The Monday Book – The English Teacher by Lily King

Guest review by Janelle Bailey, avid reader and always learning; sometimes substitute teaching, sometimes grandbabysitting, sometimes selling books

The English Teacher by Lily King

The English Teacher by Lily King

This is not a new book–it was first published in 2005)–but I came to it after first discovering Lily King and then wishing to read everything she’d written. I was not disappointed by that pursuit. King’s writing is solid, her stories holding layers of literary value, her characters thoughtfully deep and charismatic.

And it’s even been years since I read this book, but I’m still thinking about it, especially in light of some critical issues that have been developing for women these past couple of years. I often think of Vida…and also of my discussion post-reading with a great friend and fellow lover of good literature. Vida was very real to us, and she prompted a thoughtful discussion that could apply to many situations and which I think of often.

The English teacher in this novel, however, is that Vida. The book’s main character, Vida is a bit of a mess, but she wasn’t always, necessarily. It’s that during the action of this novel, she is first confronting some of her stuff, which she had been, well…stuffing…for years and years. Vida teaches English at Fayer Academy, a cozy little boarding school built in a mansion once owned by Vida’s grandfather, coincidentally. She has the third floor pretty much to herself. She’s much loved by students, named teacher of the year by then and rewarded more than once in her career, and she teaches the classics, such as Hardy’s Tess of the d’Urbervilles in ways with which any of us who’ve taught literature at all can relate, that beautiful repetition of seeing a work anew but the same, too, with a brand new group of students.

And outside of her classroom, Vida is also mom to Peter, now a freshman at Fayer…and dog mom to Walt…and she likes her wine. And she enjoys a positive, camaraderie- and history-filled, collegial relationship with many of her school colleagues, having worked there for years and living right on campus in a school-owned house.

And yet the life that Vida has been living outwardly allllll of this time has not required her to confront much of what she keeps inside…until she meets and then marries Tom.

This is a great book…thoughtful and thought-filled, well-written, characters believable and intense, and giving us access to our own stuff on the side.

I hope you have something new in the works and coming out soon, Ms. King.

Come back next Monday for another book review!

The Monday Book – Shark Heart: A Love Story by Emily Habeck

Guest review by Janelle Bailey, avid reader and always learning; sometimes substitute teaching, sometimes grandbabysitting, sometimes selling books

Shark Heart: A Love Story by Emily Habeck

Shark Heart: A Love Story by Emily Habeck

My goal in writing book reviews is to steer additional readers to consider reading the best of the books and/or to engage in conversations about what makes books “good” books. I fully relish the opportunities to discuss books in our book club, as we rarely all agree about books, and no matter what we read, whatever we discuss there is better for the various perspectives reading it.

Shark Heart: A Love Story presents a fairly unusual story, and as it is typically my practice to spoil nothing, to not reveal the biggest things about a book such that it is not how I feel about or interpret them that matters, wishing not to steer or direct another reader’s personal experiences at all, I don’t wish to say too much more about it here.

The format of the novel is also unusual, as it is a collage of short bursts of fiction (but not really “flash fiction,” as I understand it), some playwriting/script, and some few other forms. It’s not 400+ pages full of text. So here’s a deal for anyone wanting to say the have read or read “big books,” who then does not have to work too hard to accomplish that. A little sadly, I also report that I think this unusual format is what is currently most accessible to and most easily digested by the distracted-by-other-stuff readers that we have all become. You can easily get through several pages, for as little as is there, for there not being time to have to go do something else. I do think that anyone listening to the audiobook rather than reading the text will “miss” something about the seemingly intentional white space within.

All of that said, this is a somewhat heartbreaking and somewhat heart- and soul-restoring story, told in layers, of Louis and Wren, who meet and marry in their 30s. It is also the story of Wren’s mother, Angela, whom–we are told over and over–could grow a garden in an eggshell. I think it’s safe to share that something quite rough came Angela’s way when Wren was young, and like many other young people in such circumstances, Wren had to grow up very fast.

It’s never a book’s requirement or responsibility or task to stir response from me as a reader, but this book so very much did. There are many thoughtful beautiful passages. There are some greatly funny moments and scenes. There are layers of reference–second book I’ve read this year! The first was Tom Lake–to Our Town, that old and wonderful, treasure of a favorite play. Additionally, this book understands teachers and values them in ways they will appreciate and which may fulfill them in heart-deep ways. I felt some Mr. Holland’s Opus-like honoring taking place here.

Yep: it’s a tad odd/unusual/weird, this story…some well done magical realism, we mostly agreed at book club…and of a very interesting, perhaps very applicable, figuratively, sort.

Sincerely: I am really glad I read this book, and I look forward to discussing it with any others who have read it. I think it probably reads differently for a variety of readers. I think it is going to win a number of awards, including some for a tremendous debut novel.

Come back next Monday for another book review!