Wednesday, January 29, 2014

The Cardturner

The Cardturner by Louis Sachar
Fiction

Alton Richards didn’t think his summer would amount to much. His checklist involves going to the pool and maybe getting a job. That all goes out the window when he finds out that his materialistic mother promised that he would drive his blind, diabetic, and very rich uncle, Lester Trapp, to his bridge club. Due to financial problems at home, Alton’s mom wants to get on the good side of Trapp in hopes that he will leave them money in his will. In addition to being his driver, Alton finds out that he also is signed up to be his cardturner. Trapp’s blindness doesn’t let him see the cards, but that is what Alton is for. As a cardturner, Alton is supposed to tell Trapp the cards he has and play the cards for him. Eventually Trapp tells Alton of his philosophical musings and Alton learns more about Trapp’s past relationships. Including one with his former partner for bridge, a woman named Annabel, someone whom Trapp avoids talking about.


Frequently I got very annoyed at Alton for being such a push-over. He sits idly by when his best friend, Cliff takes his potential girlfriend, Toni to a party and doesn’t seem to have any control over his life. He doesn’t even try to get a job during the summer. The fact that Alton is a cardturner illustrates this very well. Alton carries out actions, but he doesn’t really decide anything for himself, Trapp makes all the decisions. It isn’t until after Alton exerts some control over his life does he starts dating Toni, the granddaughter of Anabelle, applies to college, and gets his act together.


This theme reappears throughout the story, giving it—as Trapp puts it—a philosophical bent.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

The Westing Game


The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin
Fiction

I know I’ve already reviewed this before, but I think my previous review did not do it justice. I’ve read it again recently, and this time I read it carefully, unlike last time. The Westing Game transports the reader to Sunset Towers where there are bombers, murders, a 200 million dollar inheritance, and one great big mystery.


                On Halloween night, Sam Westing, millionaire and owner of Westing Paper Products, is murdered. Later when Sam Westing’s heirs are all gathered to hear the reading of his will, they are surprised and shocked to discover that the murderer is one of them. In his will, Sam Westing pairs the heirs up, and then gives them clues to discover the killer. Everyone desperately tries to win so they will receive the 200 million dollar inheritance. As the game progresses, the players soon realize that this is not an ordinary game.


                The reason why I liked this book so much was the same reason why I didn’t like it last time. In my last review I thought it was confusing and too complicated. When I read it this time, I appreciated the small details and unsuspected plot twists. The plot was laid out perfectly so it formed a well-constructed mystery with puzzles in every chapter and the characters were so well developed I felt that I knew them personally. As the story progresses, small pieces of the puzzle form a picture that brings sixteen unlikely people together  in the most unusual way.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Sold


Sold by Patricia McCormick
Fiction

           Lakshmi lives in a small poor town in Nepal. She witnesses her step-father gamble away what little money they have and disrespect her mother. One day, she asks her mother “Why must women suffer so?” Her mother replies, “This has always been our fate. Simply to endure is to triumph.” When she is offered a job from a stranger to work in India to earn money and, being the obedient, innocent, and naïve girl she is, she immediately says yes, and then realizes the terrible truth. She has been sold to a cruel woman named Mumtaz and into sex slavery. Time after time Lakshmi is beaten down, but she gets up again and again. When Lakshmi is in India she is still obedient, but she doesn’t openly act out and endures until she triumphs. At the end of the book, she is no longer the scared naïve girl from the beginning. She is strong and resilient.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Calling the Gods




Calling the Gods  by Jack Lasenby
Fiction
            The story begins with the main character, Selene’s, banishment, which gives the impression that this book will be similar to other recent novels  set in the dystopian future, but this turns out not to be the case. Lasenby’s style differs from the writing styles of other authors of teen fiction because his sophisticated choice of words gives the impression that he is writing for a more mature audience. Despite the good writing, some parts dragged and felt unnecessary.

               When Selene sneaks back into her village after her banishment, she finds it destroyed, with only a few survivors. From there, she and the lucky survivors travel great lengths to start over. There, they are joined by survivors from different communities. Together, they seek to create a village free of the hardships they previously experienced, until their new community is jeopardized by one of their own residents. The point of view of the story also switches, the beginning is told from Selene’s point of view, but in the middle and the end, it switches from her to the point of view of an old man, who could be from before Selene’s time, or after. The old man hears and sees the villagers, but can’t be heard or seen by them. He watches the village and is able to sense when something bad is going to happen, but is not able to intervene.



The plot alone gives the novel the potential to be intriguing, but parts of the storyline were overemphasized. The events leading to the climax of the novel weren’t as suspenseful or dramatic as they should have been, although they were described well. 


What I thought was the most interesting part of the story was that the old man didn’t dismiss the thought that he could be from a time before Selene’s--and not just the future-- even though he comes from a much more advanced society. Another thing that I thought was interesting was how the destruction in the villages was always the fault of the villagers, not any outside forces. The same mistakes were made over and over by the villagers, resulting in their ruin again and again.  I think that Calling the Gods did an excellent job of illustrating the reason why mistakes need to be learned from, but not as great of a job showing the story of a girl struggling to survive.