Tuesday, December 1, 2015



FURIOUSLY HAPPY


By Jenny Lawson


Reasons you should read this book:


It will make you laugh. I’m a firm believer that the more you laugh, the better your life is. Jenny Lawson makes me laugh out loud, shake my head at strangers and mutter, “Kitten Mittens!” while trying to compose myself. There is no better way to embarrass your significant other then to break out into an uncontrollable fit of laughter in the middle of a quiet waiting room, plane or place of worship. Bonus points if you try to explain the scene in the book and get a horrified response, because you didn’t do much justice in explaining a stuffed raccoon that spent a weekend of debauchery in Vegas.


It will make you uncomfortable. Why is that a good thing? Because we grow from learning about things we don’t know about, especially things that are outside our comfort zone. If you are already an expert on fish, learning the scale count on a trout isn’t going to enlighten you. But getting a more personal insider's perspective on mental illness or problems from being a woman could make you a better person.


I didn’t know there were so many jokes to be made out of inappropriate source material. I’ll save the surprises for you, dear reader, but believe me there are quite a few curveballs I was not expecting, but was delighted to be blindsided by.


If you find yourself loving this book as much as I did, fear not, there is another by Jenny Lawson that is also wonderful and magical. Let’s Pretend this Never Happened has more childhood trauma, less insight to pharmacists eating dog biscuits. More Magical Squirrels and less about the crushing effects of depression. She also has a blog, which I’ll link for you.

http://thebloggess.com/ 

Please read these magical novels, the world owes you nothing but Jenny Lawson turns that nothing into a big bowl of medicated possibilities.













Friday, February 27, 2015

MR PENUMBRA'S 24 HOUR BOOK STORE By Robin Sloan



Mr Penumbra’s 24 Hour Book Store

By Robin Sloan


Admit it. You would love to stumble into some secret society or adventure steeped in a rich history that goes all the way back to the roots of your favorite obsession. Every adult living in the dot com era can simultaneously appreciate and take for granted the power of the internet, getting the answer to a question in seconds that used to take hours or even weeks to track down. The moving and spawning beast that fills our days with absolutely everything under the sun (and beyond) makes it difficult for us to wrap our heads around unsolved mysteries.

Clay Jannon is a former web designer looking for work. He does something so unheard of it take the reader back to a simpler time of sock hops and malt shops… he walks around San Francisco looking for a “Help Wanted” sign. What he finds is Mr Penumbra’s 24 Hour Book Store. Mr Penumbra hires Clay to work the 10pm to 6am shift, where his quiet position consists of selling a book or two, but more importantly documenting the quirky members of what Clay can only assume is a secret society and fetching them books from a neck-ache inducing sky high unit of mysterious shelves. He does this by becoming something of an acrobat with the ladders. And he’s forbidden to open any of these books from the “way back list”. Obviously Mr Penumbra's is a front, Clay spends most of his days using the store next door's internet connection to improve upon the store's lackluster sales, until he stumbles on something much deeper.



Equal parts mystery and adventure, Clay’s fall into the rabbit hole made me laugh more than a few times. His nerd turned internet millionaire best friend Neel (still a nerd at heart) aides Clay in his quest, so does his artist roommate Mat and his love interest, Kat. A heroine in her own right, Kat has the smarts and power of Google behind her, she brings the future crashing into Mr Penumbra’s secret organization. 



In a world where people frequently question the staying power of books in print with new technologies rising up each day, Robin Sloan’s take on the magical interwoven into the fabric of modern society is fun and exhilarating. Its exciting to think that there are still hidden treasures in this world. You can see the streets of Paris without ever taking a plane trip nowadays (just visit Googlemaps and search the street view), and who’s to say that in and of itself isn’t magical?

While I am disappointed to report there are not hundreds of quality novels written by Sloan waiting for you to unlock their treasures sitting on the nearest book store shelf, I can report that the author’s website is every bit as intriguing as the initial puzzle of Mr Penumbra. Search for it your self using the magical powers of internet search engines and see what I’m talking about.

...Also, there’s a surprise. Somewhere. I won’t spoil it for you. But it made me smile like the Cheshire cat. That’s all I’ll say about it.