Friday, March 20, 2015

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

With so many parodies and alternate versions and spin offs, finding the original Alice's Adventures in Wonderland was more difficult than I expected it to be. Quite honestly, I love the concept more than I ended up loving this original book.
As many of you may be familiar with it, I'll keep the summary brief. This book is about a young girl named Alice, bored of her lessons and bored of looking at books with no pictures. When she happens across a white rabbit in a waistcoat, Alice follows the creature into a rabbit hole where she falls into Wonderland. Wonderland is a world with seemingly no logic and strange animals and creatures which speak like civilized people. Alice journeys through the land until she can find a way back home.
What was the main plot of this book? Did I just completely miss the conflict of the story? Is the point of the book to get out a message that went completely over my head? I have so many questions because, after finally reading the novel, I found no plot to it whatsoever. I struggle to even find deep meanings behind the bizarre creatures (the only things I come up with seem like desperate attempts to answer why cats bark to smell a tree's sense of humor). As of this moment, the conclusion I have is Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is a whimsical classic simply to entertain the youth from years past. I didn't fancy Carroll's writing much either.
I love the Alice in Wonderland concept so, so, much and all the renditions of it, but I didn't favor the actual book as much. I didn't hate it, I just had very high expectations which this novel failed to meet. I found it to be drab and uneventful. Yet I appreciate being able to finally have read the book for myself.
I would still recommend that people read this, because it is indeed a classic, and it's always fun to catch when another piece references or alludes to Alice in Wonderland.
I rate this book 5.5/10
~Mushu


*Note: It also occurs to me that- what if this book I read is not in fact the original? How upsetting.

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Coffeehouse Angel by Suzanne Selfors

Being an avid coffee drinker, I was immediately drawn to this particular novel. Coffeehouse Angel is about Katrina, the granddaughter of an elderly woman full of energy and owner of a coffeehouse. Although it takes up most of her time, Katrina never really minded working at the old fashioned cafe until another place opens right next door, the trendy Java Heaven. If stealing all their customers, beside a few dedicated old men, wasn't enough, the daughter of Java Heaven's owner steals Katrina's best friend too. In serious lack of confidence in herself and the cafe, Katrina's problems continue to pile up. Little did she know leaving pastries and a cup of coffee for a stranger in her alleyway would blossom a new relationship and grant her true heart's desire.
I thought Coffeehouse Angel was an adorable, sweet book and I definitely enjoyed reading it. It's not a difficult read that would require analysis or make you think- it's really just something you pick up for fun. The build up of romance between the characters was a little fast, but it still keeps a genuine feeling, so this doesn't interfere with the story. My biggest complaint would just be in some of the smaller details, however these small details that bug me aren't big enough to necessarily bother someone else and they don't get in the way of the story.
I'd recommend this book to people who like simple romances, and are going through a tough time in their high school life.
I'd rate this book an 8/10
~Mushu