Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

What Do I Read Next? My Faves: Every Day by David Levithan

Some novels grow on me over time. Some draw me in during the first few pages. Some have me at "Hello." The novel, Every Day, falls squarely into category number three. With one of the more intriguing premises I've ever heard, the story follows "A", a disembodied entity who wakes up in a new body every morning. He/she spends one day living as the invaded person, and one day only, before waking up in a fresh body the next morning. A doesn't have a past, just memories of the borrowed lives. How mysterious!

After sixteen years of inhabiting progressively older bodies, A has developed a code of survival. The rules are simple: don't get too attached to the host, don't do anything out of the ordinary, and leave no trace behind. All that changes the day he wakes up as sixteen-year-old Jason, and meets the boy's girlfriend, Rhiannon. The girl possesses a depth of character and vulnerability of spirit that immediately draws A to her. By evening, A reaches a fateful decision. A wants to be with Rhiannon for more than just one day. In fact, A wants to be with her every day thereafter. Unable to stay in Jason's body, A must find creative ways to be with Rhiannon no matter whose body he/she inhabits over the ensuing weeks. These attempts begin to expose his/her existence to others, and puts both A and Rhiannon in peril.

The strength of the story is A's description of the inhabited lives, and of the insight into the problems and flaws of the unsuspecting hosts. In full disclosure of my prudishness, I must confess that some of the romantic liaisons make me uncomfortable, particularly those of a homosexual or bisexual nature. This story is not for everyone! However, my discomfort forced me to look deeper at the characters of the novel - past the labels that I or society would place on them. There I found the tender souls of the characters so poetically described by the author, and that is what remained as I turned the last page.

I recommend this novel not just for the ingenious premise, but for the journey it promises the reader in terms of seeing through the eyes of many others.

Friday, December 9, 2011

What Should I Read Next? My Faves: The Graveyard Book

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman

No author possesses a more finely developed sense of dark and silky humor than does Neil Gaiman. In the telling of this story he is at his finest. The novel examines a simple but shivering pretext: what if an orphaned toddler were to be raised by the ghostly residents of a graveyard?

The child wanders into the graveyard after the murder of his parents, where the kindly but long deceased Owens family raises him. Under the protection of the graveyard and the watchful eye of Silas, who might be a member of the undead, the boy thrives. His unique circumstances expose him to a macabre world of death, ghouls, witches, and monsters, all of which he takes in stride. When his blissful, if unorthodox, existence is threatened by the return of his parents' murderers, the boy must use his unique accumulated knowledge to survive.

Mr. Gaiman tells the story with a pitch perfect mixture of dark humor, suspenseful mystery, and genuine emotion. This novel will leave you pondering the meaning of life and the nature of love as seen through the eyes of the dead.

One of my faves!