Alaska Books
I spent a week in a cabin in Alaska; due to weather and flight delays, I also spent a whole lot of time holed up in the cabin and in airports and on planes. As a result, I finished a whopping nine books, so this might be a long post! This covers many of my favorite genres: litfic, young adult, speculative fiction, and Japanese mystery.
Asking for a Friend (by Kara H. L. Chen)
Cute YA about Taiwanese-American kids with complicated families who enter a business competition. In fact, the first of two books on this list about second-generation Asian kids! I enjoyed the depiction of Taiwanese culture and as a second-generation kid of immigrants (though not Asian immigrants) a lot of relatability in this one. Cute but not amazing.
Inspector Imanishi Investigates (by Seicho Matsumoto)
I believe this was a new author for me that I got from a recommendation on Reddit. Slow-paced, lots of minutia which I normally love, but
but not enough balance in the other direction, and not enough excitement
in the mystery. It's like "here is every detail about a very slow paced investigation, and the killer is the exact person you most medium suspect, and you'll discover that very slowly." Not a must.
True Love and Other Impossible Odds (by Christina Li)
This was the one that made me cry. It has lot in common with the first book on this list, as it also deals with the pressure of being the child of Asian immigrants. Bu it's a little more mature (the characters are college freshman), the romance is a Sapphic one (always a plus), and in general it was more affecting (I cried). Of all the YA books (or early adult in this case) on this list, this was by far my favorite.
James (by Percival Everett)
I've been meaning to read this one since the summer, as it was selected for Camp ToB and is by one of my favorite authors. It's a high concept novel (a loose retelling of Huck Finn from Jim's perspective) and it's by Percival Everett, so of course it's a masterpiece. This will definitely make my end of year best books list and probably be in the 2025 tournament. It's wonderful.
In the Orbit of You (by Ashley Schumacher)
Another YA, with good chemistry and a nicely complex love story but an unsatisfying ending that didn't quite ring true. As an aside, I knew the Goodreads crowd would dislike this one because they get very mad when anyone is
emotionally (or god forbid physically) cheating in a YA novel, but I
cannot be the only teenager with the messiest love life. (A sample of my high school days: I
cheated on my first boyfriend by kissing a hot guitar player at a party, he
responded by bringing me flowers and forgiving me, which didn't make
sense until I catfished him for fun only to discover he'd been having
sex with his male best friend for years. We stayed together until I
successfully convinced him he was gay. We've been best friends for over
30 years. That's high school for you!)
Margo Has Money Troubles (by Rufi Thorpe)
I decided based on reading her ToB judgment last year that I had to read something by Rufi Thorpe and indeed, this novel is exactly as smart, fresh, quirky and funny as I expected.
The Half-Life of Love (by Brianna Bourne)
This was both speculative fiction and YA; the concept is that you get a twinge when your life is halfway over. A lot of suspension of disbelief was required because they are scientifically investigating it as if it's some chemical thing but also apparently you're immortal before this happens? Like, what happens if you blow your brains out with a pistol? But it's a love story between a researcher who lost her baby sister and a teenage boy who's about to die. I didn't love how the
ending played out (not in terms of what happens, but in terms of how Finch doesn't get agency over his planned death) but it was an interesting high concept, and I liked September as a character and just generally pondering how we live our lives and what's important. Also I was on a bucket list trip (to see the Northern Lights) so led to some interesting contemplation about the purposes of a bucket list and why this trip was important to me.
True Letters from a Fictional Life (by Kenneth Logan)
I wasn't sure if the characters fell flat for me because I was tired from travel at this point, but my thoughts were echoed on Goodreads and the more I thought about it, the more flat it fell. It's about a sporty kid who's figuring out he's gay but I had a lot of problems with it: there's a lot of homophobic and transphobic stuff that is never challenged or addressed. It doesn't feel like in 21st century Vermont of all places there would be this many people using the f-slur, punching gay kids, assuming gay people are pedophiles, or panicking about gay people getting AIDS. Like the widespread regressive attitudes don't ring true. The romance is absolutely tepid. And I couldn't really visualize any of the characters so they all fell flat. A big miss for me.
Salvation of a Saint (by by Keigo Higashino)
Last but not least, from the author of The Devotion of Suspect X, another Howdunit. There was one part of the Howdunit that I figured out very early on; the other part was ingenious and I didn't. I loved the character of the female junior detective. I loved the entire plotline and the unraveling of the mystery. Goes into my top tier of Japanese mysteries for sure, and a great note to end my vacation reading marathon on!
Labels: black american writing, humor, international, kindle, LGBTQ+, library, litfic, mystery, romcom, translated, world literature, young adult
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