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Indie Fixx Book Club: Swamplandia! Book Review

April 25, 2012

indie fixx book club

Heather McCaw is a visual artist and occasional art writer with an eclectic background in painting, newspaper editing, English literature, and Middle Eastern studies. She runs her own blog and has her own Etsy shop and she shares a review for Swamplandia! for a long overdue installment of the Indie Fixx Book Club. Get in touch with me if you want to contribute to the Book Club by writing a post. xoxo – jen!

{{image from by mvlslibrary}}

I think everyone should read Karen Russell’s novel Swamplandia! Especially read this book if you are a child of the eighties or have ever had the privilege of visiting an old Florida mom-and-pop tourist trap. This book breaks new ground using magical realism to explore a forgotten pocket of the American experience. Thirteen-year-old Ava is a member of the “Bigtree” tribe whose spunky Florida island theme park, “Swamplandia!” is in steady decline. Ava is determined to follow in her mother’s footsteps as a great alligator wrestler, but larger forces are at work, eventually leading her on an unforgettably surreal and transformative journey.

Tragedy, violence, humor, and folksy charm intertwine like so many mangrove roots in this complex but riveting narrative full of rich description and mythological overtones. Read this book and you will never forget the Seth of Seths (the granddaddy of all the Bigtree alligators) or how you inwardly chuckled every time the name Swamplandia! is mentioned in the text, exclamation point and all, even in the middle of a sentence. Also, read this book because it was screwed out of the Pulitzer Prize for which it was short-listed. No book was awarded this year, apparently a sign of deadlock on the committee. Nevertheless, Swamplandia! is a masterpiece and deserves recognition as such.

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Indie Fixx Book Club: Good Reads

November 11, 2011

indie fixx book club

Erica Williams from Subtle Acts shares some good reads for the Indie Fixx Book Club. Get in touch with me if you want to contribute to the Book Club by writing a post. xoxo – jen!

I’m sure that I am not the only one with more books in my “To Be Read” pile than I could ever possibly read.  The pile seems to just keep growing and growing, especially as people tend to pass books my way, telling me, “You are going to love this one!” without actually seeing the stack of books by my bedside just waiting to be read.  And I happily accept these books, hoping that I will wedge them in before I find more books that I just cannot live without.  This, I believe, is part of the common experience among us readers, to collect these little treasures of worlds unknown to us until we finally dig out that long-forgotten book and wonder why we did not read it sooner.

The good news, for you fellow readers out there, is that I am not going to give you a book to add to your ever-growing, slightly tilting stack.  Instead, I am going to tell you about a few books that I think you will love, or at least I hope you will tell me you did.

{{photo by .Delight}}

The Turning by Tim Winton

If you have not read anything by Tim Winton yet, then I suggest that you catch up with him quickly and begin with this collection of interconnected short stories set in Western Australia.  While I have read most of his novels, it is this short story collection that made me a true Tim Winton fan—the type that says at during every bookstore visit, “When is he going to write another one?”  In this collection of stories, we see the main characters portrayed at different points of their lives and through different viewpoints, each struggling with an issue that is a turning point for them.  In one of my favorite stories of the collection, “The Commission,” one of the characters, we have witnessed grow up in several of the stories, visits his long lost father as part of his mother’s deathbed wish.  And while the natural tendency may be to despise a character that would abandon his family, Winton’s prose leads you to feel a sort of pity for this character that you would never expect to feel.  This is what makes me love Tim Winton, his ability to turn your mind around on what you think you know.

White Noise by Don DeLillo

While I was reading this book not too long ago, I kept wondering why I had not already read this purely original, satirical book (it won the National Book Award in 1985).  The story centers around the life and family of Jack Gladney, founder and professor of Hitler studies at a fictional Midwestern college, the father/stepfather of several children, husband to Babette (who has been cheating on Jack in order to get her hands on a drug that lessens the fear of death), and a man with his own suppressed fear of dying.  Okay, I can hear some of you out there grumbling, saying that sounds like real downer of a book.  That is what makes convincing others to read this book such a tough job, because when I say that this book has some of the funniest, most thought-provoking lines you have ever read, people don’t believe me.  But trust me, you will catch yourself laughing out loud throughout this book!  This book is about many things, including the idiosyncrasies of everyday life, the avoidance of fear through any means necessary, the cohesiveness of the nuclear family, the craving for a simulated reality, and a certain airborne toxic event that causes a persistent sense of déjà vu in those affected by its plume.  Not all books make me feel the urge to quickly dive back in as soon as I have finished reading them.  White Noise not only made feel this way, but it also made it nearly impossible to start up a new book because I just knew that nothing else could compare to it.  And that, for me, is the sign of a good book!

{{photo by CUBIST LITERATURE!}}

Super Sad True Love Story by Gary Shteyngart

In the not so distant future, people have become a little too connected to one another, with the intimate details of one’s life (hotness ratings, cholesterol scores, credit ratings, etc.) constantly available for public viewing through the use of gadgets called äppärät (which are eerily like the smartphones we all carry now) and the GlobalTeens social network.  The people of the future go to great lengths to remain forever young and to be a part of the current hyper-superficial pop culture in spite of the ridiculousness of it.  The economy has collapsed, huge corporate conglomerations have more power than the government, and books are no longer read since they have been digitized for their data.  It is in this setting that Gary Shteyngart gives us Lenny Abramov, a not so attractive, balding, middle-aged man obsessed with Eunice Park, a much younger, very attractive woman way out of Lenny’s league.  Lenny and Eunice enter into a relationship in spite of their differences, and only in the hands of the witty Shteyngart do these polar opposites stand a chance to remain together.  Unlike Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell’s version of the dystopian future, the characters in Super Sad True Love Story seem much more vulnerable, a little more sensitive, to society’s decay.  You cannot help but see where some of our modern technologies may someday lead us.  And let’s not forget how absurdly funny Shteyngart can be (if you have read Absurdistan or The Russian Debutante’s Handbook, you know how he has a way of bowling you over, making you look ridiculous as you read in the crowded coffee shop).  So, be ready for a laugh if you read this, but be warned: the future does not look too bright!

Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann

Set in New York City in 1974 as a tight rope walker journeys across a cable stretched between the Twin Towers, this story follows the lives of several people who caught a glimpse of this feat.  While their lives at first seem disparate from one another, McCann brings out the connections that bind them together to weave a story that is unmatched in beauty and lyricism.  The characters range from an Irish monk living in the Bronx in love with a Guatemalan nurse, to a struggling mother and daughter prostitute, to a wealthy woman mourning the loss of her son in the Vietnam conflict, to a guilt-ridden recovering addict artist that forms an unexpected bond with the Irish monk’s brother.  This is the type of story that giving away too many of the details too soon will spoil the journey.  One thing I can say is that the last few pages of the book, just where you finally understand whose story this ultimately leads to, you will find yourself in sheer awe of the way that McCann puts together his sentences.  This is one of the best, most moving endings I have ever read.

{{photo by Katey Nicosia}}

The Great House by Nicole Krause

When I buy an antique, I always wonder about its history.  Who and how many people owned it before me, where did it fit into their lives, why did they let it go?  In Nicole Krause’s latest book, The Great House, a large foreboding desk connects the lives of four characters who have owned it and who are searching it out.  As the book unravels, we see the desk change hands from a Chilean poet (later killed by Pinochet’s forces) to a lonely American novelist who writes at the desk for 25 years before giving it to a young woman claiming to be the Chilean poet’s long lost daughter.  The story further develops as the history of how the Chilean poet came to receive the desk unwinds.  Those who have lost the desk long for its return; for each character, the desk holds a particular irreplaceable significance.  Loaded with depth and written in the voice of each of the characters, this is one of the best books I have read this year!

About the Contributor:  Erica Williams is a self-taught artist that lives with her husband Jeff in their little house full of books in the piney woods of Texas.  Erica opened up her Etsy shop of hand carved designs, Subtle Acts, in October 2010.  She believes in carrying a good book with you everywhere you go, establishing a good relationship with a great bookseller, and sharing the stories you read and love.

{{photo by by not.rachel}}
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Indie Fixx Book Club: Guerrilla Libraries

October 28, 2011

indie fixx book club

Amy Foster from How to. Why Not? What the? helps to revive the Indie Fixx Book Club with her post about Guerrilla LibrariesGet in touch with me if you want to contribute to the Book Club by writing a post. xoxo – jen!


{image from Daily Mail} via PC Sweeney’s Blog. Bondi Beach Library

By guest contributor Amy Foster

I am so excited to be writing this post, Indie Fixx and Jen have given me—someone who has roamed and moved so much around the world—a sense of community.  I hope that this post triggers something for you dear reader, for this is my chance to share and to start the conversation, so I can sit back and listen in.

I love books.  Books in the library, on my Kindle, in second-hand shops, bargain bins, as presents, glossy or worn down (but never out), leather bound with tissue pages,  given and borrowed.  Books have been my closest friends and oldest companions.  Books and reading are one of my greatest biases, as L.M.Montgomery said “I am simply a book drunkard”.


{image by Nick Brandreth for WSJ} Guerrilla mini-library in Williamsburg.

I know many who fuss that the day of reading is ending.  That those of us who are bookworms are becoming few and far between is the mantra.   Literacy rates are abysmal and the pale horse of technology is riding forth. Ironically and sadly, I am drafting this post on the day that the world is responding to the death of Steve Jobs.

As an educator, I have been trained in all the up-to-date fear mongering techniques to do with literacy.  For example, did you know (hear my gossipy voice) that in the United States of America the amount of prison cells being built for tomorrow are based on the stats of grade two literacy rates.  That’s right, non or delayed readers become criminals, according to this train of thought.

Add to this bit of dismal tidings, the division within the book lover community to read the ‘right’ genres.  High brow, pop culture, glossy magazines, comics, graphic novels, old, new, e-books, self-published, Oprah’s book club, mom and pop book sellers and on and on…the words and feelings colliding and arguing amongst themselves.


{image via Decor8}

However in the spirit of portentious omens and serendipity (Halloween is on almost here), I refuse to be a defeatist.  I have come to embrace Guerrilla Libraries or the ‘community bookshelf’, despite the controversy that they are minimizing the function of the public library.  My awareness of the concept of Community Bookshelves began at Decor8.  Expounding the take a penny, leave a penny’ feel good gesture, but with books and enhancing a sense of community.  I started thinking how many of us have experienced these sort of community bookshelves or Guerrilla Libraries, if you will.

As a teenager, I spent some time in Ethiopia and devoured the entire library, three Reader’s Digest Select books.  I added to that little library two works by the Bronte sisters and several teen fashion magazines, I truly felt that I had done a good deed.  As an adult I have moved across the country with my husband’s job and have gone from landlocked to ocean dweller.  Experiencing pangs of culture shock yet again, I have been saved by another community bookshelf.  This time its form is a long cushioned bench in our apartment building where the residents take and leave the printed word.  Leaving a book or magazine, I wonder what the new owner will take from it.  But finding a new book gives me a unique thrill, this book may be meant especially for me.

So, have you ever found a book at just the right time?  Are you willing to leave a book for the fates to find it a new home?  Do you have a story of every day wonder to share?


{image from Kindness Girl} Guerilla goodness at the publc library.

About the contributor: Amy Foster is a childcare professional who teaches children and adults while encouraging the belief in everyday wonder. She currently resides in the small coastal province of Nova Scotia, Canada  and is a vegetarian, novice maker, explorer and writer.  She blogs at How to. Why Not? What the?, mostly about little local adventures and artists in her new province that is steeped in fog and set back in time.

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Just a few things

September 20, 2011

I’m looking for folks who want to share share their homes via a virtual home and/or studio tour. You can see past examples here.

Do you want to share a book you just read, put together a curated collection based on a book, do a top ten book list or have some other idea for the Indie Fixx Book Club? Get in touch, the Book Club is long overdue!

I’m also looking for designers who want to share their creative process from the sketchbook to the finished product. See what I’m talking about here.

Are you an organizer? Solved an organizational problem or have one that needs solving? Please share for How Do You Organize?!

I’m also looking for folks for both Joie and Indie Fixx who are interested in writing and sharing holiday-themed tutorials and diy projects.

Finally, I’m thinking it’s time for another Weekly Photo Challenge….do you have any thoughts on a theme? Leave your suggestions in the comments.

To get in touch, you can email me here.

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Indie Fixx Book Club: The Summer Book Swap page

July 28, 2011

indie fixx book club

Kerry from Darlin shares her Summer Book Swap for the Indie Fixx Book Club. Get in touch with me if you want to contribute to the Book Club by writing a post. xoxo -  jen!

ribbon books
{{image from A Beach Cottage}}

By guest contributor Kerry

It’s such a pleasure to guest blog here (really, I think the work Jen does is phenomenal) and I’m very excited to be able to share the details of my new interactive, literary project with you today. First, let me ask you …

Have you ever opened the pages of a second hand book only to find it laden with lists, notes and exotic postcards belonging to owners past? Have you found the most mouth-watering recipe for chocolate cake wedged behind the cover of a book that hasn’t been opened in decades? Perhaps you’ve purchased a book at a flea market only to discover it was once, long ago, used as a hiding place for photographs, locks of hair and love letters?

If not, let me tell you, it’s quite simply the most delicious thing in the world.

It happened to me just a month ago.

I was working in the garden when the sky suddenly became very low and threateningly swollen; all grey, silver and purple. Dashing inside, I put the kettle on the stove to boil for tea. While I waited, my attention turned to a package of old books I’d acquired at a thrift store for little more than a dollar. My intention had been to break them up and use them for craft projects. As I began to unwrap them though, the house shook with an overwhelming, crash of thunder and they tumbled to the kitchen floor. As I gathered them up, I could barely believe my eyes. The books had been used as a hiding place for a series of scrawling, passionate love letters, written in the 1950s. The kettle whistled for a very, very long time as I read them.

And thus, the idea for an interactive summer book swap was born.

This is how it works.

1. Open to residents all over the world, this literary project is my brainchild and is held over at my blog Darling Disarray.

2. Once you have signed up for the free swap on The Summer Book Swap page, you are assigned a swap partner (you can specify whether you would like to swap within your own state, country or internationally). You must then choose a book title to send to your new partner. This is your choice entirely. It can be any genre or length, old or new, and provides a great opportunity to introduce your favourite authors to others.

3. Before packaging the book and trotting along to the post office, participants are encouraged to get crafty between the pages. Some members, for example, have created fictional, antiqued love letters and hidden them throughout the book. Others have slipped postcards of exotic destinations, scrummy recipes or vintage photographs inside. In some cases, books have arrived with a selection of homemade treats for members to enjoy as they read.

The idea is to create a story within a story, in the most deliciously enticing way!

If you would like, you can blog about your package on receipt and leave a link on The Summer Book Swap page of Darling Disarray. Non-bloggers can write a description of theirs in the comments too. Every month, I will pick my favourite, creative swap and send a wonderful literary prize to the winner.

I really do hope you’ll be able to join us on our literary adventures this summer. Head on over to Darling Disarray now to sign up!

With love, Kerry x

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Indie Sleuths: Girl Detective Series through the Ages

March 02, 2011

indie fixx book club

Here’s another Indie Fixx Book Club post from Laura Zurowski. Get in touch with me if you want to contribute to the Book Club by writing a post. xoxo -  jen!

By guest contributor Laura Zurowski

On first glance one might be tempted to say that the girl sleuths of our parent’s or grandparent’s era have little in common with female detectives found in today’s popular crime series. Upon peering through our trusty magnifying glass though, it’s apparent that yesterday’s characters were stealthily challenging gender norms and societal expectations while appealing to a mass audience of young women. From a teen girl having a “career” solving mysteries instead of domestic duties to adult women working as private investigators preferring independence over husbands to ladies from around the globe expressing their sexuality, heritage, and intelligence on their terms, these stories showcase creative and courageous females who are simultaneously feminine and tough as nails.

Old School Sleuthing

Girl Series: The immense popularity of teen detective series published in the early twentieth century – Nancy Drew, The Dana Girls, Judy Bolton… to name but a few – transcends time. Some of the titles are nearing 100 years old! Certain series, like Nancy Drew, were reprinted and “modernized” but reading the originals provides insight (although an uncomfortable one) into the societal beliefs of the time.

Invisible Scarlet O’Neil Published in the 1940s and 50s, this American comic strip featured one of the first “superheroines.” Scarlet used her power of invisibility to help strangers in need and catch dangerous criminals. Despite a 50+ year hiatus, she has recently resurfaced in a book series and blog.

nancy drew
{{nancy drew books by alice b. gardens photography}}

Crime Bustin’ 80s style!

Kinsey Millhone: Sue Grafton’s Alphabet series features a no-nonsense California PI twice divorced living in a converted garage and hating her daily 3-mile run. Kinsey might be a plain Jane but she has a brilliant mind for busting criminals – even if her taste in sandwiches (peanut butter pickle?) is questionable.

Stephanie Plum: The star of Janet Evanovich’s Numbers series has big attitude, big problems with cars, big drama with her family, and big hair thanks to a canister of Aquanet (which is used as a crime deterrent in one story). Going on a long flight? Throw one of these into your carry-on and that seat in coach won’t seem so bad.

No Ordinary Woman

Theda Krakow: Clea Simon has a brilliant mystery series featuring something near and dear to many Indie Fixx readers – cats! Theda is a music journalist, detective, and cat lover all rolled into one. With titles such as Mew is for Murder, Cries and Whiskers andProbable Claws the furry friend in your life will certainly approve!

Lisbeth Salander: She’s the girl with a dragoon tattoo and in Stieg Larsson’s three books her 5 foot tall 90lbs bundle of mixed martial arts energy hacked computers and criminals to bits with clinical precision. Considering the mysterious death of the author, a real-life Lisbeth may be needed to ensure the unpublished manuscripts see the light of day.

Mma Precious Ramotswe: The No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency has eleven (and counting) novels featuring this rather large, slightly comic, and whip smart lady and her private detective agency in Botswana. Tackling crimes involving gender discrimination, domestic violence, and marital infidelity, she is a force for good in a turbulent landscape.


{{judy bolton mystery by callooh callay}}

While this article lists just a few of the crime series books featuring female detectives and crime-stoppers, there are many, many more! What are some of your favorites and why? Are there any series you collect?

About the contributor: Laura Zurowski publishes Lovelorn Poets (www.lovelornpoets.com), a blog devoted to celebrating the beauty of anonymous love letters, missives of regret, and poems found on Missed Connections websites. The heartfelt messages serve as a springboard to creativity employing illustrations, photographs, music, dramatic readings, and videos. Indie Fixx readers are encouraged to contact her about showcasing their work!

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