It’s time again for another batch of four completely random mini reviews! Do you like sentient vegetation? Unexplained cannibalism? Love stories? All of the above? Great news: I’ve got some books for you.
Author: Caitlin Starling
Published: September 5, 2020
Genre(s): Fantasy, Horror
Page Count: 131
Rating:
Summary from Goodreads:Powerful shipping magnate Evelyn Perdanu lives a tight, contained life, holding herself at a distance from all who would get close to her. Her family is dead, her country is dying, and when something foul comes to the city of Delphinium, the brittle, perilous existence she's built for herself is strained to breaking.
When one of her ships arrives in dock, she counts herself lucky that it made it through the military blockades slowly strangling her city. But one by one, the crew fall ill with a mysterious sickness: an intense light in their eyes and obsessive behavior, followed by a catatonic stupor. Even as Evelyn works to exonerate her company of bringing plague into her besieged capital city, more and more cases develop, and the afflicted all share one singular obsession: her.
Panicked and paranoid, she retreats to her estate, which rests on a foundation of secrets: the deaths of her family, the poisons and cures that hasten the dissolution of the remaining upper classes, and a rebel soldier, incapacitated and held hostage in a desperate bid for information. But the afflicted are closing in on her, and bringing the attention of the law with them. Evelyn must unearth her connection to the spreading illness, and fast, before it takes root inside her home and destroys all that she has built.
Big Mexican Gothic vibes, so if you’re looking for more creepy houses infested with sentient vegetation, here is a book for you, my friends.
I absolutely loved Starling’s concept, but my big complaint here is that because this is a novella, there wasn’t enough exposition or time spent setting a suitably sinister mood. Which is a shame, because, again: mysterious lesbian poisoner haunted by a nefarious entity as her city crumbles around her ears is 100% my thing. Loved the writing, loved the conclusion, loved it all: I just wanted more.
Author: Brenna Yovanoff
Published: May 17, 2016
Genre(s): Magical Realism
Page Count: 373
Rating:
Summary from Goodreads:Waverly Camdenmar spends her nights running until she can’t even think. Then the sun comes up, life goes on, and Waverly goes back to her perfectly hateful best friend, her perfectly dull classes, and the tiny, nagging suspicion that there’s more to life than student council and GPAs.
Marshall Holt is a loser. He drinks on school nights and gets stoned in the park. He is at risk of not graduating, he does not care, he is no one. He is not even close to being in Waverly’s world.
But then one night Waverly falls asleep and dreams herself into Marshall’s bedroom—and when the sun comes up, nothing in her life can ever be the same. In Waverly’s dreams, the rules have changed. But in her days, she’ll have to decide if it’s worth losing everything for a boy who barely exists.
Literary magical realism for the youths! *chef’s kiss*
Brenna Yovanoff was one of my favorite authors in high school, but it was more that I loved her writing style than anything else (her first novels were all paranormal, which isn’t my preferred genre). Luckily, Places No One Knows is different than her previous books—this is a slightly bizarre, introspective character study. It’s very pretty, very plotless, and very emotional. And it’s a book whose success derives entirely from (a) the style and aesthetic of the prose (very adult litfic) and (b) the exploration of the protagonists’ psyches.
I loved it, obviously.
Author: Paulette Jiles
Published: October 4, 2016
Genre(s): Historical Fiction
Page Count: 209
Rating:
Summary from Goodreads:In the wake of the Civil War, Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd travels through northern Texas, giving live readings from newspapers to paying audiences hungry for news of the world. An elderly widower who has lived through three wars and fought in two of them, the captain enjoys his rootless, solitary existence.
In Wichita Falls, he is offered a $50 gold piece to deliver a young orphan to her relatives in San Antonio. Four years earlier, a band of Kiowa raiders killed Johanna’s parents and sister; sparing the little girl, they raised her as one of their own. Recently rescued by the U.S. army, the ten-year-old has once again been torn away from the only home she knows.
Their 400-mile journey south through unsettled territory and unforgiving terrain proves difficult and at times dangerous. Johanna has forgotten the English language, tries to escape at every opportunity, throws away her shoes, and refuses to act “civilized.” Yet as the miles pass, the two lonely survivors tentatively begin to trust each other, forming a bond that marks the difference between life and death in this treacherous land.
Set in lawless Reconstruction-era Texas, News of the World is a surprisingly emotional love story between an old man and a ten-year-old girl. Elderly Captain Kidd agrees to transport an uncooperative former white captive from Indian Territory to San Antonio. The journey is far, and the dangers infinite. And along the way, the two find kinship in their wandering feet and unconventionality. Jiles’ story is meticulously researched and unflinching from the brutality of life on the frontier. She cuts into minds of her protagonists efficiently, and even though several portions of the story feel rushed through, that only gives the novel the aura of an old folktale that’s been passed down through generations. Truly an excellent book.
Author: Sayaka Murata
Published: October 6, 2020
Genre(s): Literary Fiction, Magical Realism
Page Count: 247
Rating:
Summary from Goodreads:As a child, Natsuki doesn’t fit into her family. Her parents favor her sister, and her best friend is a plush toy hedgehog named Piyyut who has explained to her that he has come from the planet Popinpobopia on a special quest to help her save the Earth. Each summer, Natsuki counts down the days until her family drives into the mountains of Nagano to visit her grandparents in their wooden house in the forest, a place that couldn’t be more different from her grey commuter town. One summer, her cousin Yuu confides to Natsuki that he is an extraterrestrial and that every night he searches the sky for the spaceship that might take him back to his home planet. Natsuki wonders if she might be an alien too. Back in her city home, Natsuki is scolded or ignored and even preyed upon by a young teacher at her cram school. As she grows up in a hostile, violent world, she consoles herself with memories of her time with Yuu and discovers a surprisingly potent inner power. Natsuki seems forced to fit into a society she deems a “baby factory” but even as a married woman she wonders if there is more to this world than the mundane reality everyone else seems to accept. The answers are out there, and Natsuki has the power to find them.
Earthlings is a bizarre, pseudo-fabulist novel that—while certainly open to interpretation—explores the ways childhood trauma and the pressure to conform to societal expectations can shape an individual’s concept of reality. After a truly horrific childhood, narrator Natsuki remains trapped inside the fantasies that helped sustain her at the age of eleven. Unlike the “earthlings,” she has not been brainwashed to follow the commands of the “Factory” (which directs individuals to work, to mate, to procreate). Natsuki is an alien lifeform; she has special powers; she alone can see the farce of society for what it is.
What Earthlings truly means is a subjective question, made particularly thorny by the way Sayaka Murata’s deftly interweaves the real with the surreal. Which parts of Natsuki’s narrative are “true”? Which are metaphor? And how much is colored by her status as traumatized woman, unreliably narrating her experiences of abuse and neglect? Forming a fringe cult as a means of coping with one’s alienation and trauma isn’t far-fetched, but perhaps eating your fellow cult members alive is a bit weird…it’s just so hard to decipher what really happened here.
In any event, I’ve never read mpreg in a serious literary novel before, so if nothing else, Earthlings will always have that in its favor.
Jenny @ Reading the End says
I genuinely LOLed at that last sentence. I too have never read mpreg in a serious literary novel, though I would not say I have been yearning for it. 😛 I read Yellow Jessamine earlier this month and found it so wonderfully creepy — did you read Caitlin Starling’s full-length novel? It was good; also creepy; also Caitlin Starling referred me to Kate Alice Marshall’s book Rules for Vanishing which remains the scariest gd book I have ever read in my life. Like, in case you are into that.
Renae says
But really, Jenny, WHOMST AMONG US truly yearns for mpreg—it’s something that just happens to us all, sooner or later 😂