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KASPIAN LOST

Another supernatural adventure in Maine, the eighth from the author of, most recently, the fey and moody In the Land of Winter (1997). Here, 15-year-old Kaspian Aaby follows three leprechauns who lead him into a cave where he encounters a life-sized girl- daimon, some kind of emissary from . . . well, from the fiery carousel Kaspian sees called the Wheel ‘O the Dead. The Wheel has summoned up his father, who died when the boy was six and left him under the rule of his short-tempered stepmother, school psychologist Carol Deacon Aaby. Carol has sent Kaspian off to the Accelerated Skills Acquisition Camp outside Florence, Maine, to have him prepped for shipment to a high-bandwidth academy at the cutting edge of pedagogy. But the disaffected outsider Kaspian feels put upon during the camp’s rougher games and takes off into the woods, where he meets the leprechauns. When he awakes from his encounter with the daimon, four days have passed and Kaspian has been transported 60 miles from Florence to Sinai Falls. There, he’s taken in by Inanna (named after the Sumerian Queen of Heaven and Earth); her son, Malcolm, a student of ecosystems, explains to the boy that Earth is alive and all living things are connected. Everything, Malcolm asserts, has consciousness; even the soil is full of organisms. What happened to Kaspian’s missing four days? Wary readers know they—ll have to wait for the close to find out, but that the lacuna will also have to do with Earth-consciousness, Kaspian’s father, and a plastic bear he lost at age six. A likable teenage protagonist and, this time around, a storyline that isn—t supersaturated with sentimentality: both make for Grant’s best to date.

Pub Date: June 8, 1999

ISBN: 0-380-97672-2

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Avon/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 1999

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GIRL IN TRANSLATION

A straightforward and pleasant, if somewhat predictable narrative, marred in part by an ending that too blatantly tugs at...

An iteration of a quintessential American myth—immigrants come to America and experience economic exploitation and the seamy side of urban life, but education and pluck ultimately lead to success.

Twelve-year-old Kimberly Chang and her mother emigrate from Hong Kong and feel lucky to get out before the transfer to the Chinese. Because Mrs. Chang’s older sister owns a garment factory in Brooklyn, she offers Kimberly’s mother—and even Kimberly—a “good job” bagging skirts as well as a place to live in a nearby apartment. Of course, both of these “gifts” turn out to be exploitative, for to make ends meet Mrs. Chang winds up working 12-hour–plus days in the factory. Kimberly joins her after school hours in this hot and exhausting labor, and the apartment is teeming with roaches. In addition, the start to Kimberly’s sixth-grade year is far from prepossessing, for she’s shy and speaks almost no English, but she turns out to be a whiz at math and science. The following year she earns a scholarship to a prestigious private school. Her academic gifts are so far beyond those of her fellow students that eventually she’s given a special oral exam to make sure she’s not cheating. (She’s not.) Playing out against the background of Kimberly’s fairly predictable school success (she winds up going to Yale on full scholarship and then to Harvard medical school) are the stages of her development, which include interactions with Matt, her hunky Chinese-American boyfriend, who works at the factory, drops out of school and wants to provide for her; Curt, her hunky Anglo boyfriend, who’s dumb but sweet; and Annette, her loyal friend from the time they’re in sixth grade. Throughout the stress of adolescence, Kimberly must also negotiate the tension between her mother’s embarrassing old-world ways and the allurement of American culture.

A straightforward and pleasant, if somewhat predictable narrative, marred in part by an ending that too blatantly tugs at the heartstrings.

Pub Date: May 4, 2010

ISBN: 978-1-59448-756-9

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Riverhead

Review Posted Online: Sept. 22, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2010

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THE CIRCLE

Though Eggers strives for a portentous, Orwellian tone, this book mostly feels scolding, a Kurt Vonnegut novel rewritten by...

A massive feel-good technology firm takes an increasingly totalitarian shape in this cautionary tale from Eggers (A Hologram for the King, 2012, etc.).

Twenty-four-year-old Mae feels like the luckiest person alive when she arrives to work at the Circle, a California company that’s effectively a merger of Google, Facebook, Twitter and every other major social media tool. Though her job is customer-service drudgework, she’s seduced by the massive campus and the new technologies that the “Circlers” are working on. Those typically involve increased opportunities for surveillance, like the minicameras the company wants to plant everywhere, or sophisticated data-mining tools that measure every aspect of human experience. (The number of screens at Mae’s workstation comically proliferate as new monitoring methods emerge.) But who is Mae to complain when the tools reduce crime, politicians allow their every move to be recorded, and the campus cares for her every need, even providing health care for her ailing father? The novel reads breezily, but it’s a polemic that’s thick with flaws. Eggers has to intentionally make Mae a dim bulb in order for readers to suspend disbelief about the Circle’s rapid expansion—the concept of privacy rights are hardly invoked until more than halfway through. And once they are invoked, the novel’s tone is punishingly heavy-handed, particularly in the case of an ex of Mae's who wants to live off the grid and warns her of the dehumanizing consequences of the Circle’s demand for transparency in all things. (Lest that point not be clear, a subplot involves a translucent shark that’s terrifyingly omnivorous.) Eggers thoughtfully captured the alienation new technologies create in his previous novel, A Hologram for the King, but this lecture in novel form is flat-footed and simplistic.

Though Eggers strives for a portentous, Orwellian tone, this book mostly feels scolding, a Kurt Vonnegut novel rewritten by the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Pub Date: Oct. 8, 2013

ISBN: 978-0-385-35139-3

Page Count: 504

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: Sept. 15, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2013

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