Jul. 3rd, 2010

capfox: (Nobuo Side)
A bunch of cute or poignant love stories; hard to turn that down.

Book #22 (2010): How They Met, and Other Stories
Author: David Levithan
Provenance: Bought at the Chapters on Ste. Catharine

Short story collections all by the same author can often have some deeper thematic links, but this one is right out there on the surface: these are all love stories. Stories, yes, of how people met, but also of how they came apart, or came closer together, or found something deeper in their love, or found it wouldn't work. And that was really most appreciated, because man, that many stories of people meeting and falling in love and everything being rosy in a row would be pretty hard to get through.

But Levithan manages quite a solid mix of these, with some funny ones (the Alumni Interview was probably the one that got the most laughs out of me, but the Good Witch worked as well), some poignant ones (Memory Dance; The Number of People Who Meet on Airplanes), and ones where some people work it out, and some where they don't (and that, I'm not telling you which is which). And with a mix of ages, as well, although there's a preponderance of high school to early college stories, as perhaps befits an author who usually does YA books. And that works pretty well, too, from the trying to figure out even how to work with your feelings perspective that shows up in a few of them.

I liked that a large number of them had homosexual pairings, and I liked still more that in a decent number of cases, it wasn't clear what the genders of the couple in question were. There are definite coming out issues that show up in a few, closeted relationships, and that sort of thing, and those are handled quite well as well, usually. The first few were all gay or lesbian couples, and I was glad after a while to have at least a couple of straight ones, for the fleshing out of the concept, but I'm not going to complain about lots of gay characters when they're well written.

There are a couple of less-good stories in here, or ones that I think were meant to be more stylized that I wasn't sold on, and while I can usually see what the intention was, it did mean I didn't love everything. Still, for the first David Levithan book I've read that he wrote just by himself, I don't think this was a bad pick at all, and I'll probably be trying to read more of his stuff soon. Starting from here, if you haven't read anything of his before, could work, too, although I might try one of the novels. But if 75-80% of a short story collection really clicks, then you're getting your money's worth.

Next up: Oh my, probably back to the Japanese books, but I might throw a short English novel in, too. We'll see.
capfox: (Tokyo)
Oh, Japan... even if you weren't this bad, I can see where this was coming from.

Book #17 (2010): Fear and Trembling
Author: Amelie Nothomb
Provenance: Bought at the Chapters on Ste. Catharine

Living in a foreign country is often not as wondrous and glamorous as it appears to be from the outside. No matter how much you want to get to know your new culture and fit in, there are always differences in the way you approach people or matters, and even if you're trained ahead of time, you don't know what they all are, and they can still catch you unawares, and help bring you down.

Such is the case in Nothomb's book, which is a scathing, thinly fictionalized satire of her time working in a large Japanese company. She had wanted to spend time living in Japan again since being there with her parents as a child, and working there is an ideal way to try it, but she missteps with her coworkers time and again, in the most ridiculous ways. For example, after being hired to translate, she is criticized for speaking Japanese in front of people from another company, and forbidden to understand Japanese in the future.

Such indignations are par for the course in this book, and the poisonous relationship between Nothomb and her immediate superior, Ms. Fubuki, provides plentiful other examples. It's a very amusing story, if a bit harsh at points, and can be read very quickly. There aren't a lot of characters, and beyond the main two, they're pretty one-dimensional, but it doesn't really make a difference in a satire. It's not something that's likely to stick with you forever, but it makes for a light, fun summer read. I'd get it out of the library rather than buying it, since it really is finishable in an afternoon, but it's worth a chance.

(More reviews soon? I do have a backlog... we'll see.)

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