May 012009
 
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A Visit to Oz
So! It’s been about a month since the Visit to Oz Challenge started. How are you all doing? Read any good Oz books?

Myself, I, er, haven’t. I read the first Oz book (The Wonderful Wizard of Oz) and half of the second (The Marvelous Land of Oz) before the challenge started, but nothing since then. Bad me! I did find a whole section at the library where I work that’s dedicated to Oz-type things, including a really nice annotated The Wonderful Wizard of Oz! I’m going to check it out more once I’m done with finals.

What have you all done so far? Better than me? Any particular aspect of a book you wanna talk about?

For instance! In The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the Emerald City isn’t really all green! It’s white! It’s the green goggles everyone wears that makes it seem emerald-colored. Weird, eh? I also thought it was interesting that Dorothy used the flying monkeys to accomplish some tasks (after offing the Wicked Witch, of course), but that they short-changed her last wish (she got three) because they “couldn’t do it.” Wouldn’t that mean she got a do-over? I certainly think so!

What are you planning to read this month? I’m going to try to finish reading the second book and maybe start on the third. Hopefully I won’t fall too behind and become unable to finish my own challenge!

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Buy Indie Day!

 Posted by Anastasia on May 1, 2009  No Responses »
May 012009
 
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Inside Bird Song Used Books, my favorite indie bookstore.

Inside Bird Song Used Books, my favorite indie bookstore.

Today, May 1st, is Buy Indie Day, where everyone’s encouraged to buy at least one book (or audiobook or comic book or whatever) from an independent bookstore. Yay!

If you don’t know where an indie store is located in your town, IndieBound has this handy indie store finder. I’ve noticed that it doesn’t include all the stores in my own town (Bird Song Used Books is missing, for instance), but it’s a good sampling. What’s your favorite local indie store?

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Travel LightTravel Light by Naomi Mitchison
Publication: Small Beer Press (July 10, 2005), 144 pages / ISBN 1931520143
Genre: Fantasy, Children’s/YA
Rating:
Find @ Amazon or IndieBound
First sentence: IT IS SAID THAT WHEN the new Queen saw the old Queen’s baby daughter, she told the King that the brat must be got rid of at once.

In one sentence: Short but sweet, with a kick-ass heroine.

I found this book in the clearance section at my campus bookstore last year, and while it wasn’t totally a bargain (about $6 for a very small book), it had a lot of blurbs from authors I like/admire plus a comparison to Diana Wynne Jones. Any time a book invokes the name of Diana Wynne Jones? Oh yeah, I’m gonna read it.

Summary from Amazon:

A young woman is transformed by a magical journey from the dark ages to modern times, from brooding medieval forests to bustling Constantinople. Halla is turned out of her father’s castle by her new stepmother. Her nurse transforms herself into a bear to look after Halla. This is just the first of the wondrous and natural changes in Naomi Mitchison’s magical 1952 novel. Travel Light will appeal to fans of the Harry Potter series and Phillip Pullman’s His Dark Materials series, as well as to readers of Ursula K. Leguin and T.H. White.

Travel Light is less like Diana Wynne Jones and more like the Brothers Grimm; it’s a classic fairy tale with a few twists. The story reminds me a lot of the Brothers Grimm stories, actually, except that it doesn’t end in marriage. It’s got that kind of bare-bones, only a tiny amount of exposition feel to it, so I suppose it’s a good thing it’s so short. I don’t think I could stand that kind of writing for more than 200 pages, really.

Anyway, Halla is a very strong main character, and it’s very refreshing to have her in a traditional fairy tale but not doing traditional fairy tale things. She’s a princess, but she’s looking for her inner self, not a prince charming. She goes from wearing jewels and gold and beautiful dresses to wearing plain, tattered clothing– rather than the reverse normally seen in fairy tales. And at the end, like I said, Halla doesn’t marry the “prince” she meets. Instead, she goes off with a bunch of Valkyries and becomes one herself! Wonderful! Really, really refreshing.

There’s also some really interesting philosophical/morality kind of things in it, but it never gets preachy. And I thought it was really interesting that the mythological system went from Norse to Christian (Halla spends a long time travelling) and how the changing world– both religious and not– affected everything from dragons to people to gods. Again, it wasn’t covered with a lot of detail, but it was kinda fun picking out what had happened through the course of the plot.

For those looking for a different kind of heroine and a different kind of fairy tale, Travel Light is your book.

(You can read the first two chapters here!)

Other reviews: Strange Horizons Reviews (including some very interesting background info) | Infinity Plus | Rambles

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