Archive for » March, 2007 «

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007 | Author: Maryan Pelland

News resources on the Web are reporting some scary figures about human papillomavirus (human papilloma virus, HPV). The Houston Chronicle reported just a month ago that 25%, one quarter of American women are infected witht his sexually transmitted disease. Cervical cancer doesn’t necessarily follow, experts say, but it’s a big enough risk that the available vaccine is a more than just a good idea.

The Center for Disease Control did a study recently that indicates numbers of infected women are higher than previously thought, the Chronicle says. A couple of weeks ago, one of the newsmagazines on TV - the John Stossel thing, did a report about how overly fearful Americans are becoming because of media hype. Things that go bump in the night, or don’t, are being exaggerated and it feels like we should all be running about screaming, “The end is near!” But Stossel says we’re more likely to get struck by lightning than abducted by a predator, for example.

This HPV emergency is real. In my mind, we should encourage, if not require young girls and women to have the vaccine. In Texas, right now, the legislature is bickering about the whys and wherefores of requiring girls to receive the HPV vaccine. From what I’ve heard, some mothers of daughters are worried that having the vaccine will, somehow, cause their daughters to go off the deep and become veritible ladies of the evening.

I never argue people’s religious or moral convictions. We’re all entitlted to believe what we believe. It seems to me that risking our daughters’ lives becasue we fear we can’t instill the right values in them is overkill (pun intended, of course).

Once upon a time, I knew a woman who refused to allow her 5-year old daughter to own a Big Wheel tricycle. Her objection was the configuration of the thing requires rider’s legs to be spread apart too wide, thereby calling to mind sexual activity. Ok, no life was as stake here and it doesn’t matter a fig if a child gets to ride a Big Wheel or not.

My point is, as responsible women, we have to think long and hard about protecting our daughters’ health. The vaccine is available. It’s safe. Your daughter’s chance of becoming sexually active is a fair risk in today’s world. Denying her protection isn’t going to change that. If she decides to have sex - it is unlikely you will be able to stop her unless you have already instilled a strong sense of personal value in her. And that’s no real guarantee, either. A cancer vaccine certainly won’t be the deal breaker.

Monday, March 12th, 2007 | Author: Maryan Pelland

For all of us women who can’t wait for the next installment of Harry Potter…here are some new Harry Potter tidbits from various sources, including Publisher’s Weekly’s

Thursday, March 01st, 2007 | Author: Maryan Pelland

Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult
Atria Books, Mar 6 2007
$26.95 451 pages ISBN 0743496728

Other books to read


Nineteen minutes is enough time to become disenchanted with an author. Sometimes, it doesn’t even take the reading of an entire book, though I made it all the way through Jodi Picoult’s Nineteen Minutes.

When I’m engrossed in a novel and author-error yanks me out, I feel cheated. It’s like watching an historical film, like Last of the Mohicans, and discovering a jet comtrail marring the ancient prairie sky. But we’re all human. I usually shrug and read on.

However, it’s impossible to get past a laundry list of troubles with Picoult’s 14th destined-for-stardom novel, Nineteen Minutes. Clearly, Picoult knows how to write. She sells books. She sells graphic novels, to wit — five Wonder Woman comics issues. She’s been writing a long time, postulating aloud in magazines recently about how difficult it is to churn out best sellers while remaining true to your own principals.

Nineteen Minutes has a sensationalized plot. Consider a question: Should movie makers and book writers profit from national tragedies like school shootings 911? Picoult’s novel draws upon both. And I guess the answer is — sure, it’s free enterprise. In droves, we buy the books and see the movies. You can’t keep us away.

But this book is disturbing. What should be a ghastly tragedy, a high school boy coldly walking into his school building one morning and graphically blasting away at teachers and students, comes wrapped in a tawdry chick-lit romance between female judge and crime investigator.

Story begins, steeped in teenangst. Bullied boy, Peter, is mired in the depression of life-long harassment by cool kids. One cool kid, Josie, whose mom is a judge, was Peter’s best friend, first crush, and patron saint from early preschool and beyond. She protected, befriended, defended him — spent every spare moment with him.

But Josie becomes cool, and not by her own wish. She’s just sort of carried on a wave because she is, evidently, undeniably…cool. She dumps Peter. Like everyone else did. Meantime, Peter’s family is plagued with grief. His only sibling is, on the surface, a wunderkind that no one, including Peter, could ever match in reputation or shine. Sibling dies in a car accident. Mother discovers her angel kid had feet of clay. But that doesn’t help Peter, still perceived by all as a substandard human, apparently because he’s a computer geek.

But we have a computer genius who, Picoult tells us, is “programming” incredibly lifelike and complicated games with HTML code. In fact, he plots his crime in HTML coded virtual action with the faces of his victims on the characters. HTML is a markup language for controlling the appearance of text. It’s been replaced in Web design with so many iterations of coding that even a novice must be expected to know it cannot do what Peter does with it.

Then, in a pivotal scene, our computer guru hits “control, alt, delete” and his computer screen snaps to a black, blank screen, saving him from seeing something terrible. Hit those keys. Unless you use Windows 3.1, you will not see a blank screen of salvation from your demons.

Next, Josie’s football-hero-boyfriend, a cool guy, pulls down Peter’s pants in the crowded high school cafeteria, and a love letter from Peter to Josie is mass-emailed by another cool guy to “every student” in the high school population. Peter gets really, really angry. He sets off a pipe bomb in the school parking lot. His rampage begins.

The story continues through investigation and trial, bogged down for many pages with romantic interludes and sexual encounters for both Josie and her mom. If Nineteen Minutes was just a hot-topic novel, we could dismiss it, and move on — if you read newspapers or follow cop-and-court lineups on weekly television, you’ve already been fed everything to be digested from this novel.

But author and publisher sell Nineteen Minutes as a “complex, deeply emotional book,” filled with insights and seeming to promise catharsis. Closure.

The insights aren’t insightful – we can draw conclusions by the first sections end. Lonely, aggressive, man-hating, single mom female judge clearly lays out her personal conviction that she doesn’t need a man to complete her. She got pregnant and purposefully had her now 15 year-old daughter without the shallow, rich father. Then what?

A few chapters later, after bumping into the crime-solving love-interest for the second time, she is smitten. Her principals gone, she practically falls off her bar stool to leap joyfully into his bed.

With respect for Picoult’s demonstrated talent and past successes, I must say there are inconsistencies and bloopers throughout Nineteen Minutes. A Picoult fan since book one, I’ve struggled with her failures to respect detail. How is it, I’ve pondered, her main character in first novel, Plain Truth, drives through a cornfield in Northern Illinois, in May, watching tall plants rippling and corn tasseling? Try that.

I trusted her skill. I looked forward to a great read, I even overlooked my personal trepidation with her subject matter, hoping she’d be respectful of a people traumatized multiple times since that awful day at Columbine.

Paragraph after paragraph, the main characters change their most basic beliefs. They wheel 180s, and have no apparent reasons for doing so. Confusing dialog has no basis in earlier conversations – the defender fervently hopes Josie’s mom gets the case because the only other judge hates defenders, and always sides with the prosecution. Then, with no explanation, he’s delighted that Josie’s mom recuses herself.

Most difficult to understand is the trick ending. Without spoilers, I’ll say only that Josie does something that simply cannot be believed in her character’s context. A cardinal rule of writing fiction is, you can create a world and make it anything you want; but the story must happen only within the physics of that world. In other words, you can only write what is believable, given the set up. Picoult broke that rule, then called a Greek chorus to explain and employed a “God machine” for a “surprise” ending that forces its own logic right down our gullets.

Further, in a sentence about 300 pages into the plot, Josie sits outside the school (post shootings), musing that “grownups” have torn down the gym and all other venues of the tragedy. She scoffs that adults think what is out of sight will remain out of mind. One hundred pages and a month in time later, the detective stands in the gym, which is magically intact, and finds a bullet-fragment on the floor. He figures the rest of the bullet must have traveled a particular path, through an open transom window out to the schoolyard and embedded itself in a tree. He finds the other fragment in the tree. If this investigator had had, say, nailclippers and file, or toothpick and comb, or any other common tools in his pocket, he’d have been sunk. He happened to have a laser pointer and a pen knife.

Case solved. Twist revealed. Reader out in left field, blinking — shaking her head, confusion.

Distressed and disillusioned by errors and coincidences and disconnections, I emailed Ms. Picoult. With respect, I asked the Harvard/Princeton graduate how these inequities survived into the printed book.

She said, basically, errors happen - and thanked me for a “careful reading”. She felt certain advance copies, by their nature, are filled with inconsistencies.

I can’t recommend this book. Isn’t there a promise, from author to reader, of integrity within the construct of fiction? From her choice of topic, to unsubstantive treatment of a tragic situation, to staccato stabbings of inaccurate detail, I felt used. Perhaps it was marketingly urgent to get another Picoult on the shelves in less than a year since her last book. Maybe publishing in concert with her March Wonder Woman comic gig made speed essential.

Regardless, Nineteen Minutes hands readers, at one point, a list of things that can be done in 19 minutes. You can mow the lawn, color your hair, watch the news on TV and so forth. Those might be better uses of time.