think if he ever gets ahold of this book, he'll be jealous he didn't come up with the plot first. But don't be mistaken - Dally has her own unique voice, and it's very well developed. The characters are quirky and addictive, and the dialogue has great rhythm.

Here's the story line: Peter, a 12-year-old boy, asks God a question. A controversial question. Is it okay to - ahem - "wash the bird"? (If you don't know what that means, you'll have to read the book to find out. I am not going there.) God answers. When Peter's principal finds out, he suspends him for lying. In come the media, the politicians, the religious leaders. "A boy suspended for praying?" "A boy that hears directly from God?" And this, my friends, occurs in the first pages. The rest of the book gets even better, conquering the difficult topic of the difference between religion and spirituality.

Written in the omnipresent viewpoint (interesting, when one considers God is a major character), Dally pulls this trick off without a hitch. I've read omnipresent books that have you feeling like you're jumping all over, bounding in and out of the characters' heads. As a reader, I find it hard to attach to any one person in a book written in this style. But Dally does it so well, you might not even notice it's omnipresent. I personally can't imagine the book being written any other way.

Overall, I loved reading A Highly Placed Source. It's got humor, edge, controversy - and it makes you feel good. I finished the book wishing there were more, and I must say this is one reviewer who needed a tissue at the close. I'll be on the lookout for anything else coming from Michelle Dally, and I suggest you do the same.

I've decided to add a new twist to carp(e) libris, because I know some of you build lists of books to be read, and I'd like to help you out. For the books I review that really stand out, I'll be giving them the carp(e) libris Goldfish Award. You'll notice it under the picture of the book on the right. So here's to my first Goldfish Award! A Highly Placed Source, written by Michelle Dally and published by Ghost Road Press.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Boxing for Cuba by Guillermo Vincente Vidal


When I recently started carp(e) libris, I had a vision. I wanted to bring books to readers, unique pieces of literature hunted like gold from small presses who publish works as labors of love. I have found one of those books. Boxing for Cuba by Guillermo Vincente Vidal is exactly the kind of book I wanted to share when I began this blog. It's written courageously, from the heart, and in such an honest, strong style that I won't soon forget it.

Boxing for Cuba, published by Ghost Road Press, is the memoir of a man who left Cuba as a boy with Operation Peter Pan in 1961. Operation Peter Pan carried more than 14,000 Cuban children between the ages of 6 and 16 to America to save them from Fidel's regime. Unfortunately, with too few homes to accept all these children until their parents could hopefully someday join them, many, like Guillermo and his two brothers, ended up in orphanages. Through the pain and struggle of feeling abandoned when his parents sent him and his brothers away, to the reunion of his family only to find his mother and father fight just as viciously as before, Boxing for Cuba brings you an amazing memoir you won't be able to put down. The journey starts and ends with Cuba, taking you from the tropical home of Vidal and his family, to the U.S. where he grew to adulthood in Colorado, and finally circles back to an emotional visit to his homeland. It's a story of family history and of learning to be proud of who you are and where you come from. There's so much to be gleaned from this book, and anyone who reads it is sure to put it down feeling they've grown from it.

If ever a book gives the perfect example of why I adore the memoir, this is it.