Monday, December 27, 2010

Now Reading: Tinkers by Paul Harding



This is the second book I'm reading on my new Nook. For all you avid readers out there: check out the Nook or any of the other eReader devices. One of the nice features is being able to buy a book without leaving your home and the thing that I like even more, since I am a penny-pincher, is the ability to borrow books from the library online and read on the Nook instantly. Very cool!

Monday, December 20, 2010

Review: Man in the Woods by Scott Spencer



Scott Spencer’s Man in the Woods is an interesting look at different ways guilt affects us over time, especially as our past insurrections disappear into the darkness of the past. The irony is that our past casts long shadows well into our futures. How does one forget serious crimes or the ultimate betrayals when our minds constantly weave a web of connections, series of events that prevent us from pushing things into the past when they insist on being addressed?

The story’s protagonist, Paul, is a large, burly man with a sensitivity that endures him to everyone. Spencer seems to choose the name Paul to have the reader recall a Paul Bunyan image, yet this Paul would have not only an ax in one hand but a bouquet of flowers in the other. He is a man who has fallen into a good situation after a lifetime of wandering the country as a handyman. His girlfriend, Kate, has recently become a modern patroness of the fallen woman who failed balancing marriage, child, and career by falling into alcoholism. Her recovery becomes an inspiring story, one that she recounts in a book, public appearances, and even a radio show. Her recovery and success seems to be the strength that Paul is looking for to survive his past.

While trying to clear his mind of financial concerns, Paul goes to a park to clear his mind. While there he encounters a man who brutalizes a dog. When Paul cannot resist coming to the dog’s defense, a struggle ensues and Paul ends up regretting his decision. What follows is the story of Paul contending with a crime he knows he has committed but cannot come to grips with whether or not it was justified. As an investigation begins, the reader witnesses how dots are connected eventually bringing Paul and Kate to face their pasts and make decisions that will determine their individual and collective fates.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Review Numb: a Novel by Sean Ferrell

I would hesitate before recommending this book to the avid reader of literary fiction. It is full of symbolism, metaphor, and a character-driven narrative. Overall, I think the novel is heavy-handed in terms of exploring the theme of beauty being in the eye of the beholder. The protagonist is a canvas of disaster. His body is mutilated for public enjoyment and the more destroyed it becomes, the more he is adored. His blind girlfriend was a bit too much for me. She seemed to serve no greater purpose than to further highlight the "love is blind" theme. The supermodel who seduces the protagonist is a sterotypical character as well.

All in all, the literary qualities of the novel are admirable, but the narrative is so far detached from reality, that it would require greater literary acumen to get the average reader to suspend disbelief in this story.