Saturday, March 17, 2012

E-book Novel




Haig, M. (2011). The Radleys. New York: Free Press.

Vampires have moved to the suburbs.  At least the suburbs of England.  The Radleys seem to be your typical suburban family, except for the small fact that they are vampires. Dad Peter is a doctor, Helen is a stay at home mom and Rowan and Clare are their high school-aged children.  Peter and Helen have become abstainers, meaning they don't kill or drink blood as normal vampires do.  The survive on large quantities of meat, but this "cure" leaves them weak and feeling poorly.  The children don't know they are vampires and suffer from skin rashes, fatigue and depression.  Things are terribly mundane until one day Clare is attacked as she walks home from a party.  During the attack, instinct that Clare knows nothing about takes over.  She has an OBT (overwhelming blood thirst) and kills her attacker in a frenzy.  The blood gives her a strength and clarity that she has never felt before.  The novel is about what happens in the aftermath of the death.  Peter's brother Will is called in to help with the situation, even though the couple has not had anything to do with him in well over a decade.  Will is not an abstainer, far from it. The police, who track vampires, have him pegged as a serial killer.  The idyllic life portrayed to outsiders is shattered as the family deals with Clare's murder, Will and Helen's past relationship, Peter's flirtation with adultery and Rowan's denial and acceptance of being a vampire.  This is a well written story with full characters that are believable despite them being vampires.

Vampire stories are a dime a dozen lately, but The Radleys is a fresh take on the genre.  We are able to see into the lives of vampires trying very hard to live a normal suburban life.  The story deals with the unhappiness that many people feel in the suburb, where they often feel they have to conform to what everyone else is doing.   I liked the complexity of the story and of each of the characters.  Not only are the Radleys living a life they weren't meant to live, Helen is keeping a secret from Peter that could easily destroy their family.  That the secret involves Peter's brother Will makes it more dangerous.  I read this book on my Nook, which I like to do, but I do find that unless I highlight as I read, it is difficult to go back and find a particular passage that I am looking for.  I would recommend this book to readers 14 and up.  Lovers of the Twilight series by Stephanie Meyer  would enjoy this vampire story, though The Radleys does not have as much teenage angst as the series.

If you enjoyed this book you might also enjoy:



To learn more about Matt Haig have a look at his website:


Everyone has a facebook page...even the Radleys




Matt Haig discusses The Radleys on Youtube

If you enjoyed this book by Matt Haig, you might enjoy other books by him as well.  Click each title to find out about them on Amazon.
The Dead Fathers Club

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Non-Western Setting Novel




















Khan, R. (2009). Wanting Mor. Toronto: Groundwood Books.

Death, betrayal, abandonment.  Anyone of these can be hard to deal with but all three visited upon a person in a short period of time can be devastating.  Wanting Mor by Rukhsana Mor tells the story of Jameela, a young girl growing up in post-Taliban Afghanistan.  The book opens with the death of her Mor which is the  pushto word for mother.  Pushto is the language spoken in Jameela's village.  Jameela's father is unpredictable at best but also can be very cruel. While her mother was alive, she avoided him because of his temper, but now with the death of Mor she has no protection from him.  Soon after Mor dies Baba (Jameela's father) sells all of their things and moves them to Kabul where he thinks his life and luck will be better.  He hires Jameela out as a servant in return for a place for both of them to live.  This situation works out well until one night Baba gets drunk and tries to have sex with the wife of the family they are living with.  They are thrown out in the middle of the night and the next day Jameela has a new stepmother.  The stepmother hates Jameela and soon talks her father into abandoning her in the middle of the city.

Following is an excerpt from the book when Jameela realizes that her father is not returning for her.

And that's when I realize.
When we left her house, I had all my things but Baba's hands were empty.  He hadn't taken anything of his own. (p.81)

A local butcher takes Jameela in for a few days but she is sent to the local orphanage when his wife insists they can not afford to keep Jameela.  At the orphanage Jameela finally finds the family that she has been looking for after the death of her mother.  She learns to read and write and even gets her cleft lip fixed by the Americans.  After a series of events, Baba realizes that Jameela may be valuable to him as a tutor to rich children and tries to get her to rejoin him after he is thrown out of his new wife's home.

I find myself getting more excited when we get to the head of the street and I can see the orphanage. Nothing feels more like home.  Not her house, not that first place, not even Agha Akram's. (p.177)


Jameela has found a home at the orphanage and refuses to leave with him. Jameela has found the place where she belongs and is now healed enough to begin to take care of another orphan.  As the book closes she is passing on the wisdom her gave to her.


"If you can't be beautiful, you should at least be good.  People will appreciate that." (p.183)


I really enjoyed Wanting Mor, but I did find it tedious to have to consult the back of the book to figure out what many of the words meant.  The glossary in the back of the book was helpful, but it did interfere with my flow of reading. I liked the fact that the title of the book really had two meanings.  The literal meaning would be wanting her mother (mor) after her death, and the second meaning would be wanting more out of life.  Jameela wanted to learn to read and write and experience life.  By the end of the book she is well on her way to fulfilling this need.  I would recommend this book to children twelve and up who are interested in how children live in other countries.  It would be a great book to read in a social studies class that is learning about Afghanistan. You certainly get the day to day feel of life in Afghanistan through the eyes of Jameela.

Other books that may interest you are:

To learn more about orphans in Afghanistan visit this site:



To learn more about the author Rukhsan Khan, visit her website:

Rukhsana Khan's Official Website

Below you can watch an interview with Rukhsan Khan.  She talks about Wanting Mor and other books that she has written for children.