Wednesday, February 26, 2014

GoodReads: My Bookshelves

Book Talk

Eleanor & Park vs. Why We Broke Up: Traveling Across the New and Improved Chick-Lit Spectrum


Eleanor and Park cannot stand each other when they first meet. The lack of an immediate "spark" is what immediately set this book apart from others in its genre. It is highly uncommon to come across a book in the "teen fiction" or "romance" sections where the characters take longer than a few chapters to fall completely and totally in love. With Eleanor and Park, author Rainbow Rowell forces readers to deal with a real love story – one that doesn’t start right away.

Another interesting element about this book is its characters. Neither of them, in all honesty, are likeable at first. Rowell makes sure to give readers constant reminders of Eleanor’s unruly, red hair and her weight (which, apparently, is above average and, therefore, makes her unattractive). She “never looked nice” (Rowell, 165). She was an easy target for bullies. And Park? He was one of the (very) few Asian students in his school. He liked to wear eyeliner sometimes. He didn’t have many friends. So, it’s hard to picture these two together, given how different they appear at first – and it’s even more difficult to imagine them falling in love. At first, it’s hard to like the images that come to mind. Most readers want to picture two aesthetically pleasing and socially acceptable people to fall in love so they can get the best possible picture in their heads. Eleanor and Park are not poster teens for a quirky romance. Yet, somehow, they pull of one of the greatest love stories of its time. Or, rather, Rowell does. Her voice as an author could be, at times, compared to that of widely popular author John Green:

“I just can’t believe that life would give us to each other,’ he said, ‘and then take it back.’

‘I can,’ she said. ‘Life’s a bastard”(Rowell).

Perhaps it is the witty back-and-forth banter that makes the story so enticing. Or maybe it’s the way readers learn to love a more realistic love story with each turn of a page. The bottom line is that there is simply something about this book that is highly unconventional in the most wonderful way possible.


 

 

Min and Ed are opposites, like Park and Eleanor. But Ed is your typical attractive jock, and Min is your typical average-looking, quirky, borderline outcast. They fit more of the “typical” character prototypes for chick-lit books. What makes Why We Broke Up so different from other novels of its kind, however, also becomes apparent right at the beginning.

Min and Ed have broken up before the book even starts (hence the title). The entire book is a series of pictures of items that Min is returning to Ed in a box, each with a story (be it one page or fifteen) explaining why it contributed to the eventual downfall of the relationship. Never does one see a love that has already met its demise. Sometimes novels backtrack through the relationship, but never has it already ended by the first page.

But why would I want to read about their “love story” if it is so obviously going to end?

The answer lies in the way the story is written. Handler (who, by the way, wrote the Series of Unfortunate Events…who knew?!) took a stylistic approach seen only in a few novels; one of these is Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, in which some chapters Safran Foer chooses to write in run-on sentences, so as to show Oskar’s grandfather’s racing mind. For those who haven’t read sentences with multiple purposeful comma splices, the experience can be a little strange at first. But it quickly becomes somewhat poetic:

“You flew your way through all those stone silent statues, and if I could I'd thunk them all at your goddamn doorstep, as noisy as you were quiet, as furious as we were giggly, as cold and scornful as I was breathless and hot watching you cat burglar for evidence and come back shrugging and empty-handed so we still didn't know, we still couldn't be sure, not until everything was developed...But we never developed them”(Handler).

That’s what makes this book stand out. It forces readers to enter Min’s frantic, post-heartbreak mind. And as messy as it is, it is somehow beautiful. And, most importantly, it’s real. Many romantic/chick-lit novels have the happy ending we hate to love – but this one doesn’t. Because the end had already happened.

 

Rowell and Handler have taken major steps in transforming the highly popular –and also highly criticized – chick-lit culture. Perhaps the most important one, though, is the one that is shared between them: showcasing reality. Reminding love-struck teenage girls (and the occasional boy) that love does not always last, that not every story can have a happy ending, and that people who don’t meet society’s skin-tight standards can indeed fall in love. Yes, this is the most important thing: the reminder that we are human.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Blog post 9: Heroes and Villains


Over the past two weeks, I’ve read both Eleanor & Park and Why We Broke Up, so I thought I’d discuss the heroes and villains concept within both of them, since they’re so different (even though they’re both “romance” novels).

In Eleanor & Park, there are a few minor characters who give Eleanor a hard time, but the villain who reigns supreme is her stepfather, Richie. He is abusive not only to her, but to her mother and siblings. He is constantly at the bar and when he does come home, Eleanor is sure to stay out of his way. We as readers know very little about Richie, but we don’t need to: it is obvious that he’s wicked to the core.  Eleanor’s mother doesn’t harbor the strength to escape her abusive relationship with Richie, so Eleanor is forced to take care of herself and her siblings emotionally. Eleanor could be considered a hero to her siblings because she’s there for them on nights when Richie is especially abusive. However, she’s more of a “hero” to Park than anyone else. And Park is a hero to her. Though they could not be more opposite on the outside, they manage to connect and fall in love; this ultimately changes them, making them dependent on each other emotionally because nobody else around them treats them the way they should be. Eleanor and Park do not possess powers, and they don’t physically do anything to save each other (minus the time Park punches Steve for making fun of Eleanor), but they “save each other.” As cheesy as that sounds, I think it’s actually really wonderful. Having been outcasts their entire lives, it’s so nice to see them finding something (or rather, someone) to believe in.

In the case of Why We Broke Up, there aren’t really any heroes or villains. Min and Ed are the main characters, and they’re already broken up before the book even starts. I guess (spoiler alert!) you could call Ed the villain because he ends up cheating on Min in the end, which obviously really hurts her. However, Ed doesn’t possess any qualities of a typical villain – mostly because he isn’t wicked or isolated or anything like that. He’s just a jock who got stuck between Min and the life he was taught to live. But he still made an awful choice in the end- and didn’t really apologize for it or seem to regret it – so let’s just call him the villain. Min isn’t really a hero or a villain, in my opinion. Perhaps she’s a hero to herself for telling him off via the letters that compose the novel, but overall, she doesn’t save anyone or end up in any situations that require resilience or bravery. Maybe she possesses heroic qualities. I’d like to think she does. But we never really get a chance to see them. All we learn is how much she loved Ed, and therefore, why she’s so completely and utterly done with him (even if she so completely and utterly isn’t).

Both of these novels are realistic fiction/romance novels that focus on polar opposites attracting. However, the “heroes and villains” are different in both. In the case of love, though, you can probably often argue that the lovers themselves are the heroes and villains. We see a strength in both female characters (much more so in Eleanor), but the male characters are very different (Park being much more likable due to his not-being-an-awful-boyfriend-ness).  One novel comes to a crossroads at the end (as many love stories do), while the other was over before the first page is even turned. Though the stories themselves are different, the heroic and villainous qualities of people are still seen in both.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Blog post 8: Truth in Memoir


I think that the line between fiction and nonfiction is blurred. I feel like most memoirs aren’t 100 percent true in the sense that every piece of dialogue is word for word. They’re still memoirs, though. The amount of truth bent and the purpose behind bending it is what I believe determines whether or not a story is to be considered fiction or nonfiction. In the case of Frey, his truths were too far bent; there was too much distance between what he said and what really occurred. That being said, it’s hard to categorize his story because there are probably still plenty of truths to it. This brings Shields’ opinion into the argument: should we so distinctly label novels as fiction or nonfiction? I’m not sure. Books like Frey’s make me wonder whether or not it’s necessary. Perhaps books like his, which are “mostly” true but still bend major truths, could be labeled as nonfiction, but have an author’s note at the beginning. That way, readers don’t feel betrayed/know what’s real and what isn’t as they read. It’s just up to the author to decide how honest they’ll be in their note.

Another problem: we’re too caught up in the labels of stories. I understand what Shields says when he asks why it all matters; as long as it’s a good story, why worry about the genre label? I really think these labels should be used for general identification purposes, since people want to know where to look for fiction vs. nonfiction as a whole. But controversy over a few books that fall on “blurred line” is very unnecessary. If it becomes too difficult to discern which category it falls into, make another category. Call it miscellaneous, call it “both,” call it something, anything, but don’t make it a bigger deal than it is. In the end, we all just want a good story.