Showing posts with label strong female protagonist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strong female protagonist. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Their Eyes Were Watching God

 

Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston (1937) 238 pages

I listened to the audiobook through Libby. Ruby Dee is amazing at performing and narrating the story. She makes every other skillful audiobook narrator I've heard seem like they are only giving a 70% effort. The various character voices and emotive delivery are stellar. Hurston's story feels like a legend about the founding of the black town of Eatonville, Florida, where she grew up, and where she did anthropological studies in college. We follow the life of Janie. As a child she is raised by her grandmother and married off young to a much older man. She is raised to be obedient and stays put for years. Later, she runs off with a smooth talker who has dreams of being the mayor of a new black town. As the mayor's wife she is treated with respect, but is caught in a sort of gilded cage. As a still young widow, Janie meets perhaps her great love, and starts life anew again. She begins to enjoy life and find her individuality for the first time. The ending crashes through fairly rapidly with a hurricane hitting Florida, a rabid dog bite, and a brief courtroom drama. Hurston really masters the language in a poetic way with the dialect of blacks in the south in the 1930s.

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Dealing With Dragons

Dealing With Dragons, Patricia C. Wrede, 212 pages

Dealing With Dragons was one of my favorite books when I was in the third grade, and is the first novel in The Enchanted Forest Chronicles. This series and Brian Jacques's Redwall series gave me a firm love of fantasy novels, and what I loved most about this series in particular is that the protagonist, Princess Cimorene is quick witted and practical. She solves her problems by being clever and knowing Latin and magic and how to organize a library and treasure room. As an adult, revisiting this book, it was exactly what I wanted to sit down and read for the evening. Wrede has made a wonderful world with this series, and I recommend that anyone who has an interest to pick this up. It is the bee's knees.

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

The life and loves of a she-devil

The life and loves of a she-devil / Fay Weldon, 241 pgs.

A dark tale of revenge and scorn.  Ruth is happily married until her husband cheats on her with a popular romance novelist. Her life falls apart as she has no income, no husband, no will to continue...until she decides to get revenge.  The revenge ideas come on strong and fast.  She wants to ruin the husband and his lover. The plans are complicated and time consuming but she has nothing but time.  She is obsessed and quite successful in her plans. An interesting read.

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Battle Angel Alita Deluxe Edition Vol. I, II, III

Battle Angel Alita Deluxe (Book I, II, III), Yukito Kishiro, 430 pages/416 pages/436 pages

Kishiro's Battle Angel Alita series was a hallmark of the early 1990's cyberpunk canon. I first read the trade paperbacks while in high school, and with the upcoming release of a movie based upon the work, it was time for a re-read. Kishiro's fast paced story keeps a reader intrigued page after page, and the striking visual style is clean and crisply presented. The story follows Alita, a young female cyborg with amnesia, as she pieces together her past and her future. The first three books in the deluxe edition series cover Alita's initial time as a bounty hunter, a motorball player, and finally as a tuned agent for Tiphares, a floating city above the scrapyard in which the story takes place. While Alita accomplishes these external things through the mastery of a mysterious martial art style that she innately knows, she struggles with the concept of identity and finding her place in a world she is just learning about.

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Cinder

Cinder, Marissa Meyer, 550 pg.

Cinder is the first installment in Meyer's Lunar Chronicles. It is a science fiction take on the tale of Cinderella and follows Linh Cinder, a sixteen year old cyborg. There area few major twists to the plot, involving a Lunar colony, a missing princess, and a plague. The plot is fast paced and the writing style is clear. I did want less predictability in the plot, though the target audience of young adults would probably not be as harsh about that as I am.

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Uprooted

Uprooted, Naomi Novik, 448 pages

Naomi Novik's Uprooted is November's Orcs and Aliens book club book. It centers around Agnieszka and the Dragon's fight against a deeply corrupted evil forest. It draws a lot of influences from Eastern European folklore, and Agnieszka's magic shares a connection to the stories of Baba Yaga. Novik's storytelling is clear and well written, and her protagonists have wonderful depth and purpose. I'm very excited to see what the rest of the book club thinks of this novel, as I highly enjoyed it.