ISBN-13: 9780802119193 Availability: Readily Available Published: Grove Press, 10/01/2009
Quite some time ago, I decided Sherman Alexie was just plain great at what he does, and I’ve never reconsidered. His newest collection, War Dances, compiles poetry, short stories, prose, and mysterious hybrids of all three. Each is centered on revolutionary themes and social justice issues using artists, workers, fathers, sons, and their experiences dealing with extraordinary life changes.
In the first story, “Breaking and Entering,” a film editor stands in a stalemate, holding his son’s little league baseball bat, with a young man who has broken into his home. In “The Senator’s Son,” a young Republican Seattleite commits a hate-crime against his best friend, and has to choose between avoiding the consequences and accepting them. And in the title story, a famous writer has to decide how to care for his father, who is slowly dying a “natural Indian death” of diabetes and alcoholism.
Each piece in this collection is placed perfectly, making the book, as a whole, as engaging and easy to read from start to finish as a well-paced novel. And Alexie’s writing is humorous, concise, and thoughtful; bound, like all of his work, to leave a lasting impression. ~Jared
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell
I became a fan of Mitchell after I read his wildly inventive Cloud
Atlas, so I was expecting literary pyrotechnics from his latest.
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, the sweeping story of the Dutch
East Indies Company in Japan at the turn of the 19th century, reads like a
combination of Patrick O'Brien's nautical historical fiction, the
exoticism and passion of Shogun, and "Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom" because of a creepy part of the plot. Wow!... read the rest of Tegan's review
The City & the City by China Mieville
I think good Science Fiction uses an altered reality to reveal something
about the real world that couldn’t be revealed without that altered
setting. Great Science Fiction does this and entertains as well. China
Mieville’s The City and the City is really great Sci-fi. It
begins feeling like a dark, well-written, noir-style mystery – a body
has been found in the city of Beszel, detective Borlu has been assigned
to investigate – but the story quickly takes a sci-fi turn... read the rest of Lillian's review.