Summer Book Thingy, 2014

Summer is about over, which means my window for reading books is closed. So it is time for me to review the books I read and let you know what I thought of them.

Here they are, approximately in the order that I read them. Note: I noticed that all the books published before the year 2000 had authors with initials: G.K., C.S., H.G. I don’t know what that signifies, but it was interesting.

  • Tentacle by Roland Smith
    This was an incomplete book – it needs the rest of the trilogy to be satisfying.

    It is book 2 of a trilogy. To put it another way, it is the middle section of one long story that has been split into 3 books for marketing purposes.

    I read it because Alpha checked it out of the library and I wanted to know what he was reading.

    The book looks to be a sea monster type of book, for the book cover shows a huge tentacle reaching out of the ocean. It seemed to convey “horror story” with that illustration, so I approached the book warily.

    The cover was slightly misleading, as the story involves the search for the giant squid, not a squid who terrorizes boats and beach-goers.

    The story was fine, although the beginning part mentions a severed human head. I thought that was a bit rough for a 4th/5th grader to be reading, but then I considered it a bit more:

    Would I have any problem if he were reading Treasure Island instead?
    No, no problem.
    Could I reasonably expect there might be a severed head in that story, or maybe other depictions of harm?
    Yes, that would not be out of place.
    So then, “severed head” is okay in classic literature but not okay in newer stories?
    Yes, I suppose so.

    So in the end, I had to admit to myself that it should not be a problem.

    I’d say 3rd grade on up is fine for this series. But if your child is interested in this series, try the old Tom Swift series first.

  • Peak by Roland Smith
    Apparently my son was on a Roland Smith kick, because he checked this one out too. So I read it.

    It was an engaging story, but with some questionable items.

    The phrase “I was conceived” occurred near the beginning of the story. Why it’s in the book is one thing, why the mom of the 14-year-old in the story felt the need to tell him where he was conceived is another matter. Not everyone needs to know everything there is to know.

    I guess that was my biggest issue with the book. Most of the rest of it was about mountain climbing.

    Also, do any protagonist kids in any current books come from intact families?

    Ages 10 and up.

  • Why Gender Matters by Dr. Leonard Sax
    The only non-fiction book in my list. If you are involved in parenting or education, you should read this book. There are a couple of chapters that could be skipped, but the chapter titles are clear enough so that you won’t be surprised by the content.

    Really, you should read this book.

    Not a book for kids.

  • The Dead in Their Vaulted Arches by Alan Bradley
    Ah, the final installment of the Flavia de Luce series.

    Of the 6 books in the series, this was one of the better-told stories.

    That being said, I noted a couple. One, the book mentions that glass is a liquid. Two, the book mentions dripping coming from melting dry ice.

    It is a common misperception that glass is a liquid. In any other type of book, I could gloss over that. But this is a book whose protagonist is an expert chemist. Maybe Mr. Bradley wrote the book too authentically, using the prevailing knowledge of the day (1950s) rather than today.

    And as far as dry ice melting and dripping, that’s even worse for a book that describes chemistry so well. Maybe Mr. Bradley meant that when the dry ice warmed, the objects it was keeping frozen started to thaw and water dripped from them. Because dry ice doesn’t melt. It sublimes. Or sublimates. Goes straight from solid to gas.

    The book has a solid ending, a definite conclusion. It leaves a crack open for another series, but just barely.

    My problem with the ending was that
    Spoiler Alert
    people other than Flavia solved the mystery just ahead of her. In the other books, Flavia solved the mystery first and then we got a chapter or so of her explaining to the investigators how she did it.

    In this case, the investigators and police solve it (Flavia does too, independently, but not before the others) but we never get an explanation of how they solved it. We know how Flavia solved it, because that was described in the story. Oh well.
    End Spoiler Alert

    Not a book for kids. Teens maybe.

  • The Man Who Was Thursday by G.K. Chesterton
    I had heard great things about this book, so I started with high expectations (not Great Expectations, as that would be confusing). And perhaps that’s why I found this book disappointing.

    I didn’t have a problem with the writing or with most of the story. It was the ending chapters that lost me. They didn’t make sense. I mean I understood the words I was reading and what was happening, but I got the impression it was an allegory for Something Deep and Profound and I wasn’t catching on like I should. In other words, it ceased to be entertaining and began being confusing.

    And then, at the very end, it was all for naught.

    I don’t know – high school and up?

  • Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis
    I had heard great things about this book, so I started with high expectations (not Great Expectations, as that would be confusing). And perhaps that’s why I found this book disappointing.

    I didn’t have a problem with the writing or with most of the story. It was the ending chapters that lost me. They didn’t make sense. I mean I understood the words I was reading and what was happening, but I got the impression it was an allegory for Something Deep and Profound and I wasn’t catching on like I should. In other words, it ceased to be entertaining and began being confusing.

    Yes, I copied and pasted this review from the previous review. Because they both had the same effect on me. My recommendation is to read Book 1 of Till We Have Faces and skip Book 2. If you’ve seen the musical Into the Woods, it’s like that. Watch the first half, and leave at intermission – you’ll be much happier that way.

  • War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells
    I read this only because Alpha picked it up at a book sale and was reading it. Being a classic, it should have been fine for him, so I didn’t read it until after he did. He liked it so much he went to the library and checked out a collection of 7 books by H.G. Wells.

    There are some depictions of violence and mayhem, so ages 10 and up maybe, depending on your child’s sensitivities. Do not give this book to a child who is prone to nightmares. But Alpha has never complained of having nightmares I guess we’re good.

  • The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells
    Based on some reviews of this book and what I remember of the previews of the movie that was made some years back, I was expecting this one to be a bit more terrifying than War of the Worlds.

    But it was not.

    The descriptions of violence are a little more graphic, but they involve animals instead of humans, so the overall squeamishness level is about the same.

    If your child can handle War of the Worlds, he can handle this book.

But these, like unreasoning animals, born as creatures of instinct to be captured and killed, reviling where they have no knowledge, will in the destruction of those creatures also be destroyed,

2 Peter 2:12

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This little article thingy was written by Some Guy sometime around 6:17 am and has been carefully placed in the Life category.

2 Responses to “Summer Book Thingy, 2014”

  1. Erin Says:

    Yay! Someone read Why Gender Matters! Loved the research in that book.

  2. Some Guy Says:

    I believe it was you who recommended the book to us.

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