Title: Wish I Was Here
Author: Jackie Kay
Number of Pages: 198 pages
Book Number/Goal: 30/75 for 2009
My Rating: 5/5

I didn't enjoy this quite as much as I did Why Don't You Stop Talking, but it's still a really awesome book. I just love the way she writes, her use of language, everything.

As with her previous short story collection, most of these are about queer people (mostly lesbians, though the last story is about gay men), though this time they seem to be mostly not about people of color (only two (IIRC) are specified as being PoC and many are specified as being white, with a few that don't indicate one way or the other).

I think my favorite stories were Wish I Was Here, My Daughter the Fox, and The Mirrored Twins.

Mooch from BookMooch
Title: Evening Is the Whole Day
Author: Preeta Samarasan
Number of Pages: 340 pages
Book Number/Goal: 23/75 for 2009
My Rating: 3/5

This is the story of the Rajasekharans, an Indian family in Malaysia. It jumps around through time through three generations, though the main focus is on the "present" of the story (set in 1980) and several events that happen all around the same time.

I'm really not sure how much I liked it or not, so I gave it three stars, because that's in the middle, and there were things I liked and things I didn't, and nothing really swayed me to the love or hate side. But I did enjoy it over all, so three stars.

My biggest problem with it was that it was slow. It's only 340 pages, but it felt like it took forever to read, and I always had to force myself to pick it up again. This finally changed about two-thirds of the way through, and I found myself eager to read the last few chapters. But I didn't really enjoy the slog to get there, even while I can see why she included everything that she did up to that point.

I loved the language, though. The rhythms of Malaysian English come through so perfectly I can hear it all in my head. And I liked the story, even liked the way it was told, all the revelations, peeling layers back like an onion. Though I thought some of the reveals were pretty obvious. Like Chellam being innocent and Uncle Ballroom being the better of the two brothers and the guy arrested for murder being framed. I was surprised about Appa's second family, though (though I suppose I should have seen the foreshadowing with Kooky Rooky). I also wished there had been a bit more about Uma. We barely get her POV at all, and she's just this perfect girl who is perfectly perfect at everything from birth and has no personality.

If you need your books to be happy, though, this is not the book for you. Nothing happy happens to anyone ever here.
Title: The Story of a Marriage
Author: Andrew Sean Greer
Number of Pages: 208 pages
Book Number/Goal: 20/75 for 2009
My Rating: 5/5

Review: It's the early '50s and Pearlie Cook is a young housewife and mother, married to her childhood sweetheart, but her illusion of happiness is shattered when a man claiming to be an old friend of her husband's shows up on her doorstep one day.

I loved this book SO MUCH. I don't even know what to say about it. All I can do is flail happily. Like The Taqwacores, this is a story about people of color (apparently some people thought this was a "twist" in the story, but idk, there are plenty of hints before he comes right out and says it) written by a white guy, and I think he did a good job. He also did an amazing job portraying the delicate relationships between Pearlie and Holland and Buzz. I love Pearlie and Buzz's sort-of friendship, and how Holland is a mystery to both of them. Everything felt completely believable to me. I saw a lot of "why the hell did Pearlie do what she did?" type reviews on Amazon, but I thought it was perfectly obvious and made sense. She didn't do it for the money. She did it because she loved Holland and thought that was the only way for him to be happy (and because she didn't feel she could cross a rich white man). I loved the way the secrets came out, so many layers in such a short book.

I already have another book of his on my shelf to read, and I'd really like to get my hands on his short stories, too. Definitely a new favorite author.
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