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Powell's Staff:
Five Book Friday: In Memoriam
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Every year, the booksellers at Powell’s submit their Top Fives: their five favorite books that were released in 2023. It’s a list that, when put together, shows just how varied and interesting the book tastes of Powell’s booksellers are. I highly recommend digging into the recommendations — we would never lead you astray — but today...
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Brontez Purnell:
Powell’s Q&A: Brontez Purnell, author of ‘Ten Bridges I’ve Burnt’
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Rachael P.:
Starter Pack: Where to Begin with Ursula K. Le Guin
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Customer Comments
TKS has commented on (11) products
Klamath Knot: Explorations of Myth and Evolution
by
David Rains Wallace
TKS
, December 21, 2012
Gorgeous writing merges myth, philosophy, and natural science to create what may be the best articulation of what a particular place really MEANS. It's a slim volume, but the content is packed in tight - no fluff here. This is not to say that it's hard to read; the essay(s?) unfurl seamlessly. It's a wonderful read, and a wonderful set of ideas and starting-points to carry around in your mind afterward.
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Vertical
by
Rex Pickett
TKS
, April 28, 2011
I've heard plenty of reviewers laud this book's high standard of writing. I didn't see it, but maybe I was too distracted by the astonishing amount of gratuitous sexual content and unapologetically crude characters. (Not just the main characters - everyone.) From Chapter 1, VERTICAL reads like the script for an inept porn film. It also feels occasionally like the author opened a dictionary to learn a new word and thought "let's see if I can use that in the next sentence!" That's an admirable way to learn vocabulary, Mr. Pickett, but it makes for some seriously stilted writing. The plot, such as it is, hangs together alright, but there doesn't seem to be much of a point to it all. A much-hyped part of the action takes place in the Willamette Valley, focusing around the events of the International Pinot Noir Celebration, or IPNC. As a member of the Willamette Valley wine industry, and an annual IPNC attendee, I can testify that the scale of debauchery author Rex Pickett attributes to the event (and the industry in general) is more than slightly exaggerated -- and, at times, just plain gross. I can testify also to the good character of many of the (real!) people he represents in the book as aiding and abetting his characters' boorish behavior. This sort of "wine writing" gives people the wrong idea. It's embarrassing. As far as I can tell, this book is a mish-mash of Rex Pickett's life and a fantasy version thereof. The main character (perhaps even both?) is a painfully obvious substitute for the author. (And if I'm at all right about that, well, let me just say that the character is in need of some rehab.) I'm annoyed with the book for plenty of reasons, but this may be the cherry on top of it all: Pickett can't even make up a good character. Now that I've got all that off my chest, I do have one compliment to offer: good title.
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War That Killed Achilles The True Story of Homers Iliad & the Trojan War
by
Caroline Alexander
TKS
, March 21, 2011
The packaging on this book leads one to suspect that it contains mainly an analysis of the idea of warfare, using The Iliad as a lens. Not so. Perhaps the publisher thought that implication would sell more copies, but the truth of the book is that it's a scholarly (also entirely readable) analysis of The Iliad itself, particularly the character of Achilles. Ancient epic poetry is tough to approach from our modern perspective, and I found THE WAR THAT KILLED ACHILLES both enlightening and enjoyable. It makes some obscure passages clear, and it provides a helpful springboard for one's own critical thinking. It's not a dry work of literary criticism, by any means, but it is certainly a serious literary discussion, and very enjoyable as such.
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War At Troy
by
Lindsay Clarke
TKS
, March 16, 2011
If you're read the Iliad, and especially if you're familiar with the background stories (as Homer's original audience would have been,) you'll either love this vibrant retelling that imagines new depths to the principle characters and their relationships, or you'll hate it because the story itself is nothing new. I find the Iliad a many-layered tale, and I perceive things differently each time I come to it. This is true of other works too; it doesn't bother me to read the same novels many times over the years. More is always available in the interaction between an intelligent, gifted author and your own thought and experience. Authors willing to take a time-honored story and try to add yet MORE layers are courageous beings. I imagine it's hard to get that kind of thing "right." Lindsay Clarke does it. THE WAR AT TROY is emotionally moving, beautifully written, and a very good, very accessible synthesis of many potentially confusing stories, back stories, and relationships at the heart of Homer's work. You could read it to deepen your knowledge and enjoyment of the Iliad, or you could enjoy it without coming anywhere near a bunch of long-winded, ancient Greek poetry. I've done both (in reverse order, obviously), and each time it was fresh and compelling.
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The Minister's Daughter
by
Julie Hearn
TKS
, February 23, 2011
I had no idea this was supposed to be a "young adult" novel until I read the reviews at Powell's. Adults: this book is completely appropriate for your pre-teens, and also completely enthralling for you. It's a good story: solid history woven with a whole lot of (rather modern; sorry) folklore. The last sentence is still haunting me a week after I finished the book. If you're one of those who likes to read the last sentence first, DON'T. Save the shivers it'll give you for the very end. And in the meantime, enjoy a well-told tale. Note: I particularly enjoyed the audiobook version, read by Heather O'Neil. It really brings the characters to life.
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Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother
by
Amy Chua
TKS
, February 07, 2011
I noticed this filed in the "Children and Parenting" section at one store. I think that obscures the point of the book for many readers and reviewers. Battle Hymn is not a parenting manual, and it's not even entirely about raising kids. It's a memoir first: about family, philosophy, and legacy, and yes, it's focused on the author's method of raising her children. If it WAS a parenting manual, I'd have to say it makes some good points but I disagree with the larger premise, and I'd move on. (Then again, I might have skipped it entirely -- my own parents taught me how to raise kids, and my husband's parents taught him how not to. Books on the subject are entirely overrated in comparison. But back to the book at hand...) Battle Hymn is much more complex than the Chinese Parenting Manual" it's been made out to be. Whatever you think of Amy Chua's "extreme" "Chinese" parenting style, her memoir on the subject is very much worth a read, for several reasons. 1) It asks you to think about a big-picture plan of how you were raised and how you will raise/are raising children. This is something plenty of us don't often consider beyond the basic "do I want kids or not?" Amy Chua doesn't just react to her children. She has a PLAN. She is raising her kids to a purpose. Are you? WHY were you raised? How did you feel about it? How do you feel about it now? 2)It takes #1 and asks you to think about parenting and growing up in the context of different cultures' family values, the idea of legacy, the definition and value of "achievement," world politics, American "superiority," and ethnic identity. How about those for the topics of your next PTA meeting? 3) It has started a HUGE conversation about #s 1 and 2. I think that's a good thing. 4) It's well-written. You don't have to "work" through it, but you'll find yourself working with the ideas that spring from it in many different contexts. Not just for parents, ideas about the continuity of family, the unavoidable (?) differences between generations, and divergent cultural expectations are absolutely relevant to our entire world. 5) It's frankly, sometimes painfully honest, and you can hear Chua's voice so clearly. (Bonus: get the audiobook version and you can actually HEAR Chua's voice, and thus "read" it the way she does.) 6) It's hilarious. The short version: don't buy the hype, but do read this book, and join the discussion. Even if it pisses you off, you'll enjoy it. (Some people like being pissed off.) You might even learn something from your own reactions.
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Kristin Lavransdatter
by
Undset, Sigrid
TKS
, January 24, 2011
Epic is right. By the end of this novel (or three novels, in the original publication), you're worked for what you gained -- and yes, there is much enjoyment and enlightenment here for the gaining. There's a lot of tragedy here -- death and separation, poor choices and painful regrets, sad might-have-beens and the omnipresence of past mistakes -- but don't let that scare you off. Undset also gives us wonderful descriptions of natural beauty, and varied views of what might be termed "true love." It's not exactly an uplifting read, but it's wonderfully written, and the truths it shows about the human heart are both profound and absolutely accessible. Take this one on a long trip, somewhere quiet. Enjoy.
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Independent People
by
Halldor Laxness
TKS
, January 24, 2011
My goodness this is a difficult read! It's not any one thing that makes it so; you can choose your favorite: remote characters, dense prose, bleak outlook, general unfamiliarity. BECAUSE of all that, I was drawn in, figuring out what amounted to a sort of literary puzzle for me. And IN SPITE of all that, although I put the book down repeatedly, I couldn't bring myself to leave it lying there. A few hundred pages in, I realized I was enjoying the difficult slog immensely. Side note: I read this before my first trip to Iceland, in an attempt to get a feel for the place and people. I wish I'd waited until my return. I intend to read the book again, and I'm willing to bet my thoughts will shift a bit.
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Ambassador
by
Bragi Olafsson
TKS
, January 24, 2011
A lot of the negative comments on this novel focus on the fact that not much actual action happens in the course of it. That's true enough. Forewarned. Of course, if this book was about the plot alone, it wouldn't succeed, but it does, beautifully, and it's the mood, the setting, the characterization, and particularly the tone that create that success. The best phrase I've read describing The Ambassador is "a straight-faced farce," and that's it in a nutshell. You probably won't "like" the protagonist, but you may find yourself sympathizing with him, laughing at him, even identifiying with him, and certainly enjoying his mental adventures. (Because if there is any action to be found here, it's in Sturla Jon's brain.) An important note: This may turn out not to be true for you, but I read this book after a first trip to Iceland, and I found that made the characters and setting infinitely more accessible.
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Obvious Enchantment
by
Tucker Malarkey
TKS
, January 18, 2011
Like one of its protagonist's fever dreams, this novel is strange, incomplete, and absolutely compelling. It's full of false starts and odd twists. Unlike plenty of novels I've seen reviewed with words like that, it's not a dense work, requiring hours of unraveling, but in fact quite an "easy" read. It begs more questions than it bothers to answer, though, so don't mistake it for a piece of fluff. The setting, in particular, is skillfully used to color in a mood at once comprised of languor, menace, and mystery. I felt the tropical heat and damp as I read. The characters do not reveal themselves quickly or easily, and I had a hard time liking or identifying with a single one until I'd finished 3/4 of the book. It didn't stop me reading or enjoying, though, and I did come to an understanding before I'd turned the last page. By that time, I felt I was working for it (though liking the work), and it came as a reward. I couldn't have said exactly how I felt about the book until I found out the author's written another. I will most certainly be reading it.
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Under Heaven
by
Guy Gavriel Kay
TKS
, January 17, 2011
This is vintage Kay: intricate plots within one grand scheme, subtle characterization, pitch-perfect dialog. Kay brings history books to life and writes between the lines, so that his novels devour you whole. His addition of a mystical element is skillful, and adds layers of complexity and beauty to an already fascinating world. One of the things I love about Kay's "historical fantasy" novels is their evocation of places and times often lost to the non-specialist. In this case, a reader leaves Under Heaven sure that she has lived some time in this world that is not quite T'ang China, and curious to expand her knowledge. More than worthy as itself, Under Heaven is also one of those novels that opens many more doors when you close the cover.
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