I had a good, normal week. Went to the dentist, did some walks, got stuff done around the house, visited some new libraries, had some good book clubs. I’m enjoying my Murderbot rereads, and the chance to talk to people about books in general.
I think I am now reading 60 books, according to goodreads. It’s staying stead at only 3 screens of currently reading!
Books Completed April 25 - May 1st
All Systems Red, Martha Wells. Tuesday Gaming group, prepping for the TV show. We all enjoyed this reread, although some people remarked that the first read through was better. We then checked out the trailers for the show and tried to guess on choices made, which somehow moved onto why I am not invited into any top-secret SIGNAL chats, and then to a map of 50 US states set so population is equal among them.
Into the Broken Lands, Tanya Huff. I liked the page by page insights and world descriptions better than the overall arc which felt a bit lopsided. The end especially was anticlimactic. I really like Huff’s series best, because she’s really good at long spearpoint stuff, and if this were the start of a trilogy or something I’d like it better. Maybe I’ll get lucky. It’s not the her stand-alone are bad, it’s that her worlds and characters are rich enough that I want more.
The Road to Mars, Eric Idle. Not really my cup of tea. A lot of the humor comes from the idea that men and women are fundamentally different, and men are often jerks to women because that’s how men are, ha ha ha, and isn’t it bitchy of women to complain about it, boo. And how men aren’t really parents, and jerky women mode is often incompetent showboating, and many other tropes that are fine for a sketch but not really for a novel. It meant that I found most of the characters unlikable and didn’t care what happened to them, which is not a good thing in a book.
The Future of Silence: Fiction by Korean Women, Jong-hee Oh (editor). I chose this from the library shelf as part of my quest to read a book from each shelf of the Renton Library. I thought it would be an interesting change of pace, and it was that. It felt very science fictional, because there were some magic realism bits and even the realistic bits had people very alien to me, house wives who saw their role as very different to anything I’ve experienced. I think I gained some appreciation of the boundaries of Korean women’s lives but few of the stories worked for me as stories. On to the next shelf!
Lamplighters, D. M. Cornish. Cybils finalist from 2007. I loved the rich and demanding prose, full of great vocabulary both real and invented for the world, and appreciated the complicated situations and relationships our protagonist Rosamund faced. But I was handicapped by coming in at book two and also found him frustratingly passive, where things tended to happen to him and he’d react but he rarely had much scope to initiate things.
A Fate Inked in Blood, Danielle L. Jensen. I didn’t like the voice of the first person narrator. I think a third person perspective would have worked better for me. Part of it is that so many books nowadays feature characters who feel garrulously guilty for things they have no control over, which conveniently leaves them no time to take responsibility for the things they actually do. So this book was a backbreaking straw for me. I did like the magic idea and the society.
I Survived the Children’s Blizzard, 1888, Lauren Tarshis. Talbot Hill book club. Very fun! A bit of history I was vague on, but stuff that Laura Ingalls dealt with so it was sorta familiar. And I liked the back matter with the research information, context for the events, and further reading.
Just Saying, Rae Armantrout. Torches and Pitchforks is doing “Apocalypse Poetry” and when I searched the library catalog it suggested this book. What I got is delightful - small twists of words that glitter in the sun, casting beams of color in all directions. Armantrout has a deft way of sliding words from one meaning to a different one, and giving the first image a richer understanding through the transition.
Books Started
Eat a Peach, David Chang. Saw it at the library and grabbed it. Turns out it was in my TBR list!
Service Model, Adrian Tchaikovsky. Hugo finalist.
Mallory and the Trouble With Twins, Ann Martin. Gotta get them all! Just kidding. I haven’t seen any numbers higher than 30 at the libraries.
Eva Evergreen and the Cursed Witch, Julie Abe. Next shelf in Renton Highlands library for my quest.
Tales From Watership Down, Richard Adam’s. Warm up to reread Watership Down with Foolscap book club.
I Survived the Children’s Blizzard, 1888, Lauren Tarshis. Talbot Hill book club.
Artificial Condition, Martha Wells. Reread in anticipation of the TV show.
Bookmarks Moved
Alibi, Sharon Shinn
Autistic Community and the Neurodiversity Movement, Steven K. Kapp (editor)
Rissa Kerguelen, F.M Busby. Foolscap book club.
Tomb of Dragons, Katherine Addison.
Tam Lin, Pamela Dean
Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, David Okrent
Serpent Rider, Yxavel Magno Diño.
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell
I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
Threads That Bind, Kika Hatzopoulou. Cybils
Tinker, Wen Spencer. Audio
Bookmarks Languished
I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence.
Poppy and Marigold, Meg Welch Dendler.
Wow, No Thank You, Samantha Irby.
Samantha Smee: A Pirate’s Life, M.C. Dingman.
Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann.
Long Live Evil, Sarah Rees Brennan.
True Colors, Abby Cooper.
South Riding, Winifred Holtby.
Saving Verakko, Victoria Avelina.
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
Books Acquired
From the library:
I forget,
For my shelves:
Enid Blyton compilation. Now I should see if I can send out the paperback versions.
Picture Books and Short Stories
I Love My Bike, Simon Mole. Fun an energetic book about a little girl's first bike and how she learns to ride it with her dad. It’s as delightful as the podcast Even the Trunchbull promised.
Books on Slow Mode
Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. More kitchen stuff. I need to clean my fridge.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Kip having an adventure. In a bureaucratic kind of way.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane (no picture). Mail bribe.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. (no picture). Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe. Uh oh. I think I forgot all these characters from the start of the book.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe.
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. Making reading analysis fun.
Year of Wonder, Clemency Burton-Hill. Mail bribe. Made it to November.
Future Plans
This is for the actual future, so a week beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading:
- Book I own: Rissa Kerguelen
- Library Book: Saving Verakko
- Ebook I own: Alibi
- Foolscap Book Club Book: Watership Downs
- Sword and Laser Club Book: Micky7
- Scintillation Book Club: Tam Lin
- Cloudy Book Club: A Dark and Drowning Tide
- Torches and Pitchfork Book Club: Death From the Sky’s!
- River Runs Under It Book Club: Demon Copperhead
- Talbot Hill Book: Wimpy Kid and I Survived
- Friday Book Club: Lavender Blue
- Romance Book Club: A spy romance! Beauty Like the Night