Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Hoppy Easter Eggstravaganza Blog Hop: Wrecker

Welcome to Hoppy Easter Eggstravangaza Blog Hop at In The Next Room. I'm offering one copy of Wrecker by Summer Wood.
Summary from Goodreads:
After foster-parenting four young siblings a decade ago, Summer Wood tried to imagine a place where kids who are left alone or taken from their families would find the love and the family they deserve. For her, fiction was the tool to realize that world, and Wrecker, the central character in her second novel, is the abandoned child for whom life turns around in most unexpected ways. It's June of 1965 when Wrecker enters the world. The war is raging in Vietnam, San Francisco is tripping toward flower power, and Lisa Fay, Wrecker's birth mother, is knocked nearly sideways by life as a single parent in a city she can barely manage to navigate on her own. Three years later, she's in prison, and Wrecker is left to bounce around in the system before he's shipped off to live with distant relatives in the wilds of Humboldt County, California. When he arrives he's scared and angry, exploding at the least thing, and quick to flee. Wrecker is the story of this boy and the motley group of isolated eccentrics who come together to raise him and become a family along the way. 
You must be a follower to enter this giveaway. If your GFC name is different than the one that shows up when you comment, let me know. To enter leave a comment letting me know what your favourite book about family, of any kind, is. Make sure you include your e-mail address so I have a way to contact you. The winner will be randomly selected using random number.org and will have 48 hours to reply to my e-mail. It is open the US and Canada only, no PO Boxes. This giveaway will close when the giveaway hop ends at 11:59 PM on April 25th EST.

Click here to return to the Hoppy Easter Eggstravaganza Blog Hop homepage and visit the rest of the awesome stops. 

Bees: Nature's Little Wonders by Candace Savage

Bees: Nature's Little Wonders by Candace Savage looks at the incredible insect in a way you have never experienced before. It covers everything from what the relationships between bees is like, the diversity of bees, and what is going on in the mind of a bee. I picked up Bees because I'm a huge nature and science nerd, but what I found is a wonderful little book with crossover appeal to anyone who might just be a little interested in bees. Savage combines everything from poetry and sayings involving bees, to the history of the bee. Not only does she tell the story in an interesting way, but the book itself is extremely aesthetically attractive. You can click here to get an inside preview of Bees (it looks even better in real life!).  

I did find two rather large gaps in the material covered. First, there is a not a single mention of Killer Bees which have spread and terrorized over the years and which I certainly would have loved to learned the facts behind. Secondly, Savage only spends the final three pages of the book discussing the threats to bees in a way that is rushed and vague and I certainly thought a book funded by the David Suzuki Foundation would have spent a little more time on the environmental struggles facing the bee. That said, it's wonderful and informative on the topics it does cover. Savage tells the reader about the history of scientists studying the bee in chronological order, focuses on the key historical and contemporary figures.  I personally have a strong biology background but I had no real prior knowledge of bees going into reading this book. Luckily, Savage is clear and concise although the book itself is not overall scientific in detail.

The format of Bees is fantastic for getting a well-rounded impression of the insects and Savage definitely appears to have done a lot of research while writing the book which also includes plenty of references at the end for further reading. The book is full-colour and the images are a wonderful variety of photos and artistic renderings of the bee. Overall, I fully recommend Bees by Candace Savage as a lovely and informative introduction for individuals interested in learning a little more about this incredible insect!

Release Date: October 1st, 2008
Pages: 136
Source: Publisher 
Buy the Book

Monday, April 18, 2011

Small Mechanics by Lorna Crozier

Small Mechanics is the sixteenth collection of poetry by Canadian author Lorna Crozier. Although I wasn't familiar with Crozier previous to picking up the book, as soon as I began reading the collection I knew I was going to love it. What is so refreshing about the poetry is Crozier's simplicity, some of the best lines are so straightforward and yet raw and piercing. The poem "Giving Up" ends with the stanza:
"No one will go mad tonight.
No one will ride a silver slip across the waters,
and no one, no one, no one will fall
in love." 
While "Night Walk" ends with:
"Once, twice, a truck goes past.
I raise my hand to wave but I can't see
if anyone is waving back."
The simplicity of the lines grips the reader into a world of emptiness and loneliness, the lines are quiet but with an echo that resonates, and the division between them break them up perfectly creating moments such as "and no one, no one, no one will fall" and "I raise my hand to wave but I can't see" that tell stories by themselves. Of course, that isn't to say that Crozier can't play with language either, because there are plenty of vivid poems in she seems to have selected specifically words whose sound compliments her imagery, using words like scab and crusty in the poem "Lichen".

The moments Crozier celebrates are ordinary but she views them from a different and beautiful perspective, turning an annoyance into poetry with "Finding Four Ways to Celebrate the Huge Moths That Keep Me Awake Banging Between the Blind and Window and Falling On My Pillow" which uses the wing imagery to tell four small stories. The image of the moth appears in many of the poems including "A Cow's Eye" and "Obsession", representing something that is both ugly and extraordinary. Wings in particular play an important role in the collection, not only the wings of moths but also birds and even dragonflies, things that beat and fly away. There are also several references to the song of a bird in "If Bach Was A Bird" Crozier writes "the bird sings not because / it has an answer / but because it has a song" while "Holy One" ends with the stanza:
"A chickadee lighting on your palm:
hard to believe that a soul weighs less than that
and does not sing."
A bird's song is both simple and magical, a beautiful mystery, one of the small, unexpected moments that Small Mechanics uncovers. Another major theme to many of the poems in the collection is mourning, grief at the loss of parents, in particular a mother as well as time leading up to her death. In "Angel of Grief", Crozier delves into the mystery that our parents always maintain and the rituals that follow their deaths:
"And there's something
sacred about this place and what I'm doing,
empty my mother's dresser,
the only thing she claimed as hers alone,
the house too small, too poor to keep a secret."
The narrator is visited by the Angel of Grief but says:
"-enough of him. Here, he's less
important than my mother, her last things;
they slip through my fingers into the garbage sack
and leave their mark on me like scalding water." 
Crozier also mourns her father, who according to poems such as "Getting Used To It" and "Grief Resume" passed away sixteen years before her mother. In "My Father, Face To Face" she reflects on what it would be like to see him again, in the other world, and the insecurities and regrets she has about their relationship, "I wish / I'd known then that his drinking / was a sickness not a sin" she writes while in "The Dead Twin 2" she lists her sins including the fact that she has "mourned a cat more than my father". The poem "Grief Resume" is a collection of losses, from animals to parents to friends, "Too many friends. / Once I could count them / on one hand." The quiet nature of grief is epitomized by in the poem "The Day My Friend is Dying", where Crozier writes, "What is silent is more silent."

Many of the poems in Small Mechanics have an air of nostalgic to them, not just for those who have passed away but also for what life was like when they were alive, for the person you are when you have your parents and are a child, the vast potential that the world offers. In "What Holds You" Crozier reflects that
"The sky's
the only childhood thing
that isn't smaller
than you remember it."
while one of the very first poems in the collection, "The First Day of the Year", begins with the potential of a newborn writer, one who is "dreaming ink / though she hasn't seen it / in this world yet." 

The second half of Small Mechanics is compiled under the tile "Our Good and Common Bones" and then divided into poems within it, all filled with rich imagery. In the title poem "Small Mechanics" Crozier writes "your old bones / need dress rehearsals for the fleshless times." and ends with the stanza:
"I want a poet who goes outside,
who knows the small mechanics
of the clothespin and the muddy boot."
Crozier is exactly that kind of poet, the one who in "The Grasshopper's Task" finds the beauty in something as ordinary as a potato, writing that:
"Potatoes: more like us than any other vegetable.
In the root cellar their long pale arms
reach for one another in the dark."
Many of the poems in "Our Good and Common Bones" revolves around various animals, rats, horses, birds, cows, cats, grasshoppers, foxes- each of these is viewed in a unique and interesting way and the poems feel like a distinct look at them, a look goes beyond the feathers or fur and examines what makes up their soul. One poem, "A New Religion", even goes so far as to describe a religion which centres around the cat, although it was one of the cases where the concept didn't quite work for me. As a whole however, "Our Good and Common Bones" is a perfect title for a collection of poems which looks at animals in such a way that they could be human. The section also includes several unconventional love poems, ones that address the changes that happen as you age, not just to the body but also to the kind of love you have in poems such as "My Last Erotic Poem" and "Taking the Measure".

Ultimately, Small Mechanics is epitomized by Crozier's ability to capture rich details. It is a collection about time and animals, about mourning and remembering. In each poem Crozier examines the small mechanics of a moment and with her observant eye what she finds beneath the skin throughout Small Mechanics is described with incredible beauty and skill.

Release Date: March 29th, 2011
Pages: 120
Source: Publisher
Buy the Book

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Author Guest Post: Laura Kasischke

On Writing Poetry Vs. Novels

I find the writing of poetry and of novels to be quite different, but my first interest is always in language, and particularly in figurative language. I like discovering new ways to describe things. In both the poetry and the prose, I compose mostly via association. I begin with a sensory image—something like a river, or a snowstorm—and move through the details until I find an event or an emotion correlative to that imagery. But with poetry, there’s an accumulation of energy that I need to have already started on before I sit down to right. With a novel, that’s not possible. You can’t sustain that amount of energy for a project over many years. I can hack away, and come back and revise, and find the inspiration during the writing process itself, instead of before. I've never really started a novel from a poem, or vice versa, but I do find overlap of themes and images, particularly when I'm writing in the two genres simultaneously. I enjoy both a great deal, but if I were told I could write in only form for the rest of my life, I’d choose poetry. That’s where my love of writing started.

Laura Kasischke teaches in the University of Michigan MFA program and the Residential College. She has published seven collections of poetry and seven novels including In A Perfect World. She lives with her family in Chelsea, Michigan. Click here to read a review of her latest novel, The Raising, on In The Next Room. To learn more about Laura's books and upcoming events visit her Author Page here.  

Saturday, April 16, 2011

In My Mailbox (April 10th-16th 2011)

I definitely had a happy mailbox (and a happy me!) this week.

{For Review}
Vaclav & Lena by Haley Tanner (Unsolicated ARC) (Random House Canada)
Rage by Jackie Morse Kessler (Thomas Allen and Sons)
The Education of Bet by Lauren Baratz-Logsted (Thomas Allen and Sons)
Bird in a Box by Andrea Davis Pinkney (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)
Beauty Queens by Libba Bray (ARC) (Scholastic Canada)
Abandon by Meg Cabot (ARC) (Scholastic Canada)
Wanna Go Private? by Sarah Darer Littman (ARC) (Scholastic Canada)

Definitely quite a mix of YA this week. Vaclav & Lena sounds cute and it's all about magic and came with a finger cutting trick which was fun. I haven't read the prequel to Rage, Hunger, so I'm not sure when I'll be picking up that but I have heard the writing in the books is really beautiful. The Education of Bet will probably be hit or miss, it's about a girl who pretends to be a boy because she lives in a time when girls have no power basically. Bird In A Box is historical fiction that takes place during the Great Depression which is a period I find really interesting so I am definitely looking forward to it. I'm really excited about the Bray and Cabot titles as I have not read them before but heard really good things about both authors. Wanna Go Private is supposed to be a really creepy look at an important topic (internet dating).
Bees: Nature's Little Wonders by Candace Savage (D&M Publishers)
The Bond: Our Kinship With Animals, Our Call To Defend Them by Wayne Pacelle (Unsolicated) (Harper Collins/William Morrow)
Far to Go by Alison Pick (ARC) (TLC Tours)
Skinny by Diana Spechler (ARC) (TLC Tours)

I'm already almost finished Bees which is absolutely adorable and informative and I love it. The Bond caught my animal-loving heart with its cover and I'm sure the contents will do the same. I also have two books for upcoming tours I am really looking forward to, one about a woman who goes to fat camp, that'd be Skinny, and the other, Far to Go, focuses on a Jewish family in Czechoslovakia in the time leading up to Hitler's invasion, a historical period I am particularly interested in.

{Won}
I won Hiking: 101 Essential Tips from Anaiz at Lady and the Books during a Birthday Day Week celebration she hosted. I admit I haven't gone hiking in years, but this cute little book is sure to provide some inspiration.

{Bought}
Cusp by Jennifer Grtoz
Intruder by Jill Bialosky

I totally did my part to help support poetry during National Poetry Book by purchasing three titles I'd been lusting over. The first two arrived this week. I had to pick up Cusp after loving Grotz's latest collection The Needle (click for review) unfortunately she waited 8 years being publishing Cusp and The Needle so I'm hesitant to read it right away and not having anything else for another decade. Bialosky's collection I picked purchased after reading her memoir, History of a Suicide (click for review) which was incredibly beautiful and included some of her poems and definitely got me interested in reading more.

Overall it was a great week for my mailbox! How was yours?