Read This: The Final Character Approved Picks

Sarah Healy, Character Approved
photo: Shem Roose Photography

In the summer of 2011, I took on a gig as the “Writing” correspondent for the USA Network’s Character Approved blog, providing weekly pointers toward new books and authors. My first post was a five-book summer reading list, so it seems somehow fitting that as USA puts the blog on hiatus, I end with another summer reading list, this time focusing on debut novelists.

I actually didn’t realize it as I was picking out the books to include on this list, but both Can I Get an Amen? by Sarah Healy and Wichita by Thad Ziolkowski are comic novels about adults who move back in with their wacky parents—whether that wackiness is of the born again or New Age variety—and it’s also a prospect that comes up in Leni Zumas‘s The Listeners. (The protagonist of Gilded Age, a modernization of The House of Mirth by Claire McMillan, returns to her hometown as the novel begins, too, but it’s a slightly different scenario.) So there’s a cultural/literary trend I may have inadvertently stumbled upon, eh?

Meg Howrey, Character Approved
photo: Travis Tanner

When I got the news about Character Approved suspending publication, I’d just submitted what was going to be my next post, about Meg Howrey‘s The Cranes Dance. It’s hard not to think about Black Swan when you’re reading this novel, especially since it leads off with a performance of Swan Lake, as described by Kate Crane, one of the dance company’s leading performers. It’s a semi-sarcastic recap of the plot, with a few insider jokes thrown in. (Later, Kate will admit you might have seen her and her fellow dancers in the background of a recent ballet film, lending ambience to the star actress’s performance. “Between the actress’s lobster-claw hands and biscuit-shaped feet, no one could mistake her for the real thing,” Kate snarks. “Except for the millions of people who completely loved the movie, of course.”) The deeper we get inside Kate’s head, though, the more Howrey—herself a former professional dancer and actress–is able to take the story in her own direction. So, although my post may not run there, I wanted to make sure you knew to keep an eye out for this one.

I’ve had a really great time writing the Character Approved posts. At the beginning of 2012, I wrote about how I viewed the CA mission to celebrate “the people, places and things that are making a mark by positively influencing our cultural landscape” as an opportunity to demonstrate the diversity of contemporary American literary culture—and to push myself into unfamiliar reading territory. The early results were mixed, but I feel like I was getting better at that goal these last few months—and I was glad for the opportunity to tell people how much I enjoyed reading authors like Ellis Avery, John Green, Kevin Young, and Mary Robinette Kowal.

That’s what it’s always been about for me—telling folks about books and writers I think are fantastic, that I’d like to see have a bigger audience. I’m grateful USA gave me an opportunity to do that with their audience these last 12 months, and I’m definitely taking the things I learned about myself as a reader and a writer and applying them back into Beatrice as I move forward.

3 July 2012 | read this |