Currently Reading: How I Live Now

An anatomy of book selection (How I Live Now by Meg Rosoff):

1) Rolling Stone magazine listed the book as one of its 40 Best YA Novels.

2) The book was $5 on Amazon. What? Ink on paper, printed, bound, and enclosed by a glossy cover; a story of original characters, places, events, and ideas, born from the human mind; packaged, shipped, and delivered by Amazon robots and the postal service…all for $5. On Sunday, I went to Blue Bottle Coffee in SF and spent $4 on an iced coffee à la New Orleans. It was admittedly delicious, but it ceased to exist after 10 minutes, and well, it was a cup of coffee. Sometimes, market prices do not reflect true value…unless of course you’re getting an iced latte with almond-macadamia milk in a chilled Mason jar.
 

 
3) A lot of Young Adult books seem far more complex and challenging than a lot of books aimed at adults. After Me Before You, I decided to give this theory another test run.

4) How I Live Now tells the story of Daisy, a 15-year-old New Yorker who travels to England to visit cousins. She is quickly enamored by them and the beautiful countryside where they live. However, soon after Daisy’s arrival, an unnamed enemy occupies the country and a sort of WWIII ensues. This is a story of a world war as it might unfold in the 21st century.

Post-Reading: Me Before You

In Me Before You, Will’s parting message to Louisa is “Just live well. Just live.” This somehow translates to Louis reading a postmortem letter from Will at a café on Rue des Francs-Bourgeois in Paris, eating a croissant and drinking coffee. On one hand, I know that what it means to “just live” is different for all of us. I’m constantly trying to figure out what it means, and of course I have no idea. On the other hand, this books tells the story of a young man who commits suicide after enduring a horrible accident and its aftermath. The book ends with a girl tearing up over a letter at a café before going on a Parisian adventure. I don’t know about other readers, but girl-in-Paris-café did not give me the closure I needed for this very heavy, emotional book.
 
That being said, I think Jojo Moyes makes it easier for the reader to accept Will’s decision to end his life by making him such an intelligent and consistent character. Despite flashes of happy moments with Louisa, he never wavers from his decision. Will convinced me that he knew what he wanted and that he deserved to receive it. But did he convince all readers? I doubt it. That’s what makes Me Before You such a worthwhile read, because you have the opportunity to gauge your reaction to an incredibly serious issue within the safe space of a book. Do we have the right to choose death for ourselves? If so, at what point does it become appropriate? I know, heavy stuff. So to be able to explore the idea, even within the confines of a book, is quite an experience.

Church Steps


We found this church in Trout Lake, WA on a Sunday, well after the apparent 10:00 AM service. If I had grown up in a town that was host to a church this cute, I might of actually walked inside, and who knows what would have happened. So it goes. See The Poisonwood Bible.
 
The Poisonwood Bible is a book that I too-often reference. The evangelical Price family travels from the U.S. state of Georgia to the Congo in the name of missionary work. The Reverend Nathan Price is a stubborn religious zealot who faces a village of people with their own unique and complex beliefs, who have no reason or desire to believe anything he preaches. At one point in the book, it is the middle of summer, but the Reverend declares it Easter Sunday in hopes of launching a mass baptism. Everyone in the village refuses. He becomes obsessed with baptizing, giving passionate sermons on its merits, to no avail. In fact, the villagers become disturbed and angry by the Reverend’s insistence. We soon learn that the surrounding water is overrun with crocodiles. One young girl was even killed by a crocodile a few months before the Price family’s arrival, so the villagers avoid the water.
 
There are many memorable mini-plots like the one above in the book. Cheers!

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