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March 5th, 2023

3/5/2023

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1. What is the book? 

          Siren Queen

2. Who wrote it?

          Nghi Vo

3. What is it about?

          Siren Queen tells the story of a fictitious star of the silver screen, Luli Wei, and the sacrifices she
          makes in her determination to make a name for herself outside the confines of racial and gendered
          tropes that were the studios’ bread and butter. It lifts the curtain on the entertainment industry in a
          creative way, blurring the lines between reality and make-believe in the process, and it reads like a
          historical novel of the early to mid-twentieth century Hollywood, a modern fable seasoned liberally
          with magical realism.


4. Why did I read it?

          I picked up Vo’s book because I wanted to try something new. I’ve read fantasies and I’ve read
          historical fiction, but the blending of the two genres is something I haven’t experienced before.


5. What do I think?

          The most fascinating thing about Siren Queen is that, as the layers of veneer and polish that create
          Tinsel Town’s luster and allure are peeled back to reveal the sinister dangers that propel its success,
          the mythical creatures posing as producers, directors, and actors help ground it in reality. It isn’t a
          far stretch to see a Harvey Weinstein inspiring Oberlin Wolfe, and the price for fame may not be
          one’s soul, but it does cost those who strive for it dearly.


          While it is the story of a fictitious movie star in the making, the novel does speak to the difficulties
          actors of color had in finding roles that were not one-dimensional or rife with offensive and
          oftentimes dehumanizing characteristics. In this way, it can be read as a companion piece to
          Charles Yu’s National Book Award-winning novel,
Interior Chinatown. Vo also sheds light on similar
          issues women actors faced, and what sovereignty and self-preservation cost those who pursued it
.

          In her mostly successful attempts at weaving reality into the fantastical there are times when Vo
          leans too heavily on rote characterizations of mythical tropes. Overall,
Siren Queen offers a
          refreshing take from an insider’s perspective of the celluloid machine.


You can place a hold on your copy of the book by clicking on the cover below:

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February 5th, 2023

2/5/2023

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1. What is the book? 

          Trust

2. Who wrote it?

          Hernan Diaz

3. What is it about?

          It is a novel in four parts, with four different narrative voices, about capitalist pursuits in the United States by a fictional
          tycoon from the late-19th into the mid-20th centuries.


4. Why did I read it?

          This one I picked up by chance. The subject matter doesn’t usually interest me, but the fact that it tells overlapping
          stories from different perspectives got me intrigued. 


5. What do I think?

          As the novel unfolds from different perspectives, what comes to my mind is Orson Welles’ cinematic masterpiece,
          Citizen Kane. The movie centers on Charles Foster Kane, who is a thinly veiled avatar of actual media tycoon William
          Randolph Hearst. When Welles made
Citizen Kane, Hearst was not happy and came very close to silencing it before it
          arrived at movie theaters. In
Trust, art does imitate life.

          Another piece Diaz is in conversation with is the article by scholar Gayatri Spivak, “Can the Subaltern Speak?” In that
          article, Spivak posits that if the lowest class members of society want to represent themselves or be heard, it comes at a
          drastic and shocking price. The true center of
Trust is one such character.

           Diaz’s novel does not end in typical fashion, and for me this is the redeeming quality of Trust. It poses the question
          “What if?” What is the greater story of this country’s moguls if all the people who contributed to their lives had a voice?
          Another question, perhaps mine, is what sacrifice must the supporting cast, as it were, make in order to be afforded their
          opportunity to speak?


You can place a hold on your copy of the book by clicking on the cover below:



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January 5th, 2023

1/5/2023

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1. What is the book? 

          Sweet, Soft, Plenty Rhythm

2. Who wrote it?

          Laura Warrell

3. What is it about?

          It is an evocation of the jazz that embodies one of the central characters, Circus Palmer, and many
          of the lives he touches. Like the music, it is at turns sultry, melodious, brash, and reverberating.


4. Why did I read it?

          As with many novels that capture my attention, the title drew me in first. It is from a quote by jazz
          pioneer Jelly Roll Morton, epigraphed at the beginning of Warrell’s book. Since jazz is the ebb, flow,
          and inspiration of the story, it recalled other authors who showcase its influence in their writing,
          like James Baldwin and Toni Morrison. 


          Of course, I cannot think of jazz in literature without thinking of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, and
          so I imagined Circus as a contrast to that unnamed, young protagonist in Ellison’s novel. Where he
          is unseen raging against the machinations of a post-World War II society whose traces on that
          society are surreptitious, Circus, as an older Black man facing the harsh reality of fading talent and
          opportunity, leaves haphazard traces of himself on everyone who sees, hears, and touches him.


          Returning to the title, the novel’s sweetness is bittersweet; it is soft like a bruise; and its rhythm is as
          syncopated as a murmuring heartbeat.


5. What do I think?

          The most interesting part of Sweet, Soft, Plenty Rhythm is the variety of perspectives from which
          the novel unfolds. Warrell places Circus front and center, like a jazz soloist who affects a bevy of
          women with his art, passions, fears, and outsized personality (his name is apt!), but the women and
          their voices are the rhythm section that set the tempo and provide context for the solo’s existence.


          The two recurring characters are Pia, Circus’ ex-wife, and his teenage daughter, Koko, and their
          cadence is a jazz suite on the page. Part of the charm of the book is that all of the characters are
          clearly flawed, which accentuates the beauty of their individual and collective struggles. 


          Another character, Maggie, figures prominently in Circus’ thoughts, as she and their unborn child
          drive him to introspection, but her perspective is only seen in one chapter.


          There are some uncomfortable scenes in the book, particularly Circus’ painful, meandering, and
          philandering path to being a responsible and giving father to Koko, and I think Warrell
          overcompensates for this by presenting a tidily packaged ending, but it does read like the music that
          inspires it. 


Reserve your copy by clicking on the book cover image below:
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December 5th, 2022

12/5/2022

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1. What is the book? 

          If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English

2. Who wrote it?

          Noor Naga

3. What is it about?

          It is about a couple in a caustic, toxic relationship in Cairo, several years after
          the Arab Spring, and the aftermath for both parties.


4. Why did I read it?

          Besides being drawn to the title, the structure of the novel got me to pick it
          up. It is divided into three parts. The first and second sections alternate
          viewpoints between the unnamed woman and man. In the first part, each
          perspective is prefaced with proverb-like questions. The climax occurs in the
          second segment, which is given context in part through footnotes. The final
          section, written as a play, somewhat deconstructs the rest of the text.


5. What do I think?

          If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English is more layered and complex than what I
          perceived at first glance. The short passages help to create a sense of the two
          characters fusing together occasionally.


          The woman is an Egyptian American living in Cairo, and Naga does a good job
          of articulating her thoughts as a cultural outsider with blood ties to the
          region.


          The novel is also uncomfortable at times, with glimpses into the man’s
          psychotic, misogynistic thoughts and actions. It also offers insights into his
          struggles with drug addiction and poverty in the aftermath of the Arab Spring.
          It is thought-provoking and, in my opinion, a worthwhile read!



Interested? Reserve your copy by clicking on the book cover image below:
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    Author

    Hello! My name is Tom, and I am a librarian here at the Niagara Falls Public Library. Welcome to a new, recurring blog post that will come out the 5th of every month, where I answer five questions about a book in our collection.

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