Daily Archive: March 10, 2012

Mar 10

Book a Week Challenge (Double Edition) — Book 9

The second book for this week is Luka and the Fire of Life by Salman Rushdie.

For fans of Salman Rushdie’s Haroun and the Sea of Stories, comes yet another delightful tale featuring Haroun’s younger brother Luka. When Haroun and Luka’s father, famed storyteller Rashid Khalifa succumbs to a sleeping sickness, Luka embarks on a mission to the World of Magic to retrieve the Fire of Life itself. Joining him on his quest is a singing dog named bear, a dancing bear named Dog, and the mysterious Nobodaddy, Rashid’s ghostly double.

In a bustling and minutely imagined fantastical landscape crammed with allegorical figures and places, Luka moves between the mythological and the contemporary: one minute he is meeting all manner of gods and goddesses, the other he’s subject to the laws of the video game, keeping a close eye on the number of “lives” he has left and trying to save his progress through various levels.

The novel moves quickly and there are a number of laugh-out-loud moments. The only times it seems to drag is when Luka turns to introspection or worse, when he analyzes his companions and the world around him. It’s like Rushdie is trying to lead his audience instead of letting them get it on their own. It doesn’t help that Luka sometimes acts like a spoiled brat. (Then again, I have yet to meet a twelve-year old who didn’t act like that at one time or another.)

Favorite Line/Image: When Grandmaster Flame was right in front of him, Luka shouted out at the top of his voice, ‘May your animals stop obeying your commands and your rings of fire eat up your stupid tent.’

Now it so happened that the moment when Luka shouted out in anger was one of those rare instants when by some in – explicable accident all the noises of the universe fall silent at the same time, the cars stop honking, the scooters stop phutphuttering, the birds stop squawking in the trees, and everyone stops talking at once, and in that magical hush Luka’s voice rang out as clearly as a gunshot, and his words expanded until they filled the sky, and perhaps even found their way to the invisible home of the Fates who, according to some people, rule the world. Captain Aag winced as if somebody had slapped him on the face and then he stared straight into Luka’s eyes, giving him a look of such blazing hatred that the young boy was almost knocked off his feet. Then the world started making its usual racket again, and the circus parade moved on, and Luka and Rashid went home for dinner. But Luka’s words were still out there in the air, doing their secret business.

What I learned: Though they do slow – and sometimes halt – the narrative, some of the best moments come when Luka ponders how his actions will change others’ lives. His quest is an arduous one that endangers his friends, and he knows it.  

“I am exploiting their love and loyalty,” he thinks. “It seems there is no such thing as a purely good deed, a completely right action.”

Despite all the action going on around him, Luka’s struggle is primarily a moral one. And like many adolescent magical heroes, he recognizes that the tough part about being a kid is that the job of being the adult largely falls to him.

Bottom Line: A great story full of adventure, mischief, and magic. Highly recommended for kids and adults.  

 

Permanent link to this article: http://www.jacquitalbot.com/2012/03/book-a-week-challenge-double-edition-book-9/

Mar 10

Book a Week Challenge (Double Edition) – Book 8

WHAT’S PLAYING: Colbie Callait “I Never Told You”

My little bout with pneumonia has put me behind in my reading. So, for the next two weeks, I’ll be reviewing two books instead of the usual one.

The first book for this week is Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman.

While rushing to a dinner engagement with his ambitious fiancée, Richard Mayhew stumbles over an injured girl on the sidewalk and decides to help. This act of kindness irrevocably changes his life. Through the mysterious Lady Door, Richard discovers London Below, a thriving world that lies beneath the mundane reality of our everyday lives. After his encounter with Lady Door, Richard discovers that he has become invisible to his friends, colleagues, even his erstwhile fiancée. His only hope of staying alive long enough to return home lies with the Lady Door in the fantastical land of London Below.

As usual, Gaiman proves himself a master at creating the weird and wondrous, with characters ranging from the benign to the stunningly evil. Each one is drawn with the same luxuriant attention to detail, while still leaving a lot to the reader’s imagination.

To my mind what really proves Gaiman’s effectiveness as an author in these pages is how easy he makes it to believe in the existence of this other world beneath our feet. Where do the people go who have slipped between the cracks in our society? Adding to the believability of the situation is Gaiman’s refusal to romanticize people or their circumstances. London Below is no paradise. There is starvation, famine, and crime down there just as much as there is above ground

My only issue with this novel has to do with Richard’s attitude. He follows Door around like a lost puppy, begging her to let him come with them – which makes a hell of a lot of sense, seeing as how it’s his best chance of survival – and then he turns into a bit of whiny jerk. For example, when she tells him that they’re going to see an angel, he insists that there’s no such thing as angels. I don’t know about you, but if my only chance of survival lay with a group of people who believed in angels, I’d sing Hosanna until the cows came home and keep any snarky comments to myself.

Favorite Line/Image: Mr. Croup was in a cold fury. He was walking twice as fast as Mr. Vandemar, circling him, and almost dancing in his anger. At times, as if unable to contain the rage inside, Mr. Croup would fling himself at the hospital wall, physically attack it with his fists and feet, as if it were a poor substitute for a real person. Mr. Vandemar, on the other hand, simply walked. It was too consistent, too steady and inexorable a walk to be described as a stroll: Death walked like Mr. Vandemar.

What I learned: The great thing about this book is that it speaks to something deep within human nature. We all crave identity. As Richard discovers, when you are no longer given recognitions status unless you are self-assured and aware, you can quickly become lost.

Bottom line: Neverwhere is a wonderful adventure story about a journey through a vast underground world full of wonders and horrors. It is also about the same journey we each can choose to make through our own world of wonder and horrors that lies within us. Enjoy it for the story, and think about it for yourself.

Permanent link to this article: http://www.jacquitalbot.com/2012/03/book-a-week-challenge-double-edition-book-8/