Showing posts with label Libba Bray. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Libba Bray. Show all posts

07 June 2011

What I Learned from Miss Teen Dream

Beauty Queens

Libba Bray

5 Stars

Printz Award winner Libba Bray is back with a tale that involves a plane crash, national beauty pageant contestants, a secret militaristic corporation, and desert island survival. It’s irreverent and thought provoking, and laugh-out-loud funny. When the Miss Teen Dream Pageant plane goes down over the ocean, there are only a handful of pageant contestant survivors. The girls are divided – should they keep practicing their routines and wait for rescue? Or should they buckle down and try to survive in the tropical jungle they’ve been dropped down in? And what will they do when a band of sexy pirates show up? Or when they find the secret headquarters of The Corporation – sponsor of The Miss Teen Dream Pageant? And what exactly will happen now that they are separated from everything they’ve ever known including eyeliner, high heels, and parents with high expectations? Not to mention lack of food and water. Libba Bray takes readers on an adventure that will make you laugh, make you think, and make sure you never see beauty the same way again.
 
This book...wow. Just plain wow. I knew it was going to be hilarious and quirky and thought-provoking, because all Libba Bray's other books are, but I had no idea it would impact me so strongly! I mean, this was probably the funniest book I've read all year - Libba Bray is a master of satire. Our beauty-and-perfection-obsessed-society is parodied and mocked in such a way that you read a section, immediately laugh out loud, re-read it, and then fall into deep thought, because, hey, it was undeniably amusing, but it sounds awfully, uncomfortably close to real life. I would think about how ridiculous something sounded and then realize that the exact same thing happens in our society all the time. A lot of this clever satire shows up in the form of commercial breaks - yes, commercial breaks - which are quite possibly the best literary device ever. However, even without the comments on society, there were so many snarky, laugh-out-loud moments that I swear I spent half the book in stitches. I loved how each of the characters was unique and had their own story, which made it really interesting to follow their different story arcs and feel for them when they went through ups and downs. I didn't cry for any of the characters, but I felt something that might be better - I felt empowered and I felt proud. Every time one of the girls were discovered their own strength, cast off a label, took control of their own future, or learned to love themselves, I cheered for them and I realized that if they could accept themselves, why couldn't I accept myself? I also adored how the characters were so very diverse. Different races, different backgrounds, different sexual orientations, different genders, different abilities, different hopes, and different views - all of them reflected reality.

It would be so easy for me to make a list of things I learned from Beauty Queens with items like "how to survive on a desert island", "not to make deals with crazy dictators", and "the evil villain's lair is always inside the volcano" - and I did, in fact, learn plenty about those things. But one of the things I adore about Libba Bray's writing is that it's layered. There is something more meaningful under the surface, which is not to say that what's on the surface isn't entertaining and fabulous, but the emotions and themes and significance underneath are so important. So, below is my 'real' list of what Beauty Queens really taught me about myself, about other people, about guys, about feminism, and about society:
  • I don't need to be so obsessed with how I look and what other people think of me. What matters is that I accept myself - fat, skinny, tall, short, smart, slow, any race, any gender, any disability, any sexual orientation. I deserve to be confident in myself.
  • I don't need to apologize when I express my opinions or talk about how I feel. My thoughts are just as important as anyone else's, so why should I say sorry?
  • Society does a lot to objectify females and undermine their self-esteem. Actually, people in general, not just girls. We need to stop letting harmful messages in the media and ridiculous standards define us.
  • You don't have to be a female to be a feminist.
  • There are guys out there who are jerks, yes. The ones who will objectify girls and disrespect them and then come back and beg for forgiveness. But there are also the guys who will accept girls for who they are.
  • People are complicated (I know, you had no idea). But seriously - we're all patchwork quilts of sorrows and joys and hopes and dreams and pains and cruelty and kindness and confidence and self-deprecation. And that means we're all different, and that means that we need to accept each other.
  • It's okay to be confused about who I am and what I want - I'll figure it out in the end, and yes, I will make mistakes along the way.
Clearly, I love this book, and it's definitely made a difference in my life and my viewpoint. Go read it! May your nails be perfectly manicured and your catapults well-stocked with stilettos for ammunition.

30 December 2010

Mad Cows

Going Bovine

Libba Bray

5 Stars


All 16-year-old Cameron wants is to get through high school—and life in general—with a minimum of effort. It’s not a lot to ask. But that’s before he’s given some bad news: he’s sick and he’s going to die. Which totally sucks. Hope arrives in the winged form of Dulcie, a loopy punk angel/possible hallucination with a bad sugar habit. She tells Cam there is a cure—if he’s willing to go in search of it. With the help of a death-obsessed, video-gaming dwarf and a yard gnome, Cam sets off on the mother of all road trips through a twisted America into the heart of what matters most. (quoted from goodreads)

 First Sentence:
 "The best day of my life happened when I was five and almost died at Disney World."

I cannot even describe how much I love this book. It's this crazy, wonderfully loopy, charming, sardonic, deep, unique mess - but it's a good mess, if that makes any sense at all. It is beautiful and touching and hilarious and one of the best books I have read in a long, long time. This is the kind of book I can tell I'm going to reread again and again, not precisely to comfort myself because I know what happens, but to once again immerse myself in the delight and tears and love of it. So, having gushed about it extensively, I should tell you why I love it so much.

1. Cameron. He has such a unique voice - very real and sarcastic. I got him from page one, I understood exactly what he was talking about. Maybe I don't have a dysfunctional family or smoke weed in high school fourth-floor bathrooms or act totally apathetic, but I still get Cam.

2. The other characters - Dulcie, Gonzo, Balder, Cameron's family, Dr. X, even the nurse who takes care of Cameron (Glory) and the hitchhikers that are picked up on the road - I feel like I know each and every one of them, no matter how relatively small their parts are. They all have depth and emotion and their own story.

3. The plot. It is just so wild and wacky without ever seeming too overboard. I mean, think about it. A teen who pretty much hates life is diagnosed with a fatal disease, but after a vision from an angel, he sets out to find a cure for said disease. He takes along with him a dwarf named Gonzo and they're supposed to find someone named Dr. X. Along the way, they discover musicians, overly happy people, a gnome who is really a Viking god, lots of physicists, and much more insanity. But you never doubt it, you just go along for the ride. It's absolute magic.

4. The meaning underneath. You know, some books push people to take in their theme and realize something important about human nature or the fate of the world. For example, The Boy Who Cried Wolf is very clear in its message - don't lie, or horrific things will happen to you. But Going Bovine is so subtle and beautiful that it doesn't push anything on you. But all the same, when you reach the end, you are crying and promising yourself that you will live as fully as possible, that you will never ever forget how precious life is.

5. The hallucinatory nature of it. There were times when I couldn't tell what was real and what wasn't, because reality and hallucinations and were mixed together to the point where it didn't matter which was which. The whole thing is so dreamy and surreal.

Needless to say, I adore this book. Go read it, and you won't be sorry!