Science fiction/fantasy is my favorite genre by far. Nothing thrills me like blasting into hyper space or exploring the terrain of a new world from the safety of my own home.
I just finished the novel, The Three-Body Problem by China’s premier science fiction author, Cixin Liu. I’d love to tell you I read it in the original Chinese, but I only know how to say, not spell, “thank you” in Mandarin. The Three-Body Problem was not light reading, at least not for me. There was all this math-y and science-y stuff. I’m trying to decide if I’m woman enough to tackle the sequels. Three-Body provides a spectacularly different view into Chinese culture, so after a brain break I’m sure I’ll return to the impending Trisolarus invasion.
Before Liu’s book, I’d immersed myself in the works of John Scalzi whose Old Man’s War series is a must read for scifi fans. Scalzi’s wit, I suspect, could make a rewriting of the U.S. Tax Code into a pleasurable evening of reading, and I recommend it to everyone, not just those into the genre.
Hugh Howey is another scifi writer I’ve become attached to. Not literally because Howey might have me arrested, but his Wool Omnibus is incredibly entertaining, and deals with intriguing social issues. If you suffer from claustrophobia, be warned. The characters don’t get out much.
Now anyone who’s still with me might wonder what in heaven’s name all this has to do with the post’s title, “Saving the Cowsills.” As a preteen one of my all-time best friends who I’ll call LA, and I were obsessed with brothers John and Barry Cowsill of the family singing group the Cowsills, upon whom The Partridge Family TV series was based.

We could tell you darned near anything you wanted to know about the brothers: Eye color, height, birth dates, likes, dislikes, etc. One of the highlights of our young lives was getting to meet our idols after a concert in Canyon, Texas.
At a recent reunion LA gave me a book entitled, I Think I Love You, and insisted that I read it. Sure, I said, thinking it was the last thing a scifi fangirl like me wanted to read, but after tackling The Three-Body Problem my brain truly needed a rest. I picked up LA’s book and dove in. And began giggling like a preteen schoolgirl.
Written by Allison Pearson, of I Don’t Know How She Does It fame, I Think I Love You perfectly captures the mindset of a young teenaged girl infatuated with a rock idol, in this case David Cassidy of The Partridge Family. The book’s heroine, Petra, is obsessed with David Cassidy, whom I’d always assumed was an amalgam of John and Barry Cowsill. Ah ha!

I’m not a particularly speedy reader, so I’m savoring the awkwardness and self-consciousness of Petra in something akin to a slow motion retro film. She’s me at 13. She’s pretty much every girl at 13, with the exception of those who somehow seemed to be in on the whole joke from the beginning.
I owe LA a big hug and a thank you for lending me I Think I Love You. It’s been more than a brain break. It’s been a refreshing swim in a pool of Cowsill-stocked memories. One thought goes out to my idol: John Cowsill, we’d have been so very good together.
I look forward to finding out just what becomes of Petra’s obsession with her hero. He’d best not disappoint her!
Peace, people!
not sure I’ll follow you down the teeny-bopper path, but I appreciate the sci-fi titles – not much of the genre gets to bookstores here in English. ebooks changed the lives of all of us out here in the boondies 🙂
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I have to say, the teeny bopper book is outstanding. And you can get it on ebook. Do try Howie and Scalzi. Howey has self-published and his books are quite inexpensive.
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thanks for the advice, I have limited pleasure-reading time these days, so I’ll go for the sci-fi for the moment!
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My wife used to be a huge fan of Shaun Cassidy, David’s half-brother. She’s better now, though.
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Just thought I’d mention it. 🙂
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Lol! She’d get a huge kick out of the I Think I Love You book. I actually cringed in remembrance at the girls’ earnestness. It brought back some great memories.
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It might take her back to her giggling, girly years. She apparently belonged to a fan club that had a magazine. This would be filled with articles full of “secrets” about Shaun, such as, “Shaun likes oranges, but he’s also fond of apples.”
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That’s what the book is based on. These teeny bopper girls memorize all the “facts” about their idol. Come to find out…
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It does sound like fertile ground for satire. 🙂
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It’s more a coming of age novel than anything else. The main character is complex. Not a caricature at all. I think if she had been I couldn’t have read the book. And the author truly was a David Cassidy fan. As an adult she interviewed him for a magazine she was working for and finally got to ask all of her questions.
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It’s lucky my wife wasn’t doing the interview. Every sentence would have started, “And another question about Shaun…”
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Snort!
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