
This week in my mailbox:



Also received Children of Dust by Ali Eteraz for review. I love memoirs and it seems I'm going to continue my current streak with this genre. a spellbinding portrayal of a life that few Americans can imagine. From his schooling in a madrassa in Pakistan to his teenage years as a Muslim American in the Bible Belt, and back to Pakistan to find a pious Muslim wife, this lyrical, penetrating saga from a brilliant new literary voice captures the heart of our universal quest for identity.

Paper Towns also alerts us to something that is easy to overlook. I think we all understand that we tend to dehumanize our so-called enemies, and so it’s easier to watch out for that. But it’s harder to watch out for the fact that we can also dehumanize the people we admire or love. By imagining them to be perfect, we are not allowing them any emotions that don’t conform to our mental picture of them. As Quentin says:
And so I could not imagine her as a person who could feel fear, who could feel isolated in a room full of people, who could be shy about her record collection because it was too personal to share. Read Ana's full review.

For most kids, a trip to space camp is a trip of a lifetime, for Aadi it was life altering. After receiving a camp immunization needed for travel to Mars, Aadi finds that the immunization is the catalyst of an insidious experiment. Lucky for him, he was engineered to survive, thrive, and dominate. Without realizing he is being trained to conquer worlds, and manipulated under the guise of a camp, he unfolds the plot too late for a change of fate.
5 comments:
Thanks Suse. How're you?
Paper Town sounds great.
Fledgling by Octavia E. Butler sounds like a book I'd read and enjoy
great round up of books. I loved Paper Towns!
Fledgling is great. Its Butler's last book.
Can't wait to hear what you think of Explorer X-Alpha.
You went with Paper Towns, smart move.
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