Friday, June 22, 2018

Save the Cat: A Book Review

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I first heard about this book when I met my first real writer. She hadn’t been published (yet), but I remember my admiration at her immovable schedule of writing every day.

“How do you write a book?” I asked.

“I write every day,” she told me, “and read Save the Cat.”

Since that day, Save the Cat has sat on my to-read shelf on Goodreads for years and has been added and removed from my Amazon cart many times.

At a recent young adult noveling conference I attended, speakers and writers praised Save the Cat and I added it to my Amazon cart again. I finally purchased it in desperation, looking for some much-needed plot advice for my current novel. I read it over a span of a week.

Did it live up to the hype? Maybe.

The reason for hesitation is this: I didn’t feel like it changed the way I look at writing and story. But I think the reason for this is that Save the Cat is an application book. I don’t think it’s meant to be read cover to cover, but rather referenced when applying his plotting principles. I have yet to try his plot formula. But I think this book will be helpful when I do.

Even though Save the Cat is a screenwriting book, it’s still valuable for novelists. Why? Blake Snyder’s ability to recognize plot points in successful movies connects to plot points needed in novels. A story is a story, no matter the form, and Blake Snyder conveys his secrets of writing an interesting, character-driven story.

While it’s not the greatest writing book I’ve ever read (my favorites are Bird by Bird and Spilling Ink), I will turn back to it for developing plot. Perhaps after application of his book, my appreciation for it will grow and it will make my favorites list. We’ll see.

Writing Aesthetic/Style: 3.5
Content: 4
Readability: 5
Overall: 4

Would I recommend? Sure.

For more ratings and reviews and to see what I'm currently reading, visit my Goodreads page here!

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

All the Bright Places: A Book Review

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I finished this book last week, but I still don’t know if I’m emotionally ready to write about this book. I don’t think I can form cohesive, meaningful sentences the way I want to. So I’m going to sum it up and say that All the Bright Places reminded me of a mix between the romance and parental relationships in The Fault in our Stars and the grittiness in Bone Gap. It was a book that I didn’t want to like, but ended up loving because of deep characters and Jennifer Niven’s way of weaving mental health and suicide into a loving, purposeful story. It was a rollercoaster of emotions. I love books with emotion.

Writing Aesthetic/Style: 4.5
Plot/Movement: 4
Character Development: 3.5
Overall: 4

For more ratings and reviews and to see what I'm currently reading, visit my Goodreads page here!

The Road: A Book Review

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This is another book I don’t want to part with. Although I do feel somewhat relieved to be free from its grittiness and stress. Still, Cormac McCarthy’s breathless, chilling, and masterful writing is of the most beautiful and real I’ve encountered. I want to live within his writer’s voice and hope I can see the world and its people the same way he writes about them.

Throughout this book, here are some recurring thoughts that I had:

How the heck is this going to end?
The dialogue. *fulfilling sigh* The dialogue.
This is stressful.
But beautiful and real.
I can’t put this down.


While this book did have lots of death, injury, and frightening moments (what can you expect from a post-apocalyptic survival story?), I didn’t feel pushed beyond my limit. Cormac McCarthy artfully pairs the ugly with the hopeful. This is one of my favorite parts of the book: the ugly with the hopeful. And I loved how I felt like I traveled the road with the man and the boy and felt everything they did, even though I know I couldn’t really come close to feeling what they experienced. That’s a sign of a great novel.

The Road takes place as one of my favorites of all time, with a whopping five stars.

Writing Aesthetic/Style: 5
Plot/Movement: 5
Character Development: 5
Overall: 5

Would I recommend? YES

For more ratings and reviews and to see what I'm currently reading, visit my Goodreads page here!