It's the end of the week, so it's time to Celebrate the Small Things.
What am I celebrating this week?
The website for young adult author Kate Larkindale. A place for her musings on writing, publishing and a day job in the arts sector.
This one was recommended to me by several members of my book group. As they are all very discerning readers, I jumped on board.
And it was fascinating. I'd never heard about the deep-sea-diving women in Korea known as haenyeo. I didn't know that on the island of Jeju, the society is matriarchal, with the women doing the work and men taking care the house and kids. So I found the subject matter incredibly interesting.
The book follows two friends, from quite different backgrounds, through their lives across some of Korea's most tumultuous times. Young-sook is the daughter of the head of the village diving collective and is expected to follow in her mother's footsteps. Mi-ja is the daughter of a know collaborator with the Japanese who is sent to live with her aunt and uncle on the island . Badly mistreated by these relatives who don't really want her, Mi-ja is taken in by the collective and becomes best friends with Young-sook.
Over the years, these two friends come together and split apart time and time again, their lives constantly entangled even as they weather marriage, children, war and political change.
The premise of this book was amazing and I learned a lot from reading it. Unfortunately, I was not quite so in love with the way it was written. The book is told in first person, and therefore I expected to be very close to the narrator (Young-sook) and to experience the events of her life through her eyes. Yet the book was strangely unemotional. A lot of extremely harrowing things happen to Young-sook, but I never felt like I was living through them. As a narrator she told the story of what happened and then told the reader how it made her feel, rather than showing how she reacted to what happened and allowing the reader to understand the feeling.
Which was a shame, because I think the book would have been way more powerful if it had really punched the reader in the feelings.
But I didn't dislike the book - it's more that I was a little disappointed that it didn't sweep me away I believe it could have. It was still fascinating and I'm very glad to have learned as much about this culture and this unique society as I did.
So I do recommend it. But maybe not so much as an absorbing read, as a fascinating document of an unknown society.
But don't just listen to me. Here's the blurb:
Set on the Korean island of Jeju, The Island of Sea Women follows Mi-ja and Young-sook, two girls from very different backgrounds, as they begin working in the sea with their village’s all-female diving collective. Over many decades—through the Japanese colonialism of the 1930s and 1940s, World War II, the Korean War, and the era of cellphones and wet suits for the women divers—Mi-ja and Young-sook develop the closest of bonds. Nevertheless, their differences are impossible to ignore: Mi-ja is the daughter of a Japanese collaborator, forever marking her, and Young-sook was born into a long line of haenyeo and will inherit her mother’s position leading the divers. After hundreds of dives and years of friendship, forces outside their control will push their relationship to the breaking point.How is it almost the end of February? That's nuts! How did that even happen?
I made a very basic - I'm talking two or three sentence - start to the new book brewing in my mind on Saturday, so my goal for this week is to finish that chapter. I'm not sure if this is a single POV book or a dual POV book yet. I thought it was going to be a single POV, but the more I think about the characters and how far into the story they might actually meet, the more I wonder about making it dual POV. So I might play a little with that. I feel like Arlo will have a pretty strong voice if I let him have his own chapters, but I'm not sure if we need him to alternate with Devon. Maybe he just needs his own chapters here and there... I'll figure it out.
So that's my main goal for this week. I hope to get feedback from some readers on A Stranger to Kindness so I can make the last edits on that and get it everything sorted out to start querying - which terrifies me. I love Harley and Wolfe so much, having this book rejected is going to hurt more than any book has ever hurt before.
I'm not going to have a lot of writing time this week, but I want to have made at least a little bit of progress on this new book before Easter. I have 10 days off then and am aiming to use that time to write this book, but it will be so much easier to blitz it if I've already got a little way into it.
What are your goals this week?
I read something about this book that made me really excited to read it when I found it at the library the other day. I don't remember exactly what it was I read, or why it excited me so much, but the actual reading experience was not as amazing as I had hoped it would be. It has amazing elements - a trans, autistic narrator, a bigoted small-town setting, a generations-old feud and socio-political commentary. Unfortunately, the sum was not greater than the parts.
The protagonist is Miles, who is transitioning and hasn't let everyone in his life know yet. The book starts with him writing an email to his parents, letting them know, before he heads off to a party where he's beaten half to death by the son of his family's arch-nemesis. The beef between Sheriff Davies and Miles' family is almost a century old, stemming from a miner's rebellion kicked off by Miles' great, great grandfather.
This relative from the past hovers over Miles as he recovers in hospital and appears at his side at key moments through the rest of the book as Miles tries to find a way to get revenge on the boys who hurt him and find peace for his long-suffering family by ending this feud once and for all.
Unfortunately, ending something as long-running and deeply ingrained in the fabric of the town as this feud isn't easy, and before too long, Miles has blood on his hands and bodies to dispose of. As he tries desperately to keep those he cares about safe, the stakes just keep getting higher and the body count rises.
There is a lot to like about this book. Miles is an interesting POV character with a raw, authentic Appalachian voice. I did take issue with some of his inner monologue because it grated on me that Miles considered himself right all the time, regardless of what was happening. And a lot of what was happening was not right, and Miles' part in what was happening was also not right.
I also really struggled with how evil the sheriff and his son were written. There was no attempt to give any reason for their ongoing hatred for the Abernathy family other than the fact these two families had hated each other for generations. I know this kind of long-running family feud is possible, but it didn't feel real to me and as a result, both Noah and the sheriff felt underwritten and cartoonish.
I also had problems with the way Miles' family were written. Their reactions to his coming out were confused and all over the place, and the fact they encouraged him to go alone to an abandoned mine to confront a kid who had put him in the hospital only a few weeks earlier, didn't sit well with me. Especially since they were supposedly so overprotective of Miles. What kind of overprotective parents send their kid off to face a bully with a gun?
It felt like a lot of the characters were written to fulfil representation of a type more than sitting organically within the story. Which is a shame because some of these characters could have been interesting if they'd had a more invested role in Miles' journey.
I also could not help noticing that while there were a lot of autistic, queer and trans people in this town, there were no people of color. I understand that this part of Virginia is very white, but it seemed unlikely that there was not one single person who wasn't. It's painted as a very conservative, right-leaning town, yet somehow, by the end of the book, most of the townsfolk are siding with the socialist trans kid rather than the sheriff whose values would align far more with their own. Which also didn't sit quite right with me.
So, I don't think I can really recommend this one. It was not an unenjoyable read, but so much of it didn't quite ring true to me that I feel uncomfortable about it.
But don't just listen to me. Here's the blurb:
Bestselling and award-winning author Andrew Joseph White returns with a queer Appalachian thriller, that pulls no punches, for teens who see the failures in our world and are pushing for radical change.I have quite a few goals this week, but whether I manage to get through them all is another question.
I've started making a query list for A Stranger to Kindness. I'm not racing to send it out - I still have a few more people reading it - but I'm getting prepared.
After asking which book people were interested in seeing more of last week, I decided that the next project I'm going to work on is Pieces of Luke. I was surprised to discover I'd actually written close to 40K on this one before giving up on it for some reason. I've read through it, and the pacing is way off, which is probably why I abandoned it. But it shouldn't be too hard to fix, so I'm going to give that a go. Fingers crossed it works and I can find my way back into these characters.
My goal is to get the first two chapters whipped into shape, but we'll see how I go. I'm not sure how much time I'm going to have to work on it this week, but at least I have something to work on.
I have a lot of gym work this week and a lot of choreography to remember, so a big chunk of my week is going to be making sure I know all that before the relevant classes. Luckily this week I'm only teaching half of each of the new ones because we do it in pairs on new release week. Gives me a little more time to learn the rest!
And that's about it for goals this week. What are you hoping to achieve?