Sunday, October 26, 2025

What Comes Easy for Some: Book Review of Out of the Easy

 

Out of the EasyOut of the Easy by Ruta Sepetys


Description

Out of the Easy by Ruta Sepetys was a book club choice. The main character, Josie, knows the sketchy side of New Orleans because she was born into it. Well, moved into it when she was a little girl. Her mother is a prostitute working in Willie’s house, and she long ago expected Josie to fend for herself. Willie keeps an eye out for her, after a fashion, and pays her to clean the rooms in the house. Josie also has a second, more respectable job, working in the bookstore where she also lives.

Josie exists in her overlapping worlds of books and brothel until a customer at the bookstore assumes she is a college student. Josie begins to dream of a way out—if only the Big Easy will let her go. But for Josie, the trouble is just beginning.

Would I Teach this book?


Would I teach Out of the Easy? As I was reading Out of the Easy, I kept feeling like a thread was missing, the strongest thread that would guide all the subplots, and that at any moment, the real plot would emerge. But, spoiler alert: the main plot did not emerge. It was not a bad or boring read, but it was not the kind of gripping plot, where it has you in its talons, and you’re sneaking off to your room just to grab a few pages. It is not the kind of gripping I am looking for when I choose a book to teach. In addition, the seedy underworld of New Orleans, and especially Willie’s brothel, did not fulfill the promise of seediness. Willie’s brother felt too homy and cheery, compared to how I imagine a real brothel to be. To be fair, I have never actually been inside a brothel, but based on what we know about sex workers and how they are treated, I doubt that it is comparable to dorm life.

As a coming of age novel, Out of the Easy leaves much to be desired, and I would not classify it as YA.

Friday, October 17, 2025

Sometimes, Only an Allegory Will Do: Book Review of The Measure

 

The MeasureThe Measure by Nikki Erlick


Description

The Measure by Nikki Erlick has an extraordinary premise: one morning every person in the world over the age of twenty-two receives a box with a string inside that represents the length of their life. Once everyone understands the significance of the box, some people choose not to open theirs, but many let curiosity get the better of themselves and decide to find out how much time they have left. To the horror of some, they discover that they have “short strings,” meaning they will die young. As the world decides how to respond to this new information, there are also individuals who seek to capitalize off of the newfound vulnerability of society.

The Measure has an ensemble cast, told from the point of view of several characters in a few different orbits. Nina and Maura, a couple who has been together for two years, seem to be the link between most of the characters. They choose to open their boxes together and then must contend with the heartbreak of their uneven strings.

The Measure is my book club's pick for October. Of the books we have read so far this year, it is my second favorite, second only to The Ten Thousand Doors of January.


Would I teach this book? 

Short answer: yes. Longer answer is in considering how I might use it. The Measure can be read as an allegory for not just prejudice, but also for privilege. Everyone gets a string that they have done nothing to merit. While longer strings do suggest the propensity to live a better life, the people who receive them do so arbitrarily, not because they have been more giving or more successful. Likewise, those that have received a shorter string have done nothing to deserve less time on this earth. Just as no person has done anything to deserve the circumstances they are born into, whether that means for their benefit or their detriment, those circumstances are often used to judge people or are ignored when considering a person’s ability to succeed or fail. Similarly to how privilege and belonging to a marginalized group are discussed, string length becomes politically divisive.


As in most allegories, as string length is something that does not exist, for some, they will have an easier time understanding how what we are born with and born into can impact our chances and therefore choices, and even more so when society creates unjust limitations.

That being said, while I have not taught a novel in a composition class, I know that some courses do kick off the semester with one. The Measure would be an interesting way to begin a political discourse and to examine the way that people discuss privilege, prejudice, and politics. Especially since The Measure does not begin and end on allegory, but instead creates a full and emotionally engaging novel, the discussion of plot could significantly contribute to engagement. It sounds like Erlick could offer a potentially effective way to introduce students to their status as academic interlocutors.

If you have taught or taken a composition class that used a novel or other full-length book, I would love to hear from you about your experience.

Monday, October 6, 2025

Beware of Aswang: Book Review of Marikit and the Ocean of Stars

 

Marikit and the Ocean of StarsMarikit and the Ocean of Stars by Caris Avendaño Cruz


Gratitude

Thank you to the Montgomery County Public Library for making Marikit and the Ocean of Stars readily available for public use. 

Description

In Marikit and the Ocean of Stars by Caris Avendeño Cruz, Marikit’s birthday wish is to have a blue fairy dress—more beautiful than the wealthy girl’s yellow fairy dress—so beautiful no one would ever pick on her for her shabby clothes again.

And why shouldn’t she have such a beautiful dress? Her mother is the best seamstress, everyone agrees. When she asks her mother for the dress, she also points out that her recent birthdays have been sad affairs. Since the deaths of her father and brother while they were fishing, there have been many unhappy times for Marikit and her mother.

All of Marikit’s hoping and dreaming could not prepare her for the dress her mother makes—nor could it prepare her for the adventure ahead. Nothing could have prepared Marikit for that—not for the new friends, enemies, and lands she will see. And certainly not for the ways she’ll be tested.


Would I teach this book? 

Marikit and the Ocean of Stars has adventures, fairies, and a wide range of imaginary creatures from Filipino folklore. There is excitement and danger and a wide cast of characters. The supporting cast outshines Marikit, who, while she is described as brave and does exhibit some bravery, does not have as much depth of personality as other characters.

The book is a bit below the reading level for middle school, so I would probably not choose it to teach, but it would be good for a classroom library, to include a variety of reading levels. If I taught elementary, I would consider it for a fourth grade class, where it would be more compatible. I could also see the possibility of including it in a literature class on contemporary folklore, as it does include Filipino mythological creatures in inventive ways.

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