Meredith's 2026 Reads (mabith)

TalkClub Read 2026

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Meredith's 2026 Reads (mabith)

1mabith
Edited: Jun 21, 5:59 pm



2026 Reads

Is a River Alive? – Robert Macfarlane
Lemons Never Lie – Richard Stark
A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum – Emma Southon
After Graduation, I Became the Dragon King – Lin Zhiluo
Eyes like the Sea – Mor Jokai

The Peepshow – Kate Summerscale
The Gales of November – John U. Bacon
Between Two Rivers – Moudhy Al-Rashid
Elena Knows – Claudia Pineiro
Eyeliner – Zahra Hankir

The Echoes – Evie Wyld
White Heat – Dominic Sandbrook
The Encyclopedia of Ugly Fashion – Karolina Zebrowska
Slayground – Richard Stark
Industrial Cultivation – Lin Zhiluo

Persuasion – Jane Austen
Romaine Wasn't Built in a Day – Judith Tschann
The Artsy Smartsy Club – Daniel Pinkwater
Index, a History of the – Dennis Duncan
The Rise and Reign of the Mammals – Steve Brusatte

Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake – Alexis Hall
The Great River – Boyce Upholt
The Poisoned Chocolates Case – Anthony Berkeley
Seascraper – Benjamin Wood
All That She Carried – Tiya Miles

Fifth Sun – Camilla Townsend
The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida – Shehan Karunatilaka
Plunder Squad – Richard Stark
The Library of Ancient Wisdom – Selena Wisnom
Audrey Lane Stirs the Pot – Alexis Hall

The Road to Ruin – Donald E. Westlake
Apparently, Sir Cameron Needs to Die – Greer Stothers
Ponzi's Scheme – Mitchell Zuckoff
Replaceable You – Mary Roach
Every Day I Read – Hwang Bo-Reum

Two Princesses of Bamarre – Gail Carson Levine
A Brief History of Motion – Tom Standage
There are More Beautiful Things Than Beyonce – Morgan Parker
Enter a Murderer – Ngaio Marsh
Butcher's Moon – Richard Stark

Comeback – Richard Stark
After Facing a Tribulation, My Dead Daoist Partner Came Back – Jimo Yao
Revolusi – David van Reybrouck
Our Missing Hearts – Celeste Ng
The Buried City – Gabriel Zuchtriegel

This Alpha Is Determined Despite Physical Disability – San Wanguo Gang
If They Come For Us – Fatimah Asghar
The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny – Kiran Desai
Operation Valuable Fiend – Albert Lulushi
His Marriage Partner is Scheming – Wen Quan Ben Dan

Backflash – Richard Stark
After Crossing Through Ten Worlds I Failed to Run Away – Jiu Mi Jiu Mi Tu
Fighting For Our Friendships – Danielle Bayard Jackson
Made for Love – Alissa Nutting
Salt, Sweat & Steam – Brigid Washington

Villain's Strategy – Luobo Hua Tuzi
Harlots, Whores, & Hackabouts – Kate Lister
After Marrying an Enemy General – Gongzi Rou
The Hunter – Richard Stark
The Labyrinth House Murders – Yukito Ayatsuji

Make Believe – Mac Barnett
Window Left Open – Jennifer Grotz
O Human Star – Blue Delliquanti
The Man with the Getaway Face – Richard Stark
A History of Delusions – Victoria Shepherd

The Ax – Donald E. Westlake
Original Sins – Eve L. Ewing
Brat Farrar – Josephine Tey
Celestial Bodies – Jokha Alharthi
The Raft – Robert Trumbull, Harold F. Dixon

Frederica – Georgette Heyer

2mabith
Edited: Jan 1, 9:41 pm

Looking back at my loose goals from the beginning of 2025 I definitely didn't meet all of them. Though, I also found out in early April that I'd be moving soon so went into sorting, donation, and packing mode, and got into my new apartment full time in early May. I wouldn't say it hugely changed what I read, and I didn't totally lapse into comfort re-reads, but it definitely made it hard to think about managing anything other than my own energy levels.

I did read a decent amount of poetry, I got to authors from more countries than I did in the really homogeneous years even if not quite to my goal, (technically less than last year but a good heap last year came from a fairly short anthology), I did read two more books each from Wilkie Collins, Edith Wharton, and John Steinbeck.

This year I want to always have a new-to-me print book on the go (due to my chronic pain it's easier to read via audiobook), continue adding more poetry, and continue getting to a wider variety of countries (for author nationality).There are some specific things I'd like to read but I'm not going to curse myself by naming them. Okay no, I'll name one, I'm hoping to finally read a couple of Anthony Trollope novels.

3mabith
Jan 1, 9:58 pm



And here is the force of nature overseeing me at home, the beauty and (some of) the bookcases, Ixnay.

4mabith
Jan 2, 10:32 am

Favorite reads of 2025:

Fiction
The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton
Girl Meets Boy – Ali Smith
The Death of Vivek Oji – Akwaeke Emezi
Fathers and Sons – Ivan Turgenev
A Lady for a Duke – Alexis Hall
She of the Mountains – Vivek Shraya
French Exit – Patrick Dewitt
Howards End – EM Forster
Flesh – David Szalay
The Winter of Our Discontent – John Steinbeck
The Black Ice Score – Richard Stark
The Impossible Fortune – Richard Osman
The Night of the Hunter – Davis Grubb
Frederica – Georgette Heyer
The Husbands – Holly Gramazio
No Name – Wilkie Collins
Moby Dick – Herman Melville

Non-Fiction
Never Had it So Good – Dominic Sandbrook
Looking for Lorraine – Imani Perry
Byzantium – Judith Herrin
An African History of Africa – Zeinab Badawi
The World Remade – GJ Meyer
Dancing on Ropes – Anna Aslanyan
Red Sauce – Ian MacAllen
The Burgundians – Bart Van Loo
Postwar – Tony Judt
I'll Be Here in the Morning – Brian T. Atkinson
Oranges – John McPhee
One Day – Gene Weingarten
A Travel Guide to the Middle Ages – Anthony Bale
Unseen Universe – Caroline Harper
Voice of Glory – Thomas E. Douglass
Alexandria – Islam Issa
Fasting and Feasting – Adam Federman
Jane Austen’s Bookshelf – Rebecca Romney
The Devil in the Shape of a Woman – Carol F. Karlsen
Everything is Tuberculosis – John Green
A History of the World in Six Plagues – Edna Bonhomme
The Garden Against Time – Olivia Laing

Children's Books
Jules, Penny & the Rooster – Daniel Pinkwater
Scarlet Morning – ND Stevenson

Graphic Novels
In. – Will McPhail
The Book Tour – Andi Watson

Poetry
The January Children – Safia Elhillo

5edwinbcn
Jan 2, 11:32 am

Interesting non-fiction readings. I have been thinking about buying The Garden Against Time but couldn't make up my mind. Although I visited the wonderful exhibition about the Burgundians at the museum in Venlo, I flunked The Burgundians that was in the library of my mother. This year I hope ti read No name.

6labfs39
Jan 2, 12:16 pm

>4 mabith: I never hear of Fathers and Sons these days, but it was a favorite of mine back in grad school.

7dchaikin
Jan 2, 1:37 pm

>3 mabith: hello beautiful Ixnay

>4 mabith: lovely lists. Great year.

Hope no more moving this year. Happy New
Year Meredith.

8rocketjk
Jan 2, 1:44 pm

Happy New Year. Here's to a year of happy reading and reaching, or at least enjoying, those reading goals. Cheers!

9kidzdoc
Jan 2, 1:46 pm

Everything is Tuberculosis and A History of the World in Six Plagues both sound interesting (my undergraduate degree is in Microbiology), so I'll have to track them down.

10WelshBookworm
Jan 3, 2:01 am

Beautiful cat! I hope you are starting to feel settled in your new place. I'm still unpacking and organizing after three years! Happy reading!

11BLBera
Jan 3, 10:19 am

>4 mabith: Great lists of favorites. You had a good year of reading. Happy New Year. I hope 2026 is good to you.

12LolaWalser
Jan 3, 11:53 am

Happy new year, Meredith, much good reading and film-watching.

13mabith
Jan 3, 10:45 pm

>5 edwinbcn: The Burgundians was definitely a lot, but I liked van Loo's style and it did help fill in some European history gaps.

>6 labfs39: I absolutely adored Fathers and Sons. I saw so much of my dad in various characters, for better and for worse. It definitely deserves a resurgence in popularity here.

>7 dchaikin: I think if I had to move again I would simply sit on the floor and cry until someone else took charge.

>8 rocketjk: Yes, hopefully a great year of reading for all of us!

>9 kidzdoc: Those two books are definitely focused on the human side more than the science, especially Six Plagues, which would better be titled 'Lessons for Humanity from Six Plagues.' That one was really unexpected and brilliant, at least for me.

>10 WelshBookworm: I got unpacked pretty quickly, though I really need to reorganize the kitchen cabinets to be more functional and I keep wondering if I should rearrange my living room...

>11 BLBera: Thank you, and hopefully 2026 is good to all of us.

>12 LolaWalser: Happy new year! Definitely need all the good books and films for a little balm from Current Events.

14mabith
Edited: Jan 5, 11:00 am


Is a River Alive? by Robert Macfarlane

Years ago now I gave my dad one of Macfarlane's books, The Old Ways, which he loved and I always felt I should give it a read. I have not, but I saw this new one on my library site and figured I'd give it a go. I'm a river person myself and have been missing my particular river (never mind I've been living along two other rivers for over half my life now).

I found Macfarlane a little hard to get along with, which I suspect is my issue. He wants everyone to be a total Character (or only writes about Characters) but also sometimes leans into people's skills automatically being nearly mystical with little mention of the years of work and learning it takes before you hit the point where it seems magic to strangers. If The Old Ways is similar I can see how the aspects which bothered me would have been just what my dad liked.

There's some good and interesting information here, but Macfarlane got in the way for me. I was also surprised, especially given this is a brand new book, that he doesn't bring up successful river cleanup projects, of which there are many! Younger readers might be left thinking it's an impossible task so why care about putting in work on an already polluted river.

I wasn't constantly experiencing high levels of annoyance through the whole read or I'd have dropped the book (though Macfarlane's idea of how long grieving lasts would have had me throwing a paper copy across a room), but it was extremely mixed. I don't think I'd pick up another by him.

15mabith
Jan 4, 10:37 pm

Gary (@valkyrdeath) and I have a little Sunday movie club, watching 'together' from our respective sides of the Atlantic. I thought I might post about those films as well.

Today I definitely needed a dose of Katherine Hepburn and Cary Grant and I realized we'd neglected Holiday! Plus, Edward Everett Horton is also in it and I adore him. This was such a fun comedy with some universal themes about control and freedom. Wikipedia incorrectly, in my opinion, calls it a screwball comedy. It does not reach the heights of screwball that you find in say, Bringing Up Baby or Arsenic and Old Lace.

16labfs39
Jan 4, 10:48 pm

>15 mabith: I knew that you and Gary were good friends and had the film club, so I always assumed that he was local to you. Surprise! He's in the UK!

17mabith
Jan 4, 11:38 pm

>16 labfs39: Ha, nope, just longtime online friends (and he's come here to visit a few times), sort of due to both being highly frustrated with a mutual friend. We ditched that person and kept each other! I try to drag all my reader friends onto LT, but he's my only success story so far.

18dchaikin
Jan 4, 11:59 pm

>14 mabith: hmm. I’m trying to decide if he just has issues or didn’t put enough into the book to figure his issues and missing info out. Anyway, i think I won’t pursue him. And i wish you a better next book.

>15 mabith: >17 mabith: this is cool about your movie sharing. And I’m happy Gary’s here

19LolaWalser
Jan 5, 5:35 pm

>15 mabith:

I like Holiday, despite not really liking Hepburn at all... (I always feel guilty about this bc clearly I SHOULD like her, and yet...) She grates on me particularly in Bringing up Baby! I know the nature of screwball is to be over the top but every time I feel that in Grant's place I'd have punched her eventually. Manic Pixie Dream Girl waaay before the trope?

20mabith
Jan 5, 6:48 pm

>19 LolaWalser: Ha, I can definitely understand her being too grating, especially in that film. I was infected very young though, and really it's the style of humor in the scripts of her 1930s movies that I like even more than Hepburn (and Grant does Man Having the Worst Time so well). To me it's less manic pixie dream girl trope and more Posh Idiot, a timeless character type, I'm sure.

21RidgewayGirl
Jan 5, 9:23 pm

Here's to a new year and to Ixnay. I hope the new place is feeling more and more like home.

22qebo
Jan 5, 9:30 pm

>14 mabith: I might be similarly irritated but still I'm interested.

23edwinbcn
Jan 6, 3:00 am

>14 mabith:
Interesting to read your review of the latest book by Mcfarlane, but pity you cannot compare it with some of his other books. I have read two of his earlier books, The Old Ways and Landmark, and usually I would then alsmost automatically want to read the next book. But I am really in doubt about this one.

It seems Mcfarlane "is going Simon Winchester". I don't like the idea of forcing a story on x number of rivers. I have looked over this book two or three times in a bookstore, each time deciding not to buy.

24mabith
Jan 6, 9:18 am

>21 RidgewayGirl: We're definitely good and settled! It was hard being in a place my parents never saw for the holidays, in the soft grief of feeling my life slip further from what they knew, but the stress relief of of not owning a falling apart house that I can't afford to fix is enormously wonderful.

>22 qebo: Holiday is definitely a less grating one. It's not a masterpiece, but we enjoyed it. I do just love that period for comedy though.

>23 edwinbcn: I would say the rivers he picked fit his starting point about declarations of the rights of nature and various movements to declare certain rivers as individuals with rights that should be protected. The three rivers (well, one part has a river but is more about a forest) he visits are all relevant to that discussion in different ways. It's more what he does with those stories and where he leaves them that bothered me (also some really horrific water safety decisions that apart from endangering his life could have endangered his guides' lives). But zero discussion of water cleanup projects and how successful they can be was just a really bizarre choice to me. As much as there's a broader story in there it felt like Macfarlane just wanted to write about his adventures and his new friends.

25SassyLassy
Jan 6, 9:36 am

>14 mabith: Interesting thoughts on Macfarlane. I pick him up periodically, but have never been able to put my finger on why I don't become more engaged. I think you may have the answer. I will continue to dabble in and out, but will wait until the books of his I have here are finally completed before venturing into river territory.

>23 edwinbcn: "Going Simon Winchester" - great way of putting it

>15 mabith: I'm a huge fan of Arsenic and Old Lace

26japaul22
Jan 6, 9:37 am

>14 mabith: I tried reading his Underland and know what you mean about him "getting in the way". I was interested in the info, but it seemed overwritten or overly indulgent to his specific personality. I abandoned it quickly, but kept the book. I will probably give it one more try and then donate it the library if I feel the same.

27AlisonY
Jan 6, 3:05 pm

Howdy Meredith! I've only read one Macfarlane book (Mountains of the Mind), which I was in mixed minds about. I feel he got the bit between his teeth on certain sub-topics which the book didn't particularly need (at least to that level of detail). Sounds like the rivers book was a bit similar - too many Macfarlane pet projects in the writing.

28mabith
Jan 6, 9:30 pm

>25 SassyLassy: I'm very relieved it's not just me struggling with him! And Arsenic and Old Lace is such brilliant film. I should really rewatch it, as the most recent time was maybe ten years ago.

>26 japaul22: If he were writing strictly travel books or more strictly personal books his approach might work better for me, but alas!

>27 AlisonY: It's really a shame, since the subjects are interesting.

29mabith
Jan 7, 10:05 pm

Well, egg on my face (or memory), turns out I did read The Old Ways by Macfarlane and just completely forgot. It was back in 2014, and I've read an awful lot since then but I've generally got a pretty good memory for titles/authors when I'm looking at them again.

I discovered this lapse while going through all my old reading and trying to pick a most influential read from each year of the 20 I've been noting down my reads (influential on either my reading or my worldview or sense of history, etc... rather than just Best or Favorite), and it's definitely not the first utterly forgotten read.

30dchaikin
Jan 7, 10:26 pm

In your defense, you read a lot of books. 🙂

31mabith
Jan 7, 10:59 pm

>30 dchaikin: This is true!

32mabith
Jan 7, 10:59 pm


Lemons Never Lie by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake)

I'm trying to keep more up to date on my reviews this year, so we'll see how long that lasts!

This is the final book in Westlake's Alan Grofield series. Grofield is a sometimes confederate of Parker, appearing in The Score and The Handle before getting his first solo book which carries on directly from the events of The Handle. He's a really fun character in those books, being an actor who finances his theater shows (the only REAL acting, according to him) by a yearly robbery job. What Westlake really uses the solo Grofield books for are stories that Parker just won't work for, but which he wanted the Stark paycheck for (as they sold best among his real name and pseudonyms). This means Grofield isn't quite so consistent as Parker and the books vary a lot (one is partly a 'country house' type mystery, another is clearly playing on James Bond and other spy novel tropes).

This is the bloodiest of the Grofield books but also the book where we get the most of his non-crime life. After being called to Las Vegas to discuss a potential job, it's clear the man planning it is not sensible. After keeping another walk-out from the job company in the casino, he's met at his hotel by two men who thinks he has the other pro's gambling winnings and give his head a crack before they leave. He realizes it's the rejected job's planner, and is even happier to leave that guy behind, not realizing he'll keep following like a bad penny.

It was a good read, as ever with Westlake. Plus like with the Parker novels he's always happy to show just how many ways things can go wrong (and the vital importance of good plans and trust). Grofield gets another appearance as a Parker string member in Butcher's Moon, but I'll miss him.

33mabith
Jan 9, 11:12 pm


A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome by Emma Southon

This was a really fun book. I've long been a reader of books about ancient Rome, and had kind of decided I didn't need to read any more. Then I kept hearing about Southon's books and my love for the subject took over.

Southon's tone is very casual. She's happy to say X Exhaustive Thing is Boring So Don't Worry About It (I didn't always agree, but we all have different nerd points). She swears, she uses slang, she clearly thinks a lot about the actual lives of people in the past. She understands that there are reasons it's so easy to turn some of these historical events into soap opera. The book is of course about some specific murders in Rome, but it's also about what 'counts' as murder (today and then) and what aspects of her examples are usual or unusual in the period, and what we do and don't know about views in the period.

My one complaint is that the audiobook reader was very poorly chosen and read the book in the uninterested posh tones that books about ancient Rome usually get. It's distinctly at odds with the text (and the reader also didn't bother learning how to pronounce a current famous person's name properly, which is also very annoying). It's really a shame Southon didn't read it herself.

34mabith
Jan 10, 11:12 am

After Graduation, I Became the Dragon King by Lin Zhiluo

Another book by my favorite webnovel author! This one was more in line with my favorite work of theirs (New Times, New Hell), as we're back deep diving in Daoist spells and various traditional spirits and ghosts. Also like the previously mentioned book, this one has episodic monster hunting with a wider background plot. Kind of like The X-Files if it were actually well-balanced.

Xue Chen is a young dragon who has been doing closed door cultivation for much of his life. He's finally completed his Daoist body (meaning he can shift between his human and dragon forms) when he's attacked by an unknown person and wakes up in the body of a college boy who had just drowned. He almost immediately ends up helping with a spirit making trouble at a construction site (he's interning there) and swiftly builds a reputation with the local Daoist temple. One aspect of the overall plot is easily guessable but Lin shifts and complicates it enough that you still feel surprised at the resolution.

Lin's books are always funny and this one is no different. It's not quite as hysterical as New Times, New Hell, but the main characters in that are different types. A dragon must have more dignity, one thinks. One of the other features when Lin is on this subject is the intersection between Chinese socialism and the impact on the spirit world. There's lots of stuff about spirits needing to cease being so feudal and catch up to the modern world in this book.

One of my favorite things was learning that a Chinese word for mirage, 蜃景 shèn jǐng, which I know from a song title, refers to a very specific legend. It was written at some point that giant clam spirits could spit out a gas that caused people to get trapped in illusions, so if you separate the two characters you could translate it as giant clam scenery. In my head I've already replaced the word bullshit with clam scenery.

35dchaikin
Jan 10, 1:29 pm

These all look fun. And I’m thinking about the uses of clam scenery. (Fortunately i edited them out of this comment)

36labfs39
Jan 10, 7:02 pm

>34 mabith: "giant clam spirits could spit out a gas that caused people to get trapped in illusions, so if you separate the two characters you could translate it as giant clam scenery. In my head I've already replaced the word bullshit with clam scenery."

This is fantastic.

37mabith
Jan 12, 11:09 am

>35 dchaikin: >36 labfs39: It's a great phrase we should all be using, there's certainly a lot of nonsense to apply it to.

38mabith
Jan 12, 12:36 pm


Eyes Like the Sea by Mór Jókai (1825-1904)

I have a lot of non-fiction library holds coming in, so I wanted to get a quick fiction read done. Initially I was set to start Persuasion, but I remembered someone in my book club suggested that so it's now a February read.

Jókai was a Hungarian writer of the 19th century, and a leader of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. He was quite a prolific writer, maybe partly due to being passionate about the Hungarian language.

This book has a number of autobiographical elements, the main character was sent to train to be a lawyer, was more interested in writing and painting and politics, was a leader in the revolution, was imprisoned, etc etc... He is in love with Bessy who has 'eyes like the sea.' She is of a higher social class and has spent at least part of their early acquaintance laughing at him with her same-class peers (everyone knows he's in love with her). In most ways she's the point of the novel.

Thus Bessy was under a threefold inspection, the natural consequence of which was that she could do just as she liked, for every one of her guardians privately argued, "Why should I take the trouble of looking after this little girl when the other two are doing the same thing?" and so all three were always occupied with their own affairs.

We go through the novel with our Jókai stand-in, with Bessy coming in and out of his life with new travails and new husbands and new husband problems, always assuming our narrator can help. She does not lean on his affections in a way that gives him hope they'll be requited, but counts on his generous and genuine feelings to keep him from taking advantage of her.

I feel like I'm missing a lot in this novel, in the context and in being unsure what Jókai's main point was. Is it Bessy's selfishness in relying on him over and over, presuming his affection has continued to last when the narrator is already disillusioned? Is the point her difficulties and how her husbands and other men have treated her, without regard to her particular actions but on sexist assumptions? Is the point the narrator's inability to see how he himself treats women under the facade of nobility of purpose? Perhaps it's all of the above.

It was certainly an interesting read, and at times quite humorous. Jókai was apparently much beloved of the upper class Britons of the period, including Queen Victoria (which makes me feel like maybe I'm imagining some of the deeper points of this novel). I leave you with another fun quote:

"No! no! En akarom magyarul beszélni"—and at the same time he made as though he were ducking the head of a refractory urchin in a basin of soapsuds.

"Akarok," I good-humouredly corrected him.

"No! no! Akarok is the indefinite mood, akarom the definite mood; and I want to speak Hungarian definitely."

I was forced to acknowledge to myself that his logic was stronger than his grammar.

39mabith
Jan 15, 9:26 pm


The Peepshow: The Murders at 10 Rillington Place by Kate Summerscale

I've read most of Summerscale's books and enjoyed all of them. She covers what can often become overly sensational stories in less careful hands and is skilled at balancing all the nuance. As the subtitle says, this one is about the murders by John Christie at that address (part of the Notting Hill area of London).

Summerscale also brings in the stories of two writers of the time who were covering the case and the trial. One, Harry Procter, essentially of the tabloid press and known for his array of tricks to get the story first, and Fryn Tennyson Jesse, a more serious journalist, novelist, and something of a criminologist. Their interests in this case and views on the conviction and execution of one of Christie's neighbors, Tim Evans, for the deaths of Evans' wife and infant daughter, as inherently suspect in the light of Christie's killings form a really important thread in the book.

A good, thoughtful treatment that does not pretend to have all the answers and which does not ignore the lives of the women Christie murdered.

40mabith
Jan 16, 1:43 pm

I'm behind on movie posting already. Last Sunday we watched Nina Wu, a Taiwanese film released in 2019. It's a surreal one, about an aspiring actress, Nina Wu, who has finally gotten a main role. However, it comes with a very difficult director, nudity, and sex scenes. She begins the crack psychologically and become paranoid, imagining attacks by an unknown woman.

The film didn't quite achieve its lofty goals, and the ending felt less impactful, but great cinematography and particularly good sound work which amplified the atmosphere really well. I was super impressed by that aspect throughout. Someone else described it as "a Taiwanese Black Swan meets the Me Too movement," which is a little unfair perhaps but not completely unfair.

I also watched Animation Outlaws, a documentary about Spike and Mike who pioneered an important animation festival in the US during the late 1970s and worked hard on getting the animators (in the US and elsewhere) personal recognition and showings so they could be submitted for the Oscars. It was not a well done documentary, and there were sections of people talking in various languages which did not include subtitles at all (either in English or the spoken language). I feel like a good essay on them would be more worthwhile, perhaps, because there was a lot of interesting information.

Both films were on Kanopy.

41KeithChaffee
Jan 16, 6:39 pm

>40 mabith: For most of the 90s, Spike & Mike put out a theatrical release of each year's festival highlights. I loved those collections, as well as the "International Tournee of Animation" collections that came out during the same period. The Wikipedia entry for Spike and Mike says that the rights to their festival have been purchased by a new company that hopes to revive it; I hope that will include a similar theatrical release.

42mabith
Jan 21, 10:43 am

>41 KeithChaffee: I think there were some collections of work they originally featured that made it to TV and/or VHS in the 1990s as well? I know I'd seen some of the less mainstream stuff featured in the documentary and in small town West Virginia that would mean it made it to MTV maybe or the local video rental store. It will be great if they can revive it.

43mabith
Jan 21, 11:29 am


The Gales of November: The Untold Story of the Edmund Fitzgerald by John U. Bacon

For the past few years I've been a great fan of youtube video essays on maritime disasters, particularly from a few particular channels, and the Great Lakes stories are some of the most interesting. The Fitzgerald sank in 1975 and it was somewhat of a turning point for safety and weather precautions on the lakes. Though, I do wonder if Bacon has overstated new corporate concerns about safety (obviously it makes more business sense to play it safe when transporting valuable cargo on valuable ships but that was the case long before the Fitzgerald sank). Certainly for ocean going ships recent sinkings haven't seemed to make much difference (don't talk to ME about the El Faro).

However, there have been no cargo ship sinkings on the lakes after the Fitzgerald, and I'm sure the sheer regard for her (and her captain) did make for a stronger impact among the other captains especially than if it had been another ship.

Regardless! I think Bacon did a great job with this, and keeping the story firmly grounded in the facts, the culture of Great Lakes boat workers and their families, and in the human stories of those aboard and the people left behind. I don't know how it will read to people not already decently versed in Great Lakes shipping (the Carl D. Bradley and Daniel J. Morrell sinkings were already well known to me). Though for that matter, if you're not already interested in the subject will you be likely to pick up this book vs check out a Wikipedia article?

Good read for those interested in the subject.

44mabith
Jan 21, 11:46 am


Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History by Moudhy Al-Rashid

Another good non-fiction read! Al-Rashid takes us through aspects of ancient culture and life springing from specific archaeological discoveries and specific cuneiform tablets or caches of tablets.

For folks who get a lot of bite-size bits of ancient history news, a lot of the individual tablets or jumping off points will be familiar (history nerds on Tumblr love cuneiform tablets). However, Al-Rashid always builds on what I knew in interesting ways. She's also not trying to do too much or be definite about areas where there are many potential explanations. You can also really feel her passion for and interest in the subject.

Definitely recommended.

45KeithChaffee
Jan 21, 1:31 pm

>42 mabith: Yes, at their peak, the Spike & Mike theatrical collections got home video releases. But that was in the VHS era, and I don't believe any of them were ever re-issued on DVD.

46mabith
Jan 21, 2:37 pm

>45 KeithChaffee: I imagine that would have required new rights negotiations and whether the time spent tracking people down would have been reflected in DVD sales is debatable. I'd have to ask my brother, but I think the owner of one of the video rental places in my town was a bit of an animation nerd. I know some high schoolers my brother delinquent-ed around with did an animation they were submitting places (would have definitely been on the Sick and Twisted side of Spike and Mike), and that guy made extra VHS copies of it and kept one on the shelves in the rental place.

47mabith
Jan 26, 2:41 pm


Elena Knows by Claudia Piñeiro

I saw positive reviews for this on a couple threads last year and happily it lived up to expectations! I kept considering suggesting it for my book club, but eventually decided against that due to physical disability being the house I live in. Well meaning but shallow/incorrect thoughts on that representation can sometimes hit sore spots and I don't want to feel I HAVE to play Cheerful Disabled Person Educates Healthy People.

That aspect, the description of feeling trapped by the body, feeling separate from it, was done SO well in the book. I had to take a few breaks in the reading despite loving it because it really hit so close to home and especially how I remember feeling in the first years of being sick.

Elena has Parkinson's, that "fucking whore illness" in her words. The narration switches between the events of a single day and incidents from the past covering her and her daughter, Rita's, somewhat difficult relationship, and how Elena's escalating care needs impacts it. When Rita is found hanged in the church she attended, Elena is insistent it was murder but the police have given up the case. The single day we spent with her covers her traveling to get help from someone who owed her daughter a favor.

The whole book was done so well, in my opinion.

48labfs39
Jan 26, 2:44 pm

>47 mabith: I'm glad you liked this one too, Meredith. Thanks for sharing your perspective. I find it hard sometimes to review a book that strikes close to home.

49mabith
Jan 26, 3:09 pm

>48 labfs39: Yes, that closeness can be hard to describe or articulate when it's well done (plenty easy when the author does it poorly!).

50mabith
Jan 26, 3:10 pm

My Sunday movie was The Wolf House, a 2018 animated film for adults by Chileans Cristobal León & Joaquín Cociña. It was inspired by Colonia Dignidad, an isolated cult run and populated by emigrant Germans which became complicit in the torture and murder of dissidents during the Pinochet dictatorship (and was rife with child sexual abuse, along with other typical working-the-land cult abuses).

The film is presented as a propaganda fable about a girl who runs away from the group. The mix of drawn and stop motion animation was really impressive, and the entire style of it was captivating the whole way through. The film was full of surreal horror and creeping dread but it was the animation that really makes it.

Highly recommended for animation lovers.

51KeithChaffee
Jan 26, 3:24 pm

>50 mabith: Oh, such a strange marvel of a movie. I remember being struck by the way objects would sometimes appear in incomplete form and only gradually fully assemble themselves, as if the story was moving faster than the animators could keep up with.

52kidzdoc
Jan 26, 3:53 pm

>47 mabith: I agree, Elena Knows is a great book.

53kjuliff
Jan 26, 4:07 pm

>47 mabith: I think I was one of the ones that raved about it last year. I was really impressed by the writing and it’s a book. I always remember. So glad that you liked it Meredith.

54labfs39
Jan 26, 5:46 pm

>50 mabith: Well that sent me down a rabbit hole on the Internet.

55cindydavid4
Jan 26, 6:13 pm

>44 mabith: oh definetly want to read that! its a topic I always want to know more about

56Nickelini
Jan 26, 8:42 pm

>19 LolaWalser: Manic Pixie Dream Girl waaay before the trope?
That's funny. I don't think I've known anyone who disliked Katherine Hepburn before. I like her, but she can be A LOT, and her odd accent gets tiring.

57Nickelini
Jan 26, 8:45 pm

>40 mabith: I do hope you post more of your movie watching. I'm also interested in how you co-watch with someone on another continent

58mabith
Jan 27, 11:44 am

>51 KeithChaffee: Yes, the way the animated figures were often built or painted in front of you and then rushing to keep up was so neat.

>52 kidzdoc: >53 kjuliff: It was such a good read, I almost regret not making people in my book club read it, but not quite.

>54 labfs39: Ha, yes, I went down the same internet research rabbit hole.

>55 cindydavid4: Between Two Rivers definitely felt like a great introduction to the subject.

>57 Nickelini: We've occasionally watched together on sites that let you have 'watch parties' with multiple viewers, but mostly we both just start the video, pause right at the beginning, one of us says "begin!" in our chat program, and we both hit play at close enough to same time. We're both computer users and fast typists, rather than chatting on phones, so it works out nicely to get to comment while we watch. We generally have a TV show we're watching during the week as well, and it's a great way to actually make us watch stuff we're interested in that we'd likely just keep putting off on our own.

It helps that we both like watching a wide variety of genres, have fairly similar tastes, and that Gary is particularly open to me forcing him to watch weird/silly things that I've loved.

59dchaikin
Jan 27, 12:50 pm

>43 mabith: all i know is the song. Sounds like an interesting read

>44 mabith: ditto on the Sumerian tablets. Sounds fascinating

>47 mabith: i want to read Elena Knows. I really appreciate your response to it

60valkyrdeath
Jan 27, 4:03 pm

>58 mabith: Weird and silly things are the best so not much forcing required!

61Nickelini
Jan 27, 11:18 pm

>58 mabith: That sounds like fun!

62qebo
Feb 1, 9:04 am

>47 mabith: was done SO well
Somehow I missed reviews last year, but this look interesting.

63mabith
Feb 2, 1:23 pm

>62 qebo: It's definitely one that deserves to make the rounds of LT I think, though I imagine it won't work for everyone (what book does).

64mabith
Feb 2, 2:26 pm


Eyeliner: A Cultural History by Zahra Hankir

I previously read a book Hankir edited, Our Women on the Ground: Essays by Arab Women Reporting from the Arab World, which I highly recommend. After starting and ditching two non-fiction books, one for issues in the content/views and one because it turned out to be really a list-filled coffee table book, I wanted an author I had more trust in.

It's easy to think this is a thin topic, but Hankir handles it really well, focusing on current and historical eyeliner use and the many meanings behind it for different groups, traditional and modern, and how it makes the wearer feel. Plus a lot about traditional kohl making and application and uses of course. Even as someone who has never regularly worn makeup (and neither did my mom during my life), there is something about eyeliner and how dramatically it can change a look.

Very interesting read all in all and a good little microhistory.

65mabith
Feb 4, 9:40 pm


The Echoes by Evie Wyld

Wyld is one of my favorite 21st century novelists. I really enjoy the style of her writing and I think she has a real gift for portraits of very realistically struggling people. Some books I've found more wholly successful than others, and the previous one, The Bass Rock felt the weakest in some ways, made of up of very different parts which weren't connected enough to feel like they should be together.

This most recent novel feels like both a correction of that one's too-loose approach and takes on some of the non-linear construction in her book All the Birds, Singing. We're in different times, with some different points of view, but much more closely related. Hannah came to England from Australia on the strength of a photograph of her maternal grandmother (and a creative writing program), who she never knew, but who was born in England and immigrated as a child. Her boyfriend has died, we don't initially know how and nor does he, but he's there as a ghost in the house. We get Hannah's life in England from her point of view in the Before sections and from Max's point of view watching her in the After sections (the designations referring to his death). Third person sections, Then, cover her childhood in Australia and interspersed throughout we get chapters named by character, focused on her parents, sister, uncle, uncle's girlfriend, and grandmother.

We gradually put together what has happened in Hannah's family, though not in an absolutely 100% complete way. It all worked really well for me, though the missing Wrap Up Every Last Detail aspects might bother some readers. There are also some difficult themes which don't make for lighthearted reading.

66rasdhar
Feb 6, 9:10 pm

>3 mabith: Ixnay looks majestic here.

>4 mabith: I'm picking several books from your favourite reads list for my TBR

>14 mabith: I really enjoyed Macfarlane's Underland which does not seem to have the Main Character/Mysticism problem of his other books. I was a bit sceptical about this one, thanks for this review.

>32 mabith: A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome sounds really fun! I don't know if you know this but some years ago the Ides of March had caught on, on social media and there were endless memes about it, and have been since every 15 March. I'm going to read this, for sure, but I'll stick to print.

>39 mabith: Glad to hear The Peepshow is well written.

Sorry for the long comment, I'm making good use of my weekend by finally catching up on so many threads.

67mabith
Feb 13, 3:34 pm

>66 rasdhar: Long comments never a bad thing! I'd say Ixnay always looks majestic, but like most cats she alternates that with looking very foolish. It does seem like Robert MacFarlane's books vary a good bit.

Ha, I'm very familiar with the Ides of March memes on Tumblr at least. It's one of my favorite of the bigger Tumblr Holidays, though I was that kid pretending to be Caesar leading my legions, slaughtering many, so it's mildly bittersweet. I'm looking forward to reading all of Emma Southon's books.

68mabith
Feb 13, 4:02 pm

Movie catchup!

This Magnificent Cake! - Gorgeous felted wool animation but really a series of short pieces that didn't particularly hang together and are mistakenly described as a commentary on Belgian colonialism (one part is but most are not in any remotely direct way)

Ninotchka - A Greta Garbo film that's aged badly. It's a slippery slope from enjoying slapstick to buying a poorly made silly hat and deciding capitalism is great. I'm sure I watched this in my original teenage Greta Garbo obsession, but remembered nothing about it.

Secret Mall Apartment - Documentary about a group of artists in Rhode Island who discover a void space in a big mall they hate and slowly turn it into a secret apartment mainly as an art project. Really good and interesting all the way through.

Popeye - Rewatch from early childhood which shows why it didn't become a family favorite recurring watch. I'd completely forgotten it was a full on musical and the style of music really doesn't match the vibe of either cartoon or comic book Popeye and constantly takes you out of the film (though there are some great gags).

Song Lang - A Vietnamese movie about a debt collector who is reminded of his parents and his previous love for Cải lương (a modern folk opera tradition) when he has to collect from a troop and gets to know their new star. Can be viewed through a queer lens and seems to often be listed as a queer film but it's all optional subtext. I really liked this, but it's a sad one.

69mabith
Feb 13, 4:16 pm


White Heat: A History of Britain in the Swinging Sixties by Dominic Sandbrook

With this read I've now completed Sandbrooks very long five-book series about UK history from 1956-1982. I've found it a really informative, interesting (and horrifying), well done series and I'd happily read a few more covering early or later periods. I think the way he handles the back and forth of politics, art, fashion, entertainment, etc... and how they intersect makes them very readable.

A key important part of this series is actually reminding us how easy it is to generalize a period into very specific ideas or trends that are actually inaccurate for all but a minority. The "permissive society" of the 1960s was a political slogan much more than a reality and the "swinging sixties" only existed for a very small set of people. That reminder is important for how we approach current and recent events as well, and all the generalizations we want to lazily slip into.

70Nickelini
Feb 13, 4:55 pm

>68 mabith: Secret Mall Apartment - Documentary about a group of artists in Rhode Island who discover a void space in a big mall they hate and slowly turn it into a secret apartment mainly as an art project. Really good and interesting all the way through.

I stumbled across this a few weeks ago. It was fascinating. The shots of them taking large furniture up the ladder was amazing

71qebo
Feb 13, 5:02 pm

>68 mabith: Secret Mall Apartment
Oh this sounds interesting. I've added it to my Netflix queue.

72Nickelini
Feb 13, 6:07 pm

>68 mabith:
I'm sure I watched this in my original teenage Greta Garbo obsession, but remembered nothing about it.

I had a teenage Greta Garbo obsession too, but this was in the years before VCRs, so I didn't actually see many of her films. It was driven by library books with fabulous photos of her

73baswood
Feb 14, 5:12 am

>69 mabith: Interesting book. Having lived through the swinging sixties as a teenager in London, and looking back on it now I think there was a sea change for young people in the sixties. Ok so not everybody slept around or took drugs but there was suddenly a real difference between the generations. It wasn't only for the smart set in London although of course it set the pace.

Anyway you have picked my interest for yet another book I want to read.

74mabith
Feb 14, 10:42 am

>70 Nickelini: Yes, the furniture moving was ridiculously impressive. Even when I was healthy it was still hard enough moving furniture up regular stairs.

>71 qebo: It's definitely an interesting one, though I think whether one sees the artistic side of the project or a somewhat anarchistic side depends a lot on the viewer.

>72 Nickelini: All those gorgeous photos of her will do that!

>73 baswood: Sandbrook's argument on there not being as much difference between the generations as we think are the polls of the period. I haven't looked deeply into all those sources for this particular volume or the numbers polled, but I know for my own generation that young people with more progressive views are more likely to exaggerate them on a poll rather than underplay them, particularly if they feel the wording is looking for a conservative response. Certainly my mom's experience as a young hippie, as written in her diaries at the time, were that the exterior talk often did not run to actual changes of belief once they were head to head with an issue of the day (and I see the same thing now with young people who learn the new words but don't unlearn the old attitudes).

75mabith
Edited: Feb 14, 11:16 am


The Encyclopedia of Ugly Fashion by Karolina Żebrowska

Żebrowska is a Polish youtuber I follow, making often humorous videos about historical fashion often combining them with modern meme culture, sewing projects, commenting on costuming in period films and TV shows, a podcast looking into a different historical text each episode, and a very personally envy-inducing series of videos renovating and decorating her 1930s apartment where she is living out all my dreams.

This is a fun volume though I think forcing it into an alphabetical encyclopedia format is a bit silly and pointless. It uses a mix of historic images of the fashions and Zebrowska's photos with either handmade versions or vintage pieces and a page or two of text putting the item in historical context (plus some jokes). One is bound to disagree with her on some points but it's a fun ride (I personally love those 1920s wrap coats with the giant fur collars, and I love medieval/early modern scissors-glasses).

76mabith
Feb 14, 12:07 pm


Slayground by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake)

The 14th book in the Parker series, which means I only have two to read before the 23 year gap in the series. I'm sort of unreasonably excited to compare 1960s/70s Parker with 1990s Parker, but still trying to only read one per month.

The opening events in this book are shared with the Grofield book The Blackbird, a car accident in the getaway from a robbery which leaves Grofield and the driver injured while Parker gets away on foot with his money. Unfortunately, where the crash happened there are few places to go and four witnesses - two men in suits and two cops. Parker makes a split second decision to enter a closed-for-winter amusement park, only to find he's trapped, with the front gate being the only exit. He works out that the people out front must have been handing over money to bribe the cops and then the fun begins.

This was a great one, with Westlake clearly enjoying coming up his own local amusement park, perhaps informed by a few over-long trips to one with his children. It's a great setting for this kind of thing, and as usual many, many things go wrong. He just loves to give Parker (and most of his characters) a hard time. This one would work well as a stand-alone read, I think.

77mabith
Feb 18, 10:02 pm


Industrial Cultivation by Lin Zhiluo

The last fully translated novel by one of my favorite authors, which I probably should have saved but instead just read more slowly than I normally would.

In this one a science and technology livestreamer accidentally gets sent to a virtual cultivation world (xianxia for those familiar with the term). Or that's what the viewers are told. Actually he's transmigrated to a real cultivation world, so is largely just trying to survive as a regular person without spiritual roots/family/etc... Luckily he has great scientific knowledge and the livestreaming system is still intact which can eventually give some spiritual power. So he's traveling about with another broke guy and just introducing various bits of tech and using Newton's laws of motion as his bedrock of faith to make spells work among other bits of fun.

It's fun, and as usual with this author, there's a lot of unexpected plot that's gradually exposed. Lin Zhiluo generally gives you some plot aspects you can predict and a lot more you can't. Her strongest books (to my mind) have an episodic, Monster-of-the-Week feel, with different challenges which gradually expand the characters' abilities and knowledge (and sometimes give hints of the bigger plot to come). This one is a little weaker than my favorite novel of hers or the one I read in January, but xianxia is not my favorite genre and many works hit a lot of the same themes so certain aspects are a given.

78mabith
Feb 18, 11:37 pm


Persuasion by Jane Austen

An excellent pick for my book club! I'm not the biggest Austen person, but have been considering revisiting the novels I read many years ago when I probably didn't give them the chance I should have (and was just much younger). Book

This is certainly my favorite of the Austen I've already read (most of them), and I fully enjoyed it. Such a relief since it's a friend's favorite Austen, and I'm sure is the Austen I'm most likely to Feel very deeply due to sibling dynamics in my family, and a much regretted past love that I felt I had to give up. Anne Elliot and I are kindred spirits and I kind of want to immediately re-read the book even though I feel wrecked by it.

It's also reaffirmed my feeling that I should re-read some Austen, but I think I'll read Mansfield Park first, which I haven't read before. Maybe the less popular Austens are the ones for me.

79kjuliff
Feb 19, 10:28 am

>78 mabith: it is interesting how different people have different favourite Austen books. The main character in a book I recently read, The Lemon Table, who is most likely Julian Barnes himself, claims to like all Austen novels except one. He doesn’t name it, but I can’t help wondering which one it is.

80JesseMC
Feb 19, 12:01 pm

>78 mabith: Oh, what a good book club pick! I'm incapable of choosing a favorite Austen, but I think the discussions I've had about Persuasion in groups have been the best. Anne's relationship with Wentworth is just so good to follow (that letter!).

81baswood
Feb 19, 6:24 pm

>78 mabith: Persuasion is my Favourite Austen as well

82mabith
Feb 20, 6:46 pm

>79 kjuliff: So much definitely depends on the individual and what they go into the book expecting!

>80 JesseMC: Anne and Wentworth just so genuinely respect each other, and absolutely See the other, which is very appealing, especially right at the end of course. The letter was certainly peak romance.

>81 baswood: I can't really imagine any of my Austen re-reads eclipsing it.

83mabith
Feb 20, 6:59 pm


Romaine Wasn't Built in a Day: The Delightful History of Food Language by Judith Tschann

This was a quite mediocre little non-fiction read. I wouldn't have stuck with it, except it's very short and I didn't want to have to start picking a new read again that day. It wasn't absolutely dreadful, but it's poorly balanced.

The length and skipping around to different subjects so frequently makes it read a bit like a children's history book, but it's not one. It's a little more than a list of facts but not much more (and there were a few areas where I have more knowledge that didn't seem quite right or where the wording was poorly chosen). I love food related histories, I love books about language, but this just wasn't for me. Maybe it would be ideal if you were stuck in an airport and needed something with very short sections but could also provide random facts to amuse the rest of your traveling group.

84mabith
Feb 20, 8:54 pm


The Artsy Smartsy Club by Daniel Pinkwater RE-READ

Pinkwater is a children's author who I very literally grew up with, and I've largely continued to keep up with his novels. This one came out in 2005, when I was working in a bookstore, and I remember loving it so much, and feeling so impressed with how it talked to kids about art. Pinkwater himself studied art in college (and illustrated many of his earlier books before his wife Jill took over that job).

Three children in Hoboken, New Jersey, are beginning to struggle for things to do in their summer vacation when they come across a chalk sidewalk painting that they're super impressed with. This inspires them each individually to want to draw or paint and they eventually meet the sidewalk artist and some other adults who teach them a little.

This is part of a loose trilogy, so we also get Henrietta the giant chicken in this book. This is very pleasing to me, as the first book, The Hoboken Chicken Emergency, is one of my favorite Pinkwaters, so I'm attached to Henrietta. It might seem a bit too strange if one hasn't read that first book though (a little strange and philosophical are what you usually get with Pinkwater).

My memories probably made my expectations a little higher than they should be for a short children's novel, but I do think it's a great one for kids with any interest in art. I include two quotes:

I had noticed that Lucy Casserole never directly asked us to do anything, and she never asked questions that could be answered with a yes or a no. She would just say we could do this or that, if we wanted to. Then we would have to decide if we wanted to do whatever it was and tell her. I sort of liked Lucy Casserole's way of talking to us–it suggested that she thought we had minds of our own.


"You're on the right track, kiddies," he said. "You're using your eyes. People talk about sudden inspiration, and talent, and genius–but art is mostly about hard mental work. It's more about looking than doing. You have to look at things scientifically, take them apart and put them back together. You have to learn to feel things with your eyes. And then you try–try, mind you–to put it all together in some new way. And you have to know when you succeed, and when you fail–and why. You have to use your loaf." Hilangully Ryder smacked his head with the heel of his hand. "In other words, you have to think."


85mabith
Feb 25, 7:02 pm


Index, A History of the: A Bookish Adventure from Medieval Manuscripts to the Digital Age by Dennis Duncan

This was a great read for me! The subtitle really says it all, and I think anyone who reads a good bit of non-fiction would enjoy it. Likewise if you're just particularly interested in book history.

All the details were really fascinating, and I'd never really thought about how these common aspects of books developed or when. Duncan also delves into fiction works which use the index as the way to tell the story (or as part of it). I loved all the stories of malicious indexing, as ways to pass judgement on the author or book.

Fantastic book.

86mabith
Feb 25, 7:42 pm


The Rise and Reign of the Mammals: A New History, from the Shadow of the Dinosaurs to Us by Steve Brusatte

I was looking for a science read, and liked Brusatte's dinosaur book so picked this up as well. Ironically, the earliest periods felt harder to follow/less familiar than in the dinosaur book, which proves Brusatte's point about those creatures and early mammal development being overlooked.

It was a pretty interesting read, though I found Brusatte's imagined scenarios for how various fossilized creatures died fairly annoying. Some of them aren't too bad, but creating a story of a prehistoric horse type having pregnancy cravings and going to eat some specific thing away from her herd felt overly anthropomorphic and largely irrelevant (information about the location and probable deaths could be given without the scenario).

87cindydavid4
Feb 25, 8:48 pm

>85 mabith: what up my alley

88japaul22
Feb 26, 7:46 am

I'm so glad you loved Persuasion. I love all of Austen's novels, but this is one of my favorites. Also, every time I reread Mansfield Park it goes higher in my estimation. I think it includes more depth and subtle commentary on politics and social conventions of the time than any of her other novels. The unlikeable heroine is the main drawback for many, but Austen knew she had written Fanny that way. Anyway, I'll be interested to see what you think if you decide to read it.

89FlorenceArt
Feb 26, 8:10 am

>85 mabith: Oh, that one sounds lovely! Great title too.

Also, you and (someone else?) mentioning Persuasion made me nostalgic, and I am rereading it now. It’s my favorite Austen with P&P.

90qebo
Feb 26, 8:52 am

>86 mabith: I also liked his dinosaur book, and I have the mammal book but haven't read it. Useful to see your irritation about imagined scenarios as I would probably feel similarly.

91mabith
Feb 26, 11:12 am

>87 cindydavid4: Index, A History of the definitely feels like a good one for most people on LT!

>88 japaul22: From what I remember hearing about Mansfield Park I don't think I'll find Fanny too unlikable. Becoming disabled right at the start of adulthood I've had to be dependent on people in ways that were very much not anticipated in my family. Even with the really good, understanding folks like my mom, there was a real expectation of how I had to act and that I shouldn't question or disagree with their views on something disability/insurance/doctor related even when I was the one with the most experience with it or most impacted by it. So I feel like my view on Fanny's situation and her actions within it might be a little different from the majority.

>89 FlorenceArt: I can definitely see myself rereading Persuasion eventually. I also really enjoyed the 1995 BBC film adaptation.

>90 qebo: I can understand when a fossil is discovered, especially if you're there, creating these stories in your head or talking about it with fellow paleontologists, but they don't feel right to me in that kind of adult non-fiction. I don't want a Maybe This Happened scenario, I want facts and probable facts (with lots of supporting information to show why they're probable facts).

92japaul22
Feb 26, 11:17 am

>91 mabith: Your life experience will definitely bring an interesting perspective - good point! I will look forward to seeing how you like it whenever you read it.

93mabith
Edited: Feb 26, 12:58 pm

Movie time!

Timestalker 2024 - A woman falls in love with an asshole and gets reincarnated over and over trying to make the relationship happen. There are some others getting reincarnated with her as well. It's silly, it's weird, it's a dark comedy, it has a great soundscape. It's not something I'll feel the need to rewatch necessarily but it was pretty fun and had enjoyable visuals.

A Matter of Life and Death 1946 - One of the big classic Powell and Pressburger films. It's WWII, a pilot (David Niven of course) is going down and reporting in via radio. He has a brief emotional connection with the woman answering his call and then bails out without a parachute. He expects to die but survives and quickly falls in love with the woman. Only he was supposed to die and the Other World has made a mistake. He insists it's their fault and there will be a court case to decide. The movie is set up so that you can either see the Other World as his own hallucination or a real thing, and the writing is careful to keep it open. It's really skillfully done.

There are many interesting details as well, like the Other World being in black and white and the real world in color (opposite to what you typically see), or the fact that the Other World sets are extremely modernist in design. I really enjoyed this, but I generally find the Powell and Pressburger films interesting. There was a great documentary on Kanopy which was just Martin Scorcese talking about certain of their films that had a big impact on him (Made in England: The Films of Powell and Pressburger) and emphasizes how unique they were in the period. It made me want to watch some of the ones I hadn't seen before.

Maurice 1987 - After watching Song Lang I thought I might try a project of watching LGBT films from different countries and I have been meaning to watch this for ages. It's been a long time since I read the book, so I wasn't making direct comparisons. In many ways it's a typical period piece of the 1980s, but it's fairly well done. I watched a cut of it with all the deleted scenes restored. Glad I finally got to it even though many aspects make me sad.

Jiang Ziya/Legend of Deification 2020 - This has been on my list for a while after really enjoying the 2019 Ne Zha movie. Unlike that one, this isn't a comedy (though has some humor). It's loosely based on the 16th century novel Investiture of the Gods. A fox spirit causes the downfall of the Shang dynasty (that's right, we're in Daji territory) and Jiang Ziya (also a real historical figure) is supposed to execute her, but sees another, innocent, soul inside the fox spirit and tries to save them but fails, thinking he has killed the fox spirit. After basically being in exile for ten years he sees a girl who resembles the trapped spirit. She is trying to get to a lost mountain to find her father and Jiang Ziya follows her.

I really enjoyed it, and this one particularly highlighted some differences I've found in Chinese 3D animation vs Disney/Pixar. Particularly the focus on character animation in terms of 'every strand of hair should move independently!' for Disney/Pixar or having one tricky animation feature that's then done very well (the water in Moana for example), meanwhile the human character designs and art styles are incredibly same-y across decades of films and the backgrounds or cinematography aren't particularly compelling. If you've ever looked at Pixar concept art you'll likely find yourself wishing it was a 2D film in that inventive, unusual style instead of what we got. The Chinese 3D animation I've watched (which is limited and on the higher end/more time and money side) is less worried about the characters and the hair than the backgrounds and other details. It feels like the time saved in the animation process is actually put to use enhancing other aspects of the movie. This one and Chang'an felt particularly cinematic in ways that Disney/Pixar do not. This one is available to watch for free on Viki with subtitles in English and eight other languages, though you do have to make an account (and there will be ads unless you're watching on a browser with uBlock). There is also an English dubbed version available on Hoopla, but I can't speak to the dub quality.

94mabith
Mar 3, 9:03 pm


Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake by Alexis Hall

This is the first of Hall's trilogy that takes place in a Great British Bake Off stand-in show, Bake Expectations, and you can certainly tell Hall watched a lot of it and understand the assignment. Though what's also nice is the reminder that even Sweet Cozy shows are designed and edited to maintain a certain atmosphere and that doesn't necessarily happen in a Sweet Cozy way but also the crew really must have to remind the bakers CONSTANTLY to repeat what they've just said without making it seem like they're answering a question. The producer of the show in the books is very grumpy with creative swearing and is one of the main characters in the third and final book of the set (which are different 'seasons' of the show).

Rosaline made a decision when she got pregnant at university to keep her baby, and to not stay enrolled and just let her awful, but wealthy, parents take care of it until she finished. She struggles with money, but while she adores her daughter she also struggles with the expectations and judgements of everyone and is very insecure. She was also raised in a very specific (awful) way, so is judging her own decisions and feeling 'less than' constantly because she didn't become the doctor her parents wanted. Cue getting stuck overnight with a fellow contestant before the first filming session, and Rosaline lying about her life to avoid all the judgement. The lie is quickly exposed and the guy gets over it fairly quickly while Rosaline is very aware this is the only type of partner her parents would approve of.

I've slightly avoided this one, because I knew one of the main gal's issues were going to be experiencing biphobia and I've had quite enough of that in my life thanks. Plus I knew there's an asshole love interest, which didn't appeal (having two love interests generally doesn't appeal much to be honest though to be fair the other prospective love interest is never trying to 'win' the situation). The third book recently came out, and I've enjoyed all Hall's work, so I did want to feel I could complete the trilogy.

It's well done as ever, there are many great details, and the characters are believable, but probably not one I'll reread. I frequently wanted to shake Rosaline, even when I could fully understand why she made the decisions she did in the light of her life.

95mabith
Mar 3, 9:31 pm


The Great River: The Making and Unmaking of the Mississippi by Boyce Upholt

I really enjoyed this. It encompasses a lot of different areas that I'm interested in - engineering, history, environmentalism. Upholt doesn't neglect any of the problematic history involved and weaves all sides of the story together well. In some ways it was really a perfect book for me, though some might find it meandering.

Recommended if it sounds interesting to you, but expect a wide history, not a narrow tale of the engineering of the river. Maybe particularly recommended if the Mississippi is your river (the Ohio is mine, and she does get a little space of course).

96kidzdoc
Edited: Mar 4, 8:45 am

>95 mabith: This sounds especially interesting to me, so I'll add it to my library wishlist. I initially went to college at Tulane University in New Orleans, and my first encounter with the Mighty Mississippi was seeing it from one of my great aunt's houses in Uptown New Orleans. Much of the Crescent City, as you undoubtedly learned from reading this book, is below sea level, and I vividly remember walking up a modest sized hill to view the river. It made the Hudson and Delaware Rivers look like creeks in comparison!

97mabith
Mar 4, 9:43 am

>96 kidzdoc: Yes, that certainly sticks with one. Being a West Virginian, we're almost always very close to a river or large creek but definitely never below them! Growing up we drove to Texas and New Mexico a couple times a year to see family and the Mississippi was always an Event on the drive.

98amdial7
Mar 4, 10:05 am

>3 mabith: She is beautiful! Great reading companion.

99rowendelle
Mar 4, 2:52 pm

>3 mabith:

beautiful cat!

100mabith
Mar 5, 10:42 pm

>98 amdial7: >99 rowendelle: I have passed on your compliments and she's very smug.

101rowendelle
Mar 6, 2:24 pm

Heh she looks very snug. :)

102RidgewayGirl
Mar 6, 7:14 pm

>100 mabith: Look at that sweet baby. She clearly deserves treats.

103LolaWalser
Mar 7, 12:06 am

>39 mabith:

I expect you've seen the 1970s adaptation with Richard Attenborough as Christie? A "true" horror that outdoes all fiction.

>69 mabith:

There is always an "avant-garde", rocking the new style, and masses that are at least getting a gander at it. So, no, not everyone starts "swinging", but there is change in the air nevertheless.

104mabith
Mar 9, 10:20 am

Lola, I haven't seen that actually! It got a mention in the book of course. And yes, change in the air but Sandbrook's point is that it took into the next decade or longer for majority views to start changing. Now of course, having to watch progress stripped away it feels particularly depressing.

105kjuliff
Mar 9, 12:58 pm

>39 mabith: Sounds a bit journalistic in style. Reminds me of Helen Garner’s approach. Thank you for this review; I haven’t read anything by Kate Summerscale. It’s always good to find a new writer.

106kjuliff
Mar 9, 1:00 pm

>47 mabith: Great review. This book was one of may favourites of last year. I wish more of Piñeiro‘s work was in translation.

107mabith
Mar 9, 10:22 pm

>105 kjuliff: Hopefully Summerscale works for you, Kate! I've read most of her books and enjoyed all of them. Elena Knows definitely made me want to see out Pineiro's other work as well.

108mabith
Mar 10, 4:14 pm


The Poisoned Chocolates Case by Anthony Berkeley

A recent movie watch put me in the mood for a proper golden age mystery, and Gary reminded me of this one he read a while back. I must have put it on my to-read list then but had utterly forgotten it.

This is an atypical mystery, Berkeley already annoyed with some of the tropes and how unbelievable the detectives (including his own) were even in 1929 apparently. This book is structured as a detection club trying to solve a crime, and they each report and justify a different culprit over a series of nights after their own investigations or perusal of the police report.

I really loved it, Berkeley makes the most of the good setup and his writing is very funny and enjoyable. I kept meaning to write down some of the amusing quotes, but failed to do so. Starting this book, the frequent reader/watcher of mysteries will likely have a solution in mind already, or at least an initial "ho ho this old canard" in their head and it feels clear that Berkeley knew and planned for that as well.

This book is very low, maybe totally lacking, in the usual racism of this period (quite possibly just because there was no one to direct it towards), but they've replaced it with the idea that "well obviously men will cheat on their wives, this is just normal, and good sensible women aren't upset by it of course." However I would say in certain aspects it's less sexist than other books of the period. Swings and roundabouts.

A warning for anyone going with the audiobook (which is well done), there are a couple additional endings added after Berkeley's death, not written by him, which are added on (seems an insane thing for a publisher to do, in my opinion). They are not properly signposted in the audio edition. It's mentioned in the introduction but I had skipped that since they often contain spoilers.

109mabith
Mar 10, 5:09 pm


Seascraper by Benjamin Wood

A seeing a number of good reviews for this last year, I thought I'd give it a go and now I have no idea how to review it!

Thomas Flett is 20 and has been working as a small-scale shrimper with a horsedrawn cart since he was a young teenager. We get his life history slowly over the course of the book, but we know he's deeply exhausted by this life and it's taken a huge physical toll on him. That aspect was done very well, I'd say, as someone who was also physically in a very different space at 20 even compared to my parents, let alone my peers.

The 'action' of the book comes when a stranger drops in wanting Thomas to take him out on his wagon and show him the beach and the work as he's trying to adapt a book featuring that job into a film (and will pay handsomely for the privilege). In some ways it's a quiet book, but maybe not in the way I usually mean when I say that. The writing felt very well judged for the plot and characters.

I kind of think the musical element (Thomas has pawned a watch to buy a guitar and is teaching himself to play) got a little distracting towards the end, or the song lyrics took up too much space maybe. In the audiobook the author is playing guitar and singing the songs (and reading the book, which he does very well), which I think makes that feeling more prominent for me than it would be in print. For me this read is in the awkward place of having really liked it but not quite LOVED it. This might slightly be a timing issue.

110baswood
Mar 10, 6:13 pm

>109 mabith: Nice to read a review of a Golden Age Mystery - strange about the additional endings

111RidgewayGirl
Mar 10, 6:53 pm

>108 mabith: Making note of this one.

>109 mabith: I enjoyed this book, and liked going on-line after finishing to listen to his song, but I don't know if I would have liked to be sung to while listening to book.

112AlisonY
Mar 11, 6:23 pm

Enjoyed catching up. Going back a few books, I'm a die-hard eyeliner girl. Every few weeks or so I try to convince myself I don't need it, but then I catch a glimpse of myself in a mirror and quickly scuttle off to apply it.

I'd love to feel confident about not wearing makeup, but even if I'm just in the house by myself I'll have it on. Eyeliner was the very first bit of makeup I started with as a tween. I blame not being blessed with good eyelashes to naturally frame the eyes.

113kjuliff
Mar 11, 7:33 pm

>109 mabith: I deliberately didn’t listen to the music or lyrics in the audiobook as I agree with you they sort of seemed to be taking away from the book itself. I wonder how that how that part worked in the print book.

114mabith
Mar 11, 9:01 pm

>110 baswood: It can be hard to beat a really good golden age mystery. I'm looking forward to reading more by him.

>111 RidgewayGirl: >113 kjuliff: Part of me feels like even including the song lyrics in the text wasn't necessary? It might have been more powerful for the reader to just imagine the song. Since the author originally wanted to be a singer-songwriter I do wonder if he just couldn't help himself.

>112 AlisonY: I do think basically all humans are improved by eyeliner in a way that's untrue of any other makeup (though I have remained too lazy for it, plus I rub my eyes far too much). There were definitely a lot of people in the book who felt as you do about their eyeliner, including the author. Maybe it's less confidence and just more than we get used to what we do, whether that's makeup or no-makeup, and seeing ourselves not looking 'right' is always disturbing. I had to have a full face of makeup done (in a shop) for being in a friend's wedding and felt awful the whole time because that just wasn't Me in the mirror or the photos. It truly felt dreadful and it didn't matter that to other people I looked very nice.

115Nickelini
Mar 12, 12:52 am

>114 mabith: I do think basically all humans are improved by eyeliner in a way that's untrue of any other makeup (though I have remained too lazy for it, plus I rub my eyes far too much).

As someone with blonde eyelashes, I beg to differ! If I just put on eyeliner, I'd look ridiculous. Mascara is key for my colouring. If I'm only going to wear one thing, it's mascara. I used to wear eyeliner for my going-out-in-public face, but when I went back to work full time in 2016 (after a decade of a different life), I decided that I didn't want to put that pressure on my delicate aging eyelids. So now it has to be a quite formal occasion for me to consider eyeliner. But I'll do eyeshadow and lots of mascara.

BTW - I'm really ready for the Miss Piggy eyelashes to go out of style. Sigh.

116cindydavid4
Mar 12, 1:08 pm

>115 Nickelini: in a way that's untrue of any other makeup (though I have remained too lazy for it, plus I rub my eyes far too much).

tried to use make up as a teen but in a place like phx where it is steaming hot most of the year could never get the hang of it..yeah im probably too lazy as well I stick to mascara and lipstick

117RidgewayGirl
Mar 12, 3:13 pm

>114 mabith: What I miss is guyliner. There was a short stretch in the late eighties where a certain confident guy who liked new wave would wear eyeliner and it always looked fantastic.

118AlisonY
Mar 12, 5:00 pm

>117 RidgewayGirl: Always the slightly alternative but gorgeous cool guys. My sister was friends with one. I seem to remember he apparently only washed his hair with fresh strawberries. Teenagers will believe everything they're told...

119qebo
Mar 13, 10:02 am

>64 mabith:, >112 AlisonY:, >114 mabith:, >115 Nickelini:, >116 cindydavid4: I've never worn makeup in my life and don't know how to apply it. I'd feel weird having stuff on my face that I have to pay attention to. My mother wore minimal makeup for work (public facing and management), but resented it. I'm a computer programmer so nobody cares.

120mabith
Mar 15, 11:26 pm

>115 Nickelini: I suppose it would depend on the color of eyeliner, though I feel like the blonde eyelashes are doing the standout work on their own. My sister-in-law is the same and I always think her eyes look so gorgeous with nothing on.

>116 cindydavid4: I do find it incredible that so many people work so hard to keep makeup on and pristine in adverse conditions. It always seemed an esoteric branch of knowledge I wasn't privy to.

>117 RidgewayGirl: >118 AlisonY: Guyliner did have a bit of a comeback in the early 2000s I think. A few sections in the book are actually about cultures/groups where it's the men wearing the eyeliner as a beauty tool (many of whom stop wearing it after getting married because then it's not necessary as an attraction tool or they feel it would seem flirty to others etc).

>119 qebo: It's always disturbing how many women are essentially required to wear makeup for jobs. That's not something I could have coped with at any point.

121mabith
Mar 15, 11:45 pm


All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley's Sack, a Black Family Keepsake by Tiya Miles

This book is about a piece of embroidered cloth that was found at a flea market stall and ended up in the collection of a plantation museum. Here is a picture of the piece, with the text copied below:


My great grandmother Rose
mother of Ashley gave her this sack when
she was sold at age 9 in South Carolina
it held a tattered dress, three handfuls of
pecans a braid of Rose’s hair. Told her

It be filled with my love always

she never saw her again
Ashley is my grandmother
Ruth Middleton
1921


Miles researches as much as she's able and along the way gives us a full picture of what life might have been like those mentioned in the work. She uses a lot of sources and particularly first person testimony. It's done really well and I'd highly recommend the book.

It really hit me hard emotionally. I am someone who feels very attached to objects generally, both older family pieces and newer things already imbued with memories of where I got them or why. I think about what might happen to the potent objects in my life when I die and the people who could take them don't have the attachments I do. How many things will seem like pointless clutter to someone who doesn't know the story. I decided to start drawing little pictures of certain things I own which I'll put into a journal where I write their history.

122mabith
Mar 15, 11:49 pm


Fifth Sun: A New History of the Aztecs by Camilla Townsend

I've been meaning to get to this book for a while. Townsend gives us this history based on indigenous sources, rather than Spanish ones. She also examines why and how the various bits of misinformation were used and provides evidence that this or that myth wasn't believed at the time the events were happening.

It's very well done and was a great read for me.

123mabith
Mar 16, 12:20 am


The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida by Shehan Karunatilaka

Maali Almeida has been killed and doesn't remember how or why. The afterlife bureaucracy is confusing and does not provide any answers. He goes back to the world to try to figure things out, but only has seven days to do so. We follow him as he floats towards people the using his name and watch his friend, lover, and mother try to figure out what happened to him.

This is Colombo, Sri Lanka in 1990, and there's much thought that Almeida's career as a photographer is why he's been killed. Particularly his pictures from the 1983 killings that kicked off the Sri Lankan civil war. Almeida is a flawed person, and not particularly likeable, but the story is compelling and the premise is great.

I'm going to be mulling this one over for a while. Interesting story to carry with me as I look for a good non-fiction book about Sri Lanka.

124LolaWalser
Mar 16, 9:22 pm

>121 mabith:

ugh, straight into the solar plexus. There is no consolation.

125cindydavid4
Mar 16, 9:53 pm

>122 mabith: oh i must read that thank for the BB

126SassyLassy
Mar 18, 4:28 pm

>121 mabith: Does Miles say anything about the effect her research and writing had on her personally?

I like your idea of writing and drawing about the things in your life.

127mabith
Mar 25, 11:02 am

>124 LolaWalser: Yes, that text on the sack really just says everything.

>125 cindydavid4: Definitely worth getting to!

>126 SassyLassy: I don't think she went into personal impacts in that book, but it's a familiar subject for the author. I doubt there was anything truly New to her in that story, given her other books and research background.

128mabith
Mar 25, 12:13 pm


Plunder Squad by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake)

I've been having a bit of a reading slump, so reached for the guaranteed enjoyment of a Parker book. This one wasn't among my favorites, but Westlake's writing is always a joy.

This one is an art heist, a collector is essentially hiring a group to steal an exhibit's worth of paintings. First however, the book opens with Parker attempting to find a job that seems likely to work with a professional crew. Anyone who imagines that Westlake might be glamorizing a life of crime his books, given our main characters are generally criminals, hasn't read them. They are truly jobbing criminals, and things go wrong constantly. In some ways his books are really a study of every single thing that could go wrong.

A decent read for me, but not his finest work.

129mabith
Mar 25, 12:26 pm


The Library of Ancient Wisdom: Mesopotamia and the Making of the Modern World by Selena Wisnom

We're back in the library of Ashurbanipal to get more Mesopotamian history. Earlier this year I read Between Two Rivers: Ancient Mesopotamia and the Birth of History, which focused on a specific set of cuneiform texts and spun off from those to give us a taste of this world. This new read covers a little of the same ground but goes into much more details about the history of the region, changes in culture, and the potted version of various myths from these cultures.

I found it a really wonderful read. Grounded in the texts and archeology but with a good sense of story as well. I'll probably read a few more books on this topic this year, so if you have any favorites do let me know. Retaining knowledge from my non-fiction reads is often a process of multiple books over time until a good framework of the information gets established in my brain.

130mabith
Mar 25, 1:41 pm


Audrey Lane Stirs the Pot by Alexis Hall

I'd say this was also chosen to relieve my reading slump but it's partly that the hold came in. This is the last in Hall's series that's essentially set in the Great British Bake Off (with a few tweaks obviously), called Bake Expectations in this universe. If you want the show you will recognize the Types Hall uses in these books.

Audrey Lane applied to the show while drunk in an attempt to feel she was doing something more than just working for a small regional newspaper. She and her longterm girlfriend, Natalie, have recently parted ways, and Audrey fled London and her Fleet Street job to return to Shropshire where she grew up. Natalie's judgements and opinions (largely negative) still loom in Audrey's head even as she realizes that their relationship was never on an equal footing.

Due to her work experience, she's acutely aware of the stories reality TV, even cozy shows, are in the business of telling. She quickly befriends Doris, who is in her 90s and was a wartime evacuee at the country house where the show is filmed, and who then returned to the house as a maid after the war. Audrey becomes passionate about writing up Doris' story (which includes a tendre with a daughter of the house), though it involves fighting with the show's perpetually grumpy and foul-mouthed producer, Jennifer Hallet, to do it. These encounters with Hallet quickly become a habit.

I really loved this one! We're mostly in Audrey's world but we get sections of Doris' story (also written as first person narration) along the way. This one has less of the typical romance genre framing/timeline which I sometimes find annoying (specifically breakup then makeup in the final quarter of the book). I really enjoyed the havoc Audrey throws the contestants into with her 'well all reality TV is at least slightly rigged to benefit the making of good TV' viewpoint. It's a fitting end to this little trio of books.

131mabith
Mar 25, 2:40 pm

I've been having a lot of extra brain fog and tiredness past my normal chronic illness levels, which I was partly blaming on going back on the full dose of a medication I was off for a while, perimenopause, and new year Blahs. However, it turns out my iron level is really low (as is vitamin D). I appreciate that my doctor still wanted to test those levels even though my personal feeling was that it's all pretty explainable by other factors. I go to a teaching hospital for my primary care, which means a new resident every three years or so and this guy has been one of my favorites. I hope he'll stay in primary care.

My first iron infusion is tomorrow, so hopefully that helps a bit! And hopefully my troublesome veins cooperate. Getting the IV in was always a bit of a nightmare when I was having ketamine infusions.

132FlorenceArt
Mar 25, 3:30 pm

Hope the iron infusion gives you a boost. I’ve seen this series by Alexis Hallon the Kobo store but wasn’t much tempted. This one does sound nice though.

133LolaWalser
Mar 26, 2:00 pm

Oh, dear. Was pill supplement out of the question? I suppose you know about dietary iron and such "tricks" like using cast iron cooking utensils.

134mabith
Mar 30, 5:54 pm

>132 FlorenceArt: I think they vary a lot, as each of the three books has a very different setup and structure so it will depend what you prefer in the romance line. I do think that third one is the best for me though.

>133 LolaWalser: I could have done pill supplements but my iron was so low insurance was willing to pay for infusions (which is saying something) and that method will get it back up faster with far fewer side effects. My main concern is my iron really shouldn't be that low, given my diet, but that feels like something to address after the infusions. I do know about the cast iron trick but my disability means cast iron pans are just not workable for me to use regularly.

135mabith
Mar 30, 11:38 pm


The Road to Ruin by Donald E. Westlake RE-READ

This is technically a re-read, but unlike the first nine of Westlake's Dortmunder novels which I have been perpetually re-reading for decades (30 years in some cases!), I have only read this once, back in 2006. This is because when I discovered newer Dortmunder books I was at first excited and then deeply disappointed. The magic had gone, something had changed, I suspect Westlake's heart wasn't in them and instead he just needed a guaranteed sell to the publisher or to help with a grandchild's college costs perhaps. There's also the trouble with keeping Dortmunder in the current moment (though un-aging), because it was hard for a jobbing thief even in the 1970s, with everyone paying by check, let alone in 2004.

I am not planning to re-read all those later books, but I remembered liking some aspects of this one more than the three that followed it and perhaps I can be more generous now than when I was a wee 20 year old. It's fairly different from my memory so I might also be conflating it with a short story.

One thing about Westlake is his very clear-eyed view of the world, and his view of corporate America is far better than 20/20. We have the multinational bent on world domination covered in Good Behavior, the scammer of bankruptcy courts and general shady businessman in What's the Worst that Could Happen, and now we've got one inspired by Enron with the disgraced CEO living essentially under house arrest while various people plot how to get at him to try to extract some of their lost money. But that's not Dortmunder's business. Dortmunder is trying to get in to steal a group of extremely valuable antique cars, preferably also stuffed with smaller valuables.

The thing is, this isn't a bad book, but it's a bad Dortmunder book. The pacing and structure is all off (for a Dortmunder book), and the sideplots are too numerous and complicated. If this were a non-series Westlake novel it has the makings of a very good one, but trying to bend it to fit Dortmunder means there's far too little of him in it to please fans and that he's taking away from what might be the better story. There are some great bits in this, but it's Westlake so this is to be expected even in a subpar book.

136mabith
Mar 31, 9:44 pm


Apparently, Sir Cameron Needs to Die by Greer Stothers

This is a humorous SFF book (with a bit of romance) that's been making the rounds of my corner of Tumblr, as the author is a prominent user of the site.

Sir Cameron is a knight who is not beloved by his compatriots and who does his best to avoid battle. When his elf companion leads him away and lets slip he has to be killed due to a prophecy, he whacks her over the head and runs off to attempt to seek shelter with the local mad sorcerer, Merulo (and maybe to enjoy a little consensual menacing). Merulo isn't best pleased about the situation but Cameron's spirits are difficult to dampen.

It's a fun farce with some interesting plot twists later on. I do feel like I wanted a little more from it, but it's hard to pinpoint exactly what (better skill in the dialogue is part of it perhaps). It's a very decent first novel in this genre though.

137mabith
Mar 31, 10:21 pm


Ponzi's Scheme: The True Story of a Financial Legend by Mitchell Zuckoff

This was not the best book for me, and I might well have given up on it due to it being very narrative in a way I've come to dislike. I much prefer discussion of the sources and potential limitations of them within the text. While the author says all quotes come from sources, as do the descriptive elements, Ponzi's autobiography and newspapers of the time have various veracity issues which are never discussed in the text. The newspaper reporter saying someone blushed is both unimportant and just as likely to be made up.

The reason I did not give up on it was that I was on the audiobook and the reader was Grover Gardner. He particularly suited the book's style as well as making me feel very nostalgic, as a long-time audiobook listener.

While there are limitations, I'm not sure how many books there are about Ponzi himself and his full history and the now well-known scheme. It was generally informative and if you like a more uninterrupted narrative non-fiction this might suit you.

I've been watching a series of anti-multi level marketing scheme videos on Youtube and I will say at least Ponzi had more style than the current lot.

138mabith
Apr 7, 11:37 pm

I've got very behind on movie posting and now I own reviews for six books as well somehow. I shall tackle the movies first.

The Kennel Murder Case - William Powell movie based on a mystery novel. We enjoyed Powell so much in The Thin Man that I made note of some other of his films. This was fun and had some interesting aspects to the cinematography.

I Saw the TV Glow - really great film! You can view it as a creeping horror-light film but it's also a brilliantly done allegory for LGBT folks being unable to leave the closet and the impact that has.

Felidae - Very strange German adult animation with a cat crime investigation. Every decade apparently needs a creepy cat film and this is the 1990s version. One film society described it as what you might imagine an R-rated Don Bluth film to be, which feels accurate.

Green for Danger - Great 1946 mystery film! Very enjoyably done and you can't go wrong with Trevor Howard and Alistair Sim.

Raiders! - Documentary about some boys in the 1980s who spent years working on a shot for shot remake of Raiders of the Lost Ark (started basically immediately after seeing it in the cinema). It also documents them trying to complete a scene they couldn't as children - the fight around the airplane. For some reason they make that last scene extremely big budget, which is against what people loved about the original work. Baffling decision, interesting story.

I Used to be Funny - 2023 film written and directed by Ally Pankiw. Sam Cowell is a stand-up comedian also working as a nanny. She's had some traumatic experience in that work which is gradually illuminated as she struggles with whether to help look for the teenage girl she was nannying who has run away from home. We go back and forth with the present day and the past nannying work. I found this extremely well done (particularly the dialogue between Sam and her fellow comedian roommates). It's very timely and balances sadness with the humor and sarcasm of the main characters.

Libeled Lady - It's another William Powell. A newspaper is being sued for libel, the editor hires Powell's character to get married and then be caught with the woman suing the paper to make the libel story actually true, everyone falls in love with Powell. This was sort of fascinating, and it was very hard to tell how it would end for ages, which is not common in 1930s films. The ending was the weak point of the film, but it was still largely fun. Powell is so fantastic.

Breaking and Entering - Documentary about people trying to break and/or keep Guinness world records. There's a bit of a thread of "these people were denied the attention/positive reinforcement they needed as children" but also some of the people are just incredibly obnoxious. I very much understand challenging yourself, I don't so much understand needing it to be certified.

139mabith
Apr 7, 11:53 pm


Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy by Mary Roach

As ever, Roach can always be relied upon to provide an excellent book. The way she manages to structure her books makes them so readable and interesting, and they never feel like random topic jumps even when they almost are.

In this one we're not in the far future dreams of cybernetic enhancements, we're very much in the real work of the real world, which is slow and expensive and the achievements are not linear. This book also involved a lot of callbacks and further looking into topics she landed on in previous books, which I really enjoyed. I think this is my second favorite Roach of the ones I've read (I've not read Spook or Grunt yet).

As ever, Roach's curiosity and good humor is infectious, making this a particularly good read for the current moment.

140mabith
Apr 10, 9:41 am


Every Day I Read: 53 Ways to Get Closer to Books by Hwang Bo-Reum

Picked this up as a short read, partly because I'm feeling in a bit of a slump with my reading and a bit because the cover is pretty.

Some aspects were interesting if not super compelling. However, nothing stuck with me except some criticisms, perhaps because I don't really need help getting closer to books. This book is likely more geared to young people, or those just leaving some intensive schooling or job that required a lot of reading.

One of the last chapters is "if books disappeared from the world" and seemed to think that people would stop talking about books immediately if they weren't around? And it didn't bring up the many situations where people didn't have access to books and spent time retelling favorite or classic books to each other, as if the oral traditions mean nothing. Not to mention eras where it was more common for books to be read aloud as a communal activity in the evening, rather than a solo activity.

141mabith
Apr 10, 11:01 am


The Two Princesses of Bamarre by Gail Carson Levine

A lot of my younger friends were big fans of Levine's writing, but she came on the scene too late for me. I think the quick summary of her plots also didn't necessarily appeal when I was trying to read some later children's books to sort of keep up. I generally feel that children's novels and middle grade fiction are incredibly important areas, because those are the books that often build passionate, lifelong readers.

My friend and I were complaining about the awful new digital cartoon covers for older children's books and she brought up this book which was an absolute favorite when she was a kid. She was afraid to reread it, worried it wouldn't hold up to the adult eye so I said I'd read it for her and give her my report. I'd meant to read something by Levine (best known for Ella Enchanted), and it seemed perfect for my iron infusion appointment.

This is a fantasy novel set in a world afflicted by a random illness, the gray death, that can only be cured when a prophesy is fulfilled. One princess, Meryl, is bold and can't wait to go adventuring and the other, Addie, is anxious and more interested in her needlework. Their father is useless and removed, their mother died early. Meryl has promised to wait to have her adventures until after Addie is happily married. When Meryl gets the Gray Death and their father is doing nothing, Addie knows she must go out to seek a cure. It includes some classic fantasy objects, like seven league boots.

About halfway through I felt it was a nice book and my friend should reread it but expect something simpler than she remembered. Then we got to a dragon character who I loved immensely and the whole book really picked up. I can see why my friend loved it and I'd happily give it to a kid.

142labfs39
Apr 14, 10:46 pm

Getting caught up on your thread. Sorry for the late comments.

>109 mabith: After reading your review, I went and put a hold on the audiobook of Seascraper. Even knowing you didn't care for the inclusion of music, I have been meaning to read this, and audio may be the only way I get to it soonish.

>121 mabith: I have a copy of All the She Carried on my read soonish bookcase. Your review is a good reminder to move it up the queue.

>123 mabith: The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida is another book I've been wanting to read. It's been on my wishlist for a while now.

>139 mabith: Although I've only read Grunt, I was impressed by Mary Roach and have squirreled away Bonk and Fuzz to read on a rainy day.

143mabith
Apr 21, 9:45 am

>142 labfs39: Late comments always welcome! I do think the author did a good job with the regular reading parts of Seascraper. Roach is so worth getting to. Her curiosity and interest in basically everything is a joy, and a nice counter balance to current events. My book club read Fuzz together and ended up actually focusing on the book for the whole two hour meeting, which surprised me.

144mabith
Edited: Apr 21, 7:17 pm


There are More Beautiful Things Than Beyonce by Morgan Parker

Picked this up in my effort to always have a poetry book on the go (which fell by the wayside after the fantastic volume from December). My MO is to go into the library stacks, look for the slimmer volumes, and pluck one or two at random. If I don't love the style, it's not a big commitment, and I'm add to checkout numbers in a likely under-loved section.

This volume didn't hugely speak to me. I didn't dislike it precisely, but the style was too stylistic or distant in a way that just isn't what I love in poetry. That's kind of what I expect at least 60% of the time though, and it's still worth exploring and being exposed to a variety of styles. I do think I'll look for Parker's essay collection as well now.

The Book of Revelation

Kiss the years, their filth: it's my turn
To dress up forlorn in gold, fib

Through rotting teeth
I'm looking regal, constantly exploding

Do you think I could be a witch
Can shine be caught like a fever

My therapist says something
In my core is dark and the surface of my planet too

She says Many creative people
& I can't see a beautiful day if I tried

She says peace is something
people tell themselves

145mabith
Apr 21, 7:17 pm


Enter a Murderer by Ngaio Marsh

I was reminded recently that when I first read a few Marsh mysteries, what I could access was very limited so I didn't get to as much of her earlier work as I'd have liked to. Now I'll go back and read one every month or two until I get bored.

This was Marsh's second book featuring detective Roderick Alleyn and he still seems a bit Under Construction, but still jovial enough. One of my favorite murder mystery tropes is when an actor is killed on stage and this is a fun example of it.

Plenty of plausible suspects, red herrings, scandal, drug use, etc... There was a slightly annoying bit where a reporter (Alleyn's brother-in-law) and his sergeant are much more stupid than one feels they ought to be, but it's her second novel ever, and I forgave it.

146mabith
Apr 21, 8:20 pm


A Brief History of Motion: From the Wheel, to the Car, to What Comes Next by Tom Standage

This was a weaker Standage effort for me, for a couple of reasons. One reason is perhaps that my base of knowledge is now wide enough that in a generalist's book covering a variety of subjects, there are inevitably areas where I know something is inaccurate. Of course that makes me wonder what else is inaccurate.

The other issue with this was a severe lack of focus on public transportation, issues funding it, political motivations around it, and why it's a much better solution for congestion, pollution etc... There are glancing mentions, but it's almost ludicrously avoided which felt bizarre.

I wouldn't particularly recommend this.

147mabith
Apr 24, 9:09 am


Butcher's Moon by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake

This is the final book of the original run of sixteen Parker novels, before a 23-year break in the series. It's about twice as long as a standard Parker novel and doesn't have the typical four-part structure.

Parker and Grofield are on runs of bad luck. The book starts in the middle of a failing job for Parker and with a very amusing IRS meeting for Grofield (he's involved in heists only to finance his summer theater). Parker decides to go after an old score he had to hide in Slayground, half of which is Grofield's, since he was also on that job. However, it's not where he hid it and he knows the people who would have grabbed it.

So again it's Parker vs the local mob, who are really not happy about the timing. There's a mystery element in amongst it, with the mob involved in an internal power struggle, and callbacks to many previous Parker books. It's a good book and does feel it would have been a fine natural end to the series. Westlake always claimed he wasn't planning to end it here, but it's such a departure from the usual Parker form that's hard to believe.

148mabith
Apr 24, 9:30 am


Comeback by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake)

I usually limit myself to one Stark novel per month, but I wanted to immediately move to the later Parkers so I could compare the style.

Westlake has dragged a same-age (late 30s) Parker into the late 1990s, to battle with new technologies and detection methods. This time he's called into a job to steal the all-cash takings of a corrupt evangelist (think Jim Bakker or Jimmy Swaggart). They've got an inside man, but he suddenly gets cold feet and they learn he's told someone about the job, but don't know if that will cause trouble for them (shocker, it does!).

It's a very good comeback, with the usual bad luck for Parker and Co, and some great setups and classic on the spot thinking. It definitely doesn't feel markedly different from the earlier books, though I sometimes found it jarring to have him living in MY time period.

149mabith
May 13, 12:13 am


After Facing a Tribulation, My Dead Daoist Partner Came Back by Jimo Yao

I've been in a funk so have got well behind on LT tasks and I've picked up more Chinese webnovels again. This is a transmigration to a cultivation world novel, so our main character knows a lot of one-sided plot points. A theme with the better transmigration novels is the fact that a novel is by definition a very limited account of what is an entire world when the person is inside it, often with a very particular slant towards the events.

Song Yan transmigrates into a very minor character (a playboy sort who fell in love at first sight), right before he's married to Gu Wei, the maligned son of a noteworthy family. However, Song Yan the transmigrator knows that in five months the war will break out and his goal is to prepare and to hopefully save his character's parents. Knowing Gu Wei has just been forced to marry him, Song Yan intends to treat the relationship as a friendship while Gu Wei slowly falls in love with him. Unfortunately Gu Wei is actually a temporary incarnation of the demon lord who is going to wage war on the continent. When the Gu Wei body is killed so Ji Wugui can wake up, he's intent on making sure Song Yan falls for him first this time.

This was a really well balanced and well plotted read. The characters were fun, the world building was good, and there was just enough nuance.

150mabith
Edited: May 13, 10:31 am


Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World by David van Reybrouck

This is a really excellent book about how Indonesia was colonized, how they gained independence, the history in between, and some aftermath. Reybrouck is known for using personal interviews/oral testimony as a key part of his books, and his balance of those sections and traditional history writing really worked for me.

Reybrouck is Belgian and got a lot of pushback when he started telling Dutch friends and acquaintances about the project, but as he'd already written a book about the Congo (their main comment being to write about that instead), they lost steam quickly. According to polls from near when this book was published (2024), Dutch people have a more positive view of their colonial history than anyone else in Europe. I was in a minor rage for a lot of the book, especially after knowing those poll numbers.

I had very little pre-loaded knowledge of Indonesia, most of it being volcano based, so this was great for filling in some holes. Plus, as ever with any WWII history, there's always something new to be learned. It's definitely going to be one of my best reads of the year.

Highly recommended! I'm excited to get to his other books.

*edited to add: I'm not sure the 'birth of the modern world' subtitle was really born out in the text or focused on, honestly, outside of inspiring some independence struggles.

151FlorenceArt
May 13, 10:10 am

>150 mabith: Sounds interesting ! But I think I would be more interested in his book on the Congo.

152mabith
May 13, 10:57 am

>151 FlorenceArt: I'll definitely be getting to that one as well in the next year.

153mabith
May 13, 10:58 am


Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng

This was my book club read in April, and since I'd read an earlier book by Ng I was at least fairly certain I wouldn't hate it.

It takes place in an alternative US near-future dystopia where economic collapse has led to a large anti-Asian movement and there are laws allowing the widespread seizing of children partly as an intimidation tactic to prevent protest.

Bird Gardener lives with his father, a librarian, barely eking out a life after Bird's mother, a Chinese-American poet, leaves the family. Her books are banned and a mysterious letter sent to Bird has him trying to find her (and to find out more about her). Later we get his mother's full story.

It's a pretty well done book, though I'd slightly describe it as Baby's First Dystopian Novel. Part of the ending felt incredibly stupid to me, just characters being idiots for no reason except to add Drama, but I think the human struggles of living in this system and how nativist views develop, plus how innocuous things are blown out of all proportion, was done well. Most of the women in my book club have children and they felt the writing on motherhood was particularly good.

154mabith
Edited: May 13, 11:49 am

Movie time!

Potiche - This is a 2010 French comedy starring Catherine Deneuve and Gérard Depardieu. I have a great love for Deneuve, and she is wonderful as always. Set in the 1970s, she plays a housewife who must step up to negotiate with the workers and run her husband's umbrella factory after he's taken hostage due to his harsh management (and then has a heart attack and can't work for a while). Due to the strike she turns to a former connection, Depardieu, to help. It was a good watch, if not an absolute standout favorite.

Paper Moon - 1973 film set in the 1930s where a scamming traveling salesman has accidentally picked up a child he's supposed to deliver to relatives. When she proves useful to the business they form a partnership. This is marked by the leads being Ryan O'Neal and his real-life daughter Tatum. It was a great watch and really wonderful performances from everyone.

Eight Postcards from Utopia - Bit of a weird one now! As per the Kanopy description, this is "a found-footage documentary assembled exclusively out of post-socialist Romanian advertisements. Drawing from the debris of Romania's long transition period, the film speaks about love and death, the human body and its frailty, the natural and the supernatural and of course, socialism and capitalism." Not sure I buy all that, but it was fascinating and amusing in turns.

Tiger Stripes - 2023 Malaysian body horror film, where the horror is puberty. Very relatable, not always in a good way (shunned by former friends hits a real sore spot for me), and I found it well done. I do wish I could have just turned into a tiger during that time.

Dead Talents Society - 2024 Taiwanese comedy film where ghosts will disappear into reincarnation if they can't make some impact on the living world as a ghost sighting or legend (or through family's continued remembrance and offerings). In the ghost world there's an entire entertainment industry around this. The previous top ghost star has been overtaken by her apprentice, who is harnessing social media rather than in-person scares. She takes on a new seemingly hopeless apprentice. Really fun film, very well acted and shot, with just the right percentage of more serious moments around death and grief. Asian ghost films and TV shows always work really well for me, in part due to the cultural framework around death and the afterlife (shrines, offerings, Qingming, etc...).

Young Einstein - 1988 Australian film, a rewatch for me. This was an absolute staple in our house when I was growing up, and I still love it. It's very silly, it cares not a bit for actual history, and it has a great soundtrack. Einstein is growing up on an apple farm in Tasmania when he hits upon E=mc2 while trying to put bubbles into beer. Thus he must head to the mainland to patent it and on the way meets Marie Curie. He's also inventing electric violins and guitars as well as rock and roll, just on the side. I watch this again every few years and never cease to be delighted.

155RidgewayGirl
May 13, 3:05 pm

>149 mabith: That sounds absolutely nuts in the best possible way.

156cindydavid4
May 13, 3:21 pm

>153 mabith: i felt the same way about the ending but i found that the case in her other books Pity coz i do love her writing but its hard for her to land the ending

157cindydavid4
May 13, 3:22 pm

paper moon is one of my all time favs movies

158mabith
May 13, 7:25 pm

>155 RidgewayGirl: Ha, it definitely was.

>156 cindydavid4: >157 cindydavid4: I get endings are tough for authors to fully stick, but that particular one felt like it should have been an easy editor catch. I've meant to watch Paper Moon for years (the VHS cover in my rental place when I was a kid always stood out), so was happy it lived up to my imaginings!

159mabith
May 13, 10:08 pm


The Buried City: Unearthing the Real Pompeii by Gabriel Zuchtriegel

The nice thing with books about Pompeii is you can't read too many. As long as they're published some years apart, there will always be interesting new stuff. I think some of this book was also in a documentary that came out in 2024, but my brain always needs a refresher in case it comes up on a quiz or I need to look knowledgeable in front of a niece or nephew.

Zuchtriegel was appointed Director of the Archaeological Park of Pompeii in 2021 and in this he also talks about the challenges of continuing to develop and innovate the visitor side of things and what he learned from other sites he worked at. I really enjoyed that side of it in addition to things like how to interact with the media in a way that's good for the site, etc...

A short, enjoyable visit to Pompeii!

160mabith
Edited: May 15, 11:04 am


This Alpha is Determined Despite Physical Disability by San Wanguo Gang

Sometimes there are webnovels I read of a specific genre and I think, this is an embarrassing genre convention and I don't need to post about it (even though I think the books I'm picking are interesting uses of it, I find I'm not yet totally free of book shame). This novel though, was so incredibly deft and intelligent on a particular personality type which I unfortunately share, that I have no choice but to post. I picked it up expecting a fun bit of nonsense (and it was fun, there was a lot of humor) and got so much more.

This is an omegaverse world, and it's my impression this was invented by fanfiction writers for both smut writing reasons and also so same sex pairings could have biological children (god forbid we normalize adoption even in fiction). In addition to men and women, there are three subgenders alphas, omegas, and betas. The former have high fertility (regardless of whether they're men or women) and pheromones which can cause heats/ruts whatever. I don't read fanfiction so perhaps it has evolved. In the better Chinese webnovels it's often used to explore additional levels of social prejudice, power, and abuse.

It's another transmigration book, this time to the interstellar (which almost always means mechas and sometimes means zergs). The main character, Bai Li, has ended up in a book where he's a cannonfodder villain, just there to contrast the protagonist (technically his brother) who is supposed to build his harem and become a hero of the empire. Bai Li is aims to prevent this, and while he delays a devastating mecha battle injury his character has, it still finds him in the end forcing his retirement from the military. The world of the book seems to insist on course correcting and this is a major theme in the book, the plot armor of the protagonist and the twisting of the plot to attempt to bring it back in line when Bai Li is thwarting it.

In this world when people reach a certain age if they're unmarried they're forced to be system matched at random with a partner. Lu Zhao is a leading light of the military despite being an omega and has reached the required age. He matches with Bai Li and wants to arrange a quick marriage in part to hide that an injury has rendered him infertile. It's a contract marriage, and Bai Li hopes to prevent the book events from happening which led to Lu Zhao being in the protagonist's harem.

It's hard to express how well written this book was, and how emotionally deep with a razor sharp grip on psychology. This happens pretty regularly with webnovels I pick up, but this one was exceptional. The relationship between Bai Li and Lu Zhao grows so naturally and so thoughtfully and unravels all of Bai Li's defense mechanisms in a believable timeline (while also maintaining a great plot around what the book world wants and military matters etc). Then this bit hit me like a ton of bricks:

You're not pretending to be strong, you're pretending not to need a response.

All effort seeks equal respect--that's a mindset most humans have. I need recognition, I need praise, I need kindness, I need to be given the same love in return.


The section this was from took over an entire therapy appointment for me, because that's exactly it. If I emphasize to someone that I need more contact, need more support, etc... and they don't respond it's such a horrible blow that it's better to pretend to be someone who needs nothing. A perfect Pollyanna who can bring them little bits of fun and ask nothing in return, which of course leads to shallow relationships that become unsatisfying.

(I will say this applies mostly to in person relationships, or people I know in 'real life' even if I don't see them in person often. It's somewhat easier to be open and myself online.)

What a great, surprising read. OH, and the description of chronic physical injury and disability (which, unlike in many books, doesn't get healed) was really well done.

161mabith
May 15, 11:14 am


If They Come For Us by Fatimah Asghar

Another poetry collection picked up at random. This one was right up my street, and I really loved Asghar's voice. It also had some interesting plays on order and visuals which largely added to the poems rather than seeming like style over substance.

Here is part of what is a central Long poem in the book.

Oil

I'm young & no one around
knows where my parents are from.

A map on our wall & I circle all
the places I want to be. My Auntie A,

not-blood but could be,
runs oil through my scalp.

Her fingers play the strands of my hair.
The house smells like badam.

My Uncle Fuzzy, not-blood but could be,
soaks them in a bowl of water.

My Auntie A says my people might
be Afghani. I draw a ship on the map.

I write Afghani under its hull. I count
all the oceans, blood & not-blood,

all the people I could be,
the whole map, my mirror.

We got sent home early
& no one knew why. I think we
are at war! I yelled to my sister
knapsacks ringing
against our backs. I copy-
catted from Frances
who whispered it when the teachers
got silent. Can't blame
me for taking a good idea.
I collect words where I find them.

Two hours after the towers fell I crossed the ship
out on the map. I buried it under a casket of scribbles.

All the people I could be are dangerous.
The blood clotting, oil in my veins.

162mabith
May 16, 10:29 am


The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny by Kiran Desai

Years back now I read and loved Desai's first novel, Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard, so I had high expectations for this new book which Desai easily met and exceeded. I love her style of writing SO much, just her way with language is really glorious and just to my taste.
In many ways, Sonia felt as if she had returned to being a child. A more playful child than she had ever been. She thought that this was what people spoke of, when they spoke about love. You were outwardly more adult and treated with greater consideration, but secretly you were more childlike, more free, more full of laughter.
It is hard to sum up the plot, as it is rambling (in the best way). Sonia, an aspiring writer, is studying in Vermont, and since she cannot return home to India for breaks she is lonely and cold and unhappy. A chance meeting with an older local artist brings her under his sway and they start a dysfunctional relationship. When she returns to India instead of doing everything possible to stay in the US her family is puzzled.
At the most, they mildly remarked that it was a strange matter indeed to be married to a person who did not enjoy a potato. But that was, to them, the difference between being a human being and not being a human being. If you were a person, you would like a potato. If you were a hollowed out masquerade, it would be thus revealed.
Sunny, an aspiring journalist, is living in NYC with his girlfriend, working a night desk at the AP, and endlessly struggling. Previously his parents had sent Sonia's information to him as a possible romantic match, but he had discarded the possibility of meeting her.
They were, in surprising ways, utterly modern, or was it lack of caring. Or was it the same thing.
These are only tiny elements of the plot, which includes Sunny and Sonia's families as well. It perhaps shouldn't have been possible to balance it all and yet it worked perfectly for me. It will definitely be one of my top reads for this year, and it's hard to imagine any recent fiction matching it.

Highly recommended! It's a longer book, but for me the length was justified.

163RidgewayGirl
May 16, 3:01 pm

>162 mabith: If a book is good, I'm happy when they're long. I've got this on my shelf, and am glad to know it's worthwhile.

164kjuliff
May 16, 3:07 pm

>162 mabith: Great review, and I’m tempted again. I’ve been putting off reading only because of the length.

165mabith
May 17, 9:20 am

>163 RidgewayGirl: Yes, when the writing style really hits my sweet spot the book can go on forever and I'll forgive a lot of plot issues. No forgiveness necessary with this one though!

>164 kjuliff: The audio edition is very well done, if that helps!

166mabith
May 17, 10:40 am


Operation Valuable Fiend: The CIA's First Paramilitary Strike Against the Iron Curtain by Albert Lulushi

This was a random pickup which has some interesting information (for me mainly about how incompetent the CIA was/is). One has to sometimes look past Lulushi's These are Positive Actions views, but I knew that going in. It's one of those topics where there's probably not another book on these specific actions (vs the wider subject), so if you're very interested it's worth picking up. Otherwise definitely one you can miss.

167mabith
May 17, 11:01 am

..

His Marriage Partner is Scheming by Wen Quan Ben Dan

More transmigration into a novel (this genre often has interesting commentary on plot and reader POV, so I enjoy it). The transmigrator, He Qiao, is on a blind date with someone who becomes a villain and has his life, and his family's lives, ruined. He explains to the date, Chi Xueyan, about the book's plot, which Xueyan dismisses until he runs into the key figure and had felt himself unusually attracted by him. At which point he runs back to He Qiao and immediately start a contract marriage to protect himself from the plot (and obviously end up in a real relationship). Very fun novel, good plotting and pacing as well. Chi Xueyan was such a fun character.

After Crossing Through Ten Worlds I Failed to Run Away – Jiu Mi Jiu Mi Tu

Classic quick transmigration scenario, protagonist Ji Ning is completing novel plots due to being near death in the hospital with the hope to wake up when he's completed enough worlds. Unfortunately, in his eleventh world, the love interest from an earlier world suddenly shows up. Cue all the previous worlds colliding and ten previous love interests coming to find him and ask just how many other partners he's had. This had some really nice twists on the genre with good justification for the events and world hopping. Though it also felt like a cheat way to write a quick transmigration novel, with a lot less time/effort spent on those individual worlds than in a traditional work in that genre.

168mabith
Edited: May 17, 1:40 pm


Backflash by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake)

The second of the post-comeback Parker novels, and it was a really enjoyable one. Parker is told about a gambling boat running through an area of New York state as a bit of a test for wider legalized gambling, and the main thing is there they have a cash only policy on buying the chips. Parker feels the man who brought him this job, a vehement anti-gambling advocate, is hiding part of his motivation or plans, but decides he can deal with that later.

The planning for this one was really interesting and I liked all the things Westlake was putting in Parker's way. This one also had some incidental commentary on ableism and how wheelchair users especially are treated, which I appreciated.

Gambling is also a slight theme for Westlake, or clearly something he had opinions on, at least as far as state laws and capitalist endeavor is concerned (rather than a moral or ethical opinion).

169mabith
Edited: May 22, 11:06 am


Fighting for our Friendships: The Science and Art of Conflict and Connection in Women's Relationships by Danielle Bayard Jackson

Balanced and authentic friendships are something I think about a lot and struggle with in various ways. My therapist had mentioned a relevant part of this book, so I thought I'd read it. Plus it can go with The Girls from Ames and Big Friendship in a themed grouping.

A lot of this one wasn't particularly relevant to me (thankfully), but it's all good reminders. Plus the niece I'm closest to is 15 now and it's good to be reminded of how weird toxic friendships can develop or how lack of communication can spoil a good friendship.

I do think Big Friendship was the better book for me, but this one is more like a checklist and perhaps easier to only read relevant sections.

170kjuliff
May 22, 11:05 am

>169 mabith: The older I get the more I believe in the saying, “ You can’t make new old friends”

171mabith
May 22, 2:00 pm

>169 mabith: I think it's partly true and partly just that the people we might have a large overlap with are less commonly in our path than people who we share a specific singular interest with. It takes so much work and constantly putting ourselves in new situations to maybe find those people (and certainly for me, my disability means I can't really do that).

172labfs39
May 22, 3:36 pm

>171 mabith: It's why LT remains a priority for me.

173AlisonY
May 23, 2:24 pm

The older I've got the more I realise that friends come and go, which was almost a shock in my 20s, something I took quite personal when good friends gradually disappeared from my life, most often due to geography and different life stages.

Whilst I've never made the same depth of friendships as I have with a few girls I met in my teens and twenties (which were formed in a time when I was single and without kids and in a position to spend lots of times with those girls), it's been a delight to discover as I get older that you still make friends at every age, and even if many of those friendships aren't particularly deep they still bring fun and new perspectives.

I would say I've had 3 very close friends in total in my life who've stayed the distance over the decades. Sadly I lost one of them 2 years ago, and it taught me the hard way to make sure I take time to prioritise those relationships, even when my own working and family life is busy.

174mabith
May 28, 12:31 pm

>172 labfs39: Absolutely, it's such an important bit of online socializing for me.

>173 AlisonY: The time factor is definitely a bit issue in depths of friendship. Due to my illness I fell off keeping in touch with my really close high school friends (boarding school, so they were practically family), and I was the communication hub who kept all that going. I asked if others could step up, but at age 18-20? It just didn't happen. My closest in-person friend is someone I knew as a teenager, if only briefly. We lost touch for a lot of years after she left our city, but starting hanging out when she moved back here. I'm so thankful for it, because having someone who knew me as an idiot teenager is somehow important and we're both oddballs. Not that long after we were back in touch our mothers both died really suddenly, a couple months apart, and that absolutely bound us together. I don't know what I'd do without her, but I also don't actually get to see her much.

I suppose in the end it's a tightrope of being open to a new friendship developing into a deeper one but not going in expecting it to. Online friends are vital for me, but I'm still desperate for in person contact. I don't have any family where I live to fill that gap, hence why I will often put up with very imbalanced friendships just to maintain some human connection.

175mabith
May 29, 10:41 am


Made for Love by Alissa Nutting

This is an absurdist pre-dystopian farce of a novel. Hazel has run away from her extremely wealthy husband and back to her father who is living in a seniors only trailer park. The husband is a tech billionaire who is drawing from Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and a general idea of these creeps (the book was first published in 2017 though). Having chafed under his constant monitoring and surveillance for years already, she flees when he wants to put a chip in her brain so they can be even more connected (and he can test the product). Oh, and her father has just sold his car to buy a highly lifelike sex doll, Diane.

Then we have Jasper, a small-time love scam operator, who gets attacked by a dolphin while swimming and afterwards can only get turned on by dolphins. This storyline takes a very long time to meet up with Hazel's, but they eventually do.

As long as you keep the absurdist marker in mind and don't take anything too seriously, it's a fun read. Deeply weird, but fun. Hazel is a mess throughout, somewhat understandably, and it's also good to keep in mind she got married around age 20, was immediately completely isolated, and so is nothing like a 'normal' 30 year old. Strange to think there's a TV adaptation of this.

I enjoyed this quote from Hazel's dad when he's trying to get to go back to her husband and the rich life (before he quite realizes why she left, he just wants her out of his trailer):
Have you even considered lowering your standards in terms of general happiness?

176labfs39
May 29, 8:59 pm

>175 mabith: Sounds wild

177mabith
May 30, 6:20 pm

>176 labfs39: I'd have been way more resistant to it, but it was a book club book chosen by a person who has a very good track record of picks (for me personally).

178mabith
May 30, 9:57 pm


Salt, Sweat, and Steam: The Fiery Education of an Accidental Chef by Brigid Washington

Memoir of the author's time at the Culinary Institute of America. Washington is a Trinidadian chef who was in college in the US getting some sort of worthy serious degree the details of which now escape me (some sort of science maybe?). She's doing some job or internship she hates, in a relationship that isn't going how she feels it should, and suddenly decides she wants to cook so much she goes into a bistro she's never eaten at and begs them to hire her even saying she'll work for free. She does start working there (or interning, this is also vague in my mind now) and after breaking up with her boyfriend feels like she can't possibly stay in that area so decides to go to culinary school.

Anyone who reads US-based culinary memoirs, knows a lot of professional cooks, or even just watches a lot of cooking based stuff will know that the Culinary Institute of America is a mixed bag at best. Culinary schools are often battling accusations of encouraging really problematic student loans (or used to be) as well as issues of normalized bullying, misogyny, and racism. One does feel that if you have to scream at people to ensure they can properly brunoise a carrot, perhaps the teaching method is at fault. On the other hand learning a range (how wide the range is rather dubious at times) of cooking techniques and base recipes that you can execute in trying circumstances is handy.

Washington has a lot of interesting information to impart but the 30-40% around her relationships can be a little exhausting (after arriving at culinary school she immediately falls for the worst sort of rich pretty boy asshole). Obviously for a lot of people in their mid to late 20s this is a main part of their life and her relationships are relevant to why she went to the CIA to begin with and with some initial struggles after starting there (plus some much needed growing up) but I did want to shake her.

She graduated from the CIA in 2012 and the book came out this year. I wanted to look it up particularly because even looking back on that period the current writing about it seems very young and maybe a little focused on And Here's This Neat Little Lesson. It's not one of the great memoirs for most people, in my opinion (not awful, not great, worth reading if you're very interested in this specific experience during this specific time).

179mabith
Edited: May 31, 10:02 pm

Villain's Strategy – Luobo Hua Tuzi
A quite sweet transmigration into villain of a school novel book. The main character has to do villainous things to the protagonist in order to eke out payments from the system that took him there, but because he's shy and fearful (and generally admires the other character's skills and intelligence), he's seen to be flirting. Good funny one, if not overly complex.

After Marrying an Enemy General – Gongzi Rou
Back to the interstellar. One empire has lost a war against the other, and the defeated general noticed the other had symptoms of an eventually fatal food poisoning. Knowing that if the other dies the whole galaxy will fall into chaos (and knowing his own government has been corrupted), the defeated general sneaks over to save him. Very mixed bag novel. A lot of promise that wasn't quite carried through and a trope that particularly annoys me ("oh the two love interests actually met as children in a traumatic circumstance" blech, boring).

180mabith
Edited: Jun 1, 3:46 pm


Harlots, Whores, & Hackabouts: A History of Sex for Sale by Kate Lister

As the subtitle says, this is a very brief history of sex work through various records, moving chronologically. It is not trying to be exhaustive but is giving the reader things to think about or interesting aspects of the history that we don't expect. The gentle thrust is mainly that there will always be sex work and decriminalization is the thing which most prevents abuses and increases safety.

However, the book is not a political or sociological treatise on that topic, it's kind of just an impossible to avoid fact when you look at sex work and how governments and societies have tried to wrangle it through the centuries.

181mabith
Edited: Jun 2, 1:29 pm


The Labyrinth House Murders by Yukito Ayatsuji

This is a classic Japanese locked room mystery novel. An older well-established author,
Miyagaki Yōtarō, calls a group to his strange underground labyrinth house, including four of his literary heirs, his editor, and a critic. When they arrive they find that Yōtarō has committed suicide due to approaching death from illness and urges the group to agree to stay in the house for six days while the authors write a 50 page story, the best of which will inherit his fortune.

It's a book for puzzle lovers and while I enjoyed aspects of it the thing fell flat for me. Parts of the murders that any mystery reader (let alone author) would have brought up immediately are never mentioned by the characters and this really brought me out of the book. Perhaps this is just to allow the reader to be the main solver with fewer hints but it's just not my style of mystery. If I just want to solve a puzzle then a setup of a few pages is great vs a novel where I expect more from the characterization.

182mabith
Jun 2, 10:38 pm


The Hunter by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake) RE-READ

Now that I'm nearly done with the Parker series (and have moved into the second stage of books) I wanted to reread the first one. Parker has escaped from the prison farm and is ought for revenge against those who betrayed him, and more importantly he's there to get his money.

It's an outlier from the rest of the series, in terms of sheer levels of awful misogyny. Westlake had been planning to kill Parker, but the editor said, make it a series! The violent misogyny particularly is hugely reduced starting from the second book. There are still misogynistic characters, there's still plenty of sexism happening (it was 1962), but it's more the standard level for the time and Parker himself has calmed down significantly (he doesn't care enough about other people to bother being misogynistic). Reading Westlake's work in this series I never feel like it's author views bleeding through (and Westlake often strikes me as progressive).

Despite the shock of Parker's hardboiled horribleness, as on the first read Westlake's skill in writing and plotting really come through. This series has been so compulsively readable and I'm always impressed with how contemporary Westlake writes. He always has such a clear view of the current zeitgeist and he's always writing in the Now. That aspect makes the original set of books really interesting as well, they're time capsules but don't alienate the modern reader because his characters are fully realized people.

Westlake always gets his little jabs in (bolding is mine):
With the end of Prohibition in 1933, the hotel embarked on its new career as a location for business conferences, as the liquor syndicates merged and disbanded and remerged again in a frantic reshuffling of influence and interest, converting from suddenly legal liquor to still profitably illegal items like gambling, unionizing, prostitution and narcotics.

Of course these books improve over time, but Westlake was really starting at such a high mark.

183mabith
Jun 5, 10:40 am


Make Believe: On Telling Stories to Children by Mac Barnett

I think about children's literature perhaps more than is normal for a childless adult, but my parents were really passionate about what made a great children's book (novel or picture or in between), and did not keep any book in the house that they disliked reading to us. My dad was a sometimes children's librarian as well. They didn't stop reading to us just because we could read and they understood that some of the best picture books are for nine year olds, not five year olds. In our house I never stopped looking at the old pictures books, sometimes reading them for comfort, sometimes for pictures, sometimes to try to figure out what made them special. I had so many conversations with my parents over the years about specific children's books and what they particularly liked about them. It's just always been such an interest to me.

Barnett is current the children's laureate in the US (it goes by another title here which I forget), and this is a very short book of a few essays. For me it's preaching to the choir, but was a nice little read. It's so ridiculous to me that people will assume those writing for children should want to write for adults or that those books are inherently more important.

It also made me think of this Ursula K. Le Guin quote about writing for children:
“It must be relaxing to write simple things for a change”

Sure, it’s simple, writing for kids. Just as simple as bringing them up. All you do is take the sex out, and use short little words, and little dumb ideas, and don’t be scary, and be sure there’s a happy ending. Right? Nothing to it. Write down. Right on.

If you do all that, you might even write Jonathan Livingston Seagull and make twenty billion dollars and have every adult in America reading your book!

But you won’t have every kid in America reading your book. They will look at it, and they will see straight through it, with their clear, cold, beady little eyes, and they will put it down, and they will go away. Kids will devour vast amounts of garbage (and it is good for them) but they are not like adults: they have not yet learned to eat plastic.

184labfs39
Jun 5, 10:27 pm

>183 mabith: Fantastic quote.

185dchaikin
Jun 7, 5:05 pm

Seconding Lisa - that quote!

186mabith
Jun 9, 11:33 am

>184 labfs39: >185 dchaikin: Le Guin is always there with a stand-out quote on any literary subject, I find!

187mabith
Jun 10, 9:56 am


The Cloisters: Medieval Art and Architecture, Peter Barnet, Nancy Wu

Picked this up through random library browsing. My dad was always telling us about the first time he went to the Cloisters museum when he was 19 or 20 and how absolutely amazing and atmospheric it was and on and on. So when my sister and I took the train there in 2003, of course we visited the Cloisters and of course I loved it too.

It's essentially a coffee table book giving you potted histories of specific objects and architectural elements. I enjoyed paying attention to the acquisition dates to contemplate if it was something my dad would have seen. I started reading it around his birthday, so it was a bittersweet communion (he died in 2022).

Nice one to pick up if you're interested, some of the pictures of the architectural elements in barns etc... were especially interesting to me.

188mabith
Jun 10, 10:04 am


Window Left Open by Jennifer Grotz

I was supposed to finish this in May, and really should have, but I think it's a sign I need to move my 'read poem' task to the morning rather than bedtime. I kept settling down in bed to read and going "No poetry! Time for re-reading goofy comedies."

I largely liked Grotz style and the poems, though the collection didn't blow me away. It's a quiet, mature book and perhaps I prefer the explosive.

Self-Portrait on the Street of an Unnamed Foreign City

The lettering on the shop window in which
you catch a glimpse of yourself is in Polish.

Behind you a man quickly walks by, nearly shouting
into his cell phone. Then a woman

at a dreamier pace, carrying a just-bought bouquet
upside-down. All on a street where pickpockets abound

along with the ubiquitous smell of something baking.
It is delicious to be anonymous on a foreign city street.

Who knew this could be a life, having languages
instead of relationships, struggling even then,

finding out what it means to be a woman
by watching the faces of men passing by.

I went to distant cities, it almost didn’t matter
which, so primed was I to be reverent.

All of them have the beautiful bridge
crossing a grey, near-sighted river,

one that massages the eyes, focuses
the swooping birds that skim the water’s surface.

The usual things I didn’t pine for earlier
because I didn’t know I wouldn’t have them.

I spent so much time alone, when I actually turned lonely
it was vertigo.

Myself estranged is how I understood the world.
My ignorance had saved me, my vices fueled me,

and then I turned forty. I who love to look and look
couldn’t see what others did.

Now I think about currencies, linguistic equivalents, how lop-sided they are, while
my reflection blurs in the shop windows.

Wanting to be as far away as possible exactly as much as still with you.
Shamelessly entering a Starbucks (free wifi) to write this.

---
I also particularly like the final stanza of the last poem in the book (Scorpion):
What amount of fear is the right amount of fear?
I want to find the correct proportion but
my only measure is analogy, to ponder
how this is like that. Sometimes I can see
there is no answer because
I am not asking the question right but
God, I am doing the best I know how.

189FlorenceArt
Edited: Jun 10, 11:53 am

>188 mabith: Love those poems, you should post them to the poetry thread.

190mabith
Edited: Jun 10, 6:12 pm


O Human Star by Blue Delliquanti

This is originally a webcomic and the volumes are self-published but still available to read online. It was serialized over quite a long period but the art and writing are very stable all the way through (and the people reminded me a lot of Alison Bechdel's style).

An engineer/inventor, Al, working on robots hires a helper, Brendan, and they quickly form a bond that leads to a romantic relationship. Brendan is very open and sociable, and a good salesman, while Al is reserved and keeps his emotions fairly locked down. They get to a point of fighting over both work and the relationship apparently to the extent of breaking up, and just as Al is having an unforeseen fatal health failure. Then he wakes up in the future, as a synthetic being, brought back by mysterious forces who leave him at Brendan's house. Cue fallout and trying to solve mysteries/not fight, and that's it for the plot without spoilers.

It's not the most complicated story, but it's done fairly well. It's also far more consistent and planned out than most webcomics these days (don't get me started comparing the current culture to that of the early 2000s).

191mabith
Jun 10, 6:09 pm


The Man with the Getaway Face by Richard Stark (pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake RE-READ

Okay, one last Parker reread. This is the second book and I got in my head over "Is the change in Parker and in the tone of the books as immediate as I remembered it?" The answer is profoundly yes. I just got a little nervous I was misremembering (also the books are very short).

Parker starts this book getting plastic surgery since the in-universe mob know his old face and aren't happy with it. Then he moves on to a job which he needs enough to be willing to counterplan for the two participants who are planning to double cross him and Handy McKay. This is messed up by someone having killed the plastic surgeon to protect their new face and the doctor's henchman trying to figure out who did it, with Parker trying to manage the situation which seems destined to further louse up his life. It's very hard to not immediately move on to the next book in these first four or five Parkers, but there are too many new-to-me things to read.

192cindydavid4
Edited: Jun 10, 6:48 pm

>183 mabith: ha! Isaac Singer says something similar in his collection of essays; dont have the exact wordds but basically kids are not dumb

193cindydavid4
Jun 10, 6:45 pm

>187 mabith: i love the cloisters, but the archeaology part of me cringes about moving the buiding far from its home. but i do enjoy the musuem its fine with me

194rocketjk
Edited: Jun 11, 1:12 am

>192 cindydavid4: "Isaac Singer says something similar in his collection of essays; dont have the exact wordds but basically kids are not dumb"

Here you go. From the collection of Singer's essays, Old Truths and New Cliches, in the essay "Literature for Children and Adults":

"Anyone who wants to write for children must remember that children are frequently no poorer in emotions than adults. Often, a child's emotions are stronger and even more complex, but the child is less inclined to let itself be duped by imprecise words and abstractions. You can speak to grownups about love in general and they will form the illusion that they know what you're talking about, but the child insists on immediately knowing who loves whom. Children want to hear stories because they instinctively know that life is made up of stories. Children know that every love is different and that each encounter between people represents a kind of truth that has never occurred before, nor will ever occur again."

195rasdhar
Jun 11, 1:55 am

>77 mabith: I know cultivation refers to this specific theme of magical fantasy settings, but when you said 'real cultivation' all I could think of was someone who thinks they're playing a videogame and ends up knee-deep in a paddy field! Noting the title for when I want something fun.

>85 mabith: I've read Dennis Duncan's other book (Book Parts) which is also very good!

>94 mabith: agree with everything you said about Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake - the protagonist is too infuriating to really enjoy the book. I was hesitant about the next one, but I liked what you review said, I'll check it out.

>145 mabith: I was JUST reading a vintage mystery novel where someone dies on stage, it is Death on the Aisle by Frances Lockridge featuring Mr and Mrs North, amateur detectives-in-love.

Enjoyed all the poetry on your thread! Sorry for the long post, I'm catching up after a while.

196cindydavid4
Jun 11, 9:36 am

>194 rocketjk: yup thats the one!

197mabith
Jun 14, 12:29 am

>189 FlorenceArt: I've got a different poem set to post there!

>193 cindydavid4: I feel like from what I know when buildings or architectural elements have been moved in the last 120 years the option is never "it stays in this region or country or it moves out of the country" but rather "it falls into ruin, is destroyed with the stone broken up and used elsewhere, gets put on a private estate where no one will see it and it's still likely to fall into ruin OR it's moved out of the country." So I don't fret at all about that when it's coming from a couple with plenty of medieval architecture about.

>194 rocketjk: Definitely a great quote!

>195 rasdhar: Ha, those cultivation novel protagonists sometimes wish they were just cultivating the land, I imagine! There are deeply annoying Hall protagonists who I warm to without trouble, but Rosaline Palmer's specific hangups were much harder to get along with (I'm sure it hits the 'relatable' mark for some). Making a note of Death on the Aisle, I do love that trope and I quite like when the investigators are a couple (well, depending on the dynamic).

198mabith
Jun 14, 12:38 am


A History of Delusions: The Glass King, a Substitute Husband and a Walking Corpse by Victoria Shepherd

The subtitle for this book makes it sounds like it will be a sort of Ripley's Believe It or Not just reporting on various people's strange beliefs. Luckily it's not! Shepherd is focusing on a fairly small number of people and partly looking at common delusions and the potential causes and themes.

Shepherd also looks into the treatments of the time and the views of doctors treating these people, as well as some modern views. I found it all really well done and interesting, and not sensationalized.

Recommended if you're interested in the subject.

199cindydavid4
Jun 14, 12:38 pm

>197 mabith: You make a good point It's just in my part of the country buildings are taken down about oh every 30 to 50 years Heck I just saw a strip tmall was built there maybe 10 years ago and then now taking it down and repainting it's just funny .0n my first trip overseas i went to isreal to and I remember the age and I was just astounded by it ever since I've been fascinated by the age But time changes and things change And people change And there isn't much you can do about change , At least in this day and age we can easily take photos or videos or find images of the buildings that you loved . And so it goes

200mabith
Jun 15, 9:10 am

>199 cindydavid4: The visual changes do sometimes seem so impactful.

201mabith
Jun 15, 9:10 am


The Ax by Donald E. Westlake

This is an unusual Westlake novel, for a number of reasons. For one, there seem to be some autobiographical elements (this book is dedicated to Westlake's father) and for two the main character is not a career criminal or independent operator. Say what you will about themes, independence is key to most Westlake protagonists.

It's 1997, Burke Devore is 50 and he's been downsized from his job managing the production line at a paper mill where he's worked for twenty years. He's proudly kept his wife out of full time work, he has two children who are 19 and 17, and his interviews aren't going well. The computer is replacing too many jobs as the stockholders demand maximum profits. However, he has an idea. If he can just murder four or five people with similar resumes to him then it will be worth putting more Jolly Good Fellow energy into the interviews. Oh, and here's an article about a new mill and he could easily replace this manager, so why not add him to the kill list.
Couldn't I kill him? I mean, seriously. In self-defense, really, in defense of my family, my life, my mortgage, my future, myself, my life. That's self-defense.
This is not one of Westlake's comic novels, but a deep commentary on corporate downsizing and worker desperation. It's a tense, suspenseful novel, and Burke is a deeply human character. He is not hugely unlikeable, though he's a man of his time and through his narration we see his view of himself and his family shifting and twisting, his refusal to believe that anyone not in his situation (middle class and downsized) could know what it feels like. We can't hate him but we can hardly root for him either as we watch him harden himself, soften, and harden again. Westlake's other characters would never kill even one person to get back to a middle management job.

It's a great book, incredibly well-crafted. The structure of it mimics Devore's initially scattered resolve and mental state before solidifying into chronological order. It supports my firm belief that Westlake was one of the greatest commentators on life in the second half of the 20th century. He's never more clear-eyed than when commentating on corporate culture in 1980s and 1990s.
These are all publicly held corporations, and it is the stockholders’ drive for return on investment that pushes every one of them. Not the product, not the expertise, certainly not the reputation of the company. The stockholders care about nothing but return on investment, and that leads to their supporting executives who are formed in their image, men (and women, too, lately) who run companies they care nothing about, lead work forces whose human reality never enters their minds, make decisions not on the basis of what’s good for the company or the staff or the product or (hah!) the customer, or even the greater good of the society, but only on the basis of stockholders’ return on investment.

Oh, I knew all that when I started, I knew who the enemy was. But what good does that do me? If I were to kill a thousand stockholders and get away with it clean, what would I gain? What’s in it for me? If I were to kill seven chief executives, each of whom had ordered the firing of at least two thousand good workers in healthy industries, what would I get out of it?

Nothing.

What it comes down to is, the CEOs, and the stockholders who put them there, are the enemy, but they are not the problem. They are society’s problem, but they are not my personal problem.

202FlorenceArt
Jun 15, 9:17 am

>201 mabith:

"What it comes down to is, the CEOs, and the stockholders who put them there, are the enemy, but they are not the problem. They are society’s problem, but they are not my personal problem."

Will probably make a great epitaph for our society.

203mabith
Jun 15, 11:20 am

>202 FlorenceArt: Absolutely! He died at the end of 2008, and it's probably for the best he hasn't had to see what's happened since (I do sometimes think the events of the 2000s contributed to the heart attack that killed him).

204mabith
Jun 15, 11:20 am

.
Brat Farrar by Josephine Tey RE-READ

I didn't get to this when I was doing my other Tey re-reads last year because I've already read it twice. That last time was 2017 though and I do think it's Tey's finest book, though very different from the others and not remotely a typical mystery.

Brat Farrar was an orphan, raised in quite a humane, loving orphange. Bullied at school, he asks to be sent to work, where his lodging and food take up his entire paycheck. He takes a chance to run away, to see the world and to work, and to find something else. When he's finally back in England, someone misrecognizes him as a cousin and is so struck by the resemblance he draws Brat into a missing heir scheme. Brat intends to say no, but is drawn by horses and the fact he almost certainly is a relation, some playboy's by-blow, so he wants to see the place at least once. As he ponders:
Someone had said that if you thought about the unthinkable long enough it became quite reasonable.
It's quiet, with all Tey's usual skill at creating rounded characters, and while the pacing may not work for some, I've enjoyed every read of it.

205FlorenceArt
Jun 15, 11:28 am

>204 mabith: I liked this book too, more than the other Tey I read, whose title I forget. Something about a candle? Anyway I’m no great fan of crime stories, and this one was a bit different, and I like it.

206KeithChaffee
Jun 16, 11:32 am

>201 mabith: If you're a movie person, the South Korean flim No Other Choice from last year is an adaptation of The Ax, and it's terrific.

207mabith
Edited: Jun 21, 9:57 am

>205 FlorenceArt: A Shilling for Candles isn't one of her strongest, I'd say, but what keeps me enjoying all of her novels is how the people feel much more like real people as compared Sayers and Christie and her other contemporaries. Not necessarily people I'd like, but people rather than Mystery Book Characters. You might like The Franchise Affair, it's another unusual one.

>206 KeithChaffee: Yes, Gary (valkyrdeath here) and I watched that together before we read the book. It was great as a stand-alone watch, though the deeper themes of the book were largely ignored, which is a shame (and some of the changes dampened that even further). The almost slapstick to very tense atmosphere was a good touch for the film though.

208FlorenceArt
Jun 16, 1:41 pm

>207 mabith: Real characters are important! I’ll keep your suggestion in mind.

209mabith
Edited: Jun 22, 8:24 am

Film catch-up!

The Awful Truth - A 1937 Cary Grant and Irene Dunne picture, about a married couple who start divorce proceedings and then try to interfere in each other's next romances. Worth reading the wikipedia page on this one, the production was not typical. Pretty good, though not going on the all time favorites list.

No Other Choice (어쩔수가없다) - Korean adaptation of the Westlake book, The Ax, reviewed above. Very good stand alone picture, with some smart changes and leavings out and additions, but unfortunately also leaves out the bulk of Westlake's message re corporate culture, capitalism, and the ways we delude ourselves. Has a really nice shift from comic to tense and dark though.

Dick Tracy - The 1990 picture. I know I watched this as a kid but could only really remember the prosthetics and makeup on the henchmen. Visually it's a stunning production in every way. I feel like Beatty is an odd choice for Tracy but he also directed it. The story and a lot of the acting are not impressive, but again, visually it's an amazing film.

Alice (Něco z Alenky) - 1988 surrealist animated adaptation of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Czech filmmaker Jan Švankmajer. Another visual treat! Really interesting film, worth watching if you're into animation.

The Smiling Lieutenant - 1931 slightly musical comedy directed by Ernst Lubitsch, starring Maurice Chevalier, Claudette Colbert and Miriam Hopkins. I'm out of my first line 1930s comedies, so was looking up lists of people's lesser known favorites and found this one. Man forced to marry prim princess, tries to carry on with singer girlfriend, girlfriend eventually teaches the princess how to dress, play jazz, and bob her hair and then it's all fine. It was fun in places though not deep. George Barbier's role as the King was the real highlight.

Children of the Blitz - Very recent documentary interviewing elderly people who were children during and survived various bombing campaigns in WWII (in various areas of the UK). This was well done, I think, and just a timely reminder ofhow deeply traumatic these experiences are. I was encouraged to see that they also brought up the British bombing of German cities and that death toll as well.

The Strange Little Cat (Das merkwürdige Kätzchen) - Really interesting film where nothing happens. We're with a family where older siblings are back home with their parents and youngest sister and we're going through a day basically as they get ready for more family to come for a meal. It is deeply 'normal' and familiar, the camera sitting there while people pass in front of it, nothing 'properly' framed, and then suddenly there will be almost a monologue of a story, allowed to be told in a way that's not usual to disrupt the absolute familiarity. It managed to be compelling somehow despite nothing happening. The acting in it was great as well.

210LolaWalser
Jun 22, 4:06 pm

>209 mabith:

I like the 1940s Dick Tracys with all those amazing faces. Boris Karloff plays "Gruesome" IIRC. Really reminiscent of Chester Gould's comic strip.

211mabith
Jun 25, 10:20 am

>210 LolaWalser: That's what this movie also does really well (except for Tracy himself, annoyingly).

212mabith
Jun 25, 10:33 pm


Original Sins: The (Mis)education of Black and Native Children and the Construction of American Racism by Eve L. Ewing

Poetry fans might be more familiar with Ewing from her collection 1919 but she's a generally impressive renaissance woman. Her earlier book about school closings, Ghosts in the Schoolyard sprung from her doctoral dissertation. She has also written children's books and for various Marvel comic series, created visual art installations, and been involved in theater. She's a year younger than I am, which certainly doesn't make me feel any type of way...

This book is such a hard but important read, and the issues in it are far from over. Rarely have I muttered "fucking hell" so often during a book, and I used to read a lot of very depressing non-fiction. We're really covering the depths of racist horror in this one.

It's very well done, and it's an important framework to have if you're remotely concerned about the US education system.

213mabith
Jun 25, 10:52 pm


Celestial Bodies by Jokha Alharthi

This was my pick for my book club. I read Alharthi's Bitter Orange Tree last year and really liked it. I liked this one as well, though it was more challenging in terms of keeping track of the characters and the family tree. It's not in any chronological order, and one character is first person narration while the rest are third person. I thought of the book as a window into a pocket of lives in Oman during periods of transition.

We get glimpses into a family with three sisters, but the view is more sprawling than just their lives. However there's no big plot, you have to be willing to ride along with a character study of a book.

I really enjoyed the writing and will happily read more by Alharthi. Plus I got to give my book club something that wasn't written by an American, Brit, or Canadian.
Aah, the books! The thought of the enormous pleasure of books quickened Asma’s pace. It was a good moment to lose herself in their joys.

214mabith
Jun 25, 11:18 pm

.
The Raft by Robert Trumbull

This book really shows the random items my libraries will acquire in digital form. I see 'oh, survival at sea, that's my jam' and check it out without realizing this was originally published in 1942 and it has not been updated at all to include the information that was still classified in 1942.

Trumbull is giving sole writing credit on this, but he's written it from the perspective of one of the men on the raft, Harold F. Dixon (the ranking officer) after interviewing him (and hopefully the other men as well). The three men were on a routine flight but got lost and couldn't find their way back to their aircraft carrier or whatnot. After an emergency sea landing they managed to get the raft inflated but most of their useful tools and all supplies sank with the plane. They were at sea for 34 days before landing on one of the Cook Islands (Pukapuka).

It's a book very much of it's time, and I do find it slightly comforting to read some vintage non-fiction. However, it's also limited. It would be nice to have a more modern book on this experience.

I enjoyed this quote:
(a shark) looked as though he was up to some devilment.

Those sharks, always up to devilment!

215labfs39
Jun 26, 8:19 am

>212 mabith: Adding this one to my list. I am interested in the public school system despite keeping my own daughter and nieces out of it.

>213 mabith: I went to add Bitter Orange Tree to my wishlist and found it already there due to your earlier review. :-)

>214 mabith: I'm curious as to what was in those classified documents and how that might change the story.

216mabith
Jun 26, 10:06 am

>215 labfs39: Oh, the classified information wouldn't really change the story, it's location stuff and fairly dry details kept out since the war was ongoing, but it seems strange to me not to do a basic update when these things are republished.

Other People's Children was a good racism in the public school system read as well, which at least one of my teacher friends also recommends.