Showing posts with label contemporary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label contemporary. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
ALL FALL DOWN by Jennifer Weiner
I found a used copy of All Fall Down by Jennifer Weiner in a Starbucks cafe in Point Loma in the newspaper rack. It was still in good condition, and I looked around for someone who might've placed it there on purpose. An old man smiled at me from his seat. Maybe he does this as a hobby, I thought, smiling back at him as I slipped the book into my purse.
Am I really going to read this?
Does my bookshelf need another book?
My paralegal program started recently, and on top of that, I started my new job as case assistant for one of the largest local firms in San Diego. I flipped through the book during the weekend as I printed out stuff from the computer. Before I knew it, I was halfway done. And a little after that, I was done.
All Fall Down is about an educated, upper-middle class mommy blogger who lives a stressful life trying to balance between taking care of her sensitive daughter, their finances (she has to write professionally to make ends meet for the family), her distant husband, and her aging father with Alzheimer's. To placate her stressful mind, she takes prescription painkillers. But soon, the calming and soothing effect of those pills becomes the only reason she is able to get up in the morning.
What makes this book good is that it deals with real problems and misconceptions that people have towards drug addiction. We all have this horrid image of the homeless and haggard low-income drug addict, but drug addiction goes past socio-economic barriers, as we can see in Jennifer Weiner's novel, All Fall Down.
My plan for this copy is to pass it onto the next person in a public place.
My rating: 5/5 stars
Find out more about All Fall Down by Jennifer Weiner:
Amazon | Goodreads | Barnes & Noble
Labels:
5 star,
contemporary,
women
Thursday, March 12, 2015
The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones by Kelly Owen
The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones
by Kelly Owen
Genres: Fiction / Young Adult / New Adult / College / Contemporary
As someone who lived on campus at an infamous party school dubbed the "University of Casual Beer & Sex" for her freshman year, I can vouch for the social climate that we get in The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones. All the fun social opportunities (parties! concerts! late night talks! group "study" sessions!) can morph into a huge distraction from one's studies if one is not disciplined.
Set in Charleston, South Carolina, The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones by Kelly Owen follows the life of a college freshman named Cadence. During her first year of college, Cadence Cooper experiences and witnesses a lot of new, wonderful, and also terrible things in the fictional Charlestowne College.
True to the theme of college, the chapters are named after college courses, such as "ENGL 101", "GEOL 296", and "THTR 101".
The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones blurb from Goodreads:
SLEEPING FEET FROM STRANGERS is not a description Cadence Cooper remembers from the brochure that brought her to Charlestowne College, but this jarring reality becomes one of many she encounters during her freshman year. Threatened with expulsion from a "Demon of Darkness" professor and tormented by a hellacious roommate, Cadence struggles to survive in this realm of hookups and higher education. Here sex, drugs, and drinking become subjects of study just as much as coursework. Just when she's ready to give up the dream of a college degree, she finds romance with a rock star classmate and a position as a student photographer. With her lens fixed on the campus and Charleston, a stunning city that teaches its own powerful lessons, Cadence uncovers the details of a devastating rape, a mysterious suicide, and a secret group intent on exposing a scandal that will forever change the school. Knowledge never comes without cost--or surprises. Life with strangers transforms into profound experiences with friends, foes, lovers, and liars in and out of the Holy City's classrooms. Cadence's first-year journey begins with "English 101: The Composition of Life," but where it ends shocks even her.
An Ambitious Project: Capturing the Freshman Experience
The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones aims to capture an enormously wide scope of the freshman experience in a single book. In many ways, Owen's book succeeds in giving the reader a taste of many, many possible experiences of a freshman student:
- campus rape, date rape drugs, sexual assault
- domestic violence
- racism, discrimination
- feminism, sexism, double standards
- partying, dancing
- relationship problems
- drug addiction
- pregnancy
- eating disorders
- coping with grief, loss of a loved one
- bad roommates
- clingy boyfriends
- students who work as strippers for college tuition
- professor scandals
Welcome to the Fast-Paced College Environment
Everything is new to Cadence, who is a young white woman who grew up on a farm in the South. Before coming to Charlestowne College, Cadence had never had sushi before, and she didn't often meet people of different cultures or backgrounds. She is the perfect blank canvas for the craziness that is college.
Since we are following Cadence around campus, there is no central plot. Instead, we meet a lot of people moving swiftly in and out of Cadence's life. Such is the way of the fast-paced life on campus, and Cadence meets a few people who especially broaden her horizons, such as Isabella, a student from Mexico, who helps Cadence with a presentation for her Spanish class. I saw this same kind of enlightenment in my suitemate, who came from a home of socially conservative values and went home with a more open mind.
Covering A Wide Scope of Experiences: Good or Bad?
The advantage in covering so many experiences who come in the shape of characters is that we get to explore a wide scope of experiences, more than any individual freshman ever will. A lot of these stories are heard through the grapevine, but very few freshmen will ever experience it all themselves. This is freshman year on steroids. All of these people and tidbits of life come together to make Charlestowne College feel like real.
The disadvantage of covering such a large collection of experiences is that some individuals that Cadence meets are reduced to college archetypes, like they were only placed there to represent "eating disorders" or "bad roommate". While I recognized a lot of the stock experiences that they represented, some parts of the book with these archetypal college figures felt forced or disconnected from the rest of the narrative. Sometimes there would be a sudden switch in point-of-view from Cadence (third person limited) to another character for a few paragraphs, which was a bit jarring to me as the reader.
A Heavy Tome: More Entertaining on Ereader than Physical Copy
At 572 pages, this book is very long, and its physical form is no waif nor supermodel. I read the first half of it using the physical paperback, and the last half on my ereader. I felt a lot more comfortable reading this book on the ereader, partly because I could do so with one hand, and also because I was better able to focus on the beautifully descriptive language.
Writing Style: Fun, Tongue-in-Cheek
Kelly Owen's writing voice is remarkably fun, and deliciously tongue-in-cheek in some parts. One of my favorite spots in the book was the passage right after Corrine (Cadence's repulsive roommate) decides to drop out of college and marry her high school sweetheart:
"A good 'ole boy, raised on a strict diet of God, guns, and backwoods culture, Jed believed a woman's place was in the home, so he worked hard to restore Corrine to the proper path dictated by the limitations of her gender. This country boy would rescue her from the city and the evils of elitist professors and fanatical feminists by convincing her she was miserable...Together they would pursue their American Dream, raise their children in the steadfast tradition of family values and grow old teaching their grandchildren the importance of faith without question..." (WOST 261)
I read this in a doctor's waiting room and snorted with delight. The lady next to me wasn't very appreciative.
A Multi-Media Narrative
Kelly Owen and her students have expanded this narrative to include more than text. On the College Chronicles website, there are photos, music, and videos that her students have worked on. Kelly Owen also shares the story behind her book.Conclusion
The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones by Kelly Owen offers a great overview of the freshman experience to high school students who haven't attended college yet, seasoned college veterans who have braved and survived their freshman year, and also to anyone who is curious about what it's like during a student's first year of college. If anyone ever needed a handbook to the freshman year of college, this would be it.
In some parts, The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones can be a bit unfocused at times due to the wide breadth of Cadence and her friends' experiences, but the latter half of the book has more of a focus than the first half, as people's paths start to converge. The beautiful writing keeps things entertaining throughout the whole book. The foreshadowing at the end sets up the scene for the next volume in the series. I look forward to reading about Cadence's sophomore year!
In some parts, The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones can be a bit unfocused at times due to the wide breadth of Cadence and her friends' experiences, but the latter half of the book has more of a focus than the first half, as people's paths start to converge. The beautiful writing keeps things entertaining throughout the whole book. The foreshadowing at the end sets up the scene for the next volume in the series. I look forward to reading about Cadence's sophomore year!
My rating: 4/5 stars
Find out more about The College Chronicles: Freshman Milestones by Kelly Owen on:
Labels:
4 star,
college,
contemporary,
fiction,
new adult,
young adult
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Movie Review: The Fault in Our Stars (2014)
If I weren't such an uptight grape, I would have cried. Despite this being the third week that the movie has been out (and on a weekday!), the whole theater room was filled with teenagers, from families and groups to young couples enjoying their summer vacation.
Labels:
books to movies,
contemporary,
movie review,
romance,
YA fiction
Friday, March 28, 2014
Book Review: THE SUMMER I FOUND YOU by Jolene Perry
Amazon | Book Depository | B&N | Goodreads
The Summer I Found You
by Jolene Perry
Published: March 1, 2014
Genres: YA / Contemporary / Romance
The Summer I Found You
by Jolene Perry
Published: March 1, 2014
Genres: YA / Contemporary / Romance
A romance between a 19-year-old Afghanistan veteran Aidan and a 17-year-old high school student named Kate sprouts soon after Kate is dumped by her boyfriend. Both Aidan and Kate suffer from bodily otherness: Aidan lost his arm in Afganistan, and Kate has Type 1 diabetes, and this is what ultimately brings them together, despite their shame and self consciousness of their otherness.
This is a beautiful premise, but what I end up seeing is a shallow relationship propelled by raging hormones in which Aidan and Kate use each other as a "distraction" from their problems:
Labels:
1 star,
book review,
contemporary,
romance,
YA fiction
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Book Review: The Hunter's Moon by O.R. Melling
Published 2005 (Originally in 1993)
Genre: YA / Fantasy / Faerie / Contemporary
This is an older release from '05 and even earlier - it was originally published in 1993 by HarperCollins Canada, which explains the lack of digital technology in the book. I chose to read this book because I enjoy reading novels that cross the paths of young, contemporary adults and the faeries of old mythology.
From Amazon:
Gwen travels to Ireland to visit her cousin Findabhair, expecting a summer of backpacking, late nights, and the usual road trip adventures. But when Findabhair is kidnapped by the King of Faerie, Gwen must race to save her cousin before the rise of the Hunter’s Moon, when the fairies need a human sacrifice.
What I liked:
Labels:
3 star,
book review,
contemporary,
faeries,
fantasy
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Book Review: Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell
Published: 2013
Genre: YA / Contemporary / Romance
Many realistic first love stories are bittersweet, especially when they take place in high school. Set in Nebraska in the 1980s, Eleanor & Park captures the feverish passion of first love between two teenagers who don't quite fit in for different reasons. This is one of those wise books that surpass genre because anyone who's been to high school can relate to this story and the issues that it covers: first love, racism, family drama, abuse, and bullying.
What I liked:
Labels:
5 star,
book review,
contemporary,
romance,
YA fiction
Sunday, September 8, 2013
Book to Movie Review: The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones
Release Date: August 21, 2013
Director: Harald Zwart
Writers: Jessica Postigo (screenplay)
Cassandra Clare (novel)
The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones IMDB page
Spoilers alert!
Director: Harald Zwart
Writers: Jessica Postigo (screenplay)
Cassandra Clare (novel)
The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones IMDB page
Spoilers alert!
When actress Lily Collins heard that there was going to be a City of Bones movie, she frantically made a bunch of phone calls so that she could get the role of Clary, a teenage girl who is thrown into the chaos of the war between Shadowhunters (the race of nephilim, half-angel and half-human warriors) and the forces of demons.
Pacing / Action.
Pacing / Action.
Labels:
2.5 star,
actor,
actress,
contemporary,
fantasy,
glamorous book lounge,
movie review,
romance
Thursday, September 5, 2013
The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner (An Eclipse Novella) by Stephenie Meyer -- Book Review

Published: 2010
Genre: YA / Contemporary / Vampires
Genre: YA / Contemporary / Vampires
Okay, so I was curious about Bree Tanner as a character after I saw her in the movie, so I borrowed this book from the library. I must admit that I haven't read Eclipse, but I've read the three other books. The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner is about Bree's short, confused life as a vampire being trained to fight in an army against the Cullens.
Labels:
4 star,
book review,
contemporary,
glamorous book lounge,
vampires,
YA fiction
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
The Good, the Fab and the Ugly (Poseur #2) by Rachel Maude -- Book Review
The Second Book in the Poseur Series...and Sexism
Published: 2009
From the back of the book:
Halloween comes to Winston Prep and the newly named teen fashion label POSEUR introduces this season's must-have accessory: a red-hot handbag called the Trick-or-Treater. But whose design is sweetest? Janie, Petra, Melissa, and Charlotte all insist: Mine. You see the problem?
Good thing, then, for the sweetness of revenge. Time to dust off that costume and put your best mask forward. 'Tis the season for candy, conflict, and couture.
Once again, we are treated to the adorably cute fashion sketches, signed by Janie Farrish, who is the designated artist in the Poseur group. But they're actually done by Rachel Maude (except the Compai ones in the back). So beautiful. I was inspired to start some of my own!
The story continues the four girls' quest to promote their fashion label, Poseur.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
My Library Book Stash #1: Raiding the YA Shelves
| I borrowed more than this, but the pregnant tote bag on the floor is too unsightly to share. |
I even had more at first, but put some back. These are ordered by author's last name, and the summaries are taken from the backs of the books or on the inside pages with the ISBN numbers.
Total: 13 books - 1 book (missing pages) = 12 books to read!
Total: 13 books - 1 book (missing pages) = 12 books to read!
In Too Deep (Elite #2) by Jennifer Banash -- Book Review
A tale of the Upper East Side told from the perspective of four private school girls about parties, fashion, biological moms, and forbidden romances.
Genre: Young Adult / Contemporary / Privileged
Although I didn't read the first one, I still enjoyed this book a LOT. The four-way, high-stakes drama was captivating.
Published 2009
If you enjoy reading about fashion and brands, then you will definitely enjoy the descriptions of the designer clothes and cars. But even if you don't, this series is great in the way that each major character has her own motives for doing everything, even if she is slightly delusional about what's actually happening. It makes it nearly impossible for me to cheer for one particular person.
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