I've been saying this for a long time...
Audiobooks or Reading? To Our Brains, It Doesn't Matter - http://bit.ly/2HsNDJy
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
Thursday, August 22, 2019
NPR's 100 Funniest Books
Well, my TBR list just got a lot longer...
We Did It For The LOLs: 100 Favorite Funny Books https://n.pr/2KUjW4M
We Did It For The LOLs: 100 Favorite Funny Books https://n.pr/2KUjW4M
Monday, August 5, 2019
leap off the page
The Women of the Copper Country by Mary Doria Russell
Rating: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
Genre: historical fiction
Review: What do the women of the copper country do while the men are down in the pits mining? It takes no great imagination to picture them cooking, cleaning, mending, caring for children, and, if in much less dangerous conditions, generally working just as hard as their men.
According to Russell, though, they also organized. At least in Calumet, Michigan they did. When male union organizers got very little traction with the workers of the Calumet-Hecla mining company, where death or serious injury happened weekly, the latest death, with the resultant orphaned children, is the straw that breaks the back of Annie Clements's patience. She organizes the women, and the union and most of the workers follow, if somewhat reluctantly. Annie is a striking figure, though (no pun intended), and the walk-out soon becomes national news, thanks to the efforts of an aspirational photojournalist.
All of Russell's characters leap off the page, as anyone who's familiar with her work already knows. Everyone from Annie to her anti-union husband, to James McNaughton, the manager of the mine, is shown to have at least one or two layers. Incidentally, Russell pulls no punches in her descriptions of McNaughton's callousness toward his workers, a characterization Russell assures us is firmly based in historical reality.
Russell is known for the quality of the research she puts into her books, and this one is no exception. But she also has the gift of communicating the knowledge she has accumulated without being didactic. Having turned her attention to the beginning of the labor movement, she treats her readers to a heart-breaking look at what it cost the people who fought for the rights of all workers.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Rating: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
Genre: historical fiction
Review: What do the women of the copper country do while the men are down in the pits mining? It takes no great imagination to picture them cooking, cleaning, mending, caring for children, and, if in much less dangerous conditions, generally working just as hard as their men.
According to Russell, though, they also organized. At least in Calumet, Michigan they did. When male union organizers got very little traction with the workers of the Calumet-Hecla mining company, where death or serious injury happened weekly, the latest death, with the resultant orphaned children, is the straw that breaks the back of Annie Clements's patience. She organizes the women, and the union and most of the workers follow, if somewhat reluctantly. Annie is a striking figure, though (no pun intended), and the walk-out soon becomes national news, thanks to the efforts of an aspirational photojournalist.
All of Russell's characters leap off the page, as anyone who's familiar with her work already knows. Everyone from Annie to her anti-union husband, to James McNaughton, the manager of the mine, is shown to have at least one or two layers. Incidentally, Russell pulls no punches in her descriptions of McNaughton's callousness toward his workers, a characterization Russell assures us is firmly based in historical reality.
Russell is known for the quality of the research she puts into her books, and this one is no exception. But she also has the gift of communicating the knowledge she has accumulated without being didactic. Having turned her attention to the beginning of the labor movement, she treats her readers to a heart-breaking look at what it cost the people who fought for the rights of all workers.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Labels:
copper mining,
feminism,
historical fiction,
Michigan,
Mother Jones,
unionization
Wednesday, July 24, 2019
perfect
The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead
Rating: 5 stars (out of 5)
Genre: historical fiction/fiction
Review: This is one of those books that just wow you. Based on a true story, Whitehead tells us the story of a Elwood's experience in a Florida reform school in the 1960s. Segregated and violent, Nickel Academy marks every boy who passes through. As an adult, having made his way to New York City, he's created a good life for himself, but when the school is closed and archeologist's start discovering bodies of dead boys where they shouldn't be, he knows that it's time to confront his past.
It would be easy for this book to get weighed down with the brutality of the school and of the Jim Crow south in general, but Elwood's courage and dreams, and Whitehead's writing, lift the story above the mud. The writing is very plain, but descriptive, allowing the actions, thoughts, and feelings of the characters to speak for themselves, making them that much more resonant with the reader.
As I read this book, I kept wishing it was longer, if only because it was so good that the ending was bound to be disappointing. I can only say that I needn't have worried, as the ending was absolutely perfect. Kudos to Mr. Whitehead. This is a book that deserves to be read, and re-read, by everyone.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Rating: 5 stars (out of 5)
Genre: historical fiction/fiction
Review: This is one of those books that just wow you. Based on a true story, Whitehead tells us the story of a Elwood's experience in a Florida reform school in the 1960s. Segregated and violent, Nickel Academy marks every boy who passes through. As an adult, having made his way to New York City, he's created a good life for himself, but when the school is closed and archeologist's start discovering bodies of dead boys where they shouldn't be, he knows that it's time to confront his past.
It would be easy for this book to get weighed down with the brutality of the school and of the Jim Crow south in general, but Elwood's courage and dreams, and Whitehead's writing, lift the story above the mud. The writing is very plain, but descriptive, allowing the actions, thoughts, and feelings of the characters to speak for themselves, making them that much more resonant with the reader.
As I read this book, I kept wishing it was longer, if only because it was so good that the ending was bound to be disappointing. I can only say that I needn't have worried, as the ending was absolutely perfect. Kudos to Mr. Whitehead. This is a book that deserves to be read, and re-read, by everyone.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Labels:
fiction,
Florida,
historical fiction,
New York City,
reform school,
segregation
Saturday, July 20, 2019
like reading abstract art
This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mokhtar and Max Gladstone
Rating: 1 star (out of 5)
Genre: science fiction
Review: Many time travel books are non-linear to some degree. But this book charts a whole new path when it comes to non-linearity. To be fair, the specifics of where are when are somewhat beside the point, but the places and times the characters go to have very few recognizable features, which leaves the reading without a hook on which to make sense of the narrative (if it can be called that). It's kind of like reading abstract art. Like abstract art, a very few things come into focus by the end if you stare at them long enough, but it requires way too much effort. If you like that kind of thing, carry on, but it's really not for me. And yes, I already know I'm a philistine when it comes to art.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Rating: 1 star (out of 5)
Genre: science fiction
Review: Many time travel books are non-linear to some degree. But this book charts a whole new path when it comes to non-linearity. To be fair, the specifics of where are when are somewhat beside the point, but the places and times the characters go to have very few recognizable features, which leaves the reading without a hook on which to make sense of the narrative (if it can be called that). It's kind of like reading abstract art. Like abstract art, a very few things come into focus by the end if you stare at them long enough, but it requires way too much effort. If you like that kind of thing, carry on, but it's really not for me. And yes, I already know I'm a philistine when it comes to art.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Sunday, July 14, 2019
what exactly is the point?
Wilder Girls by Rory Powers
Rating: 3 stars (out of 5)
Genre: science fiction/horror
Review: Raxter. The name of the island, and the small girls' boarding school on it. And now, the Raxter Phenonomen, or the Tox, which is turning the island, and everything on it wild in various ways. Nearly all of the teachers, and many of the students are already dead, and those who remain are holed up on the school grounds, waiting for the Navy and the CDC which are supposedly working on a cure. Or are they? It's clear that everything is not as it seems, and you'll keep reading this book to try to figure out what the real story is. What is the Tox? Where did it come from? And is everyone actually on the same side?
Not all of those questions come with clear answers, although they're all answered enough to be satisfying by the end of the book. But the one big question I was left with was, what was the point of this book? Was it supposed to be something like Lord of the Flies where we see what happens to a society of adolescents when they're left on their own in dangerous circumstances? Or was it supposed to be more about the Tox itself? I just couldn't figure out what I was supposed to be getting out of this book. Like I said, though, you will keep reading right to the end just to see who, if anyone, makes it out alive and whether they have any answers with them if they do.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Rating: 3 stars (out of 5)
Genre: science fiction/horror
Review: Raxter. The name of the island, and the small girls' boarding school on it. And now, the Raxter Phenonomen, or the Tox, which is turning the island, and everything on it wild in various ways. Nearly all of the teachers, and many of the students are already dead, and those who remain are holed up on the school grounds, waiting for the Navy and the CDC which are supposedly working on a cure. Or are they? It's clear that everything is not as it seems, and you'll keep reading this book to try to figure out what the real story is. What is the Tox? Where did it come from? And is everyone actually on the same side?
Not all of those questions come with clear answers, although they're all answered enough to be satisfying by the end of the book. But the one big question I was left with was, what was the point of this book? Was it supposed to be something like Lord of the Flies where we see what happens to a society of adolescents when they're left on their own in dangerous circumstances? Or was it supposed to be more about the Tox itself? I just couldn't figure out what I was supposed to be getting out of this book. Like I said, though, you will keep reading right to the end just to see who, if anyone, makes it out alive and whether they have any answers with them if they do.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Labels:
ARC,
boarding school,
horror,
lgbtq,
plague,
quarantine,
science fiction,
YA
Friday, July 5, 2019
pieces of the puzzle
The Virtue of Sin by Shannon Schuren
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: fiction
Review: Miriam was born and raised in New Jerusalem; her parents were among the first faithful. She accepts her world at face value (strict male/female separation before marriage, weird rules of socializing after marriage, interpretation of dreams, etc.) but when the ordained Matrimony doesn't go like it's supposed to, she starts asking questions. Interestingly, she's willing to accept the unexpected results, except that so many people, from charismatic autocrat Daniel on down, are clearly upset about the outcome. Daniel even seems to think that what happened somehow puts the community in danger. But once Miriam starts looking, she sees oddities everywhere.
"It's like a puzzle that's been jumbled. Like someone tried to jam some pieces in where they don't belong," says Miriam. I couldn't have described it better. At first glance, this is yet another book about a religious cult, featuring a young woman who begins to question the garbage being fed to the faithful. Except there's a lot to figure out in this book. Like, who actually is a true believer, and to what lengths is Daniel willing to go to preserve his power? To what lengths has he already gone? And what in the world is Susanna up to?
There are definitely a lot of layers in this book. In addition, I found Miriam to be a particularly good character, and her inner voice drew me in right away. With elements of Vox, The Handmaid's Tale, and Educated, this book is an believable imagination of what the inside of a cult looks like to insiders. I wouldn't mind if Schuren took the characters a step further and imagined how they adjust after the action in this part of the story ends.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
Rating: 4 stars (out of 5)
Genre: fiction
Review: Miriam was born and raised in New Jerusalem; her parents were among the first faithful. She accepts her world at face value (strict male/female separation before marriage, weird rules of socializing after marriage, interpretation of dreams, etc.) but when the ordained Matrimony doesn't go like it's supposed to, she starts asking questions. Interestingly, she's willing to accept the unexpected results, except that so many people, from charismatic autocrat Daniel on down, are clearly upset about the outcome. Daniel even seems to think that what happened somehow puts the community in danger. But once Miriam starts looking, she sees oddities everywhere.
"It's like a puzzle that's been jumbled. Like someone tried to jam some pieces in where they don't belong," says Miriam. I couldn't have described it better. At first glance, this is yet another book about a religious cult, featuring a young woman who begins to question the garbage being fed to the faithful. Except there's a lot to figure out in this book. Like, who actually is a true believer, and to what lengths is Daniel willing to go to preserve his power? To what lengths has he already gone? And what in the world is Susanna up to?
There are definitely a lot of layers in this book. In addition, I found Miriam to be a particularly good character, and her inner voice drew me in right away. With elements of Vox, The Handmaid's Tale, and Educated, this book is an believable imagination of what the inside of a cult looks like to insiders. I wouldn't mind if Schuren took the characters a step further and imagined how they adjust after the action in this part of the story ends.
FTC Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher in exchange for this review.
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