Showing posts with label books you have to read right now. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books you have to read right now. Show all posts

Friday, July 28, 2017

Tenth of December



Tenth of December by George Saunders
Fiction
Saunders’s collection of ten short stories in Tenth of December creatively and hilariously explore the cracks in humanity that are exposed under stress. None of George Saunders’s stories are very pleasant and most don’t even have a happy ending. His characters are pushed through difficult conflicts that test their empathy or devotion to their values. But through these trials the readers get a deeper glimpse at what makes us human, and what Saunders seems to be saying is that humans are naïve romantics. Saunders’s characters are idealists in a society that seems to very rarely reward idealists. Sometimes what the reader sees is reassuring, but most of the time I felt disgusted with either our flaws or how society is set up to dismiss virtue.  

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Never Let Me Go



Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
Fiction

            As a child, all Kathy H. knows is Hailsham, the boarding school where she grows up with the same people, all of whom are also students or teachers. Hailsham keeps Kathy in a bubble by physically isolating her from the outside world, but Kathy is also kept in an information bubble, oblivious to the role that she and her peers play as donors. Ishiguro paints an alternate universe of England during the 1990s, where children like Kathy and those at Hailsham are created to be a source of organs for others.  As Kathy grows up and begins to explore the outside world, she keeps on revisiting her memories at Hailsham. As Kathy gets older and the prospect of her time as a donor draws near, the more she thinks of Hailsham and the more she wishes that Hailsham will never let her go.
Ishiguro’s writing is evocative and his novel beautifully and brilliantly traverses so many different issues. Never Let Me Go is a coming-of-age novel, a love story, a cautionary tale, and a social critique.  The novel provokes difficult questions -- whether ignorance is bliss, how to create an identity when a life path has been pre-established, and whether there can ever be true autonomy in a world that is eerily similar to ours.  It was one of the best novels I’ve read all year – maybe ever – and I’ll be thinking about it for a long time.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

No Matter the Wreckage


No Matter the Wreckage by Sarah Kay
Fiction


Not to sound cheesy, but Sarah Kay’s No Matter the Wreckage is truly poetry for the modern era. Most people know her from her TED Talk or her YouTube videos where she performs spoken word poetry and has given a new face to poetry, which is normally alienating and a genre most readers my age avoid. But, Sarah Kay’s poems are anything but alienating. I actually thought that a lot of her poems dealt with themes that were very familiar, most notably “B.” “B” may be my favorite poem because it was the first poem that I saw Kay perform in her TED Talk, or it could be because it emphasizes resilience despite hard times, which is a theme that all readers can relate to.