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Showing posts with label steve kluger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steve kluger. Show all posts

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Novel Review: Almost Like Being In Love by Steve Kluger



Rating (Out of 5): ~4
Genre: Adult Contemporary Romance
Publisher: Perennial (HarperCollins)
Publish Date: 2004
Spoilers?: No.

Goodreads Synopsis:

A high school jock and nerd fall in love senior year, only to part after an amazing summer of discovery to attend their respective colleges. They keep in touch at first, but then slowly drift apart.

Flash forward twenty years.

Travis and Craig both have great lives, careers, and loves. But something is missing .... Travis is the first to figure it out. He's still in love with Craig, and come what may, he's going after the boy who captured his heart, even if it means forsaking his job, making a fool of himself, and entering the great unknown. Told in narrative, letters, checklists, and more, this is the must-read novel for anyone who's wondered what ever happened to that first great love.

Something Specific:
Quotes:
  • "Why do they entrust youth to kids?!” (Paperback, pg. 111)
  • "'You’re the only one. No matter what happens, you’re the only one.’” (Pg. 147)
  • "Being Travis was a full-time job, yet that never kept him from teaching me how to be Craig.” “Romance isn’t just about roses or killing dragons or sailing a kayak around the world. It’s also about chocolate chip cookies and sharing The Grateful Dead and James Taylor with me in the middle of the night, and believing me what I say that you could be bigger than both of them put together, and not making fun of me for straightening out my French fries or pointing my shoelaces in the same direction, and letting me pout when I don’t get my own way, and pretending that I if I play “Flower Drum Song” one more time you won’t throw me and the record out the window.” (Pg. 230)
  • "'We make families of our own,’ Travis whispered in my arms on the last night we spent together. ‘It starts with you and me and then it spreads. And whatever happens, there’ll always be a part of me that’s part of you. No matter what.’” (Pg. 232)

The Cover:

I generally like this cover. It's simple and not embarrassing, which I like. The heart kind of bothers me, but it's not so bad. Overall it's pretty good, nice, and fitting.

Review:

I love Steve Kluger’s writing. This is his third book that I’ve read, and while it is an earlier book, it was still so very good.
He writes in journals and notes and letters and scripts and all kinds of things. He goes back and forth between characters, and each characters is so fleshed out, so easy to love. Even when some of the characters don’t get along, or aren’t meant to be together even though they love each other, it’s hard not to like them. And there’s struggles, so honest and heartfelt, as the main characters get together, as you know they should because they’re perfect for each other, but even as you’re upset for them and the other characters, you’re still rooting for the happy ending. 
This was just a really good, cute book. It’s sweet and romantic and hilarious and honest. I don’t know if I’m going to pick up Kluger’s previous (and I think first?) book, because I’ve heard it’s a lot weaker than the other ones, but I still might get it at some point. While I continue hoping and wishing for Kluger to write something else.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Novel Review: Last Days of Summer by Steve Kluger



Genre: Adult Historical Contemporary/Literature
Rating (Out of 5): ~4.5
Publisher: HarperCollins (Avon)
Spoilers?: No.

Goodreads Synopsis:

The hilarious and heart-warming story about a down-and-out kid who finds inspiration in his favourite baseball hero. In Brooklyn, 1940, a wisecracking, baseball loving twelve-year-old boy, Joey Margolis, is in desperate need of a hero. His rich father has recently divorced his mother, leaving her all but penniless, and she is forced to move herself and her son to an Italian dominated part of Brooklyn, where he's the only Jew in the area. Constant abuse from other boys in the neighbourhood prompts Joey to send letters to Charlie Banks, an up-and-coming star with the New York Giants, asking for a home run so he can tell everyone that it was for him. Joey uses every trick in the book to get what he wants and the friendship that comes out of their simple correspondence will change them both forever.

This improbable friendship is woven together through letters, postcards, notes, telegrams, newspaper clippings, report cards and ticket stubs, and includes a colourful cast of supporting characters.

o The joys and sorrows growing up will always have an audience and this novel sheds light on all the complexity of those difficult times, with humour and joy.

Something Special:
That I love:

  • Everything. I tried finding a specific quote, a specific something to say about this book, but I just loved everything. It was all just so good and I can't choose a specific thing. I just loved it all.

 
Review:

First of all, I love Steve Kluger. He only has, I believe, four novels out, and I’ve only read one other, but I love that one (even more than this one), and that’s enough for me. It took me forever to get to this book, but it was fantastic. I have another book of his, and I don’t doubt that it will also be very good.
I don’t think I want to spoil anything from this book, and my main message is: “Go read this. Right now. It’s amazing.” But I do want to talk about it a little, so…
This is set in the 1940’s, in America, during WWII, when Franklin D. Roosevelt was President. It’s told in letters and recorded dialogue and grades and all other formats of not straight-up narrative voice (aside from the prologue and epilogue). Kluger does this with all of his novels, I believe, and he does it amazingly well. He knows his characters, and so it’s easy to get a good sense of who they are.
This book is sweet and funny (very funny) and witty and sad. Joey, a kid growing up in Brooklyn, has a big mouth, never stops talking, can come up with stories at the drop of a hat (usually fake, but not always); he sends letters and gets responses from the President and his assistant, and then starts harassing Charlie Banks, a famous baseball player, via letters. Charlie, at first, tries to get the annoying kid to leave him alone, but quickly ends up being a stand-in father to him. They’re the main characters, but there’s also Charlie’s girlfriend Hazel, who is awesome, and Joey’s Japanese best friend Craig. Then there’s Joey’s mother and aunt and absentee father. Those are the main characters, but there’s also mention of Joey’s teachers, and Charlie’s friends. And they all have very distinct personalities and voices and you can’t help but love them all.
This book is simply amazing. The writing, the characters, the rapid and witty dialogue… Just go read this book, okay?