Library!

Sun, Mar. 11th, 2007 04:21 pm
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Having forgotten to go to the library sale yesterday, I went twice today (once for first picks, once for the bag sale). I now have even more books.

In between, I sauntered about the library looking for even more even more books, woefully handicapped by the fact that I couldn't access LJ for recs (all the internet computers were being used). I managed to actually talk to real people and ask the librarian at the Teen Zone (new one, not same one from knitting) for recs for YA books by people of color, preferably women. She thought I was a high school or college student for a bit, hee hee. I got several nice lists from her, checked out The House on Mango Street and browsed the YA section, but I figure LJ knows all.

So, anyone have recs for good books by and/or about people of color? My general preference is for books by and/or about women of color, preferably YA, preferably fantasy. I have read Stormwitch and Zahrah the Windseeker and loved them both, and I already know about Maya Angelou, Alice Walker, Amy Tan, Maxine Hong Kingston, Gus Lee, Marjane Satrapi, Geoff Ryman, Nalo Hopkinson, Gail Tsukiyama and Kyoko Mori, although book recs for Hopkinson, Tsukiyama and Mori would be nice.

What I really want is something like Stormwitch or Zahrah the Windseeker. I want something about girls of color kicking ass and growing up. I randomly browsed through some adult books by Asian Americans (I accidentally wandered into the Ch section -- Chiu, Choi, Chu, etc.), and I put most books down despite really wanting to read more about people of color. I don't really feel like reading a sad, depressing story about people dealing with hate and race relations and the difficulty of being a POC; I know that stuff. I don't mind those elements in the book, but I want the story itself to be about kicking ass and taking charge, about women and girls finding power within themselves and changing things.

I don't mind books about female POC written by white people, though I would prefer that the books not be centered around whiteness and white people dealing with race (ex. Han Nolan's A Summer of Kings, which I may read some other time but am not in the mood for now).

All POC are good, though bonus points for Latin-American (as opposed to Mexican or Chicano), South-American, African, Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian including Indian fiction, as I have read much less of those and not seen much of those recced at all.

Uh, so do these books I am hankering to read actually exist? Where can I find them? What have you guys read?
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
So, it looks as though I'm starting to glom Regencies as well.

I fell for Jesse Randall in about the first page, because I am a complete sucker for heroes who fall for the heroine first. I get kind of sick of the pining heroine. And he's just so earnestly good and kind and nice, even though he doesn't quite think he is.

The plot centers around his marrying Elinore Mason to get her out of marrying a scumbag because her father's in debt, and the horrible army retreat that follows when the scumbag takes offense. I had some problems with Kelly's prose... it felt a little clunky to me, especially in some of the dialogue, but that could be because I am not used to real Regency style dialogue, or just... I don't know.

I really loved the characters and how Elinore managed to be one of the saintly type heroines without ever seeming twee or precious or unbearably holy somehow. It probably helped that the hero wasn't a rake who was see the light and reform his wicked ways once he touched the innocent. And it was just interesting watching the two be good while trying to not hurt the other.

I also appreciated a non-romantic look at the Napoleonic War that didn't involve glamorous things like spies or traumatized war heroes. Jesse's a surgeon, and Kelly isn't afraid to show the poor conditions of the time. Plus, he was just so nice -- it's hard to say it without making him sound boring, except I adored the fact that he worried about things like Elinore's burdens, his own ability to save the patients, his ability to lead the retreat, etc.

Links:
- [livejournal.com profile] gwyneira's review

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