Monday, January 27, 2025

Not Your Average Heist: Book Review of Ruth Run

 

Ruth RunRuth Run by Elizabeth Kaufman

Gratitude

Thank you to Goodreads Giveaways and Penguin for the ARC of Ruth Run by Elizabeth Kaufman to be released April 15, 2025.

Description

Ruth grew up poor, and she knew she didn’t want to stay poor. When she finished college, she had no prospects and so took an IT job at her school. From there, Ruth found her way to a scheme in which she could divert significant money from banks into offshore accounts. One night a trip wire she set goes off and Ruth knows that it’s time to close up shop and get out. She thinks she has more time, but as soon as she goes to warn her partner, she sees that the guys who are out to get her are one step ahead. So begins Ruth’s efforts to escape the people who have the money and the guns, AKA the government.

Ruth Run is told from two points of view: Ruth, as she tries to get away, and Mike, the man whose job it is to find her and who has been tracking her already.

In her escape, Ruth must improvise, decide who to trust, guess what the government knows about her, and figure out some way to stay off the grid. Along the way, she meets some interesting characters and learns some more about the guys who are out to get her. It’s not just her life at stake, but the life of pleasure she dreamed of.

Would I Teach This Book?

Would I teach this book? Ruth Run is a suspense novel that also examines gender roles and has a light commentary on socioeconomic class. While Ruth is not the most likeable character, she is certainly more likeable than the men who pursue her. There are few things that give me the ick more than Mike. Read Ruth Run and you’ll agree with me.

The book did keep me guessing about Ruth’s next move and if the guys would catch up with her. In that way, Ruth  Run would certainly work well for teaching about writing suspense and cyber heists. It would also be fun to discuss the different moves of Ruth and the guys chasing her–are they believable? Would they work in a movie? Would there be other ways to handle a scene? There were certainly a few moments that I questioned, and discussing the plot could be a useful tool in a novel writing class. I would be willing to try it.


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Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Why Do Birds Suddenly Appear: Book Review of A Pigeon and a Boy


A Pigeon and a BoyA Pigeon and a Boy by Meir Shalev

Description

I read A Pigeon and a Boy written by Meir Shalev and translated by Evan Fallenberg for my book club. One of the reasons that I love being in a book club is that it leads me to books that I might not have chosen for myself, and A Pigeon and a Boy is one of them.

Yair, the main character, narrates the story as if he were telling it to his mother. As it unfolds, we learn about Yair’s family, his wife, his mistress, and the home he seeks for himself.

In the hospital, at the end of her life, Yair’s mother gives him a large sum of money and instructs him to buy a house. She gives specifications for the kind of house he should buy, and Yair sets out to find a home of his own. With his job as a tour guide, Yair travels great distances and knows the area quite well. He knows where to look for the kind of out-of-the-way place his mother suggests and that he desires.


Along the way, we meet Yair’s family: his father, an acclaimed pediatrician, his mother, who eventually decides to live separately from the family, and his golden brother. All three of them are described as being light and lithe, while Yair is dark, short, and thick. His wife is more like his family than him--tall, beautiful, rich and successful; but living a separate life from Yair in the same house, as she has been for years. And finally, his mistress, his oldest friend, who is more like Yair in appearance.

Intertwined with Yair’s story is that of a boy growing up on a kibbutz who is taken with raising homing pigeons. The boy meets a girl who is also a pigeon handler, and their relationship begins.

Would I Teach This Book?

A Pigeon and a Boy is much quieter than most books I read and teach. It is light on plot and heavy on thinking about and retelling the character’s history. Yair is a nuanced character and his observations are curious--I often wondered how accurate his take on things was. I did not find him particularly likeable, due to how he treats his wife and mistress--though they do not treat him so well, either.

Though not my favorite book, it might be a good choice for a multicultural literature class. The book is set in Israel and translated from Hebrew. It has a distinctively different sensibility from most American fiction and sets up a wonderful conversation about what makes a home a home.

Not a beach read, but A Pigeon and a Boy will transport you and introduce you to a type of storytelling unlike the typical American best seller.

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