Jodi

Jodi

You can find me at:
www.iwilldare.com

Listen to my podcast, Bookclub Bitches at:
http://odeo.com/channel/108896/view
  • Shakopee, MN, USA
  • member since Saturday, March 3 2007

Profile: Reviews

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  • Best of Tin House: Stories
    • Rated 5 stars

    This is a top-notch anthology of short fiction featuring brilliant stories by the likes of Aimee Bender, Denis Johnson, and Amy Bloom. really, there's not a clunker in the entire book.

    Jodi wrote this review Wednesday, September 12 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Throw Like A Girl: Stories
    • Rated 4 stars

    While I found the collection a little uneven sometimes, I was so impressed by what Thompson had done that I’m willing to forgive her most anything (except a few cheesy last lines that actual left me cringing).

    Her story “Lost” about a college-aged girl involved in a love triangle was one of those rare stories that is so delectable, so wonderful that I had to put the book down occasionally just so I could revel in the glory of the words.

    One of the things that I learn in every writing class I take (and in the very few books on writing that I’ve read) is that writers make choices, and the beauty of “Lost” is that once I finished reading the story I saw how brilliant and masterful Thompson’s choices were.

    When you take writing classes you are inevitably subjected to the psycho 20something girl story, usually written by the woman who is right out of college. Hell, I’ve written a few of my own in that little sub-genre. The problem with college-age girl stories is that 20something girls live lives that are much louder, much more important, much more dramatic, and much more total bullshit than normal lives, and the stories are often written that way.

    But here is where Thompson’s brilliant choices come in. She chose to write her college-age girl story by having her narrator tell her story from many, many years after the love triangle was long since over. This allowed the narrator to tell her story minus the drama (yet the story was still dramatic) with a stark sort of matter-of-factness that was heartbreaking.

    At one point, after having sex with her lover the narrator talks about they had destroyed her old threadbare sheets and she remarks about how she was “the girl you come to when you wanted to wreck things.”

    Gah! That line slayed me. And then a few pages later the narrator ponders whatever happened to the girlfriend of her lover, and says, “Sometimes I wonder how her life turned out, if she kept finding people to love her.”

    And as much as I loved “Lost” that wasn’t even the best story in the bunch. That would have been “Pie of the Month” (that even gets the best story accolade even though it has one of those cheesy, painful last lines something along the lines of “easy as pie.” I KNOW). This story is about these little old ladies in small-town Iowa who run a pie making business. This is one of those stories that starts in one place and you think you know where you’re going and it brings you to a totally unimagined, but wholly fantastic place.

    Jodi wrote this review Sunday, July 15 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Fear of Flying
    • Rated 2 stars

    Bleh, this come off as melodramatic chicklit. I can see how it was probably revolutionary in the early '70s, but now? No way. Isadora comes off as needy and dependent on a man.

    Jodi wrote this review Thursday, May 31 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • You Don't Love Me Yet: A Novel
    • Rated 2 stars

    After my fast and furious love affair with "Motherless Brooklyn," I was really looking forward to reading "You Don't Love Me Yet." But it left me cold. The characters are confusing and their motivations, what they want is unclear.

    I'd give it a resounding, Eh.

    Jodi wrote this review Sunday, May 20 2007. ( reply | permalink )


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