(no subject)
Nov. 19th, 2012 10:50 amI knew going in that Sarah Rees Brennan's Unspoken was probably going to be exceptionally relevant to my interests, seeing as it is:
- a Gothic
- starring a plucky girl reporter
- and her important relationships with her ladyfriends
SOLD! said I, announced my intention to buy it the first week it was out, and then instead spent about a month and a half trying to convince the local YA bookstore to special order my copy, so, you know, the best-laid plans etc.
But anyway I finally conquered the special order process and then proceeded to devour the book in a day. The protagonist of the book is Kami, a big personality in a small English town; she's a powerhouse of an investigative reporter, with one tiny quirk in that she has spent a large portion of her life having an intense personal connection on the astral plane with a boy she's never met.
Naturally, fairly soon after the book begins, aforementioned boy shows up, and here is what I loved: IT'S REALLY AWKWARD. He's huge and kind of creepy! She's tiny and has a mean death glare! The physical presence of a previously-disembodied voice really weirds them out! He is lonely and super into maintaining their codependency, and Kami is really not sure she's comfortable with that and would like to set some boundaries, please and thank you!
About three chapters into the book, they have the conversation that goes like this:
ASTRAL PLANE DUDE: Kami, now we have met, we should clearly DATE and be TOGETHER FOREVER.
KAMI: . . . yes, of course. Let me unbutton my blouse and you can proceed to take me now!
ASTRAL PLANE DUDE: AUGH YOU HAVE A BODY AUGH PUT YOUR CLOTHES ON!
KAMI: And that is why we should not date.
It's a really beautiful deconstruction of the destined soulmates trope, and I love it to pieces.
In addition to all of this, there is a lot of page space devoted to Kami's relationships with her female friends -- her BFF Angela, the deceptively lazy, and new friend Holly, who is a lot lonelier than she seems. I loved them both; I loved that their relationships with Kami were important, and that their relationships with each other were super important too. Kami's family: also important! Also Angela's family; also, in general the sense of a town full of people who know each other very well, but who all also have their own lives and motivations. What I mean is that this is not a world which revolves around the protagonists, and that's what makes it feel real.
And then, you know, there is the plot, and a sinister aristocratic family in a sinister house, and dark secrets, and attempted murder, and possible human sacrifice, all of which is awesomely Gothic and compelling in addition to the characters! But I say 'in addition' because basically the characters are what I'm here for and will continue to be here for throughout the rest of the trilogy.
- a Gothic
- starring a plucky girl reporter
- and her important relationships with her ladyfriends
SOLD! said I, announced my intention to buy it the first week it was out, and then instead spent about a month and a half trying to convince the local YA bookstore to special order my copy, so, you know, the best-laid plans etc.
But anyway I finally conquered the special order process and then proceeded to devour the book in a day. The protagonist of the book is Kami, a big personality in a small English town; she's a powerhouse of an investigative reporter, with one tiny quirk in that she has spent a large portion of her life having an intense personal connection on the astral plane with a boy she's never met.
Naturally, fairly soon after the book begins, aforementioned boy shows up, and here is what I loved: IT'S REALLY AWKWARD. He's huge and kind of creepy! She's tiny and has a mean death glare! The physical presence of a previously-disembodied voice really weirds them out! He is lonely and super into maintaining their codependency, and Kami is really not sure she's comfortable with that and would like to set some boundaries, please and thank you!
About three chapters into the book, they have the conversation that goes like this:
ASTRAL PLANE DUDE: Kami, now we have met, we should clearly DATE and be TOGETHER FOREVER.
KAMI: . . . yes, of course. Let me unbutton my blouse and you can proceed to take me now!
ASTRAL PLANE DUDE: AUGH YOU HAVE A BODY AUGH PUT YOUR CLOTHES ON!
KAMI: And that is why we should not date.
It's a really beautiful deconstruction of the destined soulmates trope, and I love it to pieces.
In addition to all of this, there is a lot of page space devoted to Kami's relationships with her female friends -- her BFF Angela, the deceptively lazy, and new friend Holly, who is a lot lonelier than she seems. I loved them both; I loved that their relationships with Kami were important, and that their relationships with each other were super important too. Kami's family: also important! Also Angela's family; also, in general the sense of a town full of people who know each other very well, but who all also have their own lives and motivations. What I mean is that this is not a world which revolves around the protagonists, and that's what makes it feel real.
And then, you know, there is the plot, and a sinister aristocratic family in a sinister house, and dark secrets, and attempted murder, and possible human sacrifice, all of which is awesomely Gothic and compelling in addition to the characters! But I say 'in addition' because basically the characters are what I'm here for and will continue to be here for throughout the rest of the trilogy.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:01 pm (UTC)Have you read Team Human, Brennan and another author's take on the Twilight vampire craze? If not, you need to read it because you will love it. There's a vampire that I think might be related to Eugenie.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:08 pm (UTC)Almost my favorite thing about this book is how she retweets everyone tweeting their rage and heartbreak with her about the ending.
(Which, still have not finished! Even though the book is sitting on my bookshelf! ARG, SELF!)
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:12 pm (UTC)(I mean it's not like you have a million other books to read or anything!)
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:14 pm (UTC)My main issue was how everyone had the same razor-sharp wry wit. The dialogue always seemed to be snarky, no matter what the situation and no matter which characters were talking. With everyone talking the same, my suspension of disbelief went out the window.
Plus I found the name 'Kami' thoroughly distracting. Who would name their child that??
Other than that, I really would have loved it. I guess I'm more picky than I thought?
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:16 pm (UTC)*waits*
...how about now? ;_;
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:21 pm (UTC)You are definitely not the only person who was bothered by the name Kami, though. It didn't nag at me but I also don't speak Japanese, so I am not the best judge!
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 06:27 pm (UTC)Angela and Holly are fabulous. And I loved Kami's dynamic with Jared.
Have you read the two short stories Sarah Rees Brennan wrote leading up to the novel - The Spring Before I Met You and The Summer Before I Met You?
no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 06:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 07:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 07:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 07:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-19 11:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-11-20 01:52 pm (UTC)Because otherwise the whole book gets an "oh hell no" and that is clearly unacceptable. I have known an actual person named that, spelled that way, so I have justification here.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-21 03:14 am (UTC)Though looking it up in a Japanese names dictionary, it looks like it actually is a name... still a horrible choice, though.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-21 03:19 am (UTC)I think she has some really engaging writing, though! She's definitely talented and I like that she's writing something a little different, and trying to break the normal molds.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-21 09:00 am (UTC)LA LA LA CAMMY CAMMY CAMMY
is what I am saying.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-21 02:06 pm (UTC)But it is a dangerously easy thing to do, make character voices sound the same! For me when I write it is one of the Great Constant Battles. I think it's also something that stands out less in audiovisual works, because you're distracted by how the actors sound different, and how they are pretty and so on.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-21 05:30 pm (UTC)I know what you meeeean. Part of the issue is that it all stems from my own head, so it's hard to make characters talk in a way that I wouldn't! Because my brain doesn't think in those speech-patterns! Ah, characterisation.
no subject
Date: 2012-11-21 05:30 pm (UTC)