Thursday, May 7, 2020

The Glass Castle Review

Title of the Book: The Glass Castle
Author: Jeannette Walls
Number of Pages: 288
Rating: ☆☆☆☆

Review:
The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls is a captivating memoir about Jeannette's family life growing up. Jeanette was one of four children born to Rex and Rose Walls. The family never had a permanent address and remained rootless to avoid bill collectors. Her father Rex Walls was an alcoholic and failed engineer that came up with many schemes and inventions to get rich. He never followed through with these projects and couldn’t keep a regular job. Her Mother was an ‘excitement addict’ and aspiring artist. Her mother was educated to be a school teacher but she hated working a regular job and actually throws fits over it throughout the book.
Money was tight and between the six of them that became an increasing issue as they got older. No matter how bad of a situation they were in Jeannette always tried to find something good in it. They staggered from city to city with several different living arrangements and junk cars. However many unfortunate events that happen there’s always something Jeanette learns from them. Through trials and tribulations of always being the new kid and growing up almost homeless Jeannette has found a way to come up from this and make a name for herself as an author. Throughout her life Jeanette shows an incredible amount of intelligence and responsibility. She looks out for everyone in the family and tries to give them insight on their actions.
 Mountain Goat as she was called by her father also takes after him with her witty half glass full point of view and her resourceful inventiveness. As she grew up she became more practical and became somewhat of the head of the household and the responsible one while her parents were ignoring their responsibilities. Like when her mother went back to school to renew her teaching license and Lori went to a summer camp. Jeannette was given 200$ for that month for bills and other expenses that she budgeted out. Her father being an alcoholic asked for money and caused her to be off budget and for Jeannette to understand what her mother went through with him. She and her older sister Lori at the end of their high school careers made a plan to get out and move to New York to live a better life. 
This book is one of my top 10 favorite books. Glass Castle is so unique for the plain fact that everyone can relate to at least one part of her story. Lots of sensitive topics are touched on in this book including: abuse, addiction, sexual assault, and homelessness all through the first hand experience of Jeanette. She writes as if you’re living through her and seeing everything and experiencing everything as she did. Since this book talks about such things I would recommend it to an audience no younger than 14. I also think this book because it’s a coming of age story about Jeanette, that it should be recommended to but not limited to young women everywhere. This book also is a good indicator of toxic relationships and there are a lot of lessons and good advice to be taken from it. 

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Title of the Book: Into the Wild

Author: Jon Krakauer

Number of Pages: 215

Rating: ☆☆☆☆☆

Review:

“No man ever followed his genius till it misled him. Though the results were bodily weakness, yet perhaps no one can say that the consequences were to be regretted, for these were a life in conformity to higher principles” - Walden, Or Life in the Woods. One of many passages highlighted in Chris Johnson McCandless’ plethora of a library was documented during his misunderstood and ultimately fatal adventure to Alaska. 

Chris Johnson McCandless was a very intelligent and out-of-the-box thinker that had an untameable adventurous spirit. This “call of the wild” that laid within him was ultimately his tragedy. While the reason for his death still questions many, his story leaves an undeniable imprint that cannot be erased. The seeds of adventure inside this man were planted as a child and grew ever so stronger when he aged with time. The McCandless family was fabled for traveling the country in their RV and never let an opportunity to do so go by. This was really the start of Chris’ desire to travel and nothing ever stopped him - even family secrets and disrupted relationships. 

Into the Wild is a story that captures the many different points of view of Chris Johnson McCandless. As Chris hitchhiked across many states, he met new people and he made new friends. It was these friends who were able to see the side of Chris that his own family failed to acknowledge. Chris never failed to make an impression on the people he met, some so impressionable that he changed their lives. While he lived as a wanderer, he was never a lost wanderer. 

When I read this book, I didn’t know what to expect. I thought I was going to read an account that was so famously told by various newspapers. I didn’t expect to read a story about a possibly crazy man and it narrate the personal side of it. But this story was relatable in the strangest ways. I read it and the story of a man that’s been dead for almost thirty years made a big impression on me. This book captures your attention and heart in the most unconventional way and once you're hooked, you’re in for the long haul.

Gamelife: A Memoir Review

Title of the Book: Gamelife: A Memoir
Author: Michael W. Clune
Number of Pages: 214
Rating: ☆☆☆☆☆

Review: Video games affect everyone very differently, but our experiences with video games all have something in common. We all learn something from the game; that’s why they are fun to play. In Gamelife, Michael W. Clune shares his experiences with the video games he played as a kid. Clune shares the way the games changed his perspective of himself, the people around him, and the world he was living in.
Throughout the book, Clune plays 7 different games, all with different lessons to teach him. With the game Suspended, he learns his own self worth. With The Bard’s Tale II, he discovers the importance of fantasy. In Ultima III, he finds the importance of leaving your comfort zone to allow discovery. When playing Wolfenstein, he finds comfort in becoming one with the games he plays. Playing Elite taught him the difficulty of overcoming urges to better himself. Pirates! showed him that every good experience has a bad one to end it. Finally, with Might and Magic II, he defines what is truly real, and what separates a game from real life.
The beauty of the book is the way that Clune explains the lessons he learned. Until you understand the way this book is written, it may seem like it doesn’t make any sense and that the author goes on a lot of tangents. If you take note of these tangents and keep them in mind while reading, the book will make more sense as you continue. The lessons he teaches throughout the book are shown from the perspective of the game, as well as real life. By doing this, he is able to make subtle references to his real life with the mask of the game. Clune’s style is like nothing I’ve ever read before. He describes games in ways that I would never have thought to. From 1990 to 2001, Michael suffered from addiction to heroin. I believe that his experiences with the drug helped him visualise and explain the thoughts and ideas that were in his head as a kid. Based on the way he describes playing video games as being one with the characters and losing himself in the world, I think that he is able to explain the games in this way because of his addiction.
This book is great for anyone who is willing to think outside of the box and jump into the creative world of someone who thinks in a way no one else does. This is no run of the mill memoir. On the surface it’s a tangled mess, but once you dive in and immerse yourself, you can experience the world from the perspective of a kid again. With its comedic moments and unique storytelling, this book has more than earned it’s five-star rating.

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Title of the Book: Into Thin Air Author: Jon Krakauer Number of Pages: 302 Rating: ☆☆☆☆☆

Review: Into Thin Air is a reflection on unspeakable events that one man lived through. Jon Krakauer writes a first hand account of the 1996 Mt. Everest disaster, in which many people were terribly injured, scarred for life and lost their lives. Jon Krakauer was fortunately a survivor of this catastrophe, only a part of the expedition to be a journalist. Into Thin Air dives deep into the topic of the history of climbing, commercialized climbing, and the process of standing atop the world. Much of the book is constantly moving forward, there is an end goal that the limbers must reach and the book is one big build up to a breathtaking event one could only dream of… but the book is far from over as the climbers still have to get down the mountain. There is no stalling in the story, each page and line is building up to the final events just building intensity and eagerness to be there. 

Krakauer tackles this book perfectly, not only because he has a trustworthy first hand account of the events, but because of his writing style. He builds so much detail on subtopics that you learn far more than what you would expect out of a book. He dives intensely deep into previous climbers, the family lives of his colleagues, the history of the mountain and recalling previous disasters such as avalanches and independent climbers going missing. Krakauer makes the book an informative, fun, and adventurous read which makes for a once in a lifetime kind of book. 

There are moments in this book that get your heart racing, and there are others that are real tear jerkers. Such as the close calls over the ice crefaces, the determination of Scott Fischer, or even the final lines that recall the unfortunate death of a great character. Moments like this and the way Krakauer writes them are what make this book worth a read, and there are too many to count of moments like the ones I used as examples. This book is based on real events, none of it is faked or exaggerated… so if you are the type of person who enjoys a good adventure story, or even a history lesson, I highly recommend this for you. Growing up I was always a climber and I am a big fan of learning history. I have never been a big reader nor have I ever truly enjoyed it, but this book was definitely worth it and sparked my interest into a lot of new things. The examples I used are just brief glimpses at the hundreds of moments like to, but the only way you’ll truly know that is if you read it. 

The Glass Castle Review

Title of the Book: The Glass Castle Author: Jeannette Walls Number of Pages: 288 Rating: ☆☆☆☆ Review: The Glass Castle by Jeannette...