Monthly Archives: August 2015

Review: Killing Auntie by Andrzej Bursa

I received an advanced review copy of this title from New Vessel Press.  This book was originally written in Polish in 1959 and this English version is translated by Wiesiek Powaga.

My Review:
Killing AuntieJurek is a twenty-year-old college student who lives with his aunt. She is very doting on him and works hard to provide well for him.  So it is rather puzzling when one day she asks him to hang a mirror in their apartment and he turns the hammer he was using for this task on her head.  In two quick and hard whacks to the head auntie is now a corpse.

Jurek’s life, leading up with to this point, is rather mundane and dreary.  He goes to lectures at the university, hangs out with friends, and eats dinners cooked by auntie; there is no real challenge in his life until he is faced with the disposal of auntie’s corpse which is now decomposing in his bathtub.  The humor of the book is very dark, but done brilliant, especially as Jurek tries and fails many times to chop up and hide body parts.

He first takes off a thumb and starts small.  When he tries to flush the finger down the toilet it keeps floating to the surface so he has to fish it out of the commode and try another plan.  He then hacks off a foot and shoves it into the coal stove in his apartment.  All of a sudden there is a massive amount of smoke in his kitchen and an awful stench that draws the attention of his neighbors.  He finally decides to wrap up different body parts and mail them to random people around the city.

Jurek is intent on not getting caught and the anticipation of whether or not his crime will be found out makes this an intriguing read.  Jurek gets very drunk with a group of friends and is picked up by the police on the way home.  He thinks they have found out about his crime and he is ready to confess everything only to learn that they put him in jail for public intoxication.  Jurek also falls in love with a woman he meets on the train and when the relationship with her becomes intimate he confesses everything to her.  For a minute we think that she will tell the police but she suddenly decides to help him dispose of the corpse.  Finally, when another aunt and his grandmother visit they discover the corpse and mistake it for animal meat and bite a chunk out of it.

KILLING AUNTIE is humorous, intense, and in the end, surreal and nightmarish.  The ending is somewhat bizarre but a fantastic and unexpected surprise.  New Vessel Press has given us another brilliant novella in translation that I highly recommend.

 

About The Author:
A BorsaAndrzej Bursa (March 21, 1932 – November 15, 1957) was a Polish poet and writer. Born in Kraków, he studied journalism, then Bulgarian at Jagiellonian University in Kraków.

Bursa published his first poem in 1954. A prolific writer, he published 37 poems and a short story in different magazines during his lifetime. He died of a heart attack in 1957. Shortly thereafter, his first poetry collection was published, an important event in Polish poetry. Presently, there is a poetry prize named after Bursa which many living Polish poets have won (e.g. Ewa Lipska and Stanisław Barańczak).

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Filed under Humor, Literature in Translation

Review: The Anger Meridian by Kaylie Jones

I received an advanced review copy of this title from Askashic Books through Edelweiss.

My Review:
Anger MeridianMerryn Huntley is prone to anxiety attacks, has constant headaches,  and hasn’t slept well for years.  When the police knock on the door at her Dallas home and inform her that her husband Beau has died in a car accident, Merryn feels nothing but relief.  She has been married to Beau for over ten years and he was always disconnected from and disinterested in his wife and their nine year old daughter, Tenney.  In fact, when Beau crashed his car, a local waitress with whom he was having yet another affair was also in the car.

Merryn packs up her daughter and immediately flees to San Miguel, Mexico where her mother has a plush home with fabulous views.  One of the greatest strengths of the book are the descriptions of San Miguel’s  intense, blazing sun, its dusty streets and its markets full of local people and tourists. But when Merryn gets to Mexico, comfort is the last thing she gets from her mother.  Merryn’s mother, whom they call Bibi, drinks too much, gossips about her so-called friends, and belittles Merryn every chance she gets.  Throughout the book Merryn struggles to deal with her strained relationship with her mother.  Bibi is not a likeable character and the degrading words she constantly hurls at her daughter makes us glad that she comes to a tragic end.

While Merryn is in San Miguel, she also has to deal with constant calls from the FBI.  It seems that Beau was making himself rich  by laundering enormous sums of money for terrorists.  Merryn had nothing to do with her husband’s business and she is very worried that she will not be able to convince the feds that she is innocent.  Merryn is already a nervous person but with her mother’s constant berating, the circumstances of her husband’s death and the FBI breathing down her neck she is at her breaking point.

To complicate her life even further, Merryn also meets an American doctor in Mexico that she is instantly drawn to.  But Dr. Fuller has a reputation for sleeping with wealthy American widows in order to raise money for his health clinic.  On the one hand his sexual promiscuity disgusts her, but on the other hand she is very attracted to him, especially since he is so kind to her daughter Tenney.

The best characters in the book are Tenney who is a chess prodigy and her stray dog, Sophia.  Tenney and Sophia seem to possess the strength that Merryn lacks and in the end Merryn makes the right decisions because she realizes that she has to be strong for her daughter.

THE ANGER MERIDIAN is a fun and quick summer read with an interesting and complex plot.  Takes this one to the beach for a good end-of-the-summer read.

About The Author:
Kaylie JonesKaylie was born in Paris, France and attended French schools until she returned with her family to the U.S. in 1974. Her father was the novelist James Jones.

Kaylie began to study Russian as her third language at age 8, and continued to study the language and literature through her four undergraduate years at Wesleyan University and her two years at Columbia University’s School of the Arts, where she received her MFA in Writing.

Kylie Jones has published six books, the most recent a memoir, Lies My Mother Never Told Me. Her novel A Soldier’s Daughter Never Cries was adapted as a Merchant Ivory film in 1998.

Jones has been teaching for more than twenty-five years, and is a faculty member in the Stony Brook Southampton MFA in Creative Writing & Literature program and in Wilkes University’s MFA in Creative Writing program. She is the author of Speak Now and the editor of Long Island Noir. Her newest endeavor is her publishing imprint with Akashic Books, Kaylie Jones Books

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Filed under Literary Fiction

Review: Give Me Your Answer True by Suanne Laqueur

I received a review copy of this title from the author.

My Review:
GMYATGive My Your Answer True is the sophomore title by indie author Suanne Laqueur.  She takes on a brave feat by deciding to retell her first novel, The Man I Love, from a different character’s perspective.  Many readers might reject this story for fear of being bored when presented with the same plotline.  But Laqueur’s writing and subject matter put a refreshing spin on her original story.

Erik and Daisy are college sweethearts and we read about how they fall hopelessly in love with one another.  Their love is immediate and passionate and what we might expect of a couple in their early twenties with not very many cares in the world.  Their best friends, Will and Lucky, are also paired up and the foursome are happy, in love, and in many ways, very innocent and naïve.  Their bubble of innocence is burst, however, when a gunman shoots Will and Daisy in the theatre where they are practicing for their latest ballet production.

How many times have we turned on the news lately and seen the tragic story of yet another shooting?  Laqueur brings to life the lasting effects that such a traumatic event has on the lives of its victims for months, years and even decades after.  The foursome do not seek out counseling, but instead engage in self-medication through drug use; they are all reeling from the shooting and once the drug use starts the easy and comfortable relationships that existed among the foursome disintegrates.

What I found the most interesting about the book are the different ways in which each character deals with the shooting.  Erik completely rejects his friends and closes himself off; Will, on the other hand, becomes more clingy and must know where his friends are at all times.  The most detailed storyline is that of Daisy’s and it is she who has the most self-destructive behaviors.  Daisy spirals into such a deep depression that she starts cutting herself.  It is evident that the author did painstaking research into the after effects of a tragedy, the behaviors of someone who engages in cutting, and the types of therapy that victims might seek out.  This story reminded me that once the camera crews disappear and these shootings are no longer the top news stories, the victims are never truly free of their demons.

The other relevant topic that Laqueur brings up in her writing is that of  sexuality and the fact that sexual preference is not always clear cut or black and white.  Many might assume Will is gay because he is a dancer;  but he actually prefers to have long-term physical and emotional relationships with women even though he also experiments with men.  Will”s sexual choices are accepted without question among the foursome–even his girlfriend Lucky is fine with it.  Will is confident and unapologetic about exploring his sexuality and because he is so open about it, then so are his friends.

GIVE ME YOUR ANSWER TRUE is not only a great story, but it also raises important and tough social topics that are relevant and timely.  She promises to continue Erik and Daisy’s story in her third book which I also look forward to reading.

About The Author:
SuanneSuanne Laqueur’s first novel, The Man I Love won the 2015 Beverly Hills Book Award for romance, and a gold medal at the 2015 eLit Book Awards. It was a finalist at the 2015 International Book Awards and took an Honorable Mention at the Los Angeles Book Festival.

Suanne graduated from Alfred University with a double major in dance and theater. She taught at the Carol Bierman School of Ballet Arts in Croton-on-Hudson for ten years. She lives in Westchester County, New York with her husband and two children. An avid reader, cook and gardener, she started her blog EatsReadsThinks in 2010 and now blogs at www.suannelaqueur.com

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Giveaway: Austen in August-Pride and Prejudice Novel Journal

I received a box of beautiful and unique books and journals from Thunder Bay Press. Their selection of journals and classic books make great gifts for those who love literature, writing and journaling. For the Austen in August event hosted by Adam at  Roof Beam Reader I am giving away one Pride and Prejudice novel journal (US only).

Novel Journals:

Novel JournalAs a blogger I am always looking for journals in which to scribble my thoughts about books. I have a scattered collection of notebooks and I was thrilled to receive the journals from Thunder Bay Press so I could better organize my reviews. The sturdy, heat burnished covers ensure that the pages are not easily ripped and if I spill a beverage on the journal then the paper is still protected.

The durable nature of these journals, however, is not their most notable feature. Each journal contains the lines of a famous novel in tiny print. The lines of print serve as the lines one which to write in the journal. This would make a fabulous gift for anyone who likes to write and appreciates classic literature. Thunder Bay Press has a large collection of novel journals which include Pride and Prejudice, Jane Eyre, Great Expectations and TheJournal Text Adventures Huckleberry Finn. To see a complete list of journals that are available please visit this link: http://blog.thunderbaybooks.com/2015/03/novel-journals/

 

Giveaway:

I am giving away one Pride and Prejudice novel journal, just like the one pictured above. It contains the lines of Austen’s famous novel in small print.  To enter:

  •  Leave a comment below and tell me what your favorite Austen novel is.
  • You must also be signed up for the Austen in August event on Roof Beam Reader.
  • The giveaway runs from August 5th through August 12th.
  • I will choose one random winner who will be notified via e-mail.
  • The winner will have 48 hours to respond with a valid U.S. mailing address.
  • Open to U.S. residents only

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Filed under British Literature, Classics, Favorites, Giveaways