sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2007-01-29 10:33 pm

Book rec

Heeee.

I have sort of a love-hate relationship with Nancy Springer's books. As in, I either love them or I hate them. In fact, I've sometimes wondered if there could conceivably be more than one author writing under that name, because it's a weird Jekyll-and-Hyde thing. I never really know what I'm going to get when I pick up one of her books; it'll either be awesome or it'll make me want to throw it across the room, but I'm never sure which.

Anyway, I picked up one of her young-adult books at the library that made me giggle and squee: "The Friendship Song". It's just about the coolest example of "write what you know" that I've ever seen, because she is CLEARLY writing from personal teenage-girl experience in this book, she's got to be. And I could relate to it so strongly -- yet the idea of writing about this particular aspect of myself never occurred to me. It's just not something that I would have thought you COULD successfully write a book about. And then she did.

It is, I kid you not, a book about a couple of teenage fangirls who crush on h/c and male friendships. It's hilarious and so damn accurate -- I was alternating between laughing and cringing, because it's written with an adult sensibility and so you can pretty clearly see what the female protagonists don't see, as they concoct ever-more-fanciful and romantic illusions about the (largely imagined) best-friends-till-the-end-of-the-world relationship between the guys in their favorite band. It's an interesting mix of genuine teen-girl fantasy -- as the girls realize that the boy band in question is in actual danger from a supernatural entity that only they can see -- and an adult deconstruction of the real-world implications of that particular fantasy. Probably the crux of the book for an SGA fan like me -- I think I'll put this under a cut; it's a mid-level spoiler, not a "and then they all died" caliber spoiler, but it *is* kind of a pivotal scene in the book ...

So the girls spend most of the book idealizing male friendships and wishing that they could be boys because only boys get to have that "die for you buddy" type of relationship. And then there's this scene where they have a conversation with one of the objects of their adoration and are completely astounded when he tells them that he envies girls for their ability to form close friendships:

"Okay, you two, you're girlfriends, right?" We both nodded. "Okay, right there you got something most guys never get. ... Thing is, guys don't know how to be friends, not really. We don't really talk with each other. There's a lot of stuff we'll never say, afraid we'll look like sissies or something. We're always competing with each other."

*laughs* Sound like anybody we know?

This barely scratches the surface ... there is just a LOT in the book that I could really relate to on a teenage-girl level, and a lot of ideas that are just cool all by themselves. It's basically a fans'-eye-view of being a fan, and not just any fan, but a fan like me. It's short and it *is* written for a middle-school reading level, and certain aspects of the ending in particular were unsatisfying to me, but still a very fun book for all of that.

[identity profile] kirei-seimei.livejournal.com 2007-01-30 08:11 am (UTC)(link)
That books sounds hilarious, and the fact that it discusses fandom on that level is great. Thanks for the enthusiastic rec, I think I'll try to track it down.
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[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2007-01-30 08:54 am (UTC)(link)
It's certainly a good book, and there's more to it than just the fandom aspect. Actually, Springer in general is definitely worth reading, even if some of her books do make me want to scream. The ones I like best are her contemporary/urban fantasies; she's particular skilled at taking myth and folklore elements and integrating them into our modern world in ways that actually *work*. Plus, she's funny. The first one of hers that I read also happens to be my favorite, and the book that made me seek out more of hers: Fair Peril, which is a retelling of the Frog Prince story set in the modern world, in which a middle-aged divorcee finds the enchanted frog -- and her reaction to him is PRICELESS. Basically, she weighs the situation: on the one hand, a guy (and in her experience, guys are mostly losers), and, on the other hand, a talking frog. So she just takes him home as-is, ignoring his increasingly annoyed pleas to kiss him. And then she has to keep her starry-eyed teenage daughter away from him, because of course the daughter wants a prince and could care less about keeping him in talking-frog form, while the mom, of course, doesn't want her daughter running off with some random guy claiming to be a prince. Chaos ensues. Simply a wonderful book.

[identity profile] ellex42.livejournal.com 2007-02-01 06:18 am (UTC)(link)
I read that book! 'Fair Peril', I mean, and yes, it was brilliant and drove me half mad at the same time. It was funny and clever and pertinent - and simultaneously aggravating, because the writing style and the organization of the plot just seemed so...haphazard and deliberately difficult.

I don't know. I liked the book, but it didn't make me want to read anything else she'd written.

Really, I'm just kind of rabbiting on here in amazement that I'm not the only person to have read that book.
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[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2007-02-03 11:54 pm (UTC)(link)
*laughs* Nope, not just you!

She is a very ... eclectic writer. Like I said above, some of her books I absolutely loathe, and in part it is because of that really distinctive writing style. She's sort of like CJ Cherryh in that regard -- another writer I have a love-hate thing for. Some books, I feel that her style really compliments the story she's trying to tell. Others, it just drives me insane.

[identity profile] klostes.livejournal.com 2007-01-30 03:35 pm (UTC)(link)
A fangirl! *g* We are legion, we are--and we never quite grow up!

And spoiler? That's probably the most OOC thing I see in fanfic, what I've always called "women writing men the way women wish they really were, i.e., just like women." Alan Alda is the exception, far more than the rule. ;9 come to think of it, Hawkeye Pierce is great to crush on from afar, but live with the man? No?
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[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2007-01-31 02:27 am (UTC)(link)
*heh* Yeah, I so agree with you there, about how women write feminized versions of men, and I loved how the book developed that idea! (Even though in its own way, it was guilty of doing exactly that.)
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[identity profile] abyssinia4077.livejournal.com 2007-01-30 04:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Sounds interesting. I love it when the "real world" acknowledges fannish behaviors - makes me feel less like I'm crazy.

I wonder how universal this is. It often feels like tv and movie media emphasizes the closeness of male relationships and makes female relationships catty and prone to dissolving over a disagreement about a male. We look at the male friendships and think "they're so close they don't need to talk about it" and the reality is what you mentioned in your post - they don't talk and that makes it very different.

But that quote is SO very John and Rodney.

(also, I wanted to ask if you'd be willing to friend me because I'd like to see your posts about the current SGA episodes, but I totally understand wanting to keep your flist smaller and manageable)
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2007-01-30 08:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I just added you! Although actually, last night I went through and unlocked the recent ones, because I realized after reading a post at [livejournal.com profile] derry667's LJ that there really is no reason to do so.

I love it when the "real world" acknowledges fannish behaviors - makes me feel less like I'm crazy.

I think that was what thrilled me about this book -- it made me feel like "I'm not alone!" And I guess I already knew that from online fandom, but it was just such a delight to see it in print, if that makes any sense.

We look at the male friendships and think "they're so close they don't need to talk about it" and the reality is what you mentioned in your post - they don't talk and that makes it very different.

Yeah, and that's precisely the point the book made -- the girls were seeing the guys' friendship as being much closer than theirs because (as one of the girls says) "They never have to say they're sorry" ... while being blind to the reality of their own, different friendship.

[identity profile] pavaneofstars.livejournal.com 2007-01-30 05:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Interesting. My curiosity's up - must get a hold of the book. Thanks for the rec. :)
ext_1981: (Default)

[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2007-01-31 02:28 am (UTC)(link)
*grin* I liked it, anyway!

(Anonymous) 2007-02-02 07:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Nancy Springer. I love "The Silver Sun" I must have read that book 20 times as a teenager! The next two books of hers I tried tho, I couldn't stand. So when you mentioned the love-hate relationship, I was like "Yey! It wasn't just me!" LOL

Erika (emergencyfan)
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[identity profile] friendshipper.livejournal.com 2007-02-03 11:56 pm (UTC)(link)
*laughs* Nice to know it's not just me! It's rare for me to have such an extreme reaction to different books by an author -- it seems like sometimes her books will just hit all my "sweet spots", but if the formula is just a tiny bit off, it's like music that's out of key -- drives me nuts.