1susanna.fraser
I'm Susanna (aka Susan--Susanna is my authorial pen name, but I go by both). I'm a writer with a day job in university research administration. I live in Seattle with my husband and 17-year-old son, and I turn 51 on January 1. (I seriously considered some kind of Area 51 theme for the thread but couldn't stretch it to cover all my challenges.)
I read pretty widely, though my fiction choices skew heavily to science fiction, fantasy, and romance (not coincidentally, the same genres I like to write). In nonfiction, I read a lot of history and science with occasional forays into theology and current events. Besides reading from the CATs and KITs, along with TIOLI over on the 75 Books group, my focuses this year will be reading more books by BIPOC and LGBTQIA authors and trying to reduce my TBR pile as of 12/31/21 by half. (TBR pile=books owned but unread in either paper or electronic form.)
Since last year's theme was lifelong exploration, I decided that this year I'll go with a loose theme of lifelong learning. Drop a star if you'd like to see what's on my syllabus.
I read pretty widely, though my fiction choices skew heavily to science fiction, fantasy, and romance (not coincidentally, the same genres I like to write). In nonfiction, I read a lot of history and science with occasional forays into theology and current events. Besides reading from the CATs and KITs, along with TIOLI over on the 75 Books group, my focuses this year will be reading more books by BIPOC and LGBTQIA authors and trying to reduce my TBR pile as of 12/31/21 by half. (TBR pile=books owned but unread in either paper or electronic form.)
Since last year's theme was lifelong exploration, I decided that this year I'll go with a loose theme of lifelong learning. Drop a star if you'd like to see what's on my syllabus.
2susanna.fraser


Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion 101: BIPOC and LGBTQIA Authors
January:
1. Radio Silence by Alyssa Cole
2. The Sentence by Louise Erdrich
3. Honey Girl by Morgan Rogers
4. The Unbroken by C.L. Clark
5. Firekeeper's Daughter by Angeline Boulley
February:
1. Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone by Diana Gabaldon
2. You Sexy Thing by Cat Rambo
3. (Trust) Falling For You by Charish Reid
March:
1. Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2021 (includes several BIPOC and LGBTQIA Authors)
2. Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho
3. Go Back to Where You Came From by Wajahat Ali
4. Not For Use in Navigation by Iona Datt Sharma
April:
1. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Roseanne A. Brown
2. Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts by Rebecca Hall
3. A Bride's Story Vol. 13 by Kaoru Mori
4. The Magnolia Sword by Sherry Thomas
May:
1. The Sound of Stars by Alechia Dow
2. One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston
3. Winter's Orbit by Everina Maxwell
June:
1. Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse
2. Sunny Song Will Never Be Famous by Suzanne Park
3. Born Both by Hida Viloria
4. Her Favorite Rebound by Jackie Lau
5. Chef's Kiss by TJ Alexander
July:
1. The Beauty in Breaking by Michele Harper
2. Fruits Basket Vol. 1 by Natsuki Takaya
3. A Lady for a Duke by Alexis Hall
4. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers
5. The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
6. Yotsuba&! Vol. 1 by Kiyohiko Azuma
August:
1. The Kissing Bug by Daisy Hernandez
2. Never Have I Ever by Isabel Yap
3. I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston
4. Her Unexpected Roommate by Jackie Lau
6. Legendborn by Tracy Deonn
September:
1. An Unkindness of Ghosts by Rivers Solomon
2. Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor
3. Banned Book Club by Kim Hyun Sook
4. The Birchbark House by Louise Erdrich
October:
1. The Game of Silence by Louise Erdrich
2. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2 by Kiyohiko Azuma
3. The Legend of Auntie Po by Shing Yin Khor
4. Bad Witch Burning by Jessica Lewis
5. The Last Days of the Dinosaurs by Riley Black
November:
1. Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York by Elon Green
2. The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna
3. Pregnant Girl by Nicole Lynn Lewis
4. The Family Outing by Jessi Hempel
December:
1. A Stranger in Olondria by Sofia Samatar
2. Marie Kondo's Kurashi at Home by Marie Kondo
3. Becoming Kin by Patty Krawec
4. The Stand-Up Groomsman by Jackie Lau
5. The Outlaw Ocean by Ian Urbina
3susanna.fraser
Library Time: Making Good Use of What's Already on Hand (i.e. reducing the TBR)
(The building is the Furness Library at my alma mater, U Penn, where I always went to study for midterms and finals because you had to take yourself and your work seriously in a room like that.)
Incidentally, for this challenge books completed before 1/1/22 count, as do books I don't finish. The goal is to reduce the TBR pile, and inevitably that will sometimes mean realizing that some of these books just aren't for me and moving them to my donation pile or removing them from my Kindle TBR collection.
Without further ado, here's the list (which will be updated with anything I acquire through 12/31), since I need to know what I'm dealing with to know when I've cut it in half! Feel free to chime in with recommendations for what I should read first.
On my Kindle
Alaric the Goth - DNF 4-21-22
Alternate Peace
The Atlas Six
Bad Witch Burning - completed 10-6-22
Brat Farrar - completed 5-6-22
Briarley - completed 11-11-21
Brown Girl in the Ring
The City of Brass
Clarkesworld January 2021 - completed 11-20-21
Clarkesworld February 2021 - completed 6-20-22
Clarkesworld March 2021
Clarkesworld May 2021 - DNF 4-23-22
Clarkesworld June 2021
Clarkesworld July 2021
Clarkesworld August 2021
Clarkesworld September 2021
Clarkesworld: October 2021
Clarkesworld: November 2021 - completed 5-8-22
Clarkesworld: December 2021
The Collapsing Empire
Consolation Songs - completed 11-10-21
Dark Rise
If Darkness Takes Us
Deal with the Devil
The Duke I Tempted - DNF 9-3-22
The Element of Fire
Exercised - completed 2-21-22
Fantasy & Science Fiction March 2021
Fantasy & Science Fiction May 2021
Fantasy & Science Fiction July 2021 - completed 3-8-22
Fantasy & Science Fiction September 2021
Fantasy & Science Fiction November 2021 - DNF 10-11-22
Firekeeper's Daughter - completed 1-27-22
Flash! Writing the Very Short Story
Forget the Sleepless Shores
Galactic Stew - completed 12-12-21
The Gaucho's Lady
The Goblin Emperor - completed 6-7-22
Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone - completed 2-1-22
The Heroine's Journey - completed 6-25-22
How the Dukes Stole Christmas - completed 12-21-21
How to Write Short Stories and Use Them to Further Your Writing Career - completed 9-9-22
Iron & Velvet - DNF 11-27-21
I Should Be Writing - completed 12-24-21
Jade Fire Gold - DNF 4-6-22
Leaving Church completed 5-19-22
Legendborn - completed 8-20-22
Letters of a Woman Homesteader - completed 3-4-22
The Library of the Dead - DNF 5-6-22
Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream
The Magnolia Sword - completed 4-24-22
Making Up - completed 4-22-22
A Marvellous Light - completed 3-19-22
More Time For You
No Gods, No Monsters - DNF 1-15-22
Not for Use in Navigation - completed 3-26-22
Now Write! Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror
One Last Stop - completed 5-5-22
The Optimist's Telescope - DNF 10-9-22
The Oracle Glass - completed 3-6-22
Radio Silence - completed 1-1-22
Season for Scandal - completed 9-4-22
Sex Sleep Eat Drink Dream - DNF 6-20-22
Shaking the Gates of Hell - completed 1-1-22
Sisters in Law
Sorcerer to the Crown - completed 3-13-22
Stormsong
Storyteller - DNF 6-18-22
Summer Sons
Teach Me - completed 2-18-22
This Year You Write Your Novel - DNF 6-18-22
Trust Falling For You - completed 2-12-22
The Twisted Ones
The Unbroken - completed 1-16-21
Victories Greater Than Death - completed 12-26-21
Wholehearted Faith - completed 11-24-21
Winter's Orbit - completed 4-14-22
On my shelves
Akata Witch - completed 9-6-22
Analog Science Fiction and Fact March 2015
Analog Science Fiction and Fact April 2015
Analog Science Fiction and Fact May 2015
Analog Science Fiction and Fact March 2016
Asimov's Science Fiction June 2015 - DNF 3/20/22
Asimov's Science Fiction July 2015
Asimov's Science Fiction September 2015
Behind Closed Doors
The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume 1 - completed 1/25/22
Careless Whispers
Charlemagne's Tablecloth - completed 5/28/22
Citizens
City of Laughter
A Curious Beginning - DNF 12/24/21
Edge of Empire
Empire of Liberty
Family Fortunes
The First Salute
The Glorious Cause
Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell
Learned Optimism - DNF 3/31/22
Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed
The Man Born to Be King
The March of Folly
The Mind of the Maker
Napoleon's Wars - DNF 3/9/22
The New Jim Crow - completed 7/28/22
The Origins of Sex
Overcoming Writer's Block
A People's History of the United States - DNF 5/8/22
The Prince of Pleasure
The Pursuit of Glory
Redcoats and Rebels
Rebecca's War
The Same River Twice - completed 1-6-22
The Secret Country - DNF 3-18-22
Solutions and Other Problems
Spill Zone
Team of Rivals
A Vindication of the Rights of Women
Vows Made in Wine
The War of Wars
When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through - completed 11-13-21
Writing Her In - DNF 10-6-22
TBR Total: 122
Goal to clear: 61
Completed: 42
DNF: 19
Total cleared: 61
4susanna.fraser
Summer School: The Seattle Public Library's Annual Adult Book Bingo
1. Leaving Church (category: blue cover)
2. Nettle & Bone (category: recommended by local bookseller)
3. Mighty Thor Vol. 1: Thunder in her Veins (category: book to screen)
4. Charlemagne's Tablecloth (category: been meaning to read)
5. The Horse and His Boy (re-read a childhood favorite)
6. Julius Caesar (set somewhere I'd like to visit)
7. The Lady With the Gun Asks the Questions (set south of the equator)
8. Fevered Star (SFF by a BIPOC author)
9. The Goblin Emperor (recommended by a friend)
10. Born Both (Nonbinary/genderqueer author or character)
11. Imprinted (book about books)
12. One of Us Is Lying (unreliable narrator)
13. Chef's Kiss (LGBTQ+ love story)
14. The Beauty in Breaking (health or healthcare workers)
15. Fruits Basket Vol. 1 (outside your comfort zone)
16. How To Be Perfect (SAL speaker)
17. Act Like It (first book by an author)
18. This Will Not Pass (read outside)
19. The New Jim Crow (banned or challenged)
20. The Kissing Bug (Latinx author)
21. Battle Royal (most recent book by same author as the first book by an author challenge)
22. Making Numbers Count (Peak Picks)
23. How to Know the Birds: The Art and Adventure of Birding
24. Legendborn (debut author)
5susanna.fraser

Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics (Science Fiction)
1. Radio Silence
2. The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume 1
3. You Sexy Thing
4. Catfishing on CatNet
5. Chaos on CatNet
6. Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2021
7. Not For Use in Navigation
8. The Kaiju Preservation Society
9. The Sound of Stars
10. Clarkesworld: Issue 182
11. Winter's Orbit
12. Mighty Thor Vol. 1: Thunder in her Veins
13. We Are Legion (We Are Bob)
14. Clarkesworld: Issue 173
15. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy
16. An Unkindness of Ghosts
17. Terminal Peace
18. Robots vs Fairies
19. Saga, Vol. 1
20. Saga, Vol. 2
21. The Collapsing Empire
22. Saga, Vol. 3
23. The Consuming Fire
24. Saga, Vol. 4
25. The Spare Man
26. Saga, Vol. 5
27. Saga, Vol. 6
28. The Last Emperox
6susanna.fraser

Advanced Readings in Folklore and the Fantastic (Fantasy)
1. The Unbroken
2. Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone
3. The Oracle Glass
4. Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2021
5. Sorcerer to the Crown
6. A Marvellous Light
7. Not For Use in Navigation
8. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin
9. Amongst Our Weapons
10. Spelunking Through Hell
11. The Magnolia Sword
12. The Privilege of the Sword
13. Legends & Lattes
14. Nettle & Bone
15. The Horse and His Boy
16. Fevered Star
17. The Goblin Emperor
18. Imprinted
19. Sweep With Me
20. Fruits Basket Vol. 1
21. The Untold Story
22. Never Have I Ever
23. Legendborn
24. Akata Witch
25. The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels
26. Bad Witch Burning
27. Robots vs Fairies
28. Rivers of London Vol. 10
29. A Stranger in Olondria
30. Illuminations
31. The Golden Enclaves
7susanna.fraser

The Homecoming Dance (Romance)
1. Radio Silence
2. Honey Girl
3. Much Ado About Nothing
4. (Trust) Falling For You
5. Teach Me
6. All the Feels
7. Nothing Happened
8. A Marvellous Light
9. Making Up
10. One Last Stop
11. Winter's Orbit
12. Her Favorite Rebound
13. Chef's Kiss
14. A Lady for a Duke
15. Act Like It
16. Battle Royal
17. Beach Read
18. Her Unexpected Roommate
19. Season for Scandal
20. The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels
21. The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches
22. The Stand-Up Groomsman
8susanna.fraser

Primary and Secondary Education (Children's and YA)
That's my high school alma mater, though it's been remodeled and expanded since my day.
1. Major Impossible
2. Firekeeper's Daughter
3. Catfishing on CatNet
4. Chaos on CatNet
5. The Pros of Cons
6. Nothing Happened
7. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin
8. The Magnolia Sword
9. The Sound of Stars
10. Further Adventures of Lad
11. The Horse and His Boy
12. Sunny Song Will Never Be Famous
13. One of Us Is Lying
14. Fruits Basket Vol. 1
15. Yotsuba&! Vol. 1
16. I Kissed Shara Wheeler
17. Legendborn
18. Akata Witch
19. The Birchbark House
20. The Game of Silence
21. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2
22. The Legend of Auntie Po
23. Bad Witch Burning
24. Illuminations
9susanna.fraser

The History Department (Nonfiction History)
1. Shaking the Gates of Hell
2. The Secret History of Home Economics
3. The Year of Lear
4. Robert E. Lee and Me
5. The Bright Ages
6. When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teenagers
7. Letters of a Woman Homesteader
8. Powers and Thrones
9. The Nineties
10. People Love Dead Jews
11. A Million Years in a Day
12. Plagues Upon the Earth
13. Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts
14. The Good Rain
15. The Guns of August
16. Charlemagne's Tablecloth
17. The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler's Ghettos
18. Banned Book Club
19. Ten Restaurants That Changed America
20. Elegy for Mary Turner: An Illustrated Account of a Lynching
21. Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York
22. A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome
23. Shadowlands: A Journey Through Lost Britain
24. Becoming Kin
10susanna.fraser

Department of Biology (Sciences, mostly biological)
(OK, that's not a very scientific crow image, but it's one of my favorites.)
1. The Lion in the Living Room
2. Fuzz
3. Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved to Do Is Healthy and Rewarding
4. Plagues Upon the Earth
5. Unseen City
6. Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas
7. Northwest Know-How: Trees
8. The Kissing Bug
9. Making Numbers Count
10. The Rise and Reign of the Mammals
11. How to Know the Birds: The Art and Adventure of Birding
12. The Last Days of the Dinosaurs
11susanna.fraser

Divinity School (Theology and Religion)
1. Shaking the Gates of Hell
2. Vestry Resource Guide
3. The Vestry Handbook
4. Cultish
5. People Love Dead Jews
6. Leaving Church
7. The Power Worshippers
8. Beyond Belief
9. On Repentance and Repair
10. Becoming Kin
11. Maybe It Happened This Way
12susanna.fraser

Electives (Everything Else!)
1. King Lear
2. Little Fadette
3. Landslide
4. A Bride's Story Vol. 13
5. Richard II
6. Brat Farrar
7. The Power of Regret
8. Julius Caesar
9. The Lady With the Gun Asks the Questions
10. Born Both
11. The Heroine's Journey
12. Measure for Measure
13. The Beauty in Breaking
14. Battling the Big Lie
15. How to Be Perfect
16. This Will Not Pass
17. Love's Labour's Lost
18. Sharpe's Assassin
19. Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems
20. How to Write Short Stories And Use Them to Further Your Writing Career
21. The Sonnets
22. Why We Did It
23. Dracula
24. Fools and Mortals
25. Pregnant Girl
26. Small Game
27. The Family Outing
28. Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands
29. Marie Kondo's Kurashi at Home
30. The Bitter End: The 2020 Presidential Campaign and the Challenge to American Democracy
31. How to Keep House While Drowning
32. The Outlaw Ocean
13susanna.fraser
CATs
January:
1. King Lear (ShakespeareCAT)
2. The Same River Twice: A Memoir of Dirtbag Backpackers, Bomb Shelters, and Bad Travel (CATWoman)
3. The Sentence (AuthorCAT)
4. The Year of Lear (ShakespeareCAT)
5. Firekeeper's Daughter (Author CAT)
February:
1. Much Ado About Nothing (ShakespeareCAT)
2. Little Fadette (AuthorCAT, CATWoman)
3. (Trust) Falling For You (ShakespeareCAT)
4. Teach Me (ShakespeareCAT)
6. All the Feels (ShakespeareCAT)
March:
1. Nothing Happened (ShakespeareCAT)
2. Letters of a Woman Homesteader (CATWoman)
3. The Oracle Glass (AuthorCAT)
April:
1. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin (ShakespeareCAT, CATWoman, AuthorCAT)
2. Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts (CATWoman, AuthorCAT)
3. The Good Rain (AuthorCAT)
4. A Bride's Story Vol. 13 (CATWoman)
5. The Magnolia Sword (CATWoman)
May:
1. The Guns of August (CATWoman)
2. Unseen City (AuthorCAT)
3. Richard II (ShakespeareCAT)
4. Brat Farrar (CATWoman)
June:
1. Julius Caesar (ShakespeareCAT)
2. The Lady With the Gun Asks the Questions (CATWoman)
3. Born Both (AuthorCAT)
4. Her Favorite Rebound (CATWoman)
July:
1. Measure for Measure (ShakespeareCAT)
2. The Beauty in Breaking (CATWoman)
3. Fruits Basket Vol. 1 (AuthorCAT)
4. Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas (CATWoman)
5. The New Jim Crow (ShakespeareCAT)
6. Yotsuba&! Vol. 1 (AuthorCAT)
August:
1. Love's Labour's Lost (ShakespeareCAT)
2. Legendborn (AuthorCAT, CATWoman)
September:
1. The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler's Ghettos (CATWoman)
2. Akata Witch (AuthorCAT)
3. The Sonnets (ShakespeareCAT)
October:
1. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2 (AuthorCAT)
2. Bad Witch Burning (ShakespeareCAT)
3. Elegy for Mary Turner: An Illustrated Account of a Lynching (CATWoman)
November:
1. Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York (AuthorCAT)
2. Fools and Mortals (AuthorCAT, ShakespeareCAT)
3. Pregnant Girl (CATWoman)
December:
1. A Stranger in Olondria (CATWoman)
2. The Spare Man (AuthorCAT)
14susanna.fraser

KITs
January
1. Shaking the Gates of Hell (RandomKIT - Home Sweet Home)
2. Radio Silence (AlphaKIT - R&H)
3. Major Impossible by Nathan Hale (AlphaKIT - R&H)
4. The Secret History of Home Economics (RandomKIT and AlphaKIT)
5. Honey Girl (AlphaKIT - R&H)
6. The Unbroken (SFFKit - Morally gray)
7. Robert E. Lee and Me (AlphaKIT - R&H)
February
1. Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone (SFFKit - Time Travel)
2. The Lion in the Living Room (RandomKIT - cats, AlphaKIT)
3. The Bright Ages (AlphaKIT)
4. Catfishing on CatNet (RandomKIT - cats)
5. Chaos on CatNet (RandomKIT - cats)
6. All the Feels (AlphaKIT)
7. Cultish (AlphaKIT)
March
1. The Pros of Cons (AlphaKIT, RandomKIT)
2. Letters of a Woman Homesteader (AlphaKIT)
3. The Oracle Glass (SFFKit - historical fantasy)
4. Sorcerer to the Crown (AlphaKIT, SFFKit)
5. A Marvellous Light (SFFKit)
6. Not For Use in Navigation (AlphaKIT)
April
1. The Kaiju Preservation Society (AlphaKIT)
2. People Love Dead Jews (AlphaKIT)
3. Amongst Our Weapons (SFFKit)
4. Landslide (AlphaKIT)
5. The Good Rain (RandomKIT)
May
1. Unseen City (RandomKIT)
2. The Sound of Stars (SFFKit, AlphaKIT)
3. One Last Stop (AlphaKIT)
4. The Power of Regret (AlphaKIT)
5. Winter's Orbit (AlphaKIT)
6. Mighty Thor Vol. 1: Thunder in her Veins (SFFKit)
7. We Are Legion (We Are Bob) (AlphaKIT)
June
1. Julius Caesar (AlphaKIT)
2. The Lady With the Gun Asks the Questions (AlphaKIT)
3. Fevered Star (SFFKit)
4. Sunny Song Will Never Be Famous (RandomKIT)
5. Imprinted (SFFKit)
6. The Heroine's Journey (AlphaKIT)
7. Chef's Kiss (AlphaKIT, RandomKIT)
July
1. Sweep With Me (SFFKit, RandomKIT)
2. Fruits Basket Vol. 1 (AlphaKIT)
3. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy (SFFKit)
4. Northwest Know-How: Trees (AlphaKIT)
5. This Will Not Pass (AlphaKIT)
August
1. Never Have I Ever (SFFKit)
2. Making Numbers Count (AlphaKIT)
3. The Rise and Reign of the Mammals (AlphaKIT)
4. I Kissed Shara Wheeler (AlphaKIT)
5. Her Unexpected Roommate (RandomKIT)
September
1. An Unkindness of Ghosts (SFFKit)
2. The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels (AlphaKIT)
3. Banned Book Club (AlphaKIT)
4. Why We Did It (AlphaKIT)
5. Ten Restaurants That Changed America (RandomKIT)
October
1. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2 (RandomKIT)
2. The Legend of Auntie Po (RandomKIT)
3. Elegy for Mary Turner: An Illustrated Account of a Lynching (RandomKIT)
4. Terminal Peace (SFFKit)
5. Robots vs Fairies (AlphaKIT, SFFKit)
6. Saga, Vol. 1 (AlphaKIT)
November
1. Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York (RandomKIT)
2. A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome (RandomKIT)
3. Shadowlands: A Journey Through Lost Britain (AlphaKIT)
4. Pregnant Girl (AlphaKIT)
5. The Collapsing Empire (SFFKit)
6. Small Game (AlphaKIT)
7. Rivers of London Vol. 10 (RandomKIT)
December
1. The Spare Man (SFFKit)
2. Maybe It Happened This Way (AlphaKIT)
3. The Stand-Up Groomsman (RandomKIT)
4. How to Keep House While Drowning (AlphaKIT)
15susanna.fraser

BingoDOG
1. Catfishing on CatNet
2. Go Back to Where You Came From
3. Nothing Happened
4. Sorcerer to the Crown
5. Further Adventures of Lad
6. Fuzz
7. The Privilege of the Sword
8. Amongst Our Weapons
9. Powers and Thrones
10. Radio Silence
11. The Guns of August
12. The Good Rain
13. Richard II
14. Major Impossible
15. Little Fadette
16. The Sentence
17. Honey Girl
18. A Bride's Story Vol. 13
19. Shaking the Gates of Hell
20. Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone
21. The Year of Lear
22. Firekeeper's Daughter
23. The Oracle Glass
24. The Unbroken
25. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin
Starting a second card:
4. Nettle & Bone
5. Brat Farrar
6. The Game of Silence
7. The Horse and His Boy
8. Fevered Star
9. Leaving Church
11. The Power of Regret
12. Winter's Orbit
15. Ten Restaurants That Changed America
16. Julius Caesar
17. One Last Stop
20. The Goblin Emperor
23. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy
25. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2
16susanna.fraser
Q1 Log
January:
1. Shaking the Gates of Hell
2. Radio Silence
3. King Lear
4. Major Impossible
5. The Secret History of Home Economics
6. The Same River Twice: A Memoir of Dirtbag Backpackers, Bomb Shelters, and Bad Travel
7. The Sentence
8. The Year of Lear
9. Honey Girl
10. The Unbroken
11. Robert E. Lee and Me
12. The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume 1
13. Firekeeper's Daughter
February:
1. Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone
2. The Lion in the Living Room
3. Much Ado About Nothing
4. Fuzz
5. You Sexy Thing
6. Little Fadette
7. The Bright Ages
8. (Trust) Falling For You
9. Catfishing on CatNet
10. Chaos on CatNet
11. Vestry Resource Guide
12. When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teenagers
13. Teach Me
14. Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved to Do Is Healthy and Rewarding
15. All the Feels
16. The Vestry Handbook
17. Cultish
March:
1. The Pros of Cons
2. Nothing Happened
3. Letters of a Woman Homesteader
4. The Oracle Glass
5. Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2021
6. Sorcerer to the Crown
7. Go Back to Where You Came From
8. A Marvellous Light
9. Powers and Thrones
10. Not For Use in Navigation
11. The Nineties
January:
1. Shaking the Gates of Hell
2. Radio Silence
3. King Lear
4. Major Impossible
5. The Secret History of Home Economics
6. The Same River Twice: A Memoir of Dirtbag Backpackers, Bomb Shelters, and Bad Travel
7. The Sentence
8. The Year of Lear
9. Honey Girl
10. The Unbroken
11. Robert E. Lee and Me
12. The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume 1
13. Firekeeper's Daughter
February:
1. Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone
2. The Lion in the Living Room
3. Much Ado About Nothing
4. Fuzz
5. You Sexy Thing
6. Little Fadette
7. The Bright Ages
8. (Trust) Falling For You
9. Catfishing on CatNet
10. Chaos on CatNet
11. Vestry Resource Guide
12. When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teenagers
13. Teach Me
14. Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved to Do Is Healthy and Rewarding
15. All the Feels
16. The Vestry Handbook
17. Cultish
March:
1. The Pros of Cons
2. Nothing Happened
3. Letters of a Woman Homesteader
4. The Oracle Glass
5. Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2021
6. Sorcerer to the Crown
7. Go Back to Where You Came From
8. A Marvellous Light
9. Powers and Thrones
10. Not For Use in Navigation
11. The Nineties
17susanna.fraser
Q2 Log
April:
1. The Kaiju Preservation Society
2. People Love Dead Jews
3. A Million Years in a Day
4. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin
5. Amongst Our Weapons
6. Plagues Upon the Earth
7. Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts
8. Spelunking Through Hell
9. Landslide
10. The Good Rain
11. Making Up
12. A Bride's Story Vol. 13
13. The Magnolia Sword
May:
1. The Guns of August
2. Unseen City
3. The Sound of Stars
4. The Privilege of the Sword
5. Further Adventures of Lad
6. Richard II
7. One Last Stop
8. Brat Farrar
9. Clarkesworld: Issue 182
10. The Power of Regret
11. Winter's Orbit
12. Leaving Church
13. Legends & Lattes
14. Nettle & Bone
15. Mighty Thor Vol. 1: Thunder in her Veins
16. Charlemagne's Tablecloth
17. The Horse and His Boy
18. We Are Legion (We Are Bob)
June:
1. Julius Caesar
2. The Lady With the Gun Asks the Questions
3. Fevered Star
4. Sunny Song Will Never Be Famous
5. The Goblin Emperor
6. Born Both
7. Imprinted
8. Her Favorite Rebound
9. One of Us Is Lying
10. Clarkesworld: Issue 173
11. The Heroine's Journey
12. Chef's Kiss
April:
1. The Kaiju Preservation Society
2. People Love Dead Jews
3. A Million Years in a Day
4. A Song of Wraiths and Ruin
5. Amongst Our Weapons
6. Plagues Upon the Earth
7. Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts
8. Spelunking Through Hell
9. Landslide
10. The Good Rain
11. Making Up
12. A Bride's Story Vol. 13
13. The Magnolia Sword
May:
1. The Guns of August
2. Unseen City
3. The Sound of Stars
4. The Privilege of the Sword
5. Further Adventures of Lad
6. Richard II
7. One Last Stop
8. Brat Farrar
9. Clarkesworld: Issue 182
10. The Power of Regret
11. Winter's Orbit
12. Leaving Church
13. Legends & Lattes
14. Nettle & Bone
15. Mighty Thor Vol. 1: Thunder in her Veins
16. Charlemagne's Tablecloth
17. The Horse and His Boy
18. We Are Legion (We Are Bob)
June:
1. Julius Caesar
2. The Lady With the Gun Asks the Questions
3. Fevered Star
4. Sunny Song Will Never Be Famous
5. The Goblin Emperor
6. Born Both
7. Imprinted
8. Her Favorite Rebound
9. One of Us Is Lying
10. Clarkesworld: Issue 173
11. The Heroine's Journey
12. Chef's Kiss
18susanna.fraser
Q3 Log
July:
1. Measure for Measure
2. The Beauty in Breaking
3. Sweep With Me
4. Fruits Basket Vol. 1
5. A Lady for a Duke
6. Battling the Big Lie
7. Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas
8. How to Be Perfect
9. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy
10. Act Like It
11. Northwest Know-How: Trees
12. The Untold Story
13. This Will Not Pass
14. The New Jim Crow
15. Yotsuba&! Vol. 1
August:
1. Love's Labour's Lost
2. The Kissing Bug
3. Never Have I Ever
4. Battle Royal
5. Making Numbers Count
6. The Rise and Reign of the Mammals
7. I Kissed Shara Wheeler
8. Beach Read
9. Her Unexpected Roommate
10. How to Know the Birds: The Art and Adventure of Birding
11. Legendborn
12. The Power Worshippers
13. Sharpe's Assassin
14. Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems
September:
1. An Unkindness of Ghosts
2. The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler's Ghettos
3. Season for Scandal
4. Akata Witch
5. How to Write Short Stories And Use Them to Further Your Writing Career
6. The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels
7. Banned Book Club
8. The Sonnets
9. The Birchbark House
10. Why We Did It
11. Ten Restaurants That Changed America
July:
1. Measure for Measure
2. The Beauty in Breaking
3. Sweep With Me
4. Fruits Basket Vol. 1
5. A Lady for a Duke
6. Battling the Big Lie
7. Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas
8. How to Be Perfect
9. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy
10. Act Like It
11. Northwest Know-How: Trees
12. The Untold Story
13. This Will Not Pass
14. The New Jim Crow
15. Yotsuba&! Vol. 1
August:
1. Love's Labour's Lost
2. The Kissing Bug
3. Never Have I Ever
4. Battle Royal
5. Making Numbers Count
6. The Rise and Reign of the Mammals
7. I Kissed Shara Wheeler
8. Beach Read
9. Her Unexpected Roommate
10. How to Know the Birds: The Art and Adventure of Birding
11. Legendborn
12. The Power Worshippers
13. Sharpe's Assassin
14. Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems
September:
1. An Unkindness of Ghosts
2. The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler's Ghettos
3. Season for Scandal
4. Akata Witch
5. How to Write Short Stories And Use Them to Further Your Writing Career
6. The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels
7. Banned Book Club
8. The Sonnets
9. The Birchbark House
10. Why We Did It
11. Ten Restaurants That Changed America
19susanna.fraser
Q4 Log
October:
1. The Game of Silence
2. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2
3. The Legend of Auntie Po
4. Bad Witch Burning
5. Elegy for Mary Turner: An Illustrated Account of a Lynching
6. Terminal Peace
7. Robots vs Fairies
8. Beyond Belief
9. The Last Days of the Dinosaurs
10. Saga, Vol. 1
11. On Repentance and Repair
12. Saga, Vol. 2
November:
1. Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York
2. A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome
3. The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches
4. Dracula
5. Shadowlands: A Journey Through Lost Britain
6. Fools and Mortals
7. Pregnant Girl
8. The Collapsing Empire
9. Saga, Vol. 3
10. Small Game
11. Rivers of London Vol. 10
12. The Consuming Fire
13. Saga, Vol. 4
14. The Family Outing
December:
1. A Stranger in Olondria
2. Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands
3. The Spare Man
4. Marie Kondo's Kurashi at Home
5. Becoming Kin
6. Saga, Vol. 5
7. Maybe It Happened This Way
8. The Stand-Up Groomsman
9. Saga, Vol. 6
10. The Bitter End: The 2020 Presidential Campaign and the Challenge to American Democracy
11. Illuminations
12. How to Keep House While Drowning
13. The Golden Enclaves
14. The Outlaw Ocean
15. The Last Emperox
October:
1. The Game of Silence
2. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2
3. The Legend of Auntie Po
4. Bad Witch Burning
5. Elegy for Mary Turner: An Illustrated Account of a Lynching
6. Terminal Peace
7. Robots vs Fairies
8. Beyond Belief
9. The Last Days of the Dinosaurs
10. Saga, Vol. 1
11. On Repentance and Repair
12. Saga, Vol. 2
November:
1. Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York
2. A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome
3. The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches
4. Dracula
5. Shadowlands: A Journey Through Lost Britain
6. Fools and Mortals
7. Pregnant Girl
8. The Collapsing Empire
9. Saga, Vol. 3
10. Small Game
11. Rivers of London Vol. 10
12. The Consuming Fire
13. Saga, Vol. 4
14. The Family Outing
December:
1. A Stranger in Olondria
2. Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands
3. The Spare Man
4. Marie Kondo's Kurashi at Home
5. Becoming Kin
6. Saga, Vol. 5
7. Maybe It Happened This Way
8. The Stand-Up Groomsman
9. Saga, Vol. 6
10. The Bitter End: The 2020 Presidential Campaign and the Challenge to American Democracy
11. Illuminations
12. How to Keep House While Drowning
13. The Golden Enclaves
14. The Outlaw Ocean
15. The Last Emperox
20DeltaQueen50
Hi Susanna, I'm dropping my star and looking forward to following along with you in 2022.
22MissWatson
Some great topics in here! Happy reading and learning!
23Jackie_K
Dropping my star, I've picked up several BBs from you in the last couple of years! Good luck with winnowing Mt TBR - I'm doing the same, but halving it is a bigger task than I can manage in a year.
27NinieB
I love the kitten in the card catalog drawer! Looking forward to following along.
(PS. A couple of your pictures are missing: >3 susanna.fraser:, >13 susanna.fraser:.)
(PS. A couple of your pictures are missing: >3 susanna.fraser:, >13 susanna.fraser:.)
28thornton37814
Enjoy your 2022 reads!
30VictoriaPL
Happy Reading!
31susanna.fraser
>27 NinieB: Thanks! I found replacements.
32Crazymamie
Looking forward to following your reading in 2022. From your Kindle list of books to read, I highly recommend The Goblin Emperor - I loved that one.
33susanna.fraser
>32 Crazymamie: I've heard a ton of good things about that one!
34susanna.fraser

1. Shaking the Gates of Hell by John Archibald
Starting my year with a memoir by a fellow white child of Alabama, roughly of my generation (he was born in 1963, I in 1971), who wrestles as I do with whether his own well-meaning, basically kind white Christian family did enough to be part of the solution rather than the problem in the Civil Rights era, only since he is a journalist still living in Alabama and his father was a prominent Methodist pastor, the questions are a bit sharper for him.
35susanna.fraser

2. Radio Silence by Alyssa Cole
I wouldn't call this a light read--there's a lot of angst and a good bit of blood--but it was definitely fun, escapist, and quick. I'm sure I'll read the rest of this post-apocalyptic romance trilogy pretty soon.
36susanna.fraser

3. King Lear by William Shakespeare
This wasn't my favorite of Shakespeare's works when I took a Shakespeare class as an elective in college...and it's still not my favorite now.
37susanna.fraser

4. Major Impossible by Nathan Hale
I'd lost track of this kids' graphic novel series about stories from American history after my own child aged out of reading them, but I recently was reminded of them and decided to catch up. Fun books, though emphatically keyed for their younger audience and their sense of humor.
38susanna.fraser

5. The Secret History of Home Economics by Danielle Dreilinger
History of home economics as a field, largely through the lens of the women who lead the field throughout the 20th century. I would've been more interested in something that focused on the student experience, how the curriculum changed over time, and so on.
39susanna.fraser

6. The Same River Twice: A Memoir of Dirtbag Backpackers, Bomb Shelters, and Bad Travel by Pam Mandel
A rather harrowing memoir of the author's travels, just after high school at age 17-18, through Israel, England, Greece, Egypt, Pakistan, and India, mostly in the company of an abusive boyfriend.
40beebeereads
Dropping a star as well. Looking forward to following you this year!
41susanna.fraser
>40 beebeereads: Welcome!

7. The Sentence by Louise Erdrich
I feel like this book shouldn't have worked--magical realism? the author is a minor character story largely set at the bookstore she owns IRL? the actual events of 2020 play a huge role in the story?--but it does, completely.

7. The Sentence by Louise Erdrich
I feel like this book shouldn't have worked--magical realism? the author is a minor character story largely set at the bookstore she owns IRL? the actual events of 2020 play a huge role in the story?--but it does, completely.
42beebeereads
>41 susanna.fraser: I am hoping this makes it on the list for my IRL book club this year. If not, it will definitely be on my priority list. Really appreciate your comments. You can find me at https://www.librarything.com/topic/338552#7715629
43susanna.fraser

8. The Year of Lear by James Shapiro
A look at the Gunpowder Plot ("Remember, remember, the fifth of November...") and the year that followed through Shakespeare and his contemporaneous works, Lear, Macbeth, and Antony & Cleopatra. It felt surprisingly relevant, given that we just lived through a year that started with political violence and upheaval and ended with a bad wave of an ongoing pandemic (plague in Shakespeare's case).
44Tess_W
>43 susanna.fraser: I've got to make time for that one, for sure!
45susanna.fraser
>44 Tess_W: It's interesting. I learned a lot more detail about the Gunpowder Plot and its impact on England and London in particular than I'd ever heard before.

9. Honey Girl by Morgan Rogers
A romance/coming-of-age story wherein the heroine, a hard-driven overachiever with a Plan for every step of her life, marries a girl she meets while drunk in Vegas after completing her PhD.

9. Honey Girl by Morgan Rogers
A romance/coming-of-age story wherein the heroine, a hard-driven overachiever with a Plan for every step of her life, marries a girl she meets while drunk in Vegas after completing her PhD.
46susanna.fraser

10. The Unbroken by C.L. Clark
Epic fantasy in a world clearly based on French colonialism in North Africa, with magic and betrayal upon betrayal and lesbian enemies to lovers back to enemies, which I basically read in a single gulp.
47susanna.fraser

11. Robert E. Lee and Me by Ty Seidule
The author is a Southern, historian, and career army officer who grew up steeped in Lost Cause mythology, which he learned to question and ultimately disavow. The final line of the book packs quite a punch, given that I think it was written just slightly before critical race theory became a right-wing pet cause: "The only way to prevent a racist future is to first understand our racist past."
48susanna.fraser

12. The Best Science Fiction of the Year: Volume 1 ed. by Neil Clarke
I've had this anthology of 2015 short stories on my shelf since at least 2017, and it's such a brick of a book it took me forever to want to pick it up and start reading. I'm glad I did, though, since it contains mostly excellent stories by a notable collection of SFF authors.
50susanna.fraser

14. Go Tell the Bees That I Am Gone by Diana Gabaldon
I've been on this ride since Outlander, and I'm not about to get off now.
51Tess_W
>50 susanna.fraser: I agree! I thought this was to be the last one, but not so...at least 1 more! If you are in for more of the "same", meaning a writer very much like Gabaldon and the setting in the US, I can highly recommend the series (6 books) Into the Wilderness by Sara Donati.
52susanna.fraser
>51 Tess_W: I think I read the first one in that series a long time ago, but I don't remember much about it. One of the things I like best about Gabaldon's work--and this will probably sound strange--is that she gets to ramble much more than modern authors can usually get away with, so I feel like I'm just hanging out with her people for a thousand pages or so. It's weirdly like when I re-read Louisa May Alcott or LM Montgomery, except with more sex scenes, battles, bears, and abductions.

15. The Lion in the Living Room by Abigail Tucker
Quick, readable nonfiction about domestic cats and our relationship with them.

15. The Lion in the Living Room by Abigail Tucker
Quick, readable nonfiction about domestic cats and our relationship with them.
53thornton37814
>52 susanna.fraser: I love that kind of pictured lion, and it would be welcome in my living room (if my three boys agree to allow it to visit).
54susanna.fraser
>53 thornton37814: Sadly my husband is very allergic to that kind of lion, so I just enjoy visiting other people's whenever I can.

16. Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare
Every time I revisit this play it makes me happy.

16. Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare
Every time I revisit this play it makes me happy.
55christina_reads
>54 susanna.fraser: My absolute favorite Shakespeare!
56MissBrangwen
>52 susanna.fraser: "One of the things I like best about Gabaldon's work--and this will probably sound strange--is that she gets to ramble much more than modern authors can usually get away with, so I feel like I'm just hanging out with her people for a thousand pages or so."
I totally know what you mean! It's why these novels are such feel good novels for me, although they have so many sad scenes and topics.
I totally know what you mean! It's why these novels are such feel good novels for me, although they have so many sad scenes and topics.
57susanna.fraser

17. Fuzz by Mary Roach
A rather quick review of all the ways wild animals and plants threaten and/or annoy humans, plus how we try to deal with them, told with Roach's trademark humor.
58susanna.fraser

18. You Sexy Thing by Cat Rambo
While the ending felt a bit rushed, I thoroughly enjoyed this space opera--it reminded me, a bit, of both Murderbot (sentient AI) and Wayfarers (found family), though it's tonally different from either one.
59susanna.fraser

19. Little Fadette by George Sand
I picked this book, frankly, because it allowed me to pick off this month's AuthorCAT and CATWoman challenges with a single book. I didn't have any expectations going in, but I found it to be a quick sweet, heartwarming read with a certain gentle, pastoral melodrama to it.
60susanna.fraser

20. The Bright Ages by Matthew Gabriele & David M. Perry
A panorama rather than a deep dive, focusing on the how vibrant and connected the medieval era was in both its beauty and brutality.
61susanna.fraser

21. (Trust) Falling For You by Charish Reid
A fun, light romance novella about a pair of faculty rivals forced to bond at a departmental team building retreat.

22. Catfishing on CatNet by Naomi Kritzer
A page turner of a YA novel (near-future SF, also a mystery) with a sentient AI and a girl who's been on the run with her mother for as long as she can remember, but doesn't really know why.
62susanna.fraser

23. Chaos on CatNet by Naomi Kritzer
I should read sequels directly after the prior book more often--it's nice remembering exactly who everyone is and what's going on.
64susanna.fraser
>63 hailelib: I was impressed--Kritzer's short stories were my favorites in a multi-author anthology I recently read, so I sought out her longer work.

24. Vestry Resource Guide ed. by Nancy Davidge
Now, this is one I'm confident no one else will want to read! I was recently appointed to a three-year term on my church's vestry, so I'm trying, possibly a bit belatedly, to learn just what I've let myself in for.

24. Vestry Resource Guide ed. by Nancy Davidge
Now, this is one I'm confident no one else will want to read! I was recently appointed to a three-year term on my church's vestry, so I'm trying, possibly a bit belatedly, to learn just what I've let myself in for.
65susanna.fraser

25. When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teenagers
An utterly heartbreaking book, bringing to light six autobiographical essays written by Jewish teens living in Eastern Europe in the 1930s for a writing contest.
66susanna.fraser

26. Teach Me by Olivia Dade
A really lovely contemporary romance novel about two high school history teachers who, unusually for the genre, are in their 40s.
67susanna.fraser

27. Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved to Do Is Healthy and Rewarding by Daniel Lieberman
This book managed to make me feel motivated to exercise more without making me feel like it's a personal moral failing to be out of shape, which is a rare feat. (Also I love that cover image.)
68Helenliz
>67 susanna.fraser: *snort* The cover image is excellent! I'm at the getting back into shape stage again (Lockdown 3 was particularly unkind to my behind). It's at the really hard "I-think-I-could-die" stage rather than the "this feels gooood" stage. >:-/
69Jackie_K
>67 susanna.fraser: That cover is fantastic! I might add this to my wishlist, you've nailed why most books about exercise (and diet, for that matter) just make me cross. (although disappointingly, the copy on amazon.co.uk has a really boring cover)
70susanna.fraser
>68 Helenliz: >69 Jackie_K: It's heavily focused on the anthropology and evolution of it all, but without being too dry and academic.

28. All the Feels by Olivia Dade
This was a warm hug of a rom-com to read for a break from everything going on in the world.

28. All the Feels by Olivia Dade
This was a warm hug of a rom-com to read for a break from everything going on in the world.
71susanna.fraser

29. The Vestry Handbook by Christopher L. Webber
More dry reading as I try to figure out my new church responsibilities.
72susanna.fraser

30. Cultish by Amanda Montell
On the role of linguistics in cults, broadly defined as anything from fringe religious groups to MLMs to fitness crazes to conspiracy theories.
73susanna.fraser
31. The Pros of Cons by Alison Cherry, Lindsay Ribar, and Michelle Schusterman
A very fun YA novel about three girls who meet while attending three different conferences at the same hotel (geek/fandom, drumming, and taxidermy).
75susanna.fraser

33. Letters of a Woman Homesteader by Elinore Pruitt Stewart
By a woman who homesteaded (and married a rancher) in Wyoming in the early 20th century. Very interesting, and Elinore is generally a charming storyteller, with the caveat that the language and attitudes are Of Their Time in spots. (To put it bluntly, there are multiple uses of the n-word.)
76susanna.fraser

34. The Oracle Glass by Judith Merkle Riley
Wherein a naive young woman with prophetic powers gets drawn into the Affaire des poisons in 17th century Paris. I didn't enjoy this as much as Riley's Margaret of Ashbury trilogy, but it was a pleasantly intricate weekend escape.
77susanna.fraser

35. Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2021 ed. by Sheree Renee Thomas
One of the many SFF magazines on my TBR pile. "How to Train Your Demon," "Bridge For Sale," and "Cat Ladies" were my favorite stories.
78susanna.fraser

36. Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho
A really lovely Regency meets Fairyland fantasy that I somehow thought I'd already tried to read and bounced off of--I think I was confusing it with something with a similar title, cover, or theme. I'm glad I gave it a first look that I thought was a second look!
79christina_reads
>78 susanna.fraser: I love that book! Glad you enjoyed it as well. I think it's one of the best examples of the "magical Regency" genre.
80susanna.fraser
>79 christina_reads: Have you read the sequel yet?

37. Go Back to Where You Came From by Wajahat Ali
Often hilarious and occasionally heartrending memoir of a first-generation American son of Pakistani immigrants.

37. Go Back to Where You Came From by Wajahat Ali
Often hilarious and occasionally heartrending memoir of a first-generation American son of Pakistani immigrants.
81christina_reads
>80 susanna.fraser: Yes, I've read The True Queen and enjoyed that one as well, although I liked it a tiny bit less than Sorcerer to the Crown.
82susanna.fraser

38. A Marvellous Light by Freya Marske
Edwardian-era fantasy with a strong and explicit romantic subplot between its two male leads. I enjoyed it and will definitely read the sequel when it comes out.
83susanna.fraser

39. Powers and Thrones by Dan Jones
Sweeping, readable history of the Middle Ages, from the fall of Rome through the Protestant Reformation. From now on I will always think of kings and lords endowing monasteries as buying carbon offsets for their souls.
84susanna.fraser

40. Not For Use in Navigation by Iona Datt Sharma
An anthology of SFF short stories, a gift from a LibraryThing Secret Santa 2 or 3 years ago.
85susanna.fraser

41. The Nineties by Chuck Klosterman
A series of essays about the first decade of my adult life, by an author just a little bit younger than me. (I was born in 1971, he in 1972.) Too pragmatic to be nostalgic, but left me feeling a bit melancholy for what really WAS a more stable, less polarized world (even if it was planting the seeds for where we are now).
86Helenliz
>85 susanna.fraser: I'm torn on that one. I'm the same age as the author, but part of me wonders if the 1990s would be better in memory than revisiting them.
87christina_reads
>85 susanna.fraser: I recently listened to an interesting interview with Klosterman: https://conversationswithtyler.com/episodes/chuck-klosterman/. I wonder how his book would strike me, as someone who was a child and young teen in the '90s.
88susanna.fraser
>86 Helenliz: >87 christina_reads: I liked it, but I don't think I'd give it a strong recommend. A moderate recommend, maybe?

42. The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi
Now this was just a cracking good fun escapist read.

42. The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi
Now this was just a cracking good fun escapist read.
89susanna.fraser

43. People Love Dead Jews by Dara Horn
And this was the opposite of fun and escapist, but so good and so thought-provoking. Just because of my particular life experiences and interests, I'm more familiar with Jewish history, culture, and religious practice than average for a Gentile and a Christian, and I get so angry every time one of my fellow Christians repeats stereotypes about Jewish wealth or greed or displays a cartoonishly simplistic understanding of Jewish religious practice. Now I know what to try to make them read!
90susanna.fraser

44. A Million Years in a Day by Greg Jenner
A rather light history of the routine activities of day-to-day life.
92susanna.fraser

46. Amongst Our Weapons by Ben Aaronovitch
Yes, I finished this book on its release day, but long-running series with found families full of likable characters tend to hook me like that.
93susanna.fraser

47. Plagues Upon the Earth by Kyle Harper
A big-picture overview of infectious disease from our hominid ancestors through covid-19.
94susanna.fraser

48. Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts by Rebecca Hall
Graphic novel about the process of finding and bringing to light hidden history.
96susanna.fraser

50. Landslide by Michael Wolff
I thought I was in a good headspace to read a book about The Former Guy between Election Day and January 6, but I wish I hadn't. It makes it even more depressing that he might be back.
97DeltaQueen50
" he might be back."
A very scary thought!
A very scary thought!
98susanna.fraser
>97 DeltaQueen50: Terrifying!

51. The Good Rain by Timothy Egan
A book about my adopted home region, published nearly a decade before I moved here, which for me cast it into an odd limbo of neither contemporary nor historical, exactly.

51. The Good Rain by Timothy Egan
A book about my adopted home region, published nearly a decade before I moved here, which for me cast it into an odd limbo of neither contemporary nor historical, exactly.
99susanna.fraser

52. Making Up by Lucy Parker
Really charming contemporary romance set in the London theater community. I may have to read the whole series.
100susanna.fraser

53. A Bride's Story Vol. 13 by Kaoru Mori
Latest volume in this gorgeously illustrated historical manga series.
102christina_reads
>99 susanna.fraser: Yes, definitely read the whole series! Act Like It is possibly my favorite contemporary romance.
103susanna.fraser
I'm currently nursing an infected finger, so I'm just going to list what I've been reading as I recuperate:
55. The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman
56. Unseen City by Nathanael Johndon
57. The Sound of Stars by Alechia Dow
58. The Privilege of the Sword by Ellen Kushner
59. Further Adventures of Lad by Albert Payson Terhune
55. The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman
56. Unseen City by Nathanael Johndon
57. The Sound of Stars by Alechia Dow
58. The Privilege of the Sword by Ellen Kushner
59. Further Adventures of Lad by Albert Payson Terhune
104Jackie_K
>103 susanna.fraser: Hope you feel better soon!
105susanna.fraser
>104 Jackie_K: I'm getting there, I think, though I wish it would heal faster!

60. Richard II by William Shakespeare
My choice for this month's ShakespeareCAT theme.

60. Richard II by William Shakespeare
My choice for this month's ShakespeareCAT theme.
106susanna.fraser

61. One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston
I didn't love this book as much as Red, White, and Royal Blue, but that still left plenty of room to like it a whole lot.
108VivienneR
>107 susanna.fraser: I just bought a copy of Brat Farrar that I read and enjoyed years ago. One of Tey's best.
I hope your finger will be better soon and typing up a storm.
I hope your finger will be better soon and typing up a storm.
109susanna.fraser

63. Clarkesworld: Issue 182
I'm starting to really enjoy reading SFF short stories, though I'm not sure I'll ever figure out how to WRITE any fiction shorter than novel-length.
110susanna.fraser

64. The Power of Regret by Daniel H. Pink
An unusually thought-provoking self-help book. I don't at all regret reading it.
111susanna.fraser

65. Winter's Orbit by Everina Maxwell
A lovely science fiction romance for my weekend reading pleasure.
112susanna.fraser

66. Leaving Church by Barbara Brown Taylor
An Episcopal priest’s memoir of walking away from church to rediscover faith.
113susanna.fraser

67. Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree
The story of an orc in a D&D-type world who retires from adventuring to open a coffee shop. Heartwarming in the best possible way.
114susanna.fraser

68. Nettle & Bone by T Kingfisher
T Kingfisher's books are SO GOOD. This one is a bit darker than most of her fantasy that I've read, but it still has a fairytale feel and (mostly) turns out all right in the end.
115susanna.fraser

69. Mighty Thor Vol. 1: Thunder in her Veins by Jason Aaron
My first Thor comic, which left me pretty confused tbh.
116susanna.fraser

70. Charlemagne's Tablecloth by Nichola Fletcher
A series of essays rather than a linear or thematic history, touching on a variety of topics about history around the world and across time.
117susanna.fraser

71. The Horse and His Boy by C.S. Lewis
This was my favorite of the series as a child because a) horses and b) Aravis, but hoo boy does the fantastical racism leap out at me now. (Still enjoyed the re-read, though.)
118susanna.fraser

72. We Are Legion (We Are Bob) by Dennis E. Taylor
This book has a huge fanbase, and it WAS a lot of fun...but let's just say I would've had an easier time with our multi-duplicated avatar of humanity among the stars being a white American tech bro if it hadn't been for the fact that the main human villains are Brazilian, that the surviving leaders of post-apocalyptic Earth that the Bobs interact with are ALL also white men from Europe, North America, and Australia/New Zealand, AND the smart kid from the primitive sentient society on another planet one of the Bobs finds is also a boy from a culture where all of the leaders were male. I mean, seriously, for all the dated aspects of The Horse and His Boy at least CS Lewis was able to imagine a brown girl being intelligent, resourceful, and brave!
119susanna.fraser

73. Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare
My favorite of the Shakespeare we read in high school, though now that I've read most of the Bard's canon I'd place it somewhere in the middle. I still remember the opening lines of Mark Antony’s funeral oration.
120susanna.fraser

74. The Lady With the Gun Asks the Questions by Kerry Greenwood
Short stories featuring the always delightful Phryne Fisher.
121Helenliz
>117 susanna.fraser: mm. I have a complete set of these on the shelf. Part of me is tempted to re-read, as I read them a lot as a child. Part of me is tempted to leave them on the shelf and not spoil a pleasant memory.
122susanna.fraser
>121 Helenliz: I still enjoy them, but it probably depends on individual tolerance level--I'm generally OK with dead authors having outdated attitudes as long as there doesn't seem to be active malice there, but even that is a matter of gut feeling.

75. Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse
Second in a rather bleak and morally gray but thoroughly fascinating fantasy trilogy.

75. Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse
Second in a rather bleak and morally gray but thoroughly fascinating fantasy trilogy.
123susanna.fraser

76. Sunny Song Will Never Be Famous by Suzanne Park
This cotton-candy light YA romcom was the perfect palate cleanser.
124susanna.fraser

77. The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison
This fantasy novel was a treat to read because it was so leisurely, something I usually have to go to 19th or early 20th century fiction to experience.
125christina_reads
>124 susanna.fraser: I really liked that one too! It takes some work to get immersed in the world, but once you do, it's a delight.
130susanna.fraser

82. Clarkesworld: Issue 173 ed. by Neil Clarke
Another one of my backlog of short story magazines. My favorites in this edition were "The Failed Dianas" and "Terra Rasa."
131susanna.fraser

83. The Heroine's Journey by Gail Carriger
A writer's guide that's making me rethink my current manuscript, in a good way.
133susanna.fraser

85. Measure for Measure by William Shakespeare
Starting off my reading for the second half of the year with the Bard...
135Jackie_K
>134 susanna.fraser: I've added that to my wishlist.
136susanna.fraser
>135 Jackie_K: I think you'll enjoy it.

87. Sweep With Me by Ilona Andrews
Another entry in the Innkeeper Chronicles series, this one a novella.

87. Sweep With Me by Ilona Andrews
Another entry in the Innkeeper Chronicles series, this one a novella.
137susanna.fraser

88. Fruits Basket Vol. 1 by Natsuki Takaya
I picked this from a list of good "starter" manga, so I was surprised by how baffling I found the whole thing, given my experience with comics in general and some manga (the Bride's Story series, mostly). I wasn't expecting all the emotions and situations to be so extremely over-the-top, either.
138susanna.fraser

89. A Lady for a Duke by Alexis Hall
Historical romance with a transgender heroine, and a plot with a fine balance of angst and wit, though IMHO it veered a bit too far toward melodrama in the final act.
139susanna.fraser

90. Battling the Big Lie by Dan Pfeiffer
I don't read as many political books as I used to, but this one was worth it.
140susanna.fraser

91. Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas by Jennifer Raff
A well-written snapshot of the current state of research into how and when the Americas were first peopled.
141susanna.fraser

92. How to Be Perfect by Michael Schur
Better living through moral philosophy, with more humor and clarity than you'd likely get in a philosophy class.

93. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers
Just a delightfully gentle and optimistic science fiction novella.
142christina_reads
>141 susanna.fraser: Man, I really need to finish The Good Place! Such a fun and clever show.
143susanna.fraser
>142 christina_reads: It's so delightful!
144susanna.fraser

94. Act Like It
Delightful contemporary romance, a fresh-feeling take on the ever-popular Fake Dating trope.
145christina_reads
>144 susanna.fraser: I love this one, glad you did too!
146susanna.fraser

95. Northwest Know-How: Trees by Karen Gaudette Brewer
Wherein I now know a lot more facts about local trees. F'rex, did you know northwestern cedars are actually cypresses? I do now!
147susanna.fraser

96. The Untold Story by Genevieve Cogman
Eighth and (for now) final in this saga of magical librarians, dragons, and fae.
148susanna.fraser

97. This Will Not Pass by Jonathan Martin & Alexander Burns
A gossipy but extremely depressing look at politics across 2020 and 2021.
149susanna.fraser

98. The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
Speaking of extremely depressing books...I wasn't expecting to be quite so shocked and enraged by this book because I thought I knew the issues already going in--black and brown people disproportionately incarcerated, school-to-prison pipeline, etc. But seeing it laid out so unrelentingly is intense.
150susanna.fraser

99. Yotsuba&! Vol. 1 by Kiyohiko Azuma
A quite heartwarming manga about a quirky, adventurous 5-year-old girl.
151susanna.fraser

100. Love's Labour's Lost by William Shakespeare
My 100th book of the year continues my pattern of starting the month with Shakespeare--but I've got to say this may be my least favorite of his books that I've read. I found it fairly baffling, frankly, and I gather it's full of in-jokes and references that I would've enjoyed more in the 1590s.
152susanna.fraser

101. The Kissing Bug by Daisy Hernandez
Both a memoir and the story of a neglected tropical disease (Chagas) and its increasing presence in the US.
154susanna.fraser

103. Battle Royal by Lucy Parker
Wherein rival bakers fall in love while competing for a contract baking the cake for a royal wedding.
155susanna.fraser

104. Making Numbers Count by Chip Heath and Karla Starr
A guide to communicating complex numbers in vivid, understandable ways. Interesting, though I think I'd rather read a guide on better understanding complex numbers when encountered in the wild.
156susanna.fraser

105. The Rise and Reign of the Mammals by Steve Brusatte
A readable popular science account, sequel to The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs.
157susanna.fraser

106. I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston
YA mystery (albeit without a dead body) romcom. A very good read, if not so fun as Red, White, and Royal Blue.
158susanna.fraser

107. Beach Read by Emily Henry
Contemporary romance between two authors in neighboring Lake Michigan beach houses, both plagued by writer's block: she's a romance novelist; he writes angsty literary fiction.
159susanna.fraser

108. Her Unexpected Roommate by Jackie Lau
Another winner from my current go-to author for contemporary romance.
160susanna.fraser

109. How to Know the Birds: The Art and Adventure of Birding by Ted Floyd
A series of short essays on birding.
161Jackie_K
>160 susanna.fraser: That sounds good, I've added it to my wishlist. Although I wonder if it's focused on US birds?
162susanna.fraser
>161 Jackie_K: It's definitely focused on North American birds, but it's also more about birding than the birds themselves, using the individual birds as springboards to talk about migration, molt, impacts of climate change on bird behavior, etc.
163Jackie_K
>162 susanna.fraser: Brilliant, thanks - it sounds right up my street!
164susanna.fraser

110. Legendborn by Tracy Deonn
And I finish my annual Seattle Public Library Book Bingo card by reading this pageturner of a YA fantasy novel.
166susanna.fraser

111. The Power Worshippers by Katherine Stewart
A depressing look at the rise of Christian nationalism in America.
167susanna.fraser

112. Sharpe's Assassin by Bernard Cornwell
I'd somehow missed that there was a new Sharpe book. Reading it felt like an unexpected visit from an old friend.
168MissWatson
>167 susanna.fraser: Yes, I was very much surprised, too. And there's one more coming up in October: Sharpe's Command.
169susanna.fraser
>168 MissWatson: Yay! I'll have to preorder that one.

113. Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems by Jenny Schuetz
On housing policy, because it's something I think about often as I go about my life in a city with a serious housing shortage (especially affordable housing). I admit to skimming some of the wonkier bits, though.

113. Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems by Jenny Schuetz
On housing policy, because it's something I think about often as I go about my life in a city with a serious housing shortage (especially affordable housing). I admit to skimming some of the wonkier bits, though.
171susanna.fraser

115. The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler's Ghettos by Judy Batalion
"Bleak but impossible to put down" seems to be the them of my reading so far this month!
172susanna.fraser

116. Season for Scandal by Theresa Romain
A delightful historical romance by an author who I believe deserves to be better known.

117. Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafar
A magic school story set in contemporary Nigeria. It's on the border between middle grade and YA, which I'd kinda forgotten going into the book, but once I adjusted to the youthful feel of the storytelling and voice I enjoyed it a lot.
173susanna.fraser

118. How to Write Short Stories And Use Them to Further Your Writing Career by James Scott Bell
Because I still want to figure it out!
174susanna.fraser

119. The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels by India Holton
Historical fantasy-romance, and a sheer romp.
175Jackie_K
>173 susanna.fraser: Did it give you any answers? (and do you think it would be applicable to short-form non-fiction writing too? - asking for a friend who may or may not be me)
176susanna.fraser
>175 Jackie_K: My biggest takeaway is the advice that "a great short story is about the fallout from one shattering moment." That moment could be at any point in the story (including just before it opens), but wherever it comes, it's the axis on which the whole thing orbits. I'll have to try it out to see how it works for me, but it feels like a useful way to structurally differentiate between a novel (which I tend to see as a journey and/or quest, whether literal or metaphorical) and a short story beyond just word count.
I think that could be applicable to short-form narrative nonfiction as well.
I think that could be applicable to short-form narrative nonfiction as well.
177susanna.fraser

120. Banned Book Club by Kim Hyun Sook
A lightly fictionalized memoir of the author's collegiate days as a student activist fighting the repressive government in South Korea in the 1980s. (I have to admit I'd forgotten that South Korea's status as a free and vibrant democracy was relatively recent, making it maybe not too surprising that they were so quick and effective in rising up when a corrupt president threatened to take them back to the bad old days.)
178susanna.fraser

121. The Sonnets by William Shakespeare
I'm glad I can cross this off my list of Things I Really Should Read, but I have to admit I find Shakespeare tougher to follow without the structure of a plot to help me through the language.
179christina_reads
>174 susanna.fraser: I really liked that one! I need to read the sequel, The League of Gentlewomen Witches.
180Jackie_K
>176 susanna.fraser: Ooh yes, that is interesting! *scratches chin thoughtfully*
181susanna.fraser
>179 christina_reads: I have the sequel on hold at the library now!

122. The Birchbark House by Louise Erdrich
A really lovely middle-grade book that I think many adult historical fiction readers would enjoy. The protagonist is an 8-year-old Ojibwe girl growing up with her family in the 1840s.

122. The Birchbark House by Louise Erdrich
A really lovely middle-grade book that I think many adult historical fiction readers would enjoy. The protagonist is an 8-year-old Ojibwe girl growing up with her family in the 1840s.
182susanna.fraser

123. Why We Did It by Tim Miller
Less a book about Trump (thankfully) and more one about how GOP operatives who should've known better and WOULD have known better in past moments in their lives got sucked into his orbit. A lot of it comes down to the old Upton Sinclair quote, "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it."
183susanna.fraser

124. Ten Restaurants That Changed America by Paul Freedman
American culinary history from Delmonico's to Chez Panisse, lengthy but engrossing.
185susanna.fraser

126. YOTSUBA&!, Volume 2 by Kiyohiko Azuma
Second volume in this quirky, rather goofy slice-of-life manga.

127. The Legend of Auntie Po by Shing Yin Khor
Graphic novel about a Chinese-American girl growing up in 19th century California logging camp.
186susanna.fraser

128. Bad Witch Burning by Jessica Lewis
That was one harrowing read. It's very good, but it's horror where I was kinda expecting a somewhat lighter paranormal urban fantasy.
187susanna.fraser

129. Elegy for Mary Turner: An Illustrated Account of a Lynching by Rachel Marie-Crane Williams
A moving account of a horrific history.
188susanna.fraser

130. Terminal Peace by Jim C. Hines
A fitting end to the Janitors of the Post-Apocalypse trilogy--though if that concept sounds intriguing, you need to go back and start with book one.
189susanna.fraser

131. Robots vs Fairies ed. by Dominik Parisien & Navah Wolfe
What it says on the tin: a short story anthology featuring robots and fairies (usually in separate stories--the authors are divided into Team Robot and Team Fairy).
190susanna.fraser

132. Beyond Belief by Elle Hardy
A look at modern Pentecostal Christianity, focusing on the cultural and political aspects more than theology or spirituality.
191susanna.fraser

133. The Last Days of the Dinosaurs by Riley Black
A very readable look at dinosaur life right at the time of asteroid impact, followed by more of a focus on how life survived and re-diversified in the years and millennia that followed.
192susanna.fraser

134. Saga, Vol. 1 by Brian K. Vaughan
I've been hearing about this series forever and finally decided to give it a try. And now I've already put Vol. 2 on hold at the library. (I should, however, offer the warning that it's more, well, graphic in terms of both sex and violence than my usual graphic novel fare.)
193susanna.fraser

135. On Repentance and Repair by Danya Ruttenberg
A deeply thought-provoking look at the hard work of repentance, from the personal level through the institutional to the national and intergenerational.
194susanna.fraser

136. Saga, Vol. 2 by Brian K. Vaughan
This series is so weird, by turns beautiful and horrifying, and apparently I can't put it down.
195susanna.fraser

137. Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York by Elon Green
A rare-for-me venture into true crime.
196susanna.fraser

138. A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome by Emma Southon
Well-researched Roman history, albeit with snarky asides rather than the Serious Classical History tone one often gets with works of this sort. (As a fan of Mike Duncan's History of Rome podcast and the Marcus Didius Falco mysteries, I'm fine with snark in my history.)
197susanna.fraser

139. The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna
Just a lovely heartwarming book brimming with found family.
199susanna.fraser

141. Shadowlands: A Journey Through Lost Britain by Matthew Green
A look at eight lost British communities (some abandoned, some destroyed, some whose endings are lost in the mists of time) and the traces they left behind.
200Jackie_K
>199 susanna.fraser: I got this book for my birthday this year, I'd never heard of it but then he did an episode of Radio 4's Ramblings programme with Clare Balding and I was intrigued! (although I've still not managed to get round to it, of course!)
201susanna.fraser

142. Fools and Mortals by Bernard Cornwell
I know from Facebook that Bernard Cornwell enjoys performing in community theater, and this book set among Shakespeare's company in the 1590s is clearly a love letter to that experience. I enjoyed it, though I do wish Cornwell didn't go to effete men as villains so often.
202susanna.fraser

143. Pregnant Girl by Nicole Lynn Lewis
Memoir of a teen mother who was ultimately able to complete her degree at William & Mary and who now runs a nonprofit dedicated to helping other teen parents do the same.
203susanna.fraser

144. The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi
First in a space opera trilogy, with just the right balance of high stakes but treated with humor and irreverence.
205Helenliz
>199 susanna.fraser: that looks interesting.
207susanna.fraser

147. Rivers of London Vol. 10 by Ben Aaronovitch
These graphic novels aren't on the same level as the prose stories in terms of quality IMHO, and the art isn't up to Marvel or DC standards, much less anything like Saga or the A Bride's Story series. And yet I'm a big enough fan of the series as a whole that I buy them anyway for a little fix of Peter, Nightingale, Beverley, Abigail, the foxes, and the rest between the main entries.
208susanna.fraser

148. The Consuming Fire by John Scalzi
I decided to continue with this series while Book 1 was still fresh in my mind instead of having to spend the first third of the book trying to remember who everyone is what what's going on for a change.
210susanna.fraser

150. The Family Outing by Jessi Hempel
Memoir by the eldest child of a family who were all closeted one way or another--the father and the siblings were all gay, bi, or trans, while the mother's life was deeply impacted by trauma and PTSD from her teen years--and how they gradually came to terms with who they were and how the secrets they'd been keeping had marked them.
211susanna.fraser

151. A Stranger in Olondria by Sofia Samatar
Gorgeously written, but slow-paced and hard to follow. I'm glad I read it, but I want to follow it up with something nice and simple and straightforward.
212susanna.fraser

152. Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton
...and this wasn't exactly nice, simple, or straightforward. It was, however, quite a bit gripping and heartbreaking.
213susanna.fraser

153. The Spare Man by Mary Robinette Kowal
Now, this science fiction mystery (with honeymooners on a cruise ship IN! SPACE! complete with an adorable dog) was the weekend escape I was looking for.
214susanna.fraser

154. Marie Kondo's Kurashi at Home by Marie Kondo
While I will never be as intensely into tidying as Kondo is, this book was a helpful reminder to focus on what feels right--sparks joy, even--in my home and how to make more of it.
215susanna.fraser

155. Becoming Kin by Patty Krawec
A book by a Canadian First Nations author that looks at justice and reconciliation at the intersection points of history, religion, and political action.
216ReneeMarie
>213 susanna.fraser: You got me with Olondria. Does Kowal mention The Thin Man movies in her book?
217susanna.fraser
>216 ReneeMarie: Not directly (at least not that I noticed with my vague and sketchy knowledge of the movies), but it's definitely glamorous power couple with adorable dog solve mysteries IN! SPACE!
218susanna.fraser

156. Saga, Vol. 5 by Brian K. Vaughan
Continuing with this often grossly graphic, occasionally gorgeous, utterly surreal series.
219susanna.fraser

157. Maybe It Happened This Way by Leah Rachel Berkowitz and Erica Wovsaniker
A set of Bible story retellings (specifically from the Torah) written at the middle grade level. They do a lovely job of giving human motivations to characters who are sketched out in the text, or of showing big miraculous events through invented child characters. I wish my childhood Sunday School lessons had been a bit more like this, allowing kids to question and engage with the text, acknowledging where it seemed weird, unfair, etc. rather than just accepting it because God Said So.
220susanna.fraser

158. The Stand-Up Groomsman by Jackie Lau
Fun, sexy romcom wherein a bridesmaid and the best man start off on the wrong foot but gradually get past their bad first impressions.
221ReneeMarie
>217 susanna.fraser: I got a copy of it from the library, & the author in her acknowledgments says "Robert, you are the Nick to my Nora." And the characters in The Thin Man movies are Nick & Nora Charles & their (fraidy cat) dog Asta. Love the movies.
222susanna.fraser

159. Saga, Vol. 6 by Brian K. Vaughan
More Saga. I hope we get back to Sophie, Gwendolyn, and Lying Cat in the next volume.
223susanna.fraser

160. The Bitter End: The 2020 Presidential Campaign and the Challenge to American Democracy by John Sides, Chris Tausanovitch, and Lynn Vavreck
A data-driven, yet very readable, look at the state of the American electorate in 2020--basically, we've become calcified, so firm in our partisan beliefs that the kind of big events that normally drive political shifts aren't changing many minds.
224susanna.fraser

161. Illuminations by T Kingfisher
A quite delightful story about friendship, family, and magic paintings, plus a talking crow!
225susanna.fraser

162. How to Keep House While Drowning by KC Davis
This is sort of the anti-Marie Kondo in some ways, though the books are closer spiritually than they appear. Davis's book is all about letting go of perfectionism and learning to see care tasks like housework, cooking, and exercise as functional rather than moral--e.g. I'm not cleaning the living room because I'm a bad person if it's messy, but because the clutter is making the space less functional as a place to relax or work on personal projects. I also like her language shift of talking about "resetting" a room rather than "cleaning" it. It keeps you from getting depressed that it inevitably gets messy again, and puts your focus on getting the space ready for its next function.
226rabbitprincess
I like that idea of changing the language around cleaning and focusing on the functional! Maybe that idea will help me get my own place in order.
227Jackie_K
>225 susanna.fraser: >226 rabbitprincess: Yes, I instantly prefer the sound of that, whereas I just want to put Marie Kondo (or rather her books, which do not spark joy in the slightest), in the bin.
228Helenliz
>225 susanna.fraser: hmmm. Maybe.
I follow my mother's motto when it comes to cleaning, "No one ever laid on their deathbed wishing they'd done more housework". And employ a cleaner.
>227 Jackie_K: That grates on me and I've never read anything by her. I prefer William Morris's version, "You should have nothing in your home that you know to be useful or believe to be beautiful". I can think of any number of practical items that don't "spark joy", but I know them to be useful. The gas bill, however, falls into neither category and can cheerfully depart.
I follow my mother's motto when it comes to cleaning, "No one ever laid on their deathbed wishing they'd done more housework". And employ a cleaner.
>227 Jackie_K: That grates on me and I've never read anything by her. I prefer William Morris's version, "You should have nothing in your home that you know to be useful or believe to be beautiful". I can think of any number of practical items that don't "spark joy", but I know them to be useful. The gas bill, however, falls into neither category and can cheerfully depart.
229susanna.fraser
>228 Helenliz: We have a cleaning service twice a month, too, but unfortunately that does nothing for the clutter problem!

163. The Golden Enclaves by Naomi Novik
A fitting conclusion to a trilogy about a magic school of horrors, ending on a mostly hopeful note.

163. The Golden Enclaves by Naomi Novik
A fitting conclusion to a trilogy about a magic school of horrors, ending on a mostly hopeful note.
230susanna.fraser

164. The Outlaw Ocean by Ian Urbina
A fascinating, depressing look at crime at sea and how little effort is made to enforce rules and deliver consequences to those who break them, with chapters on everything from human trafficking to illegal fishing, to dumping toxic waste, to piracy, to whaling, to murder.
231Helenliz
>229 susanna.fraser: Lisa comes in weekly, and I find that her coming in makes me tidy up, so she can clean. So in our case it does help a bit - but I will admit that today stuff did just get moved from the study to the dining room while she did the study!
232susanna.fraser

165. The Last Emperox by John Scalzi
Finishing up the trilogy, though without spoiling anything I'll say I wasn't crazy about how it ended.
233susanna.fraser
And that concludes my 2022 reading, since both the books I'm reading now I'm holding off on the final chapter or epilogue until tomorrow because they meet 2023 TIOLI or CAT goals. My 2023 thread is here:
https://www.librarything.com/topic/345845#n8011178
https://www.librarything.com/topic/345845#n8011178




















