Friday, June 29, 2007

About A Boy


by Nick Hornby

I got through this book in just a couple days by reading it on long bus rides. It's a perfect summer read - fun, hilarious, a happy ending - what more could you want while chilling at the poolside?

Will's a 36 year old man whose days are filled with hair appointments, shopping, TV watching, hanging out with friends...he's never had a job, since he lives off royalties of a song his father wrote years before. He realizes that if he can only meet hot, single moms, he'd be in heaven, since their children tend to keep other men at bay. Will invents a child and joins SPAT, a support and socializing group for single parents, to put his plan into action.

Marcus is a 12 year old boy who's new to town, is mercilessly picked on at school, and, to top it off, his mother tried to kill herself. He decides that a bigger family is better than just 2, so that he'll have someone to help if his mom tries to commit suicide again. Enter Will. Marcus soons give up notions of Will and his mom ever getting married, but starts a friendship with Will that's extremely funny for the reader to watch grow.

Like I said, this is a light read that made me laugh out loud on the bus more than once (which drew some stares from the other riders, haha). It was made into a movie about 5 years ago, with Hugh Grant, and though I have yet to see it, I think I'd like to, to see if it lives up to the fun I had reading the book.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

A Thousand Splendid Suns


by Khaled Hosseini

In one word: FABULOUS.

If you haven't read The Kite Runner yet, I highly recommend that as well. A Thousand Splendid Suns is Hosseini's second novel, and examines the intertwining lives of two Afghan women from the 1970's through today. Hosseini makes the reader care about the characters, and sheds light on recent Afghanistan history, something Americans like myself should really know more about.

Mariam is the illegitimate child of a rich businessman and a servant. Her father provides for herself and her mother, but when her mother commits suicide, instead of welcoming Mariam into his family, she is sent far away to an abusive marriage. From her house, Mariam sees Laila grow from a baby to a beautiful young girl, always in the company of her best friend, Tarique. How the two women come to know each other, and the relationship that flowers between them, is a wonderful part of the novel.

A Thousand Splendid Suns has everything a reader could want: action, romance, history, redemption. It shows how strong the human body and human spirit can be, and is a book you won't want to put down until you've finished. I seriously cannot stress enough what a great book it is.