Saturday, March 30, 2013

March Read - Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend




Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend - Matthew Dicks

Synopsis (as taken [and edited for accuracy] from Goodreads):  
Budo is Max's imaginary friend. But though only Max can see him, he is real. He and the other imaginary friends watch over their children until the day comes that the child stops imagining them. And then they're gone. Budo has lasted a lot longer than most imaginary friends--five years--because Max needs him more. Max is perfectly happy if everything is just kept the way it is, and nothing out of the ordinary happens. Unfortunately, something out of the ordinary is going to happen--and then he'll need Budo more than ever.


S’s Rating:  ❤❤❤❤ 1/2 (out of five hearts)


D’s Rating:  ❤❤❤❤ 1/2 (out of five hearts)



S’s Thoughts:

My younger sister, L, had an imaginary friend as a child.  She called her "Amy" and Amy was responsible for pretty much everything L did to get into trouble.  Amy obviously dumped the toys out everywhere, not L.  Amy hit me, not L.  Was it L who ripped the pages out of a book?  Nope.  Amy, obviously.  And then one day in the car, and I remember this so vividly, our mother asked L about Amy... I think it had been a while since Amy had last made an appearance.  L, who was maybe 6 years old at the most, replied matter-of-factly that Amy was gone.  She'd died in a fire.

Needless to say, we were pretty creeped out.  So that was the end of Amy--killed off soap opera style in a fire.


I don't remember ever having an imaginary friend of my own... though I guess that's one of the points of Dick's novel.  Once you forget about your imaginary friend, stop needing them, they're gone for good. 


Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend was a sweet little book with some seriously sinister and sad undertones.  Max is a lonely little boy who suffers from a form of autism.  We're not actually told this but his nuances, triggers and personality make it quite clear from the get-go.  Max doesn't have any friends except for Budo, his imaginary and very perceptive companion.  It is Budo who narrates the novel--an interesting idea to have an invisible character narrate the story without making him omnipotent.


I really enjoyed Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend; it was a quick and addictive read and I'd recommend it to just about anyone... especially those who had imaginary friends themselves!



Standout Quotes:

"The world can be so complicated for Max.  Even when he gets something right, it can still go wrong."

"Jo-Jo leans closer to me.  'Does that mean we aren't real?' 'No,' I say.  'It just means that we are a different kind of real.  It's a kind of real that adults don't understand, so they just assume that we're imaginary.'"


"You have to be the bravest person in the world to go out every day being yourself when no on likes who you are.  I could never be as brave as Max."

Album to listen to while reading this book: Not sure why but The Beatles come to mind for this one... one of their older (less psychedelic!) albums for sure.



D’s Thoughts:

When I was younger, I did not so much have an imaginary friend, but rather an entire "school" of ones. I'm pretty sure it was modeled off of the early Harry Potter movies I loved so dearly, but otherwise I don't remember them much.

Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend, having been written from the point of view of an autistic third-grader's "friend", appears to at first be meant for the late elementary school age range. However, rest assured that any adult who reads will find it impossible to put the book down once the exposition and explanation of situation are complete. As S stated, there are many sinister qualities to this book as well.

Speaking of situation, Matthew Dicks did an excellent job in consideration of the qualities of imaginary friends. For example, it is continually mentioned throughout the book that some "friends" are not imagined fully, and that many are missing ears and eyebrows simply because their young creators forgot. Such detail supports that the author was incredibly invested in his story, and the outstanding product as a whole proves it.


I suppose I love this story because it includes many things--like the eyebrow-less imaginary friends and the reasoning behind the antagonist's deeds--I never personally would have thought of myself. It was more than worth staying up late to finish...proceeded by bawling my eyes out as though I was no older than 6 when it was over. 


Yes, I cried. I'm not ashamed.


Standout Quotes:


"I sometimes think that neat and organized people spend too much time planning and not enough time doing. I don't trust neat and organized people."  


"Monsters are bad things, but monsters that do not walk and talk like monsters are the worst."


 Album to listen to while reading this book: I honestly have no idea, but to keep with the kid theme, I'm gonna stick with Saint-Saens' The Carnival of the Animals. Each movement is rather short and innocent, much like the life of most imaginary friends.

 

April’s book is D’s choice and is Such a Pretty Girl by Laura Wiess.

See you soon! S & D

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Women's Prize for Fiction - The Longlist


The Women's Prize for Fiction (formerly the Orange Prize For Fiction) is probably my favourite literary award out there.  It's not stuffy and pretentious like the Man Booker Prize (oh my GOD how I hate that one) and it's a bit more serious than the Costa Book Award (can't take an award named after a coffee chain seriously, no matter how nice their coffee is).  The Women's Prize for Fiction is like the Goldilocks of book prizes--not too boring and stuck up it's own butt but not full of fluff.

And since it's International Women's Month (Really?! You don't say!) I thought I'd just throw the longlist up on here and just say how excited I am about it:

Kitty Aldridge - A Trick I Learned From Dead Men (Jonathan Cape)
Kate Atkinson - Life After Life (Doubleday)
Ros Barber - The Marlowe Papers (Sceptre)
Shani Boianjiu - The People of Forever are Not Afraid (Hogarth)
Gillian Flynn - Gone Girl (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)
Sheila Heti - How Should A Person Be? (Harvill Secker)
A M Homes - May We Be Forgiven (Granta)
Barbara Kingsolver - Flight Behaviour (Faber)
Deborah Copaken Kogan - The Red Book (Virago)
Hilary Mantel - Bring Up the Bodies (Fourth Estate)
Bonnie Nadzam - Lamb (Hutchinson)
Emily Perkins - The Forrests (Bloomsbury Circus)
Michèle Roberts - Ignorance (Bloomsbury)
Francesca Segal - The Innocents (Chatto & Windus)
Maria Semple - Where’d You Go, Bernadette (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)
Elif Shafak - Honour (Viking)
Zadie Smith - NW (Hamish Hamilton)
M L Stedman - The Light Between Oceans (Doubleday)
Carrie Tiffany - Mateship with Birds (Picador)
G. Willow Wilson - Alif the Unseen (Corvus Books)

I'll be the first to say I've only read one title off of this list but I'd recommend Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl to just about anyone.  Actually, I'm going to try and get my hands on more of Flynn's stuff soonish!  I pretty much groaned out loud when I saw Hilary Mantel's Bring Up the Bodies on yet another prize list... I mean, snore.  I'm sure Matel's work is enjoyable for some people but I'm not one of them.  And besides... she's won enough already this year... let someone else have a go!

I'm really excited about Shafak's Honour and Kingsolver's Flight Behaviour, so much so that I bought the Kindle versions this morning.  Also I'm seeing Kingsolver in April/May and I'm pretty stoked about that too.  I'm very curious about Boianjiu's The People of Forever are Not Afraid... It looks really interesting!

My goodness, my "to read" list is growing by leaps and bounds!  Are any of you guys excited by any of these books or are there some missing from the list that you think should be there?  Have you read any of them already?

X
S