
This book was shared with me by my friend Laurie. I have read several biographies of C. S. Lewis, but never anything about his wife, Joy Davidman. Even though Becoming Mrs. Lewis, by Patti Callahan, isn't strictly a biography, it is a well-researched and thoughtful piece of historical fiction. Joy Davidman is a controversial figure in Lewis's life. Some critics think she pushed herself into Lewis's life in a stalker fashion; others see her as a brilliant mind in need of another brilliant mind to help her grow in faith. My favorite Lewis book is Till We Have Faces, which draws on the myth of Cupid and Psyche. At its core, it explores toxic love, one that seeks to possess and control. That's not the love that existed between Lewis and Davidman, and there is good evidence for that in his writing. I recommend this book to anyone interested in C.S. Lewis.
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We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson is my book club book for November. As I have reached Shirley Jackson, I have learned that she is considered the Queen of Horror and has influenced Stephen King, Neil Gaiman, and others. Her book is like a screwworm that slowly burrows into your brain. I spent the first part of the book thinking: what is happening, and the second part thinking: this can't be happening. The novel has an unreliable narrator who "ain't right in the head," but how and to what degree gradually dawns. There is a fragile balance between the isolated family of three and the local townspeople, who distrust and despise them. That the balance will be upended is plain, but the ticking down and the dΓ©nouement are exquisitely painful.
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Looking for something less creepy, I read My Life with the Walter Boys by Ali Novak. The inciting incident for this rich, New York teenager to leave her cultured life and all-girls boarding school to go live with a family of eleven boys on a ranch in Colorado is the death of her parents and sister in a car wreck. Novak does give her character angst and resulting trauma from her loss, but this is a teen romance novel with a love triangle driving the plot. There are many fish-out-of-water scenes, country-versus-city struggles, mean-girl jealousy, and romantic moments with hot guys. It was fun, and the ending surprised me. My age showed because I struggled with dating a sixteen-year-old who lived in the same house. The adults didn't seem to be aware of what went on. If you can suspend that it was a lighthearted, fun book.
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