Top 10 Books on This Summer’s TBR List

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Alas, it still does not feel or look like summer here in Calgary. But because it IS technically summer, I’m breaking out my summertime reading books and plan to get started on them as soon as possible. This week The Broke and the Bookish want to know what’s on our Summer reading list and it was definitely hard for me to choose just 10. There are tons of books on my shelves needing to be read, and whole lot more in stores waiting to be purchased, so this list will be a mix of books that I already have, as well as a couple of books I just NEED to get.


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Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen (own): This has been on my to-read list for quite some time and I really need to break open its spine this summer. The movie was good, so I’m looking forward to loving the book more.

Julie and Julia by Julie Powell (own): Again, loved loved loved the movie. I picked this book up last summer at the Calgary Reads book sale and haven’t read it yet. It looks delicious though!

The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith (own): I was so happy when I found this at this year’s Calgary Reads book sale. I’ve heard so many great things about it and can’t wait to delve into it.

Something Borrowed by Emily Griffin (own): The movie is one of my guilty pleasures and after watching it with Fil a few weeks ago, I was reminded that this book is sitting on my shelf waiting to be read. Guess I better get on that, huh?

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake by Aimee Bender (need to buy): I saw this cover at Chapters and then read lots of great reviews on it. So I’ve decided that I should read this book after reading Julie and Julie, to continue with my lovefest for food.

Marley and Me by John Grogan (own): I haven’t seen the movie yet, mainly because I wanted to read the book first. I know it’s a tear-jerker, and I can’t wait to go through Kleenex box after Kleenex box.

The End of Your Life Book Club by Will Schwalbe (need to buy): Again, this is sure to be another sad tale, but one that I think is important to read.

The Moon and More by Sarah Dessen (need to buy): Sarah Dessen is the YA bomb, and I’ve been looking forward to her newest release. I’ve heard mixed reviews on it, so I’m looking forward to reading it myself and forming my own opinion.

Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling (own): Um, I don’t think I really have to explain this one. It’s been two whole years since I last read Harry Potter and I’m going through withdrawals. I need it back in my life. I think this series will by my Mexico read.

Inkheart, Inkspell and Inkdeath by Cornelia Funke (own): My book club decided to read this trilogy for the summer and discuss it in August when people come back from vacations and before I leave for Mexico. I’m looking forward to it—I was in love with the first two in high school and never got around to reading the last one. So it’ll be nice to immerse myself in that world again.

 

Which books are on your summer TBR list? I’m always looking for more suggestions, so comment below!  :)

Life of a Published Author: Guest Post by Aric Davis

The Fort jacket    Silver Gallery Photography

I’m not sure that I’ll ever be 100% used to the fact that I’m a published author. I mean, seriously, what in the heck have I done to deserve that? There are better writers than I will ever be that will never see professional publication, and even more folks walking around with sheepskin-diplomas that will never bounce to the top of that hellish slush pile. I graduated high school on the barest of margins, slept through a few community college classes, and worked as a body piercer for almost seventeen years, so how in the hell did I get so lucky to wind up with a publisher like Thomas and Mercer, when so many others fall by the wayside? This is the sort of thing that makes me wonder if I’m dreaming this whole writer gig sometimes.

Thankfully, this has yet to be proven as just a hallucination. Being published professionally was a dream that I never thought I could accomplish, but thanks to an understanding family, an ability to not be shattered to my core by over 400 rejection letters, and an utterly tenacious attitude to writing, I have found myself in a position that I was once too scared to even imagine. I write fiction for a living from the comfort of my kitchen table, and I sure do love it.

This is what happened:

In 2006 I started writing a novel just to see if I could do it. As it turned out, I was in a perfect position to write a novel that absolutely no one wanted to publish, so I borrowed money from my mother and self-pubbed a novel called From Ashes Rise. Ashes never dragged me into the winners circle in the way that so many other self-published authors have been, but I did sell 200 copies, and my desperation to do it again was animalistic. Undeterred by weak sales and far weaker responses from the world of agents and editors, I stepped back into the fire. Five manuscripts and four years after I’d begun work on Ashes, I finally talked to someone in publishing that was interested in hearing what I had to say.

A year before I got that magical email, my wife and I were woken by the sound of her phone ringing, it was her mother, and she had bad news. Really bad. A family outing in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula had turned to tragedy, and a drunk driver veering off the road had resulted in over ten members of our family being hospitalized, three of them dead on the scene. To say I was pissed would be an understatement, I was gutted and I was furious. I wanted revenge-I still do-but instead of buying myself time in prison with a few ounces of well-placed and well-deserved lead, I wrote.

The book I completed that summer, Nickel Plated, wound up being submitted to the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award contest. If you don’t remember my name from that cold winter, it’s because I didn’t win. I left my name on some piece of documentation where names were a no-no, and I was bounced after a few rounds. The miracle was that though I had been bounced, I had reviewed well enough that inexplicably my manuscript had wound up on the desk of my editor, Terry. A few months after I was rejected, I got an email from him offering to publish my book.

As any aspiring writer would do, I immediately assumed that this was one of those scams where you pay to play, but I was wrong. The offer was legit, and I walked out of my basement with my laptop under my arms and tears welling in my eyes. I set the computer in front of my wife and told her to read. She did, had the exact same reaction I did, and it slowly began to dawn on us that the years of rejection might just have been worth it. A few days later I talked to Terry over the phone while I was between piercings in the tattoo shop, and then later inked a contract.

Somehow, things got better from there. My publisher cared about my thoughts on the cover, they cared about my thoughts on edits, and they cared about me. Everything I had been told about the bad old world of publishing had been a lie, these people weren’t just good to me, they treated me like a friend. I was in heaven, to be perfectly honest. Conference call? Hey, I’ve never been on one, but now I was participating in one every few months. A publicist? Sure, why not. A content editor? Yes please. Even now, five works later, the fact that I have these people working with me is nearly impossible to believe. I’m just some tattooed scribbler, I wanted to tell them, you’ve got the wrong guy.

How does this happen? Well, in my case it happened because I read Stephen King’s brilliant On Writing, and I decided that I was going to be published or die trying. There was a lot of luck involved, but the real trick was making myself suffer, reading every rejection letter word for word and then getting back to those keys and punching them as hard as I could. I listened to songs that made me feel horrible and beautiful all at once, studied the bills that piercing was barely paying, and said, I can do this. I had no choice, that was the attitude that I took, and I pounded keys until my fingers were raw.

You can too. Write when the wind is full of the noise of friends laughing and talking, write when you’re at your happiest or most miserable, and write while the soundtrack to your heart blares through your headphones. Just write, and submit, and suffer, and by God, keep your fingers crossed.

 

Aric Davis’ novel The Fort is available now on Amazon.com. At turns heartbreaking and breathtakingly thrilling, The Fort perfectly renders a coming-of-age story in the 1980s, in those final days of childhood independence, discovery, and paradise lost.

BUT WAIT! THERE’S MORE!

I’m giving away TWO FREE COPIES of The Fort to US residents. Enter for your chance to win here!

The Great Gatsby: Book Review

Book Review #27: The Great Gatsby

Author: F. Scott Fitzgerald

Genre: Classic, Fiction

Days to Read: 8 days

Synopsis: Self-made, self-invented millionaire Jay Gatsby embodies some of Fitzgerald’s—and his country’s—most abiding obsessions: money, ambition, greed, and the promise of new beginnings.  “Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter—tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther…. And one fine morning—”  Gatsby’s rise to glory and eventual fall from grace becomes a kind of cautionary tale about the American Dream.
It’s also a love story, of sorts, the narrative of Gatsby’s quixotic passion for Daisy Buchanan. The pair meet five years before the novel begins, when Daisy is a legendary young Louisville beauty and Gatsby an impoverished officer. They fall in love, but while Gatsby serves overseas, Daisy marries the brutal, bullying, but extremely rich Tom Buchanan. After the war, Gatsby devotes himself blindly to the pursuit of wealth by whatever means—and to the pursuit of Daisy, which amounts to the same thing. “Her voice is full of money,” Gatsby says admiringly, in one of the novel’s more famous descriptions. His millions made, Gatsby buys a mansion across Long Island Sound from Daisy’s patrician East Egg address, throws lavish parties, and waits for her to appear. When she does, events unfold with all the tragic inevitability of a Greek drama, with detached, cynical neighbor Nick Carraway acting as chorus throughout. Spare, elegantly plotted, and written in crystalline prose, The Great Gatsby is as perfectly satisfying as the best kind of poem. (Goodreads)

My Thoughts: A couple of years ago, I had picked this book up from an antique store in Nanton, AB and that night I tried settling into it. Tried, being the operative word. Because try as I might, I just could not get past chapter three. But when my book club and I formed last month, we all decided this should be our first book to read so we could go see the movie together. This time I was determined to finish it.

I’m glad we chose this book to read because I was pleasantly surprised by how easy it was for me to get into it this time around. I had been expecting another challenge, but the pages just flew by and I became immersed in the Jazz Era.

The plot itself appears to be simple, but with a mature mind and reflection, I realized that this book is so much more. It’s a story about the American Dream—and the realities of such a life. It’s about humanity, money, love and power. Fitzgerald plays with criticism, idolization and irony. He makes his characters hard to love and easy to judge. Because, really, it’s the characters that drive the story, make the story worth reading. Nick, our narrator, is logical but easily persuaded. His first apprehension of Gatsby soon turns adour, despite some of Gatsby’s actions. For a while he didn’t know what to make of his neighbour, switching from apprehension to annoyance to worshipping. This tired me to no end because his friends’ stupidity were staring him straight in the face and he just took it most of the time, turning a blind eye. Also, he had a very creepy way of going about things—even for the most intimate moments, he was there as our guide, telling us what was going on. Um, if you see two people touching each other, searching for something they’ve been missing in each other’s eyes, lost in time, GET OUT. You’re not wanted. I get he was the narrator, but a lot of the times I kept asking him, why? Why put yourself through this awkwardness? He was merely there to provide the reader a look into what we all want: a lavish life filled with parties, “friends”, music, an abundance of items and good times. He went from a poor boy to a boy living the dream.

Gatsby, on the other hand, represented what society holds above all else: success and beauty. He wasn’t complete without beautiful Daisy and her voice that “sounds of money.” His life didn’t follow the path he had wanted it to go, and so he went back a few paces to the time when it all made sense and tried to recreate a new future, without realizing that time changes everything. He was still stuck in the past and couldn’t see the present and future for what it was. Many of us can admit to this. We always think “if we could just go back and re-do (insert life moment), life would be so much better.” But we can’t change the past, anymore than we influence fate. Oh Gatsby, old sport, how dim you were to hold onto a memory, a past that could never be lived again. When Nick first meets Gatsby and learns of his reasons for living across the pond from Daisy and throwing lavish parties, I couldn’t help but become hopeful that this wasn’t going to be unrequited love (the world has enough of that already). But as the days started passing, I started feeling more and more sorry for Gatsby, for clinging onto a ghost. The woman he said he loved was no more than a frivolous, indecisive girl. A girl that you wanted to like from the start, but quickly realized the error in that sentiment.

Daisy was just that—a flower. Pretty to look at but nothing substantial. She flitted about from scene to scene, creating drama and continuously seeking a good time. She spoke without thinking and flew through life causing destruction but not taking the time to clean up her mess. Her indecisive ways hurt more than one person in this book and I was glad to be done the book if only to be rid of her. She was exhausting. I had wanted to like her at the start, but it was soon clear to me that both her and her husband, Tom, would be an eyesore on the great canvas of Gatsby. They cared tuppance for others.

The only character I really cared for was Jordan, Nick’s “girlfriend.” She was stunning. Both as an independent female, who became successful on her own terms, and who didn’t need a man to sustain her—so refreshing. Bravo for Fitzgerald highlighting such a strong woman in a world of men.

On the whole, the characters are shallow, empty shells leaving a lot to be desired. And the story is simple, if not flourished with Fitzgerald’s sweeping language. But the underlying currents hit the reader in such a force that it’s impossible to miss the point—money can’t buy happiness. That seeking a lavish life of riches will only leave you disappointed. That one’s wealth or beauty does not determine their character and morality. In that sense, it was a wonderful read.

My Rating: 9/10

Favourite Quotes:
“Whenever you feel like criticizing any one,” he told me, “just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.”

“It occurred to me that there was no difference between men, in intelligence or race, so profound as the difference between the sick and the well.”

“I love New York on summer afternoons when everyone’s away. There’s something very sensuous about it—overripe, as if all sorts of funny fruits were going to fall into your hands.”

“And I like large parties.  They’re so intimate.  At small parties there isn’t any privacy.”

“They were careless people, Tom and Daisy—they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.”

“Her face was sad and lovely with bright things in it, bright eyes and a bright passionate mouth, but there was an excitement in her voice that men who had cared for her found difficult to forget: a singing compulsion, a whispered “Listen,” a promise that she had done gay, exciting things just a while since and that there were gay, exciting things hovering in the next hour.”

“I thought of Gatsby’s wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy’s dock. He had come a long way to this lawn and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know that it was already behind him.”

“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”

Summer Lovin’ Read-a-thon

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I’m really excited to say that I’ll be participating in my very first book blogger event… The Summer Lovin’ Read-a-thon, hosted by the lovely Reviewing Wonderland! Because, after a year and a half of blogging, I’m embarrassed to say the only blogging community-type thing I participate in is Top Ten Tuesday. And I really want to change that. Because the blogging community is wonderful, and I feel like I haven’t done enough to meet people, reach out and make friends. But that’s all going to change with this first read-a-thon.

The Summer Lovin’ Read-a-thon is perfectly timed, too, because I’ll be officially moved out starting July 1st. Meaning I’ll have more time than ever to read, read, read. I can just see myself coming home from work, throwing something into the oven or onto the stove to cook, and settling into my couch, reading ALL night. Yup. I’m getting excited just thinking about it!

The Summer Lovin’ Read-a-thon is a week-long readathon event hosted by seven independent bloggers—Oh, Chrys!, Tumbling Books, Effortlessly Reading, Love Life Read, Shelf Addiction, Read Sleep Repeat, and Reviewing Wonderland. This read-a-thon is going to be loaded with fantastic goodies, such as daily author features, daily giveaways, daily challenges, and a final 24 hour marathon read-a-thon! Sounds like fun, huh? I’m looking forward to blowing through more of my to-reads and discussing more books with everyone. If this sounds like something you’d be interested in, definitely sign up here.

I hope you join us in July, but happy reading until then!  :)

 

Shiver: Book Review

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Book Review #26: Shiver

Author: Maggie Stiefvater

Genre: YA Fiction

Days to Read: 6 days, mainly because I was busy in between

Synopsis (as taken from Goodreads): For years, Grace has watched the wolves in the woods behind her house. One yellow-eyed wolf—her wolf—is a chilling presence she can’t seem to live without.
Meanwhile, Sam has lived two lives: In winter, the frozen woods, the protection of the pack, and the silent company of a fearless girl. In summer, a few precious months of being human… until the cold makes him shift back again.
Now, Grace meets a yellow-eyed boy whose familiarity takes her breath away. It’s her wolf. It has to be. But as winter nears, Sam must fight to stay human—or risk losing himself, and Grace, forever.

My Thoughts: I. Love. This. Book.

I had heard so many positive remarks (and some negative critiques) about Stiefvater’s trilogy that after coming across Shiver and Linger at a book swap I volunteered at last month, I just knew I had to get reading them (who doesn’t love free books?). And boy, am I glad I did. It’s been a while since I’ve read a YA book and I just got sucked into this story. Now a lot of people will read the word “werewolf” and immediately scoff and put it back on the shelf. But I promise you—this is nothing like Twilight. There is no convoluted love triangle side story. No creepy obsessions. No lacking plot or dialogue. Just an all around good, make-you-happy-while-making-you-cry story.

I enjoyed the note of beastiality in the book; it’s just fascinating. Grace was in love with Sam before she even knew Sam as a human—she was in love with Sam, her wolf protector. And this mysterious allure to this wolf soon turns into an obsession. An obsession that you don’t fully understand until you read the end of Linger. Sure that sounds strange. I get that as a teenager, there must have been some human boy that should have tickled Grace’s fancy, instead of her pining over something she doesn’t quite know or understand yet. But I liked that connection between the two of them, because it made their human relationship that much more realistic. It makes sense why they fell in their relationship so fast, because they had loved each other for years prior to meeting in flesh.

The ending upset me though. Not because it was sad, but because it was unrealistic. I know, in a book with werewolves, human-wolf love connections, being unrealistic shouldn’t be a problem, right? But it so was. I won’t spoil it for those who are going to read Shiver, but to those who have read it: You must know what I’m talking about. The actions Sam took at the end were not that of a loving, gotta-be-with-my-girlfriend teenage boy. Stiefvater clearly just wanted to drag the suspense out longer than necessary, which ticked me off. Come on, Maggie.

Another thing that upset me was Grace’s parents. Not because they weren’t realistic (I mean, you hear stories of parents leaving kids in cars and acting more like roomies and children themselves than responsible parents all the time), but because of how Grace was affected by her relationship with them. The mask she wore hid all the pain she felt by her parents’ absence, and that was hard for me to see. I guess I’ve been lucky with two loving parents who are equal parts responsible and fun. But it’s hard to see how some children get the short end of the parent stick.

But there were many, many reasons why this book did it for me. The most important being the words Stiefvater chose to create this world. They were so lyrical, so melt-on-your-mouth worthy, that I wanted to keep reading more so for the words I would read than the story itself (because truth be told, the story is definitely predictable). This story is like a curl-up-on-the-couch, listen-to-moody-instrumental-music, drink-hot-tea-to-ward-off-Stiefvater’s-chilly-environment, immerse-oneself-in-this-haunting-tale kind of book. THE WORDS. Stiefvater’s construction of words. The feelings those words invoked. I can’t say enough.

Now, I want to tackle a topic I saw a lot of on the Goodreads reviews: Sam. Most called him a replica of Edward—whiney, emotional, shy, and sad. I agree to all of them. But if you had spent 10years of your life lost in a wolf’s body for every winter of each year against your will, and had had parents who tried killing you for what you were as a boy, wouldn’t you be too? I love seeing romantic, in-tune-with-their-emotions, sensitive men in books. Mainly because my own man is like that. Plenty of times while reading I stopped and thought, “Hey, this sounds like Fil and I.” Which probably made me like the story more, seeing as how I could relate to it further. I loved the relationship between him and Grace, how effortlessly it flowed, how natural they acted. The dialogue was simple, but it was honest. It didn’t feel made up or forced. Sam and Grace felt like two teenagers who wanted more than was possible, struggling to see a future admist the shadows of mythology, science and elements they can’t control.

Somewhere in the book Grace tells Sam, “You are beautiful and sad.” I don’t think there’s a better way to describe this story. It’s a small, intimate tale that deserves to be read with an open mind.

My Rating: 9/10

Favourite Quotes:
“You’re beautiful and sad,” I said finally, not looking at him when I did. “Just like your eyes. You’re like a song that I heard when I was a little kid but forgot I knew until I heard it again.”

“I’d found heaven and grabbed it as tightly as I could, but it was unraveling, an insubstantial thread sliding between my fingers, too fine to hold.”

“As the hours crept by, the afternoon sunlight bleached all the books on the shelves to pale, gilded versions of themselves and warmed the paper and ink inside the covers so that the smell of unread words hung in the air.”

“I was suddenly struck by how dissimilar we were. It occurred to me that if Grace and I were objects, she would be an elaborate digital clock, synced up with the World Clock in London with technical perfection, and I’d be a snow globe – shaken memories in a glass ball.”

A Recipe for a Book Club

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What with Katie (Worms for Words) naming her public book club this morning and the start of my first real book club meeting next week, you can assume I’ve got book clubs on my mind this Thursday. I don’t know about you, but the thought of hosting a book club both excites and terrifies me. So much responsibility! But so much fun!…right?

As bookworms, we like sharing our thoughts on books (I mean, that’s why we turned to blogging), so a book club just seems like the next step.

I’ve never been in a book club before, much less ever started one myself, so I’m definitely nervous for next week. We read The Great Gatsby a couple of weeks ago and watched the movie when it came out, and are planning on discussing both book and movie at our meeting next Thursday. I’ve always wanted to start a book club because I thought starting one would be best of both worlds: friends and books. I had my ideal club: we would get together at each other’s houses each month (switching houses every meeting in order to keep it fair), chat and catch up on life at the start, drink some wine and nibble on snacks, and then discuss in detail our thoughts on the book(s) we’re reading.

Sounds pretty lovely, huh?

And I would love, love, love to make that happen. I would love for my friends at the end of each meeting exclaim just how much fun they had that evening and how they can’t wait to meet up next month. I want them to be thankful for me starting this club and help share the responsibilities. Most importantly, I want us all to become closer with this club—as we share our bookish passions with each other, gushing over characters, critiquing author choices, forming opinions of plots and just generally enjoying ourselves.

But how do I do this? How do I make a successful book club?

If you’ve formed a book club of your own or are part of a physical book club (not just via blogging or Goodreads), how do you do it? How do you make the initial 20 minutes of the meeting not awkward, as you try to start bringing the books into conversation? How do you make your club flow naturally, effortlessly and happily? What are some pros and cons to book clubs? What have been your own personal experiences with book clubs?

Help me make this meeting (and all the meetings to follow) a success! Please help me :)

The Jane Austen Book Club: Book Review

Book Review #25: The Jane Austen Book Club

Author: Karen Joy Fowler

Genre: Fiction

Days to Read: 9 days

Synopsis (as taken from Goodreads): In California’s central valley, five women and one man join to discuss Jane Austen’s novels. Over the six months they get together, marriages are tested, affairs begin, unsuitable arrangements become suitable, and love happens… Dedicated Austenites will delight in unearthing the echoes of Austen that run through the novel, but most readers will simply enjoy the vision and voice that, despite two centuries of separation, unite two great writers of brilliant social comedy.

My Thoughts: I had come across the movie portrayal of this book years ago and sat down to take in its splendour after continuously announcing myself as an “Austenite.” I loved it. So much. So when I saw the book at the Calgary Reads book sale last month, I knew it was fate. I had to get it. I hadn’t looked up reviews on it before hand, so I was merely expecting it to be as engaging as the film. Was it? Well…not entirely. But it wasn’t terrible either.

I had gone into the book expecting Austen. I had thought that the characters would discuss Austen more, and that their lives would reflect Austen’s books more than they did, but I was disappointed. To be fair, I’ve never read any other books of hers than Pride and Prejudice and Emma, but still. It was a bit of a let down. All the parallells and discussions of Austen I already knew and didn’t really add to the story at all. There was nothing that really jumped out at me and excited me. And I mean, this book was about a book club. About Jane Austen’s books. It’s pretty hard to have a book about an Austen book club if the books don’t get lots of time in the spotlight. At the end when they reflect on how However, despite the lack of Austen (which, I can’t help but suspect, she was only thrown into the book to gather her followers), this book wasn’t a total disappointment.

I loved the characters, and their stories outside the book club. I enjoy reading parallel stories within a book, and with this book my favourite chapters were the ones where Grigg was in. I loved his back story and the fact that he was considered the “heroine” in the family and that his sisters were considered the “heroes.” Majority of the plot was spent telling the back stories of each character, leaving little room for present-day interactions. However, I’m a fan of when authors tell histories of those they’re introducing us to, so it didn’t bother me too much. Plus it made the characters more likable, more believable, and more complex. It made me care for them. When a character got hurt, I hurt for them. But I couldn’t help but feel a little dissatisfied by the short snippets of history and present day for each character.

However, despite my love for the characters as a whole, there was one character I just didn’t feel for: Prudie. I had liked her character way more in the movie, and I felt her book character just fell flat. I liked the direction the movie took her in, because it created depth, complexity and—might I say—naughtiness for her. In the book, I just felt like I wanted to skip to the next chapter. Sometimes with authors you can tell which characters are their favourites because they give them more time in the spotlight and give them the better character arches. With Fowler, it was clear to see Jocelyn was her favourite. More chapters were dedicated to her and she grew the most. Which is sort of sad, considering readers lost a lot of great story opportunities with Prudie and Bernadette (one of the most charismatic ladies in the book). That being said, my favourite characters were the side characters, the ones who rarely got any page time—Dean, Grigg’s sisters and Daniel. They were the ones I yearned more to learn about. I could have done less with Sylvia and Allegra, to be honest with you. Allegra particularly. I found her character didn’t really grow or anything by the end. She merely stayed the same, which wasn’t at all how I pictured her to end up.

And speaking of endings. What was that? I mean, I understand that not all books have happy endings and not every loose end is tied up (for better or for worse), but still. This wasn’t even much of an ending. I got to the last page and said, “huh.” Seriously. That’s all I said. I didn’t know what to think because the only ending I was happy with was Jocelyn’s, Grigg’s and Bernadette’s. I was furious with Allegra. Didn’t understand Prudie’s ending at all. And Sylvia’s was predicatable. I understand that these women were very stereotypical, but Fowler could have done more with them.

One thing I think important to draw to your attention is the narrator’s point of view. For each chapter’s insight into the book club meeting and into one character’s life, the narrator is given the role of reverse second person for present day and limited third person narration for the character’s history. Throughout the book, the reader is made to feel like we are joining the characters. Fowler uses the words “we” and “us” regularly. But the identity of the narrator herself is entirely unclear becayse when each chapter reflects on a particular character, the point of view never switches to “I.” It was a bit unnerving at first for me to get used to this type of narration but I found it worked rather well once I had gotten accustomed to it.

While the writing was enchanting, the chapters tied neatly together, and the stories wistful, hopeful and understanding, I couldn’t help but be just a little disappointed by Fowler’s Jane Austen Book Club. Would I recommend it though? Yes. But only if the reader is 100% aware that Jane Austen herself will make very little appearances. So Austenites: you’ve been warned.

My Rating: 7/10

Favourite Quote:
“Arriving late was a way of saying that your own time was more valuable than the time of the person who waited for you.”