Linger by maggie stiefvater

What a beautiful cover, holding together a breath-taking story.  I read it quickly over the course of one weekend, snuggled in my bed.  Now I have to wait a long time for Forever to arrive-it will seem, well, like forever!

Good Reads Synopsis:

In Maggie Stiefvater’s Shiver, Grace and Sam found each other. Now, in Linger, they must fight to be together. For Grace, this means defying her parents and keeping a very dangerous secret about her own well-being. For Sam, this means grappling with his werewolf past . . . and figuring out a way to survive into the future. Add into the mix a new wolf named Cole, whose own past has the potential to destroy the whole pack. And Isabelle, who already lost her brother to the wolves . . . and is nonetheless drawn to Cole.

My thoughts:

     I had no idea what Stiefvater had planned for Grace and Sam in this second installment but I hoped it wasn’t just lovey stuff.  It wasn’t and in fact the direction it took was so perfect because it involved Grace’s parents, who were never around much in Shiver.  Her parents, in classic parental form, decide to ban Sam from her life, which doesn’t work. Never does.  All of this could be quite cheesy love stuff but in Stiefvater’s hands it is brilliantly written.  Extremely poetic and one chapter leads to another and another until you’ve devoured it all.
     The story, like Shiver, is told in alternating point-of-view between Grace, Sam, Cole and Isabelle, changing sometimes right in the middle of a chapter and this worked really well.   I despised Cole’s character and fell more in love with Isabelle, making their attraction an interesting combination.  Grace and Sam weathered their storms, but not easily and I’m now quite anxious to read Forever, #3 in The Wolves of Mercy Falls.  As a former Minnesotan I can relate to the setting and think she’s portrayed the cold, the seasons and the landscape so well.  If you haven’t picked up this series yet-I highly recommend it, even if your not from Minnesota. 

Random Quote: ” Later, I thought of the things I could have added to the list of resolutions, things I’d wanted back before I realized what being a wolf meant for my future.  Things like Write a novel and Find a band and Get a degree in obscure poetry in translation and Travel the world.  It felt indulgent and fanciful to be considering those things now after reminding myself for so long that they were impossible.”  (27-Sam)

Other reviews:

See Michelle Read reviews it and has some good points.

Shiver

(2009)
390 pages
     This is a story about Grace, her two friends, Olivia and Rachel, and a pack of wolves living on the edge of  town.  The summary from the verso page: “ In all the years she has watched the wolves in the woods behind her house, Grace has been particularly drawn to an unusual yellow-eyed wolf who, in his turn, has been watching her with increaseing intensity.”  Intensity, yes, it is all about the intensity!   Told in two person narrative, erratically flipping between Sam and Grace, which artfully presents this well-rounded love story.  Some readers don’t enjoy alternating chapters but I like the duality of it and each person can see the same event differently-it depends on who’s eyes your looking through.
     Grace is a strong female character, raising herself, as her parents keep busy with their own lives. She cooks and makes lovely dinners for her family and eventually for Sam.  I’m always happy when a character has a close connection to food and  I just knew I wanted to share this quiche scene. It illustrates how Stiefvater pulls her characters together over a simple common theme.   Grace and Sam find themselves in a tight spot, needing to talk with Isabel.  They are unsure of whether they can trust her or not and so Grace decides to invite her over to help make dinner~in this way Grace and Sam can judge Isabel’s character while they all work together!  It’s brilliant and I love that Grace’s character turns to cooking in a time of crisis. 
     Grace barely seemed to notice her [ mother] leaving.  She gestured at me.  ‘Isabel, eggs and cheese and milk are in the fridge.  Sam, we need to make plain old piecrusts.  Would you preheat the oven to four-fifty and get us some pans?
     Isabel was staring inside the fridge.  ‘There’s, like, eight thousand kinds of cheese in here.  It all looks the same to me.’
   You do the oven, let Sam get the cheese and stuff.  He knows food,’ Grace said.  She was standing on her tiptoes to get flour out of an overhead cupboard; it stretched her body gorgeously and made me want in the worst way to touch the bare skin exposed on her lower back.  But then she heaved the flour down and I’d missed my chance, so I traded places with Isabel, grabbed some sharp cheddar and eggs and milk, and threw it all on the counter. 
     Grace was already involved with cutting shortening and flour in a bowl by the time I’d finished cracking eggs and whisking in some mayonaise.  The kitchen was suddenly full of activity, as if we were legion. 
     ‘What the hell is this?’ Isabel demanded, staring at a package Grace had handed her. 
     Grace snorted with laughter.  ‘It’s a mushroom.” ….’Saute those in there for a few minutes till they’re nice and yummy.’ 
   “How long?’
     ‘Till they’re yummy.’ I repeated. (262-263)
     Can’t you just feel the pie crust and hear  the butter sizzling, ready for the mushrooms? I can hear Sam whisking the eggs together, everything clicking and snapping into place.  There is something so sexy about couples cooking together-something Stiefvater must know about in her own happy author life.  I wish I wasn’t obligated to share the quote’s page number so you could be surprised when you do come upon this quiche-making moment.  And what is a book, a good story made up of but wonderfully tailored moments shaped and fit perfectly together.  In Shiver, she has created a harmony of words mixed with likeable characters immersed in a odd yet believable story.  I anxious to read Linger, #2 in the Mercy Falls series.  I can’t buy it yet (my reading from my own bookshelves challenge), our public library doesn’t have it so I’m left waiting for more about Sam and Grace. 
    If I cook while I wait I would whip up this  delicious quiche  from Kim’s Easy French Food site.  I should make this for my husband as an anniversary dinner-maybe I can talk him into helping me!!  He’s so cute in an apron!   I also discovered this great stuffed eggplant dish-I adore eggplant.  Eggplant has so much flavor when cooked just right.
Check out other tasty reviews of Shiver-someone  may actually write less about the food obsession and more about the actual love story!   This post is part of Weekend Cooking over at Beth Fish Reads Pop over there and see what else is cooking…
Happy eating and reading!