In the Mail: The Savage City

The Savage City: Race, Murder, and a Generation on the Edge by T. J. English

Booklist

In Manhattan in August 1963, two white women were hacked to death in a crime the tabloids would call the Career Girls Murders. The police picked up a near-blind 19-year-old black youth and spent hours pressuring him into confessing to the crime. George Whitmore would spend the next decade fighting the setup as police and prosecutors persisted in what they knew to be a miscarriage of justice. That same decade was the most violent in the history of New York City, with escalating racial tension between the police and black nationalist groups. Acclaimed journalist English profiles Whitmore, as well as Bill Phillips, a brazenly corrupt second-generation NYPD cop, and Dhoruba bin Wahad, a gangbanger turned Black Panther, to present an epic look at the racial animus, fear, and hatred that characterized that troubled decade.
Drawing on interviews with former police and prosecutors, activists, hustlers, and journalists, English recounts a time of growing and visceral hostility between a police department steeped in corruption and a besieged black community that exploded in violence. He chronicles the rise of the Black Panther Party in New York and the Knapp Commission investigation of police corruption that was later depicted in the movies Serpico and Prince of the City. Through the lives of three ostensibly unrelated men, English peels back the underlying turmoil that led to the violent period and the unaddressed social ills that remain to this day.

Dandelion Fire (Book 2 of the 100 Cupboards) by N.D. Wilson

Cover of "Dandelion Fire: Book 2 of the 1...

Cover via Amazon

As any avid reader will tell you, one of the great things about discovering a series late is the ability to jump from one book immediately to the next book in the series.  If you are reading them when they are first released you instead have to impatiently wait for the next book to be published.

So it was with great joy that I jumped from N.D. Wilson‘s 100 Cupboards (the first book in the series of the same name) to Dandelion Fire.  The second book picks up where the first one left off.  Here is the publishers blurb:

Henry York never dreamed his time in Kansas would open a door to adventure—much less a hundred doors. But a visit to his aunt and uncle’s farm took an amazing turn when cupboard doors, hidden behind Henry’s bedroom wall, revealed themselves to be portals to other worlds. Now, with his time at the farm drawing to a close, Henry makes a bold decision—he must go through the cupboards to find the truth about where he’s from and who his parents are. Following that trail will take him from one world to another, and ultimately into direct conflict with the evil of Endor.

The thing to note about this second book is that it grows in seriousness if you will – there is a maturity and thus more violence and suffering – and also a complex plot narrated from a variety of viewpoints.

This all combines to make it disappointing for some who enjoyed the shorter more quirky first book. While the first book took some time to get to the magical aspect, the plot was relatively straightforward. In this second book, the plot threads grow and can be hard to follow at times.

My opinion is that series rewards readers who both are up to the challenge and who can just “let go and enjoy the ride.”

Read in a Single Setting captures this well in her review and sums up my feelings almost exactly:

Dandelion Fire marks ND Wilson’s second foray into the complex, fantastical world first introduced to us through his excellent middle years novel 100 Cupboards (see our review). Like its predecessor, it’s full of rich, voluptuous language, and takes an almost languid approach to narrative, giving it the same sense of the organic, the natural, in terms of plotting. Indeed, I’m pleased to be able to note that this middle book of the trilogy stands well on its own two legs, rather than acting as a bridge between an introductory first novel and the inevitable denouement that is the third–although I would recommend reading its predecessor before attempting this book. While Dandelion Fire is considerably longer than the aforementioned 100 Cupboards, it does not feel bloated: rather, Wilson rather admirably uses the additional space not only to subject his poor characters to rather a lot of intrigue and violence, but also to make salient certain contrasts and themes–although to its credit rarely in a didactic manner.

[...]

It’s probably clear from the above that Dandelion Fire does not quite have the quirky kookiness that characterizes Cupboards, but it’s not without its moments of levity. Wilson’s at once rich and laconic prose is a pleasure to read, and it’s full of winking allusions and asides that add both depth and breadth to the novel without resulting in turgidity. In terms of the narrative, there are moments of familiarity that readers of classic children’s fantasy works may find somewhat derivative, and it’s true that occasionally the plot does become a little lost in itself, particularly when Wilson is working to weave together multiple simultaneous viewpoints, but it’s just so difficult not to fall for the worlds that Wilson has created: I’m entirely enamoured of that little attic room bristling with its cupboards.

As we say in church, Amen!

This series is something that I just enjoy being a part of - immersing myself into the world and characters the author is building and enjoying the adventure. Their are flaws and discordant moments – rarely is everything just as you would have it – but their is something fundamentally enjoyable about the creation so  that you don’t begrudge the faults.

Eva Mitnick, for school library journal, has a similar take:

The plot is complicated, and readers not familiar with the first book will be hopelessly confused. The shifting locations and the many characters and factions are bewildering, but most of the characters have such deliciously flawed and fascinating personalities that fans of that book will go with the flow, waiting to see what the next bend of plot might bring. A quiet and quirky humor warms up the proceedings as well, leavening even the most intense scenes. The ending is satisfying enough to serve as a series closer, but luckily for fans of this challenging but rewarding trilogy, there is still one more installment to come.

So my advice? Challenging, yes but rewarding too.  Dive in and enjoy it.

In the Mail:The Bone Yard

The Bone Yard: A Body Farm Novel

Publishers Weekly

In Bass’s uneven sixth forensic procedural featuring Dr. Bill Brockton (after The Bone Thief), Brockton, who’s in charge of the Body Farm, a Tennessee research facility where cadavers are left to decay for research purposes, agrees to help a visiting Florida forensic analyst, Angie St. Claire, with a personal tragedy. St. Claire’s sister has died of a shotgun blast to the head in Georgia, a death ruled a suicide by the local authorities, but St. Claire suspects her brother-in-law killed her sister. Brockton’s efforts to preserve evidence that could support St. Claire’s theory ends up taking a backseat to another puzzle, based on events at an actual Florida reform school, where boys were routinely physically abused. Realistic descriptions of forensic work compensate only in part for less than convincing action sequences. Bass is the writing team of Bill Bass, the real-life model for Brockton, and Jon Jefferson.

 

100 Cupboards by N.D. Wilson

Cover of "100 Cupboards: Book 1 of the 10...

Cover via Amazon

I had been wanting to read the 100 Cupboards series by N.D. Wilson for some time. I loved Leepike Ridge, and wanted to read more from the author, but for some reason it took me awhile to get around to the series.

I wish I hadn’t take so long! What a great series. It has to rank up there with one of my favorites; and one of those rare ones that have the depth and character to repay re-reading for many years.

The series starts, not surprisingly, with 100 Cupboards.  Here is the publisher’s blurb:

Twelve-year-old Henry York wakes up one night to find bits of plaster in his hair. Two knobs have broken through the wall above his bed and one of them is slowly turning . . . Henry scrapes the plaster off the wall and discovers cupboards of all different sizes and shapes. Through one he can hear the sound of falling rain. Through another he sees a glowing room–with a man pacing back and forth! Henry soon understands that these are not just cupboards, but portals to other worlds.

The most important advice I can give to those contemplating reading this engaging series: have patience. The book takes a while to set up the characters and the setting. Enjoy the language and background and don’t worry about the action; it will come.

And once it does I think you will come to love this complex and mysterious story as much as I did.  More below. Keep Reading

In the Mail: An Apple a Day

An Apple a Day: Old-Fashioned Proverbs –Timeless Words to Live By

Product Description

Proverbs, those brief well-known sayings that offer lively advice, encouragement, or even words of warning, are as popular today as they were when they first originated–so much so that many have even made their way into several generations of pop culture. These colorful expressions have become an enduring part of our contemporary speech, but how often do we stop to think about their origins or meanings? From wise maxims originating with the Old Testament and other ancient texts to relatively modern gems coined by poets, writers, or philosophers, An Apple a Day takes a close look at why these sayings “have stood the test of time.” Inside you’ll find:

  • Hundreds of the most common proverbs, arranged from A to Z
  • A look back at their often surprising origins
  • An understanding of why some are valid; others are not
  • The derivation and meanings behind them
  • Their relevance in today’s society
  • Why they are so true . . . or sometimes not

An Apple a Day is no everyday dictionary of proverbs. It’s an honest look at hundreds of fun, sometimes contradictory, and occasionally confusing tidbits of truth. After all, “It takes all sorts to make a world.”