furyofvissarion: (Default)
[personal profile] furyofvissarion
Talking to the Moon - Noel Alumit. I loved Alumit's first novel, the devastating Letters to Montgomery Clift, so I was psyched to see he had a second one out. Jory Lalaban is a Filipino mail carrier who gets shot by a white supremacist (an obvious reference to the murder of Joseph Ileto).

The novel flashes between this incident (& his subsequent hospitalization) & memories of his past, beginning w/his youth as an orphan growing up in the Philippines who ended up in the seminary. Eventually Jory rejects Catholicism & turns to a local, pre-colonial pagan religion, for which he becomes a community spiritual leader when he & his wife, Belen, move to Southern California. Belen is convinced she's been cursed by her mother for marrying Jory (& taking him from the church); the biggest supporting evidence for her belief was the tragic death of their oldest son, Jun-Jun, as a child. Emerson, their second child, grows up feeling second best (& also, btw, gets beyond-the-grave telephone calls from Jun-Jun).

The novel switches between the viewpoints of Jory, Belen, Emerson, & Michael (Emerson's Taiwanese ex-boyfriend; I found his opinions on people who identify as Asian American interesting to hear), & also v. quickly between the past & present, sometimes without much of a marker to indicate. I didn't find that problematic--I thought it was obvious, & liked it--but I read a review where someone found that confusing. Hm.

Anyway--another thing I loved was a little subtheme about naming, which comes up w/both Jory's first & last names, Emerson, & Michael.

This is a really poignant, beautiful book. I finished it on the subway & kind of wished I'd been @ home so I could sit w/it & probably cry a little.

Magic Bites - Ilona Andrews. In this slightly grim fantasy novel, Atlanta is in shambles due to random surges of magic that leave technology useless. Kate Daniels, a mercenary, finds herself investigating the murder of her guardian & in so doing, must work v. carefully to stay on the good side of both the Pack, a group of shapechangers, & the Masters of the Dead, necromancers who control vampires. I enjoyed this a lot. My only nitpick was stylistic: Kate has a tendency to leave out contractions a lot ("did not" instead of "didn't"), but not enough to make it a speech quirk of hers; it just sounds awkward.
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

furyofvissarion: (Default)
furyofvissarion

March 2017

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
121314151617 18
19202122232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 20th, 2025 09:20 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios