Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Week Eight: Non-Fiction

1. Travel  910s History and geography/Geography and travel/Ancient world through extraterrestrial     worlds  Jungle of stone: The true story of two men, their extraordinary journey, and the discovery of the lost civilization of the Maya by William Carlsen

2. History   363 Social Sciences/Social problems and social services/Other social problems The Siege: 68 hours inside the Taj Hotel by Adrian Levy and Cathy Scott-Clark

3. Contemporary social issues  360s or Biographies Between the world and me by Te-Nehisi Coates

4. Crime  364 Social Sciences/Social problems and social services/Criminology Love's blood by Clark Howard

                                                       The Siege
reads like a fast-paced thriller. It is harrowing, suspenseful, infuriating. It has villains, heroes, heroic deaths and senseless killing. It looks at the victims as well as the perpetrators. It gives a fascinating look at the inner workings of the Mumbai police force, and a look at Indian culture. The book moves from Europe to Pakistan to India, invoking a strong sense of place, along with a map to aid the reader in placing where the characters and concurrent events are taking place.

This is the true story of Islamic terrorists taking over a luxury hotel in Mumbai, India in 2008. It puts the story in context, and looks into the backgrounds of the people who play important roles in the events. It also has photos of the people, as well.





Love's Blood is a true crime story with a fiction-like narrative. The story of the circumstances of what leads up to a savage murder of a family committed by one of the family members is fast-paced and engrossing. With strong characterizations, plot-driven, and horrific acts committed by seemingly normal people, this book appeals to those who like works of fiction that explore the dark side of human nature.

Set in Michigan, the book describes appalling events mixed with the banal. Larger than life events taking place inside a suburb. Also, for those readers who like books that look at the depravity that lies beneath the surface of normality.

cimironology


Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Week 7: Not Just for Teens

Assignment 2: My thoughts about the articles content: When the Harry Potter and Twilight publication juggernauts dominated American culture, I was surprised that numerous media outlets reported on the amount of adults reading those and other juvenile and YA books. My surprise continued as these types of reports morphed into mainstream adult publications with an adult regularly featuring articles and reviews of juvenile and YA titles. There are offshoots of this phenom: Adult coloring books.









Movies based on comic books. The juvenilization of adulthood is nearing completion, or so it seems. I understand that some of these books, movies, videogames, comics, etc. can be entertaining, and perhaps even have some depth. Well, call me a grouchy old cuss, if you must, but I cannot stop myself from judging people who like to read YA novels. I do attempt to curtail my judgement about all this by reminding myself that this is America. Adults can read or view whatever they choose. Full disclosure: I've watched Captain America  and X-Men movies in the past, up to Winter Soldier and Days of Future Past respectively. I bought a Playstation 3 when it was released, and I religiously played COD, Uncharted, and Bioshock.





Now, I'm both bored and weary of these two activities, and I find myself able to resist the unrelenting hype that comes  with each new release.

Nevertheless, I have to admit I find the adults-liking-kids-stuff somewhat disturbing. Adults seeking out juvenile/YA lit, and not only that, but being proud to do so seems...um, abnormal.










When I hear adults having discourse on cosplay or video games, or talking about Captain America: Civil War as if they were discussing the Malick ouevre
, my patience wears thin.

Maybe I am old-fashioned, but I thought adults were supposed to pursue adult things, not starting reading fiction that is aimed at undeveloped minds...minds that are trying to figure out the world in which we live in. Adults are supposed to help guide them, not join book clubs to discuss A Shade of Vampire.








We don't live in an easy world, and we all have to find ways to cope, but regressing to childish activities? And defiantly proud of it? I don't get it. I don't want to get it. I think I'll sit over here and read my book. An adult wrote it. For adults.

Assignment 3: So! Here are my observations of two YA-centric websites.

Forever Young Adult: For women in their 20s who like to read and drink and don't know who Maureen O'Hara is. .

Squeetus Blog: Oh good god. I can't. I just can't.













Assignment 4: The trends I see, by way of these publishers' websites, is more of the same: Doomed teen stories for a good cry. Fantastic epics. Sci-fi. And realism, with teens coping with dysfunctional families, or death, or the trauma of surviving high school. The gadgets may change, but the stories remain basic, because, I feel teens go through the same drama as I did when I was a kid, but without so many monitors at our disposal. I do know where I will head, though, if I get an RA question about teen lit.


Thursday, June 9, 2016

Week Six: Building Base Knowledge (Genres)

Assignment 1: I chose romance. I haven't read any books that could be classified as belonging to the romance genre. I see them, of course, and I know there are a lot of series. I was told of a website, freshfiction.com, a website that features many fiction genres, and also invites readers to become a reviewer for the site. Under each genre are sub-genres. For romance, there are the following: Chick Lit, Contemporary, Historical, Gay, Suspense, Erotic, Time Travel, and Paranormal. Most of the books are part of ongoing series. I noted that most, if not all, of the gay romance are written by women.

I am familiar with the names of the top selling romance writers: Danielle Steele, Nora Roberts, Debbie McComber. They are represented here, but the less known authors get just as much exposure here on this website. So, for any reader, who wants to break the surface of romance novels, the freshfiction website would be a good starting point.
Hold Your Breath is part one of the Search and Rescue series. Many of the romance novels listed are parts of ongoing series.

Assignment 3:

Sub-genre 1: Borough warfare is a sub-genre of urban fiction. These novels typify what I would think all urban fiction novels would contain: Turf wars, usually over drugs, with the protagonist fighting rivals and the police to stay alive. There is violence, sex, and sequels.
The novels are fast-paced, suspenseful,, and invite the reader to identify with the main character, no matter which side of the law he dwells. There are also female-centric versions of these types of tales. The male versions go with titles with "Thug" something or other," while the female-led stories tend to have the word "bitch" in the title.

Sub-genre 2: Military romances have Navy Seals, Special Ops, Green Berets and other of the more glamourous armed forces professions as romantic heroes. The men and woman in this sub-genre are rugged, fit, handsome, resourceful, and totally committed to their jobs. The romantic entanglements
entanglements generally pulls out a sensitive side. The conflicts rise out of commitment to lines of duty and not wanting to give in to emotion while fighting a strong physical attraction. Other conflicts come from the setting itself: War and call of duty has a tendency to get in the way of romance, as well. Just ask Knox McLemore of In Too Deep by Kira Sinclair.


Sub-genre 3: Techno thrillers combine military might, espionage, and suspense to come up with a subgenre. Topical themes involving current or recent global political turmoil, including terrorism, keeps the hero of this novel occupied, enough so that he appears in a slew of sequels.
Military hardware, techno gadgets, and state of the art weaponry along with race-against-the-clock thrills make this sub-genre a must for those who enjoy these elements. Clive Cussler, Len Deighton, W.E.B. Griffin, Robert Ludlum, and, of course, the late Tom Clancy are some of the top names who continue to churn out the fast paced plots.