Thursday, November 20, 2014

On Eleanor and Park

I recently read and finished a fantastic book, Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell. That said, a certain reveal was a bit too anticlimactic at parts and the switch from ignoring each other to dating wasn't super developed for my taste. However, their interactions do gradually shift, which is fun to watch (read) as well as the relationship with Eleanor and Park's mom. It has real issues and treats them...in a fresh perspective. Not totally new but not everywhere there is. The side characters make for comedy ensuing which is a nice breather from the drama of the main plot. But I also think the main plot is an annoying distraction from the subplot. Because I was plenty interested in Eleanor and her family and did not get as much a view into that as I might've liked.
Overall: if you're interested in an adorable romance with real issues lying beneath it go for it. You will love this book. If you're open to anything, try it out, because it's pretty great. And if you're into the family side, the friend side, or just the issue side, it will no doubt leave you wanting more.


And if you're looking for some fantasy or sci-fi scene go pick up Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card, my favorite of those genres at the mo'.

Hi Guys!

Hi Guys!*

My name is Kate and I am an avid book reader. Harry Potter is pure magic, Markus Zusak is a genius, and Perks of Being a Wallflower is the saddest book ever. And I love them all and thousands more. Okay, like maybe a hundred more. Tops. But thousands is my goal, I suppose. And as my name is Kate and my middle name starts with an E (and can be shortened to Lizzy) and I read books, this is kateereadsbooks. So I will read them and then review them and tell you all about them. And sometimes explain the wonder of old-classics-fantastic and new-age-young-adult-eh-it's-okay through words that aren't words. (And bit of advise: don't use the word "feels" on your english essay). So check back often for book recommendations and reviews. Be warned though, despite the existence of adults reading young adult novels (I greatly appreciate all of you for supporting this market that I love) I do not really relate as much as I will to other high school students. Simultaneously, twelve year olds might not feel the most relation to this as it will be in greater part analysis rather than omg! this! ahhh! Because I'm not just obsessing because cutes. I'm obsessing because I'm brought to emotion, to new friends, to progressively darker ideas, and progressively mature characters. So maybe that was too much. Or not enough. But I don't suppose that matters. 

*I doubt there is a single person reading this, let alone multiple to entitle the plural, however I prefer this to Hello, Nobody and so I will be keeping it.