Monday, May 22, 2023

May Is For Family


We just had a week of summer in May, which is unusual out here in the Northwest United States. Highs in the eighties sometimes happen in July or August, and we complain then! I had just taken my winter blanket off my bed and suddenly I was running the fan all night. My sun lizard son was quite pleased. It's also making me rethink my sorta-plan to grow out my bangs. I really hate that stage when they are in your eyes and I've never gotten past it, but so far I've managed not to grab scissors and chop my way clear. I have no idea what people do with their hair if they don't have bangs though...

Amazingly enough, I'm sorta on track with my running. My friend and I keep each other honest on the weekends, and cheer each other on if we keep up during the week. So I've done another Zombie Run and made progress on RunKeeper's First 10K program. But my knee felt funny so I'm taking a few days just to walk. Somehow we went 4 miles on Saturday, I tried out a new trail with my brother on Sunday, and I signed up for the Art Walk in my tiny downtown and had a lot of fun seeing stuff I've never noticed before -- poems on painted fire hydrants, murals on the back walls of buildings on streets with one way traffic, and an amazing tour of an accountants office. He saw us admiring the mural outside and mentioned he collected art and next thing we knew we were examining the walls of all the conference rooms. Really good stuff!

Several books clubs met, and I had read the books! The Renton Library hosts the amazingly named A River Runs Under It club (because the library is built over a river), and we discussed Cannery Row, which I hadn't read but enjoyed. Some people thought it was funny, but some of us thought the laughter was covering some dark stuff. And the Romance Book Club went online in the pandemic, and now we have people from all around so we'll probably stay online, and we discussed Sabrina Jeffries and also to recognize an author's tone and how to recommend books based on emotional depth. 

And then on Tuesday with the gaming group we made fun of the detecting in the Nancy Drew and decided to jump forward to a book with the author's name on the cover. I picked up John Grisham's Kid Lawyer at the library on my library run. I love going to the library! I'm trying to restrain myself, because they have gone back to only allowing 2 renewals (even I have to admit the 5 months we got during the pandemic was a bit generous). So I'm trying to read down my library pile to fit on a single shelf. But of course I also have to keep up with my book clubs, and my Cybils love, and my Library Quests (I am slowly going from shelf to shelf picking a book from each shelf). I'm sure it'll be okay. My started and completed lists this week are exactly equal, but most of the started books were fairly short and many of the completed lists were longer, so I'm really truly making progress. Really. For sure.

Food wise we've all been pretty good at cooking at home. My sister makes gourmet stuff for family dinner, and it's always fun to see my brother at those. I've been slacking on the bread making and the family has noticed and been a bit sad, which was really surprising and I hope inspiring. I'm managed to keep several weeks ahead in picking out the family menus, which is a more relaxing way to do things and also helps me mix old and new recipes in ways that don't make the cook panic (I meal plan, my son cooks).

My list of currently reading did not grow. Someday I will get back to two pages on goodreads.  I'm off to check out the other books at The Bookdate's It's Monday, What Are You Reading headquarters. And since I read a lot of kidlit, I'll also sign up at the Children's Book central version, held at either Teach Mentor Texts or Unleashed Readers. And then I will dive around to see what everyone else has been reading.


Started

The Calculating Stars (Lady Astronaut Universe #1)The Bronze Skies (Major Bhaajan, #2)The Haunted Bridge (Nancy Drew Mystery Stories, #15)
Ascendance of a Bookworm (Manga) Part 2 Volume 3Spare ManFlash of Fire (Firehawks #4)
Wingbearer (Wingbearer, #1)How Rory Thorne Destroyed the Multiverse (The Thorne Chronicles, #1)Little Monarchs


The Calculating Stars, Mary Robinette Kowal. Foolscap is reading this for our Alternate Timelines month. It's a reread for me. 

The Bronze Skies, Catherine Asaro. I had so much fun rereading book 1 that I'm continuing on. 

The Haunted Bridge, Carolyn Keene. My Tuesday book club wants to read some children's mysteries. I assured everyone that Nancy Drew is awesome and found one that all our libraries own.

Ascendance of A Bookworm Manga, Vol 2 Part 3. Ah, the joy of watching Myne expand her infant paper-making factory by enlisting a bunch of orphans. The kids work for Myne and she uses her profits to feed them. Win-win!

Spare Man, Mary Robinette Kowal. Huh, I'm reading two Kowals at the same time! This one is a retelling, and I still have vague memories of the original (Dasheil Hammett's The Thin Man). Between my poor memory and Kowal's reimagining, I have no idea whodunnit.

Flash of Fire, M.L. Buchman. I have no idea why I got this book. Wait -- it's a romance by a man! For April's Romance Readers book club. Huh. Should have read it then.

Wingbearer, Marjorie M. Liu. 2022 Cybils Graphic Novel finalist. 

How Rory Thorn Destroyed the Multiverse, K. Eason. Library Quest book. I am up to Fiction E on my quest to read a book from each shelf of the Renton Library.

Little Monarchs, Jonathan Case. 2022 Cybils Graphic Novel finalist. 


Completed

Undercity (Major Bhaajan, #1)SquireMilk in My Coffee


Undercity, Catherine Asaro. For my Friday book club, and it was a good choice. It's a fairly easy read, with an interesting protagonist who wanders through interesting places in an interesting society. There's the fun of the baseline matriarchy which is trying out equality and the men are getting close. There the hot old flame who is very interested in reigniting their adolescent relationship, there's the sciency psy powers, and there's the problems of the lost prince Bhaaj rescues as she also saves her culture and probably the empire while negotiating with both the denizens of the undercity and the rich elite. So stuff to talk about but not to stress over.

Squire, Sara Alfageeh. 2022 Cybils Graphic Novel finalist. I enjoyed this, but I'm not the target audience. I saw a lot of the beats coming and I felt the shadow of a moral lesson over the whole narrative. And a lot of the stories seemed incomplete; we got the emotional start of an arc, and then the complications, but the resolutions didn't really land. 

Milk in My Coffee, Eric Jerome Dickey. This was a rich and interesting romance book -- I'm glad I followed up on the recommendation from last month's Romance Book Club. I'm especially pleased that I didn't guess one of the secrets the woman was keeping, and it was an interesting view on how colorism affects people and relationships and how this Black community defined and patrolled itself. The gender assumptions also challenged me deeply. I ended the book hoping this couple works out (it's a happy-for-now ending). 


The Forge of God (Forge of God, #1)The Haunted Bridge (Nancy Drew Mystery Stories, #15)Little Olympians 3: Hermes, the Fastest God


Forge of God, Greg Bear. The Foolscap book club read this during one of the months I missed because of my mom. Which is too bad because it was really interesting and must have made for an interesting discussion. I would want to talk about whether the book is a set-up for something her really wanted to write, or about how grounded in its time it is and what challenges that presents to a modern reader, or about what we know about the different types of aliens and what their motives are, and how we would face the decisions that the characters did. I hope they had a good time with it! Greg Bear must have been an awesome Foolscap guest of honor.

The Haunted Bridge, Carolyn Keene. Good golly, the mystery in this was AWFUL. Well, the detecting was awful. The mystery of the haunted bridge was fine and Nancy solved it handily. The mystery of the internal jewel thieves that her dad wanted help with was an exercise in incompetence (Nancy identified her main suspect on the basis that she did not match the description) and the mystery of the jerk on the golf course was handled hilariously badly by George and Bess, but that was one of the best scenes. The golf tournament was probably the biggest source of tension in the book, but sadly I am not a golf fan and was not enthralled. Occasionally confused was the highest emotional reaction I achieved. I had to apologize to the guys in my book club.

Little Olympians 3: Hermes the Fastest God, A.I. Newton. At this point I'm questioning the choices of the camp directors. This field trip among mortals seems unwise, especially since the chaperone is only on the brink of puberty. And why favor Athens over Sparta? Huh? But Hermes gets a fun adventure and I like seeing him zip around and solve various problems, so it's a fun addition to the series.


Wingbearer (Wingbearer, #1)Busman's Honeymoon (Lord Peter Wimsey, #11)An Easy Death [Dramatized Adaptation]



Wingbearer, Marjorie M. Liu. 2022 Cybils Graphic Novel finalist. Beautiful book with great colors and illustrations; I really liked the protagonist and her willingness to face adventure to save the birds (and hopefully found her identify). The scenes with the dragon were cool and I enjoyed the hints of complex relationships between the various cultures. I wish they had visibly flagged it as the first of a series; as it was the emotional arcs just stopped with a thump.

Busman's Honeymoon, Dorothy L Sayers. This was enough fun to reread that it deserves its space on my shelves. I love the scene where they finally figure everything out while the repo people are trying to haul away all the furniture.

An Easy Death, Charlaine Harris. This was a "dramatized production" and I think also abridged a bit, and it was a very fun read. It is a perfect example of a good book to do chores with, because sometimes I'd be procrastinating on the chore but then realize that I wanted to hear the story and I'd get to work. I liked the woman they got for Lizbeth but I'm not as sure about the guy who spoke Eli's role. But I think I have the next one so I'll give him another chance.

Picture Books


Let's Talk About AnimalsWeather words and what they mean



Two books from my Reading My Library Quest, Renton Highlands division. 

Let's Talk About Animals, Harriet Blackford. This was colorful and informative and I can see enjoying it with a young kid, maybe between 3 and 8. 

Weather Words and What They Mean, Gail Gibbons. This was a bit scattered. It would probably work better as a review than an introduction. I didn't like that I got a lot of names for clouds but couldn't really identify them.


Bookmarks Moved (Or Languished) In:

Ascendance of a Bookworm: Part 3 Volume 1Ascendance of a Bookworm: Part 5 Volume 3Cobra (Cobra, #1)Children of the Stone City
Warcross (Warcross, #1)The Engagement: America's Quarter Century Struggle Over Same-Sex MarriageRoyal EscapeThe Flood Circle (Twenty Palaces #5)
Your Perfect YearRocking the BabiesThe Priory of the Orange Tree (The Roots of Chaos, #1)The Wine-Dark Sea (Aubrey & Maturin, #16)
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4d/Antigua_sailing_ship.jpg/320px-Antigua_sailing_ship.jpg



Ascendance of a Bookworm, Miya Kazuki. I'm endlessly rereading this while waiting for the next version. The bookworm's universe is my happy place. Currently I'm on Part III. But it's on pause as I slowly savor the new release over in part V. 

Ascendance of a Bookworm, Part 5 Vol 3, Miya Kazuki. Only a few more side stories, and then I'll go back to Part III until volume 4 comes out...

Cobra, Timothy Zahn. Wait -- is it almost over? No, apparently there's another section.

Children of the Stone City, Beverley Naidoo. I have a retrieved a new box of CDs with the correct third disc. As a very thinly veiled story of Arabic kids in Israel, it's very disturbing in terms of how they are treated by the authorities and how limited the information is that they are given about about the history around them, both of which seem dangerously tragic. 

Warcross, Marie Lu. I'm sorta glad that how I experience games like World of Warcraft nowadays is completely unlike how games work in this book.

The Engagement, Sasha Issenberg. For Torches and Pitchforks. Sure are a lot of words in this book. Lots of pages too.

Royal Escape, Georgette Heyer. So far this is in between -- it's more interesting to read than the mysteries, but not the page-turner of the romances. So far no chances for the ugliness Heyer is capable of.

Flood Circle, Harry Connolly. Too many library books this week. 

Your Perfect Year, Charlotte Lucas. See library book issue. 

Rocking the Babies, Linda Raymond. Wow, the ending is getting tough.

Priory of the Orange Tree, Samantha Shannon. I think we can expect to see this here for a while.

The Wine-Dark Sea, Patrick O'Brian. Not gonna finish this week.

Ship Without Sails, Sherwood Smith. Smith's magic system is complex and yet comprehensible. I love how her characters accept and approach it.



Palate Cleansers

These books I'm barely reading; lately I use them as bribes to get me to deal with the mail. I've been ignoring my mail.


StingerDragon's Breath (The Tales of the Frog Princess, #2)The Road To MarsThe Dark Fantastic: Race and the Imagination from Harry Potter to the Hunger Games (Postmillennial Pop, 13)YEAR OF WONDER: Classical Music for Every Day

 
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane (no picture). 

Stinger, Nancy Kress. The mix of FBI dogged investigation with scientific methods is cool.

Dragon's Breath, E.D. Baker.

The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler.  (no picture) 

The Road to Mars, Eric Idle. .

The Dark Fantastic, Ebony Elizabeth Thomas. I started this about a year ago while traveling, but then forgot it in a suitcase. I think I'll enjoy nibbling at the ideas, so I'll put this on the slow-read section.

Year of Wonder, Clemency Burton-Hill. I like my routine of waking up listening to the days classical selection while sorting some mail. It both defines the start of the day in a pleasant way and helps me keep on top of the mail (I have problems with this sometimes)


Reading Challenges
  1. Cybils 2022: Started.  Working on Graphic Novels.
  2. Early Cybils:  Not done.
  3. Reading My Library. Working on audio and Easy Nonfiction from backup library. Started Rory Thorne from main.
  4. Where Am I Reading 2022. Never finished updating this. Not sure I'll do it in 2023.
  5. Libraries: Started the 10 to Try for 2023. 

Future Plans

I'm putting this at the end because I suspect it's complete fiction, but I feel I should attempt some structure.

I am reading: 
  • Book I own: Royal Escape
  • Library Book: Flash of Fire
  • Ebook I own: Year of Wonder
  • Library Ebook: Bronze Skies
  • Book Club Book: Calculating Stars, Mary Robinette Kowal
  • Tuesday Book Club Book: Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer
  • Review Book: Back Home 
  • Rereading: 
  • Audio: A Longer Fall

4 comments:

Jo said...

Like how organized you are as well as honest!!

https://justmeandmyblogreviews.blogspot.com/2023/05/its-monday-what-are-you-reading.html

Max @ Completely Full Bookshelf said...

It sounds like you've had fun in all the book clubs you've been participating in—although that's no fun that the one Nancy Drew book you tracked down ended up being egregiously frustrating! And your art walk sounds amazing as well—I feel like it can be so powerful to observe your surroundings and notice things you've never seen before. As for books, I appreciate your thoughts on Squire—I read an MG anthology called Once Upon an Eid that had *beautiful* illustrations by Sara Alfageeh, but it's good to know that the writing might be a weaker point in this graphic novel. I appreciate all your thoughtful reviews, Beth, as always!

Linda B said...

Wow, you are busy, with life & with all the reading. I do work at an all-volunteer-run bookstore & we just received a donation of about 15 each of the Nancy Drew & Hardy Boys books. I did read some a long time ago but think it was an intro to kids' mysteries, not great but okay. I have read the Dorothy Sayers books, quite amazing. And I bookmarked a few of the books you shared! Thanks!

Earl said...

I enjoyed Grisham's Theodore Boone books and I wish he would wrap up that series.