A Quote From Don Quixote

"Finally, from so little sleeping and so much eating, his brain dried up and he went completely out of his mind."
Showing posts with label cliche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cliche. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

How to Set a Fire Because of This Book

Last week, at the same time that I picked out the book The Long WalkI wandered past a book called How to Set a Fire and Why. It caught my eye because, on the spine of the book, there is a classic matchbook strike plate. When I was younger, I used to visit my grandfather’s house every day after Kindergarten and, being an avid smoker, he had thousands of matchboxes lying around. I always wanted to light a match, but I never did. Instead, I would run my fingernails over the strike plate as if it were a nail file. I remember pretending that my fingers were matches and that I was setting the house on fire, not just shaving down my nail. The spine of this book reminded me of my childhood, so I decided to check it out. 

The book, written by Jesse Ball is about Lucia, a young teenage girl who’s mother is in an insane asylum and who’s father was murdered (presumably by her mother). Lucia lives with her aunt in a garage that has been converted to a small house. Her aunt is very old and does not have a job, so they both live very meagerly. 
Okay, this is the part where spoilers come into play, so get ready!

**********SPOILERS AHEAD!**********

The book begins with Lucia having stabbed a boy in the neck with a pencil. He touched her father’s lighter, which she always keeps in her pocket and tells no one to ever touch, and she instantly wishes that she had stabbed him deeper. For very obvious reasons, she is kicked out of school and forced to move to a new school. It is not the first time she’s been expelled, so she’s fairly used to the drill. This is where my first grievance comes in: Lucia’s aunt is not angry with her niece. She does not chastise Lucia for stabbing someone IN THE THROAT! Hell, she even seems to be proud of her niece. I get that both Lucia’s father and aunt were supposed to be somewhat anarchist, but even an anarchist would not condone a throat-stabbing! Especially not from their own kid (or niece)! The part that really gets me is that Lucia claims that she understands what rules are and that she is mindful of them, but I can’t think of a single time she was actually a rule-abiding person. She mostly just steals, burns shit, gets high, gets drunk, or stabs people in the throat. 

Anyway, in her new school, she turns in a really great paper, blah blah blah, and she hears about a club called the Sonar Club. Sonar, fun fact, is an anagram for Arson. She hears this from a guy who obviously has a crush on her, seems like an important character, and then really doesn’t impact the plot at all. This boy, however, introduces Lucia to the actual leader of the real Arson club (which isn’t at the high school? And there are meetings maybe? I don’t really understand how this club works tbh). The leader is a boy named Jan (I had Office flashbacks too). It seemed like there was going to be a thing with Lucia and Jan, but there wasn’t. Personally, I’m glad that there wasn’t because holy shit this book was hella angsty to begin with, and it DID NOT need a romance subplot, so props to Jesse Ball! 

Jan invites Lucia to be the lookout while he lights a building on fire. She loves it, and she is immediately entered into the Arson club (even though it’s maybe not even really a club?). By now, Lucia has met Lana. Lana is her best friend, and she is just as dysfunctional as Lucia. Not much more to say about that because the two characters are basically copies and Lana’s character is really forgettable. 

Lucia’s aunt has a stroke and goes to the hospital. She comes home, but dies shortly after. In between the hospital visit and coming home, Lucia is invited by her amazing teacher to test for a totally free boarding school. The test questions are HELLA vague (like “why Hitler?” ) and one isn’t even a question (“Tell me a joke.”), but Lucia passes and is accepted. Her aunt is glad because she wasn’t really sure what was going to happen to Lucia after her death. What does happen is not AT ALL what her aunt had in mind. Lucia sees that her aunt’s most prized possession, her wedding dress and her husband’s tux (which were never mentioned up until this point) were missing. She suspects the landlord because the landlord hates her. She goes to see the landlord and, lo and behold, the landlord has the dress and the tux. He then calls the cops, and it turns out that he had already called in a warning for Lucia and her aunt in case the aunt died, so Lucia is now homeless. She goes to school the next day, and the principal says that he knows about the crime committed and will make Lucia’s life Hell if she doesn’t drop out of school, so she drops out (which I think is fair. She never really liked school, and she really went for her aunt’s sake.) The principal had called the boarding school that accepted her, and they rebuked their acceptance. Lucia has nothing left, so she, Jan, and Lana decide to burn the landlord’s house down. 

Lucia’s final chapter is just a prediction of what will happen. She wants to burn down the house, and then she wants to leave town and never return. Her biggest fear is not about getting caught, but that (in her absence) her mother will suddenly become lucid and will cry out for her daughter, but Lucia will never return to see her mother again. And that’s the end. 

**********SPOILERS OVER**********

Alright, list time:

The good:
The plot is mildly interesting. While the tone can be very depressing, it is interesting to watch Lucia ruin her life further, but it is only interesting in the same way watching a car crash is interesting. 

Lucia’s aunt, despite being a terrible guardian (by literally letting Lucia get away with whatever the fuck she wants) is actually a really sweet character, and I really enjoyed her. 

It is alluded that Lucia has a blacklist of people that she wants to kill. Weirdly enough, this was a plus. She, for only a moment, because a character that wasn’t just super crazy angsty, but that had some actual bite behind her bark. The fire she sets at the end provided this as well. Lucia is also an unwilling narrator, which is not often seen in novels. I personally enjoyed that, because it helped characterize Lucia more. 
Finally, an orthodox church is mentioned! As an Eastern Orthodox Christian myself, that was very exiting. You don’t see many of those in the literary world (unless if you live in Russia or and Eastern European country, in which you see it all the time). 

Now for the part I love (The Bad):
At first, I thought Lucia was mentally challenged like the boy in The Case of the Dog in the Nighttime (Amazon link), but over time I began to realize that she isn’t actually mentally challenged, but that the author wrote her in a way that seemed awkward. Take this quote for example:
“Drunk means: you can understand what they are doing and why and you don’t have to fear them as much as when you wonder what they want,” (Ball 138).

Throughout the whole novel, Lucia speaks in a very choppy and matter-of-fact way that is highly reminiscent of The Case of the Do gin the Nighttime, but I began to realize that this is not actually intentional, and that it was almost a mistake as it was highly distracting and impeded on my ability to pay attention on the plot. I was so busy trying to diagnose Lucia that I couldn’t pay attention to what she was actually talking about! Lucia is also S U P E R angsty. I get that having your mother locked up in a mental hospital and your father die is very traumatic, but wow Lucia was your typical YA novel teen (especially with that SUPER tragic backstory and not a single good thing ever happening to her). Seriously, there was so little development with her that I almost thought this was a poorly written YA novel (I ended up googling it and it isn’t actually a YA novel). Lucia’s voice was so dry, detached, and angsty that the plot seemed boring. if you were to write down just the plot, it would seem incredibly interesting and full of deep emotions, but Lucia’s character actually prevented this, which is never a good thing. 

Finally, the ending was just awful. It was so dull, and it didn’t actually say what happened. It gave Lucia’s prediction and then left it at that, and not in a cliffhanger-y sort of way, but more of a wow-I-wasted-all-this-time-for-nothing sort of way. That isn’t to say that I hated the book itself, just the ending. 

Now, of the moment you’ve all been waiting for…
MY RATING! 
I give this book: 


Two Pizza Slices!

The book was fairly average. I finished it, but I don’t think that I will remember any of it in a week or so. It was just another book in a long line of books, and that is mostly because Lucia was a terrible character and prevented the book from being awesome. So, read this book if you’ve got time to kill, but it isn’t going to be groundbreaking. 

Join us next Wednesday at Noon for my next book, and be sure to comment any book recommendations you have!


Wednesday, May 31, 2017

$10,000,000 Marriage Flop

I want to preface this post by saying that I have never read a James Patterson novel to completion. I have tried to read Zoo multiple times, as well as the first book of the Alex Cross series (Along Came a Spider) and his Maximum Ride series (The Angel Experiment), but he never really hooked me. Personally, I feel like he spends so much time cranking out book after book that he hasn't really had the time to ensure actual quality in his work. Also, looking through the list of books he has published, he hasn't quite found HIS genre. He writes everything from Thrillers to trashy romance for adults to comedic YA. While many readers, especially teens looking for an ultra-dramatic read, enjoy his books, I find them tedious, not well thought out, and written solely for the purpose of monetary gain. If you are a lover of his, perhaps this post is not for you.

The other day I was perusing my local community library (WOO!! COMMUNITY LIBRARIES!!!) when a particular James Patterson book caught my eye. Now, I've always associated him with thriller novels, probably because the books that I've started of his were all Thriller novels, so I was very intrigued when I saw The $10,000,000 Marriage Proposal  by James Patterson. This particular book is one of Patterson's line of "BookShots," books that are under 5 USD and less than 150 pages. The particular copy I had was only 117 pages, so I figured that I had nothing to lose. It's a pretty quick read, so it can't possibly be that bad, right? Well, boy was I wrong.

Before I bash the book too hard, let me give you some plot. Quick warning, there are SPOILERS AHEAD, so if you wish to read this book, watch out! (Don't worry, I'll tell you when the spoilers are over so you can uncover your eyes).
*********SPOILERS************

This book is about three women, Suze, Caroline, and Janey. None of these women have found love, and they are all fairly young and beautiful. Caroline is a humanitarian that works with children who have either been abandoned or are just need help (the book really is unclear), and she is currently living with her mother after her roommate kicked her out after getting engaged. Caroline's mother is a piece of work, having forced her daughter into multiple beauty pageants and acting auditions for much of her childhood. Caroline has a sister. I originally though this sister was very young (7-10) years old, but as the novella progresses, she seems to be older (maybe early teens) but it is difficult to tell. Suze and Janey are practically indistinguishable to the reader. They both work in prestigious jobs (Janey reads through scripts and proposes them to her network that has a super cheesy name like Flowerpot, and Suze is in the tech field? She funds technological projects? She invests in technology? Honestly, I'm not really sure what she does.) Both women are financially stable, and the only real difference is that Janey is a touch warmer, and she lost her job but quickly found a new one THE VERY NEXT DAY (if only this were realistic!).

At some point, all three of these women see a giant poster board on the side of the highway that reads:


"Will you marry me for $10,000,000?  
I am a creative, open-minded businessman with limited time and desire to play the field. This is a serious proposal."
The three women eventually enter the competition at the Staples Center and fill out a questionnaire. All three women advance to be interviewed, and then are invite to the mystery man's giant mansion. Okay, let's take a quick minute here: these women just signed up to marry a man with a ton of money without meeting him first, and with VERY LITTLE actual regard for their safety. What the actual fuck? Why? Why are they doing this? Two of them already have enough money, so only really Caroline is in it for the money. They claim that it's because of curiosity, but who the hell is so curious that they would join a weird contest for marriage? I get going to the Staples Center for the first stage. I would do the same thing out of curiosity. Besides, it's a harmless questionnaire with minimal personal information, who wouldn't be fine with this? The next stage is also fairly harmless. Just a nice little interview, kinda like a job interview. It's the last stage that REALLY gets to me. A limo pulls up to your house at ten pm, and tell you to get in. Do you get in? Of course not! Yet all three girls go in, with only one (Suze) having attempted to investigate the man behind this. She, of course, discovers nothing, BUT SHE STILL GETS IN THE DAMN CAR! What the heck is wrong with these women? If someone, I don't care how rich he is, that you have never met before sends a limo to take you to his creepy ass mansion (any mansion that you don't have the address of is instantly a creepy ass mansion).

Of course, nothing bad happens at the mansion. Instead, each girl meets two different "filters" (men that interview the women and pass on information to the actual millionaire who's identity is still not revealed) and then they go home. They are even given really fancy parting gifts, like diamond earrings and expensive watches. In the limo home, the girls meet each other and, despite the competition for the $10,000,000 dollars, they become fast friends.

Ugh. Literally, two thirds of this group come from really competitive fields. They should know that competition does not breed friendship! Seriously, this is so incredibly unrealistic that it makes me want to stab my eyes out a little. UGHHHHHHHHHHHHHH. Okay, rant over back to the plot.

Later that day, all three girls get rejection letters. One of them fights the letter (Either Suze or Janey - I honestly can't tell them apart) and are invited to his big shot company (think google but waaaay more ambiguous because I have no idea what this company actually does)  for answers. Caroline is also invited for reasons that make no sense and are not addressed. Finally, Caroline meets the millionaire! And she is immediately stricken by him (surprise, surprise) and they decide to persue a relationship DESPITE THE FACT THAT HE ACTUALLY JUST REJECTED HER IN A LETTER AND CREEPILY BROUGHT HER TO HIS MANSION WITHOUT ACTUALLY MEETING HIM THERE!

**********SPOILERS OVER**********

Okay, so let's start with the good:

This book is very, very short. It's a great read for after finals (which is actually why I got it) because it's crazy fast and it requires literally zero thought.

It's interesting enough because the idea would make for an EPIC reality show (with a few moderations of course as very few women would turn down a man offering $10,000,000 just to marry him after selecting her from millions as the chosen one, and also being the perfect Prince Charming. I suggest a bachelor-esque show where the final woman has to choose between the man and an obscene amount of cash. If this ever happens, I call 10% of the profits!).

Now for the bad:

The characters are so cliched that I almost died. You have the classic callous-but-successful girl, the kinda-ditsy-but-also-successful-Hollywood type, the mysterious-but-super-rich man, and the sugary sweet-perfect-humanitarian-without-money girl who ends up getting the guy.

It's so predictable. Honestly, I picked up the book and I knew who was going to get the guy.

There is ZERO character development. Zero.

 It's seriously the cheesiest romance novel ever. It was probably written in a total of a week, and the plot is downright pathetic. My seven year old sister tells me stories all the time that are WAY more interesting than this book.

The results?

This book was poorly written and was incredibly boring. It's only saving grace was that it was short, so the pain was not protracted as it could have been.

I give it:



One crappy pizza slice on a lame old paper plate. I would've given it none if it had been longer, but I appreciate the brevity.

Alright, that's all for now! Tune in next time when I review Stephen King's (actually Richard Bachman's) The Long Walk.