Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Weird Al Created The Best Music Video EVER!

I knew when Neil Gaiman recommended a Weird Al video that I would like it.  I didn't know I would love it.  Seriously, this is SO funny I'm still laughing over being called a dumb mouth breather!
 Now go, watch, laugh.


Watch the video.
Buy the song.

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Benedict Cumberbatch is a Reader.

I knew I liked this guy.  No wonder he's such an interesting actor.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Review: Inkheart by Cornelia Funke

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Click here to buy from iTunes.
Synopsis from the School Library Journal:  Grade 4-8-An inventive plot and memorable characters will draw readers into Cornelia Funke's fantasy (Scholastic, 2003). Twelve-year-old Meggie and Mo, her book binder father, are fleeing their old enemy, Capricorn, when they arrive at Great Aunt Eleanor's book-lined villa in Italy. Though the three of them are brave and wily by turns, their cruelly-powerful nemesis manages to find them and their copy of the book, Inkheart. That's when Meggie learns about her father's extraordinary ability to read book characters into life, and the events that caused her mother's disappearance when Capricorn emerged from the title book. Meggie, Mo, Eleanor, and a host of friends and enemies go through plot twists that involve captures, escapes and, finally, an end to Capricorn's reign of terror. At the heart of it all, is the power of story and family love. Barbara Wysocki, Cora J. Belden Library, Rocky Hill, CT Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

What did I think?

(I would be remiss if I didn't preface this review by acknowledging the fact that this book has been translated from German.  I recognize than some of my points of displeasure may disappear if I could read it in it's intended language.  But alas, I don't speak German.)

I've been reading this book with my eleven year old as a bedtime story and ironically, I haven't found it a good read aloud.  (It's ironic because the plot revolves around reading aloud.)  When I started reading ahead by myself though, the story started moving faster and engaged me more.  A rather complex set of actions with out a lot of exposition or character development made this a difficult book for me to really get in to, especially only reading 15 or so minutes at a time with my daughter.  It is a very good story though, with an interesting premise (my daughter and I have had a good time theorizing which characters we'd try to read out of a book if we could and wondering if they'd be as appealing in real life - would we still like know-it-all Hermione if we had to hang out with her?) but it felt like the ending was rushed and tied up in a neat bow when that' not really how such a story would end.  I know there are two more long books in the series so this is not really the end, but I still would like this book to have it's own more substantial ending.  After all, these characters have just passed through hell.  They deserve more than a swift and glossy return to happiness.  All in all though, I did enjoy the book and think I'll encourage my daughter to either read ahead without me or set aside extra reading time because reading in longer stretches really did make a difference for me.  

Favorite Thing:  The premise.  It's lots of fun to consider being able to "read out" bits of books.

Least Favorite Thing:  There's very little character development.  They all seem to be malleable depending on the situation and a couple of the characters are pretty interchangeable.

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Review: Robert Galbraith's The Silkworm

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Buy from Amazon:  http://goo.gl/7pR6Dt
At first I was very happy with The Silkworm.  After all, it's beloved JK Rowling's latest and it picked right up where Cuckoo's Calling left off, both of which pleased me.  About a third of the way in I decided it was a little stilted.  I started to see some of the same flaws attributed to the much flawed author character (he's a pig of a person and his name is Quine - a thinly veiled analogy to a swine I thought.  It was a bit cheesy considering the book is about an author who writes a thinly veiled hit piece about his enemies.  But, Rowling knows how to tell a story and won me over. I finally plowed through the last hundred pages.  There weren't a lot of twists or turns, but there was a bit of Rowlings wonderful foreshadowing that you only realize was foreshadowing after you finish the book.  Also, for such a scrupulously planned and executed gory, gory murder, there's not a lot of suspense and the conclusion is almost thrown at you.  At times I found it a bit disjointed and in need of a good edit.  It's not as thoughtful as even Cuckoo's Calling much less Harry Potter or Casual Vacancy.  I was happy to see a tiny little step forward for Strike and his secretary, though Strike is an unlikeable character who seems to have a lot of inexplicably loyal friends.  I also liked the colorful characters and the way Strike's secretary, Robyn, was given a  more meaningful role.  So often characters like here are relegated to the sidelines as a useful but unimportant device or maybe comic relief.  Though flawed, The Silkworm a fun summer read and I look forward to the next "Robert Galbraith" book.  ;)