Showing posts with label madeleine l'engle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label madeleine l'engle. Show all posts

Let's Talk: Books That You Value the Most

Friday, November 15, 2013




Let's Talk is a weekly feature here at i swim for oceans. I think it's important that we all have our say, and there's something to be said for raising our voices. Simply put, here on the little old blog, I like to host some of my very own discussion posts because, well, I like to converse with you all.

And so, Let's Talk will feature questions or prompts, which I will answer, too. Love it or hate it, weigh in or don't, it's my hope that Let's Talk will at least get you thinking...and maybe even get you discussing with the rest of us!
What books on your shelves do you value the most and why?

On any given day that someone asks me this, I reserve the right to change this answer. That said though, there are a few books on my shelf that mean the world to me and have for a long time now. These books have a little love in their pages. They hold heartaches and secrets and, at times, these books were my hideaway…my escape. For that reason, these books hold a pretty treasured spot on my shelf.

Many Waters is the first of Madeleine L'Engle's "Time" series that actually worked for me. Funnily enough, it's also the fourth book in a series of five, and it's the only one that focuses directly on Sandy and Dennis, the twin brothers. In this story, the boys are transported back to the time of Noah's Ark and discover that, while much of the world is as the Bible tells it, there's so much more to it, as well, including mammoths, Seraphs and the snide Nephilim. 

This book singularly sparked my desire to read all day every day. I read it in one sitting, and I've read my copy so many times that cover fell off. So, these days, I keep three copies on my shelf. My first is damaged but well-loved. My second is hard-cover for safety and the third is by my bedside…always.

When I started book blogging and discovered Goodreads, I learned that I'd actually been reading fantasy long before I ever knew that I was doing so. I was a pretentious little reader when I was younger, and I was of the school of thought that the bigger the book was, the smarter I was. So, while my friends were bringing their Babysitters Club books to school, I proudly hefted these to class every day.

I got so enmeshed in this incredible world that Brian Jacques created in Redwall that I've read every single book in this series. And, to be honest, I don't even know how many of these books there are now. This, however, was my first, and I treasure my copy along with the rest of its successors.

I've read a lot of books while book blogging, but few books have made such an impact on me that I verbally coerced an Australian friend to send me a copy before we actually found a way to buy it in the states. Raw Blue is such an intense, vivid read that not only tugs at your heartstrings, but it almost draws out your hidden pain and makes you confront it, as well. 

Kirsty Eagar has written what I largely consider to be one of the most underrated books ever outside of the blogosphere. There is a delicate, pulsing pain to this novel that radiates throughout, but we heal through it, as well, all the while doing so alongside our protagonist, Carly. This book is one that I share with everyone I meet…but they can only borrow the second copy.

Happy 50th Anniversary, A Wrinkle in Time

Thursday, January 19, 2012

This year, Macmillan is celebrating the 50th anniversary of a book that's become a classic through the generations, A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle. First released in 1973, the book explored a unique realm of sci-fi and supernatural, blending elements that many readers of the genre weren't used to. And so, it reinvented the YA mold. Today, I'm so pleased to be a part of the 50 Years, 50 Days, 50 Blogs Celebration to honour this classic before its brand new release date on January 31, 2012.


I first read A Wrinkle in Time when I was 11 years old. I was desperate to find a book that was different than the books we had to read in school, and I kept looking for books that had more adventure, more drama and something entirely new. I remember finding the battered old copy on my sister's shelf, and I snatched it because, heck, that's what sisters do, right? Little did I know that this one book would transport me to another realm - a 5th dimension, as it were.

A Wrinkle in Time was the first book I ever read that presented a female protagonist that was entirely real and tangible for me. I understood her, I felt like I was journeying with her throughout the book and I was invested in her story. More than that though, Meg was capable, rather than a wimpy little girl, and I found that empowering. A Wrinkle in Time, though thoroughly intense and thrilling was also one that truly emphasized the importance of believing in yourself and the faith you have in your family. The message was wrapped up in a world of adventure though, and I lost myself in that book for weeks.

Opening the 50th anniversary edition of A Wrinkle in Time transported me back to my 11 year old self, marveling at the complexity of the story and the world within those pages. My old copy is battered and bruised, though I prefer to call it loved, with its taped-on cover nearly disintegrating. I read the book through again in one day, and though I have a different perspective having reviewed so many books and grown up, I enjoyed it as much as before. The world is just as beautiful, Meg, Calvin and Charles Wallace are just as engaging and the story is still one I adore and can't wait to pass on to my children.


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The 50th anniversary edition of A Wrinkle in Time contains unique and never before published features including:

Frontispiece photo
Photo scrapbook with approximately 10 photos
Manuscript pages
Letter from 1963 Caldecott winner, Ezra Jack Keats
New introduction by Katherine Paterson, US National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature New afterword by Madeleine L’Engle’s granddaughter Charlotte Voiklis including six never-before-seen photos
Murry-O’Keefe family tree with new artwork
Madeleine L’Engle’s Newbery acceptance speech

To find A Wrinkle in Time on Facebook, please click HERE.

To view the blogs participating in the rest of this tour, please click HERE.

Thank you very much to Macmillan and Big Honcho Media for asking me to be a part of this wonderful tour!



Many Waters Review

Friday, February 11, 2011

Title: Many Waters
Author: Madeleine L'Engle
Publisher: Laurel Leaf
Published: September 1, 1986 (1st Ed.)
Genre: YA, Fantasy, Sci-Fi
Pages: 336
Source: Personal Copy

A touch of computer keys, a blast of heat, and suddenly the Murry twins, Sandy and Dennys, are gasping in a shimmering desert land. 

If only the brothers had normal parents, not a scientist mother and a father who experiments with space and time travel. If only the Murry twins had noticed the note on the door of their mother's lab: 'EXPERIMENT IN PROGRESS. PLEASE KEEP OUT...

Many Waters is, in many ways, a retelling of the Biblical story of Noah’s Ark, with a science fiction twist. Following twins Sandy and Dennis in the aftermath of a mishap in their mother’s lab, the twins are sent back in time to world thousands of years before life as they know it. In a world divided between humans, Nephilim and Seraphim, Sandy and Dennis stick out like a sore thumb, and there’s a strong undercurrent of hate towards the twins, both seen as a threat and a useful ally, as they’re much taller than the people of the land they’ve found themselves in. To make matters worse, Noah is building an ark, and they know this story. Can they find their way home in time, and what happens to those left behind?

I have to admit – I really wasn’t a fan of the first few books in the Time series by Madeleine L’Engle. I just couldn’t get into the characters’ heads, and frankly, they bored me a good bit. Then, I found this book, the fourth in the series that isn’t completely chronological because the books stand alone. The premise fascinated me, as I’m very familiar with my Biblical tales (Catholic, party of one.) The prose is simple but sweet, with two twin boys as the MCs. It’s rich with history, embellished with touches of the supernatural and speeds steadily to an outcome I’m sure we all know all too well.

Sandy and Dennis were refreshing main characters. They kept true to a very boy-esque voice, which I find is missing in a lot of male MC books these days. The secondary characters like Adnarel, Yalith and Grandfather Lamech (and all the cute lil mammoths!) were fabulous, too, and I loved the cast of Nephilim and Seraphim, as well. I enjoyed that they shifted shapes into animals/beasts/insects very much like their own personalities. It was definitely the intricacies within Many Waters that drove it towards the climax, and the sweet touch of love that led to a sad, but beautiful climax was well-written and not overdone unlike a lot of YA romance these days. The themes of destiny, belief in things unseen and fate definitely weighed heavily, as well, making Many Waters even stronger.

I read Many Waters a long time ago, but I’ve kept it on my shelf and bough multiple copies as I wear it out through re-reading. I loved it back then, and I still do. I give it a firm 4.5 out of 5, and I’d recommend it to all YA fans, especially those who enjoy a touch of sci-fi and fantasy with religious undertones.

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