Thursday, January 31, 2013

Wildwood by Colin Meloy

Wildwood is the first volume in a children's fantasy adventure series by Decembrist lead singer Colin Meloy. Twelve-year-old Prue McKeel's baby brother is kidnapped by crows and she goes into the Impassable Wilderness next to her home in Portland, Oregon to rescue him. Inside, she finds a magical place at the brink of war.

At my YA book group last night, we talked about the way Wildwood pays homage to earlier novels, ballads and folklore such as Narnia, the Snow Queen, George MacDonald's work, The Dark Is Rising, Robin Hood and Yggdrasil. I liked that Wildwood features a plant more dangerous than Audrey in Little Shop of Horrors.

Wildwood is beautifully illustrated by Meloy's wife, Carson Ellis. There are about a dozen plates of artwork inside, some in full colour. See her art in this lovely book trailer (it's less than a minute long), and at the Wildwood Chronicles website, where you can find out more about the next books in the series.

I've handled the book, admiring the art, maps and deckle-edge pages, but chose to listen to the HarperCollins eAudiobook available through OverDrive at the library. Amanda Plummer narrates at a measured pace, modulated in the calm tones of a bedtime story, without being soporific. She reads so slowly that I was able to comfortably listen at double speed; if you don't, the recording is about 16 hours long.

Grades 5 - 7 are the prime audience, but older readers will enjoy this too. It's a fat book with heaps of action.

Readalikes: The Chronicles of Narnia (C.S. Lewis); Breadcrumbs (Anne Ursu).

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Goddess Gone Fishing for a Map of the Universe by Sheri-D Wilson

Performance poet Sheri-D Wilson's latest poetry collection -- her eighth -- is outstanding in every way. Reading Goddess Gone Fishing for a Map of the Universe is like riding a comet while shooting stars crackle in my brain. It is the most invigorating poetry I've yet experienced. Seriously! I could almost feel each zap in my synapse.

It's hard to find a good excerpt because a) there are so many and b) it's hard to find a place to stop without quoting the whole thing.

From 'Ode to My Microscopic Life'

"Ode to the incandescent cantation -- to the dot on a map
Without destination -- all about navigation
I see a woman much older than I look
(Handy perspective) then again,
Maybe I just need stronger glasses
 Wilson's  poem The Barcelona Bakery of
No Return made me feel fortunate that no
bakery bouncers prevented me from taking
photos of cakes in Vienna last year.
Of wine; ode to the optical delusion
And the compass rose and the skeleton
Key, which remind me -- of what

The Cuban Shaman said to me
He said: You are Shango

I replied: I am Yemaya

You are Shango

I am Yemaya

Shango!

Yemaya!

Only Shango would argue they are Yemaya
You are a fierce woman!

Thank-you, I said
Yes
I am"

Fierce, intelligent and very funny, Wilson makes wordplay appear effortless. Her encounters at home and abroad are all fodder for her work. A phone call from her mother about a grave plot Sheri-D might like. Being mistakenly construed as the mistress of a 78-year-old Cuban. 'Thrown Out' is her record of the many times she has been thrown out of places and onto the street... and sometimes even off the street.

"And at Head Smashed in Buffalo Jump
I was told I could not take pictures
Of the open prairie without written permission."

My favourite incident is when she was thrown out of a bakery in Spain. You can watch Wilson performing 'Barcelona Bakery of No Return' recorded at the launch of Goddess Gone Fishing in Calgary in March 2012. She is also the Artistic Director of the Calgary Spoken Word Festival.

The QR codes in the book prompted me to download a scanning app to my iPod so that I could link to additional material online. It was cool when it worked but I had trouble holding the book open while simultaneously keeping the iPod steady enough for clear focus. The poems on the page are enough for me.

From the Frontenac House publisher's website: "Pervading the book is Wilson's belief that an upsurge in feminine divine energy that will quell the madness of our time." Yay! Poetry to the rescue.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Looking at Lincoln by Maira Kalman

Looking at Lincoln is a picture book biography by the inimitable Maira Kalman. Her cheerful artwork always makes me smile. Influences of surrealism, fauvism and French impressionism are there, along with her signature panache. After all, history isn't complete without hats and cake!

Many of the bright paintings in the book made an appearance in 2009 in Kalman's illustrated column for the New York Times online, where she wrote about her fascination with Abraham Lincoln. More images are also at Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast.

Most pages in Looking at Lincoln have only a few sentences, choice facts about his amazing life. I learned that he went to school for only one year, and then taught himself after that.

"One day he was kicked in the head by a mule. He slept for two days. Then he woke up and grew up and decided to be a lawyer. (He did like to argue.)"

A similar thing happened to Sir James Hector when he was on an expedition through the Canadian Rockies in 1858. Hector was kicked unconscious by a horse and believed dead, which is how Kicking Horse Pass on the Alberta/B.C. border got its name. Hector went on to live many years in New Zealand afterwards, where his name is still quite famous... but probably not on par with Lincoln.

Kalman has made a whimsical addition to the "over 16,000 books" already written about Lincoln. Great for all ages, from preschoolers to adults.
Detail from Kalman's Looking at Lincoln. It reminds me of the time I was volunteering at the gate of the Edmonton Folk Music Festival and had refused entry to a couple of guys who didn't have tickets to the sold-out event. They had come all the way from the States because they were fans of a particular band. I was momentarily puzzled when one of them asked if Ben Franklin would change my mind about letting them in. Occasionally people would toss around festival producer Terry Wickham's name in hopes of getting through the gate, but I couldn't think of who this Franklin guy was. Then the fact that they were Americans helped me realize what offer was being made. No money changed hands, but I did direct them to where they could hear the music they wanted from outside the perimeter fence.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan

Robin Sloan's Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore is about a scholarly secret society. It celebrates passion for nerdy subjects like typography, computer programming, pre-13th century world history, online alternatives to commercial software, and old books. Especially books. It's told in the voice of Clay Jannon, the night clerk in a very unusual bookstore in San Francisco. When Clay is hired, Mr. Penumbra warns him to never look inside the books in the shop. "You may not browse, read, or otherwise inspect the shelved volumes. Retrieve them for members. That is all."

Was Clay able to stick by that injunction? Of course not. The books contain clues to an ancient puzzle. That's where the adventure begins.

I loved the way this book led me off onto tangents. For example, when a protagonist "produces another e-reader -- it's a Nook. Then another one, a Sony. Another one, marked KOBO. Really? Who has a Kobo?" (Answer: Canadians. I see patrons with Kobo e-readers in my library all the time.)

Clay's clandestine activities involve "a pair of white Stormtrooper binoculars" at one point, which reminded me of a great vlog post by author John Green, where he talks about book editors and whether stormtroopers is one word or two (and many other things), and I had to go find it again here. Come to think of it, Clay bonded with his friend Neel over a fantasy novel that they read as kids in much the same way as Green's protagonists in The Fault in our Stars.

Even though I was going off onto side roads, I never found these detracted from the main journey. It's all a brain game, really. Also, Sloan's humour hit the right notes for me, like naming a bibliophile 'Mr. Deckle.' Clay's girlfriend Kat gushes about her employer's (Google) projects:

"They are making a 3-D web bowser. They are making a car that drives itself. They are making a sushi search engine -- here she pokes a chopstick down at our dinner -- to help people find fish that is sustainable and mercury-free. They are building a time machine. They are developing a form of renewable energy that runs on hubris."

Clay's description of his first experience with audiobooks got me thinking about why I love them so much:

"I've never listened to an audiobook before, and I have to say, it's a totally different experience. When you read a book, the story definitely happens inside your head. When you listen, it seems to happen in a little cloud all around it, like a fuzzy knit cap pulled down over your eyes."

Yes, that is how it is for me. Sound adds a visceral element to books also; a gut sensation. I nearly missed my bus stop yesterday because I was so absorbed by Amanda Plummer's audiobook narration of Wildwood by Colin Meloy. (My literal knit cap did not cover my eyes, but it was about 15 below, and I put my headphones on top of my hat. Then my hood.)

I leave you with Sloan's final paragraph (and don't worry, it isn't a spoiler):

"A man walking fast down a dark lonely street. Quick steps and hard breathing, all wonder and need. A bell above a door and the tinkle it makes. A clerk and a ladder and warm golden light, and then: the right book exactly, at exactly the right time."

That special book is Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore.

Readalikes with underdog nerds banding together to problem-solve at the intersection of old and new technologies: Ready Player One (Ernest Cline); For the Win (Cory Doctorow).

Monday, January 21, 2013

The Drops of God by Tadashi Agi and Shu Okimoto

Japanese collaborative team Tadashi Agi and Shu Okimoto have created an engaging manga series that elevates wine to ambrosia status. I found myself wishing I had a glass of French red while reading the first volume of The Drops of God. Apparently I'm not the only one. According to the wine magazine Decanter, The Drops of God is "a comic so influential that a mere wine mention leads to sell-out stocks." It was also winner of a Gourmand World Cookbook Award in 2009.

The three main protagonists are Miyabi Shinohara, a young apprentice sommelier; Shizuku Kanzaki, estranged son of a recently-deceased famous wine critic; and Issei Tomine, adopted as a second son by Yutaka Kanzaki before he died. Whomever of the two brothers solves a wine-related quest will inherit the estate. Issei has the advantage, being a well-known wine critic himself. Shizuku has rejected everything to do with wine, but his father trained him from early childhood to have an outstanding sense of taste and smell. With Miyabi's help, he has a chance in the competition.

The story is a fun mix of romance, problem-solving and general education about wine. Miyabi is such a wine geek that she practically swoons while watching Shizuku decant wine.

"A... amazing! He can decant from that height... The wine droplets formed a line as straight as a thread of scarlet silk. It danced into the spout. In my experience with wine, I'd never before seen such divine decanting."

A sip of a 1999 Burgundy is enough to transport Miyabi in the first chapter, titled 'The Scent of a Hundred Flowers.' (In the images below, remember to read right to left, Japanese style.)


My iPod photos do not do justice to Okimoto's delicate art. See more of her images from this series online here. Her attention to detail on the wine bottle labels is remarkable. All of the wines mentioned are authentic. In the first volume, the focus is on comparing vintages from the Bordeaux and Burgundy regions. I think there are about 5 volumes out in English now and I hope the rest are as good as the first.

I would recommend this even to readers who haven't yet tried manga. It is character-based fiction with a strong plot line and realistic artwork. Have wine and a corkscrew handy.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Some Kind of Fairy Tale by Graham Joyce

Tara Martin disappeared when she was 15 years old, and then 20 years later on Christmas Day, she shows up at her parents' door. In Graham Joyce's Some Kind of Fairy Tale, Tara's family is understandably skeptical about her story. Was she really abducted by fairies? Tara claims she has only been gone for six months and admittedly, she looks about the same age as when she left. But this is England in the 21st century. There must be some other explanation. Her parents are just regular British folk, the kind who rely on a spot of tea for comfort.

"Tea being the drug of choice in the Martin household, Dell concocted more of it, thick and brown and sweet. After all, they'd had a bit of a shock; and whenever they had a shock or an upset or experienced a disturbance of any kind they had poured tea on it for as long as any of them could remember."

Tara's brother Peter is now married with four children. Tara's old boyfriend Richie, however, hasn't been able to get over her. The police strongly suspected, at the time, that he had something to do with her disappearance. Some Kind of Fairy Tale is more of a domestic drama than a fantasy, since Tara's accounts of another world populated with dangerous sex fiends could be fabrication or perhaps a sign of mental illness. Peter pays for her to have therapy sessions with an eccentric psychiatrist.

Joyce shifts between different points of view, opening each chapter with quotations like this one from Albert Einstein: "If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairytales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairytales." Clinical records of Tara's psychiatrist are interspersed with the Martin family's daily affairs and the reacquaintance happening between Tara and Richie.

Out one night at a pub, Richie tells Tara it's time to drink up and get home, but she protests.
"It's not eleven o'clock. The landlord hasn't called last orders yet."
"That's all changed. They don't do that anymore," he said. "That's all gone."
(I wonder if that applies in Edmonton also? I haven't been out late drinking in so long that I've no idea if there's still a "last call." I may as well have been away with the fairies.)

Bluebells underfoot when I visited Wales in 2007.
Tara disappeared from an ancient woodland in early May, when the forest floor was carpeted in bluebells. She urges Peter to think back to that time.

"Do you remember how they were? Their perfume stole the sense right out of your head. It turned you over and shook the juice right out of you. You couldn't walk between them that year they were so dense; you had to swim in them. The madness of it! The scent was so subtle that it got all over you, in your nostrils, in your cavities, and on your fingers like the smell of a sweet sin. Didn't it bind you in blue lace and carry you away?"

Some Kind of Fairy Tale transported me to a place touched with magic. I loved it.

Readalikes: The Snow Child (Eowyn Ivey); Impossible (Nancy Werlin); Kit's Wilderness (David Almond); The New Policeman (Kate Thompson); and The Folk Keeper (Franny Billingsley). Interesting that all but the first of these are YA novels.

You might also check out Graham Joyce's list in The Guardian of his favourite literary fairy fiction (which also includes some YA). Joyce is careful to note, however, that fairies don't use that word for themselves, and so he tends to avoid the 'F' word. He has selected books "where the structures of fairytales are abandoned but the world of 'fairy' is imported as a delicate spice." I didn't know what tags to use in this post for Joyce's Some Kind of Fairy Tale. I believe it fits into his description of "fantasist" literature: "a sense of awe and dislocation is upheld here, and a new way of knowing is always the prize."

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo, + Me by Ellen Forney

In Marbles, cartoonist Ellen Forney explores the connection between creativity and mental illness. After she is diagnosed as having a bipolar disorder in the early 90s, Forney fears losing her self-identity and also her livelihood if she starts taking lithium or any other medication.

"Along with my romantic preconceptions about what being a crazy artist meant... were my terrified preconceptions about what being a medicated artist meant." "If I get treatment, am I killing any chance to do my best work?"

This memoir documents Forney's struggles to find balance when her manic self would prefer to find brilliance. Forney dedicates the book to her mother and her psychiatrist. I found the scenes with her supportive mother, who happens to be a lesbian, especially poignant. Forney writes that they have always been close. "Mom paid for Karen [the psychiatrist] and for half of my rent. I had health insurance but it didn't cover mental health."

Forney is a bisexual artist who is known for her sex-positive journalism in comics format. For example, her collected work in I Love Led Zeppelin includes saucy pieces about twirling nipple tassels, mapping male and female erogenous zones, and "How to Fuck a Woman with your Hands." Forney also created the illustrations in Alexie Sherman's award-winning The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-time Indian. Check out Ellen Forney's website to see her work.

Readalikes -- other works that use graphic novel format to explore the topic of mental health:

Are You My Mother? by Alison Bechdel
Hyperbole and a Half webcomic by Allie Brosh
Bitter Medicine by Clem and Olivier Martini
The Next Day by Paul Peterson, Jason Gilmore and John Porcellino
Swallow Me Whole by Nate Powell
How I Made It to Eighteen by Tracy White


And speaking of Marbles, my sweetie says she feels like she lost hers while putting together fighting normal, an art show about mental health that will run from January 24 to March 2, 2013 in Edmonton at the Visual Arts Alberta gallery. The opening reception is next Friday.

NOTE added Jan 25 2013: A preview of the show was published in the Edmonton Journal: read it here online.