The Chemist by Stephenie Meyer

Meyer is best known for her vampire romance series Twilight, which has sold over 100 million copies. They made her a multi-millionaire.

Thought they are YA, I kinda enjoyed those books.

The Chemist (2006) is her second adult book. As a Mormon, there is no no drinking, smoking, or explicit sex scenes in her work. So this one reads something like a YA novel.

For me there was too much time dedicated to romance, as well.

Mormons have no aversion to violence, it seems. This bloody book has a super competent female protagonist called Alex – she’s a medic and an interrogator who worked for a shadowy branch of the US government torturing terrorists before her bosses turned on her.

Known as the Chemist, because she used to squeeze the truth out of her suspects with excruciatingly painful drug concoctions

Now she is a fugitive.

There are some new-to-me plot twists and surprises that makes me recommend the read to those who enjoy thrillers.

Meyer said she was inspired by the Jason Bourne character while writing this book.

A television series based on The Chemist is planned

related – The Guardian review 

 

Fall on Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald

I made it half way through this long novel before finally giving up.

The (1996) novel takes place in late 19th and early 20th centuries and chronicles four generations of the complex Piper Family. It is a story of “inescapable family bonds, terrible secrets, and of miracles.”

Beginning in Cape Breton IslandNova Scotia through the battlefields of World War I and ending in New York City, the troubled Piper sisters depend on one another for survival. …

The plot was promising.

But ultimately I agree with reviewer G. L. Fredrick:

There’s some brilliant writing in this book. Quite a bit actually, but not enough to justify the read.

The story is presented in a disjointed fashion that is hard to follow without frequent searches (glad I read the kindle version).

The characters are bleak, depressing, and also disjointed. They come and go in the story often having gone through some change that is not adequately explained.

By the end, you’re left with more questions and confusion than satisfaction.

It’s not worth your effort.

Another reviewer loved it. And read the book several times.

Dark Tower: The Gunslinger by Stephen King

King is a superb story teller and writer. This is one of his classic tales.

That said — it doesn’t really work for me. I prefer plots that are less confusing. More logical. I probably won’t continue to book #2 in the series.

The Gunslinger was first published in 1982 as a fix-up novel, joining five short stories that had been published between 1978 and 1981. King substantially revised the novel in 2003 …

The story centers upon Roland Deschain, the last gunslinger, who has been chasing his adversary, “the man in black,” for many years. The novel fuses Western fiction with fantasyscience fiction, and horror …

King started writing this novel in 1970 on a ream of bright green paper that he found at the library …

The 2017 film was based loosely on King’s series of books. It got negative reviews despite starring Idris Elba and Matthew McConaughey.

Click PLAY or watch a trailer on YouTube.

An Absolutely Remarkable Thing by Hank Green

An Absolutely Remarkable Thing is the debut novel by Hank Green.

It’s an odd plot.

April May, a young queer woman, is launched into internet celebrity when she and her friend Andy post a silly video on the arrival of a mysterious sculpture in the heart of Manhattan.

As these statues pop up in dozens of major global cities, their video goes viral.

Are they art? Space aliens?

For some reason April is essential to the mystery.

The story deals with how she handles sudden celebrity.

It’s a parable too of Trump populism vs intelligence.

I enjoyed the book. It kept me going. 

The sequel, titled A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor, will be published July 7, 2020.

Hank Green is a YouTuber and podcaster with a combined 2 billion plus views.

Writing a book was a side project.

The Archer’s Tale by Bernard Cornwell

Not recommended.

I tried book 1 in the Grail Quest series hoping it would be something like Ken Follett’s Kingsbridge series, which I loved.

Follett’s focus was evolving technologies (e.g. architecture) and how it effected history. Most edifying.

The Archer’s Tale (AKA Harlequin ) is mainly sex and violence in the middle of the fourteenth century. The start of the Hundred Years War.  I didn’t learn much.

I won’t continue.

Saturday mornings when I was in High School

If I wasn’t watching Saturday morning cartoons, we would catch a bus to downtown Calgary because pool was free from 9am – noon at one hall.

What hall was that?

At noon I’d head over to Jaffe’s Book & Music Exchange to spend most of my $1 / week allowance on used comics.

It was located at 225 – 8th Ave. S.E.

Here’s Sam Osherow, manager. 

Flat Broke with Two Goats

I recommend this book.

Tales of city folk moving to farms are usually hilarious.

Think Driving Over Lemons.

When they are rich city folk — suddenly poor farmers, it’s even more entertaining.

Think Green Acres.

One middle class North Carolina family was doing well. Holidays in Paris. Three children in private school.

The George W. Bush recession hit. They got behind. Planned poorly. And lost their house.

They are forced to move to a one-hundred-year old, snake-and-mice-infested, half-rotted ramshackle cabin with no internet, no cable TV, spotty cell phone reception, and a boiler for making hot water.

Rent $250 / month. Cash … as they had no credit.

The couple eventually learn to love homesteading, their many animals. Especially their goats.

Amazon.

related review – ‘Flat Broke with Two Goats’ will leave you alarmed, breathless, charmed

Another reviewer didn’t enjoy the book.

Global migration and the remittance economy

In 1987, reporter Jason DeParle went to sleep on the floor of a shanty in Manila for the first time. He had come to the Philippines to find out more about poverty in the developing world

… he would spend the next 32 years following their family as they spread out around the world for work and a future outside the slums.

His new book is called A Good Provider Is One Who Leaves and is the story of global migration in the 21st century …

NPR

In the news we hear non-stop horror stories about foreign workers being abused. And those happen.

Very under-reported are success stories.

More than 2 million Filipinos depart each year

About one in seven Filipino workers is employed abroad, and the $32 billion that they send home accounts for 10 percent of the GDP.

remittance is a transfer of money, often by a foreign worker to an individual in their home country. …

… in 2018 overall global remittance grew 10% to US$689 billion, including US$528 billion to developing countries.

Global migration is far more good than bad. 

Interview the families affected before you ASSume to know how they feel.

 

World War Z – the Book

Did you see the 2013 Brad Pitt film World War Z?

The highest grossing zombie movie so far.

I liked it.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

The book is different. 

Smart. Original. International. Political.

I decide to reread it because of the current CORONAVIRUS scare.

 I’m hoping it will be contained before the Olympics. So far it seems much like SARS.

World War Z is more like what we’ll face when the BIG pandemic finally arrives

World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War is a 2006 zombie apocalyptic horror novel written by American author Max Brooks.

The novel is a collection of individual accounts narrated by an agent of the United Nations Postwar Commission, following the devastating global conflict against the zombie plague. …

Brooks used World War Z to comment on government ineptitude and US isolationism, while also examining survivalism and uncertainty. …

I Am Malala with Christina Lamb

If you want to know more about life in Pakistan I recommend this autobiography of a teenager.

If you want to know more about the plight of girls and women in extremist Muslim nations, this is the book. Malala is a symbol. She was awarded the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize.

I hadn’t recalled that the Taliban assassin shot Malala and hit both girls sitting either side of her as well. All three survived.

Christina Lamb is an excellent writer, expert in this region. She too was nearly killed by the Taliban, on Benazir Bhutto’s bus when it was blown up in October 2007.

2013

I Am Malala: The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and was Shot by the Taliban (2013) is an autobiographical book by Malala Yousafzai, co-written with Christina Lamb …

The book details the early life of Yousafzai, her father’s ownership of schools and activism, the rise and fall of the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan in Swat Valley and the assassination attempt made against Yousafzai, when she was aged 15, following her activism for female education.

It has received a positive critical reception and won awards, though it has been banned in many schools in Pakistan. …

Swat Valley has been an important tourist destination in the past. And may be again in future. Malala is a Pashtun, the majority of whom follow Sunni Islam.

The leader of the Swat Taliban in Malala’s day was Maulana Fazlullah.  He was killed by American drone strike in 2018.

Today Malala is a student at Oxford studying Philosophy, Politics and Economics. 

She and her father run the Malala Fund, an organization dedicated to every girl’s right to 12 years of free, safe, quality education. That’s an important cause for me too.

I’m proud to say Malala has honorary Canadian citizenship.