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Entries Tagged as 'books'

Wally Lamb and His Wonder Woman

November 15th, 2011 by The OJBG Team · 20something, Blog, Books, teen, teen things, Women In Film

By: Samantha

I have a slight problem when I read books. After the third or fourth page, if my mind has wandered off to what I am going to eat for lunch or the shoes I have been saving up for, I quickly close the book shut and never reopen it again. Sadly, this scenario plays out far too often between a book and me. However, I broke this horrible habit over this past summer when I fell truly, madly, and deeply (cue Savage Garden) in love with Wally Lamb’s bestseller, She’s Come Undone.

The book chronicles the life of Dolores Price, a blunt, cheeky, in your face, incredibly wonderful human being who is unlike anyone you have ever met before. The book debuts her at around five years old and follows her through to her later adult years, describing every poignant moment of her life as she endures love, heartache, rape, obesity, abuse, depression, and death. You grow to like her childhood innocence and love her adult cynicism. However, please do not mistake this book for a deep, dark endless black hole (astronomy lecture was this morning).  This book tells the story of a life. It is not forced, it is not staged, and it most certainly, is not sympathetic. Much like Dolores herself, the book tells it like it is, granting very few second chances and shining a fierce light on the events of ordinary life most people would rather bury under the carpet. Most importantly, Dolores easily identifies with almost every problem one may encounter during life, which helps to ultimately shape her into one of the most relatable fictional characters that exists in literature today.

The best news? I recently read that the Gods of Cinema have decided to turn this beautiful creation into a major motion picture starring A-lister, Reese Witherspoon. I sincerely hope, wish, and pray that the film does not make a complete crapshoot of this wonderful book, and instead, illuminates it to a greater brilliance than the book has already done for thousand and thousands of people.

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Funny. And on Point.

October 10th, 2011 by Otessa · Books, Otessa, otessa ghadar, Uncategorized

Click to Zoom!

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Teri Hall’s “Away”

October 5th, 2011 by Otessa · Books, Otessa, otessa ghadar, teen, teen things, Uncategorized

Away (The Line, #2)Away by Teri Hall

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Such a good premise, but mired down by wooden writing and a lack of character development. It’s a shame really and I feel bad saying it. Also (as with “The Line”) plot elements often feel like kludges, or crude & inelegant means to fix the narrative arc. And yes, they do take the plot from point “A”, to the writer’s desired point “B”…but they often feel more expedient than truly character driven.

The world Teri Hall builds is quite captivating, with a strong premise, full of much promise. But, when populated with characters who lack depth and range, it becomes difficult to know them, to believe in them, to empathize with them, and thus we are rudderless in the sea of text, with no way home and without access to the story.



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Rediscovery of Man by Cordwainer Smith

September 19th, 2011 by Otessa · Books, Otessa, otessa ghadar, Uncategorized

The Rediscovery of ManThe Rediscovery of Man by Cordwainer Smith

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Preamble alert!  So in case you didn’t know– I love SF.  And many of the authors I “heart” have listed this guy as a serious influence…

and now to my review:

I can see why so many of the preeminent SF writers list Smith’s work as a seminal influence to their own. The ingenuity and scope of Smith’s work is awe-inspiring. That said, the execution itself is often wooden. This is a novel of ideas and thematic virtuosity, rather than one of “unparalleled narrative finesse”.

This is still a book very worthy of looking into; especially Cordwainer’s description of the “pain of space”. When put into historical context, his stories are particularly meaningful — as his work (while being contemporary to the SF of the 40s & 50s) is also decidedly apart. While his contemporaries often assumed that science and exploration would be the great panacea, Smith posits a world in which these instead complicate, de-humanize, nullify, and blur our condition. To stray into the annoying and tedious realm of, shall I say, collegiate English 101, his work was a dialectic in a time of dichotomies.

So, again, and simply put — it is fascinating to read someone whose work so influences many of the “Greats” — but, at the end of the day, the narrative & literary elements were not quite on par with those who took his ideas and really ran with them.

At the end of the day, I found it too easy to put this book down and in the end have set it to the back of my shelf after only reading to page 68. I *do* intend to pick it back up though…

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Sea of Poppies

September 6th, 2011 by Otessa · Books

Sea of PoppiesSea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh

My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Oh I wanted to like this book so much more than I actually did. The idea, the theme, the world– it should have been riveting…absolutely enthralling. Unfortunately, it was not nearly as enthralling as I had hoped it would be, nor as enthralling as it could have been.
I feel almost guilty saying this (and this guilt is what has led me to be so horribly tardy in writing this review…I didn’t want to give the book only 2 stars. Simply put, I felt bad about it.  However, after great thought and serious contemplation, 2 stars is the truth of the matter– at least for me).

The characters did not quite ring true– instead they felt like vessels for the author’s desired plot-lines.

As well, while the dialogue and language were awe-inspiring, it would have been helpful for there to have been some mention or note about the existence of the glossary of terms. Instead, it was only after slogging through the book to its very end, that I finally found a glossary — tucked away at the very back. The very existence of a glossary ought to have been mentioned somewhere prior (perhaps at the beginning, or on the book’s back cover?) However, it is also worth mentioning that the glossary was not truly all that helpful anyway, for it was written in the dialogue of one of the characters, and therefor (while of post-modern interest) it could have used its own glossary to decipher some of the terms.

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Ladies Who Lunch (90swoman.com style)

April 29th, 2010 by emily · 20something, 90's, Blog, grunge, teen things

Who are they and why are we obsessed? “The blog 90sWoman.com is a conversation between Kara Jesella and Ada Calhoun about a misbegotten era.” (–> true dat)

Their backgrounds (and playgrounds). Remember our post on How Sassy Changed My Life? Kara was the co-author. She’s also written for the New York Times, the American ProspectSalonNylon and Teen Vogue. Ada’s work has graced the pages of The New York Times, New York Magazine and recently wrote a book called Instinctive Paranting.

These girls know how to work it; this includes parenting, 90s garb and a pen (obviously), among other things. Another work to pre-order: Gunn’s Golden Rules: Life’s Little Lessons for Making It Work. (Yes, Ada wrote it alongside the loveable Tim Gunn.) A favorite Timism – “It looks like a pterodactyl from a gay jurassic park.” Also, Bravo’s Tim Gunn Dictionary compilation. Please, for a giggle. Sturm and Drang wha? And since I’m ranting about this man, check out his closet. He probably wouldn’t approve anything in the OJBG wardrobe dept. but he does love his Converse (Yay, one point for the us), one pair of flip flops (“The world will probably let our a primordial scream.”) and has 6 pairs of jeans (more than I would have guessed) haha.

Okay forget lunching, these girls must be all about crunching. Deadlines, deadlines. Can you tell we have two new girl crushes?

Take their hilarious quizYou Might Be a 90s Woman If…

Just a few we checked off:

You’ve made a mix tape on an actual tape.

You know lines from Clueless.

You’ve marched for abortion rights, against the first Iraq War, or for Take Back the Night.

You have ever been into Wicca, eco-feminism, or liberation theology.

You think any of the following items of clothing are hot: thigh-highs, plaid shirts, work boots with dresses, cat-eye glasses, chunky heels, baby-doll dresses, overalls, plaid, flannel, bra straps showing, barrettes.

You’ve dyed your hair a color not found in nature, ideally with Manic Panic. (Otessa just gave me the 411 on which shampoos strip a Manic Panic ro any semi-perm oopsy in a few washes.)

You started—or at least read—a zine. Now it’s a blog or tumblr.


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Girl Power. The 90s. Sassy.

April 21st, 2010 by emily · 20something, 90's, Blog, grunge, music, teen things

Looking for some summer reading material? Check out these two books, both of subject matter we adore. Definitely on our reading list.

“Another classic Sassy relationship article was March 1993′s “How to Make Him Want You… Bad,” which is named after a story that had run in YM. In it, Margie Ingalls (a staff writer who had been hired in 1990) and Mary Ann try out the inane relationship advice given by YM and Cosmopolitan. This includes wearing animal prints, which, instead of making Margie look “feral” (presumably a good thing), incite a homeless man to scream “Meow!” The article’s last paragraph pretty much sums up Sassy‘s worldview on men, which is “boys are cute and we like them (unless we hate them), but they’re mere dressing on the salad of life.” via

Kara Jesella and Marisa Meltzer take on Sassy‘s cultural impact in one of our favorite decades. Okay, there’s no competition, it’s our favorite. Otessa still has a scan of the Sassy article with Courtney Love and Kurt Cobain. Sassy was so cheeky. Something the teen magazines nowadays are in desperate need of.

“Of course, Sassy had always been boy crazy, from an early blurb titled “Why Am I Such a Queer Ball Spazz Head?” in which Andrea reports that she caught Matt Dillon staring at her breasts; to Jane’s crush on Keanu Reeves, which was dissected ad nauseum; to Christina’s “Cute Band Alert.”

But Sassy tempered all the swooning with a girl-power tone and a little critique. Instead of deconstructing marriage and interrogating compulsory heterosexuality — that was Ms.’s territory – Sassy ran feminist-inflected articles on how to ask a guy out. Like other teen magazines, it published pieces titled “How to Flirt” and “Why That Patrick Swayze Poster May Destroy Your Love Life”; unlike other teen magazines, it didn’t take its romantic advice too seriously, and didn’t assume that getting it on with a jock was your only goal.” via

Jezebel interviewed the author and 90s fanatic. We took some of her favorite responses:

Marisa: It’s borderline shameful how much time I spend listening to music of that era. There is something about those songs that felt particularly urgent to me in high school-Bikini Kill’s «Carnival» or Excuse 17′s «This Is Not Your Wedding Song,» just for example—that hasn’t faded; my heart still races a little when I hear them. I swear I do listen to other music but girly-’90s music is destined to be my comfort zone.

M: Everyone has to find a way to rebel. I’m sure my mom was thankful that my rebellion came in the form of feminist punk and not joining a sorority or the prom committee-those would have been hard for her to wrap her head around. But there were still some comic moments of generational differences. In high school, I remember her giving me this very classic liberal parent speech about how it’s okay for me to love anyone I want and she would support me and I had to interrupt her and be like, “Mom, I’m not a lesbian, I’m a riot grrrl, God.” You know, with sullen teenager voice. Even just a few weeks ago, I was at her house on my book tour and came downstairs dressed for my reading in San Francisco. I was wearing a dress with this cutout front that shows a few glimpses of bra underneath. My mom asked, «Honey, don’t you think that dress is a little racy for your reading?» And here I thought I was being subtle for not wearing it with a leopard print bra! I should also note that my mom showed up to my reading in Santa Cruz with SLUT written across her stomach, under her shirt, so she’s definitely on board.

M: What is more 90s than irony, right? Yes, I think it’s both an optimistic reclamation of the phrase and also comes with a bit of an ironic smirk. Girl power is a totally cheesy phrase; it’s something I talk about on the first page of the book. But I also hope that once people are done reading the book, they feel a love (even if it’s a little begrudging) for the title. The problem I have with Spice Girls-style girl power isn’t the “girl” but the “power,” as if the word “girl” doesn’t evoke enough of it on its own.

M: Pop culture will always have power over us. Perhaps some of us (okay, me) more than others. The kind of culture will probably change. I’m not sure anyone who’s a teenager now will ever write a paean to a print magazine, the way Kara Jesella and I did with the Sassy book, but perhaps there will be a loving tribute to a blog or YouTube star who forever shaped their worldview?

I never planned on being the go-to person for the ’90s, and I certainly don’t want anyone to think that my experience should define the decade, but it’s a subject I have seemingly endless interest in talking about. I wrote the Sassy book and Girl Power back-to-back, so by the time I was done with Girl Power, I told myself I was reading to turn away from the ’90s. I thought I would write something about the 19th century or France. But now that I’ve had a little break and am talking about the decade again, I’m like, Who am I kidding? I would write eighteen more books about the ’90s. It would be a pleasure and privilege.

She also made a playlist for the NYT Paper Cuts Blog. Check it out.

“I read about riot grrrl, the feminist punk movement of the early ’90s, before I ever heard any of the bands play. The photos of girls in halter tops, torn fishnets and smeared red lipstick, with words like “slut” written across their stomachs, freaked out and excited my 14-year-old self.” via

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