Saturday, January 11, 2025

The Selected Journals of Emma M. Lion: Vol.3 by Beth Brower

 genre: historical fiction, epistolary

Emma and her St. Crispian's neighborhood have done it again - amused me from beginning to end.  Not only did I chuckle out loud, several times, there was a tenderness to this volume that hit different, it's a little deeper and allows itself to go to a more vulnerable place, which I REALLY liked.  More underline-able thoughts this time and I am ALL HERE FOR IT.   Things to remember from this volume: a red ticket, a box of photographs, a table of ruffians.  Alas, at this point, I fear I have no choice but to sally forward and read ALL of Emma's journals.

Thursday, January 9, 2025

Playground by Richard Powers (audiobook)

genre: speculative fiction

With multiple story lines in far flung places from Chicago to a tiny island in French Polynesia, Playground is a story of the richness of the ocean, the power of games and play to help humans connect and the reality of AI’s ability to change the entire trajectory of human evolution on earth. Told from the point of view of game designers and artists, oceanographers and poets, Playground dares us to look closely at the things in this life that are worth saving.

Playground is my first book by Richard Powers, and so I did not have any expectations for what kind of experience this would be. The truth is that it completely blew me away. I loved the depth and richness of the storytelling, the ways that different threads were woven together, the way it made me almost close my eyes in wonder at the beauty of our planet and I especially loved the exploration of the wide expanse of human experience and invention. All of this is set up in stark contrast to a possible world in which artificial intelligence has become even more perfectly human than we are, with our faults and frailties.

This is not to say that it was an easy listen all the time, there are a lot of characters and a lot of things to keep straight, but I almost felt like he held my hand all along the way, and I never felt truly lost. Having many different narrators definitely helped and even though the ending required more than the usual amount of brain power, I still finished feeling satisfied and almost spent. This is the sort of book that you want to talk about with someone afterwards.

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

The First Ladies by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray

 genre: historical fiction

The two women couldn't have had more different backgrounds.  One, from old money and high society.  The other, the daughter of two formerly enslaved parents.  What Eleanor Roosevelt (wife of the politician and future president Franklin Delano Roosevelt) and Mary McLeod Bethune (civil rights activities and president of of her own college) have in common, though, is a desire to help and to create change.  These common desires will fuel a friendship that last for some of the hardest decades this nation has known.

While the idea of this book didn't quite capture my attention at first, I am once again so grateful for the miracle of book clubs that force me to stretch a little and add something into my reading life that I would have otherwise left behind.   Told from alternating points of view between these two amazing women, this story taught me so much not just about their history but also about the astonishing mountain of prejudice and racism that stood in the way of EVERY TINY THING that Mary and Eleanor tried to accomplish.  I have never spent a lot of time learning about the politics of the 30s, so this was a crash course for me, but the way the story is told, you learn about what's happening as the story moves forward so it didn't bog me down.  It actually felt so important, what these women were trying to do.

The most powerful (and yes, sometimes uncomfortable) parts for me was when Eleanor would overstep or make a racist mistake and Mary called her on it - with compassion, usually, but without ever backing down. Mary knew that she truly deserved the same kind of respect as anyone of any race and it was so important for me to read about her way of interacting with the world. I am embarrassed that I have never heard of her, HOW have I never heard of Mary Bethune? But I finished this book with tears in my eyes, tears of appreciation for what Mary fought for and against and for how she never gave up on this country, despite how it chewed her and spit her out over and over.   

The only reason it's four stars instead of five for me is that the writing just didn't throw it over the top to "amazing" - literarily it's a solid, four star piece of historical fiction that I absolutely would recommend.

Sunday, January 5, 2025

Night Watch by Jayne Anne Phillips

 genre: historical fiction

In the secluded hills of West Virginia lives a little family. Even though the War is finally over, Eliza, the mama of this family, is not ok. Twelve-year-old ConaLee shoulders the responsibility of getting Mama to an asylum where Eliza can hopefully rest and heal. The world is not yet a safe place, though, especially in this Reconstruction period, and the road ConaLee has to travel (both literally and figuratively) is filled with with dangers and lost memories.

I chose this one because it won the Pulitzer last year and I liked the cover.  I didn't really know anything about it but it caught my attention quickly.  Things felt fraught from the beginning, you can tell something OFF but you're not sure what.  Soon, it is all clear, and it's all horrible.  The pain and loss that our poor ConaLee has to face is deeply upsetting and my initial compassion for Eliza helped me stick with this story with a timeline constantly shifting back and forth and time in a way that felt pretty unmooring sometimes.  Once I felt grounded in the story with both characters and chronology, I did guess one of the major plot points but it turns out, I still really wanted to keep reading and find out how it would all play out.  There are parts of this that reminded me in a super vague way, of The Sound and the Fury - with different narrators who can only give us the story from their own way of seeing the world.  I liked that it's about a different part of the Civil War than I usually read and although I can't gush about this, I'm giving it four stars for the history I learned about asylums during the period and for the way it kept me reading.  

Friday, January 3, 2025

Women Talking by Miriam Toews

 genre: contemporary fiction

In a hayloft in a secluded Mennonite community, a group of women gather to make a choice.  Will they continue to be violated and abused by staying in their homes among the men who perpetrated these crimes, will they fight for their children and try create a better, safer world or will they flee and leave behind the only home they've ever known.  It's an almost impossible choice, but for these women, young and old, the status quo doesn't really feel like a true option any more.  A tiny light is flickering and these women, talking together, are going to craft it into a flame.

This book has flooded me with so many thoughts and feelings.  It is horrendous, atrocious, beyond horrible what these women have experienced. The fact that it is based on REAL events makes it ten times worse.  So one part of me is so horrified by the behavior of people who feel they have a sick kind of power that I want to look away.  But our author forces us to LOOK.  LOOK at what people can endure and then imagine how the powerless might go about taking their power back.  And that leads to another part of me that cannot get over the beauty of these women talking, the way they are slowly finding themselves as they say the words to describe what is indescribable.  I had to have a pen at the ready to underline the ways in which ideas about forgiveness and violence and power structures and patriarchy and pain are so perfectly and simply stated.  I loved the narrative structure of the novel, in which the minutes of the women's meetings are written down by an outsider, who also has their own commentary on what's happening.

I can't imagine I will ever forget how powerful this book has been to me.  It touched a deep part that is beginning to find so much solace in reading about women finding their voices, even among the basest abominations. I am giving every kind of content warning for a book discussing this kind of trauma - but also, if you can bring yourself to look in the eye of the horrors that real women have and will experience, I truly urge you to do so.

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker (audiobook)

genre: mystery/thriller

Patch with his eyepatch and Saint with her chain-smoking, bus-driving grandma, are two misfit kids that find each other in middle school.  To have a true best friend, it's the greatest gift, especially at that age.  But both of their lives hit a complete trajectory shift when Patch is brave enough to defend a local girl from tragedy - and Saint is left behind.  Both of their experiences will lead to trauma and loss, love and a fierce desire to protect, as well as the kind of obsession that can both taint and color an entire lifetime.

Wow.  I went into this knowing nothing, as I love to do.  Reader, you should know that it is LONG.  Not QUITE too long, for me, but bordering on it.  Yes, it would've benefited maybe from some tighter editing, but when the climax came (me, with my hand over my mouth as I listened, barely breathing) I couldn't think what could've possibly been left out.  All the little details, they matter.  The cast of characters is large and complex and while there is both bone-deep friendship and the love of the family you choose, there is also a deep and complex kind of evil.  The kind that of evil watches you over your shoulder for decades and can't get away from.  

Here is all the things I loved in this book that swirled around to make this the kind of listening experience that lingered in my head: paintings hung in pride of place, honey making, tenacious investigators, the power of memory, the way people can rescue us both from literal catastrophe and from the demons inside us and, most of all, the beauty in a life, saved.

Five stars for how it captured me, in all the ways.

content warnings: lots of adult material in here but no graphic sex


Saturday, December 28, 2024

The Mythmakers: The Remarkable Fellowship of C.S. Lewis & J.R.R. Tolkien John Hendrix

genre: graphic novel/non-fiction

This mixed-genre graphic novel is about the lives of and relationship between the authors of The Chronicles of Narnia books and The Lord of the Rings.  I already had some background knowledge (though not much) but I learned a lot here as well.  I truly was intrigued by their early lives and experiences in the Great War, and while this book doesn't get gratuitously gorey, it doesn't shy away from the horror either.

What I loved most though, was the way that this book teaches us about STORY - the power of story and myth and fantasy and how these genres morphed during the careers of these two men.  I found the "portals" (a bit of a Choose Your Own Adventure device) to actually be both clever and informative.  

I bought this for my sons, who are twelve, but neither of them was that into it enough to finish it.  I think if maybe if it wasn't so text heavy in between the graphic novel sections, it might have pulled them in better, but again, I found those sections to be just as engaging.  There is a lot about faith and the way that Lewis's faith journey impacted both his writing and his way of seeing the world.  The ending of this book was so tender to me that I actually got a little teary!  I think in terms of explaining the impact of these two authors and the way that they each impacted each other - that made this a really good read for me.

If you like unique narrative formats and have a tenderness for either these particular authors or any of their (in my opinion, astonishingly good) books, I do truly recommend this one.  The time I spent reading it was time well spent.

Sunday, December 22, 2024

The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion Vol. 2 by Beth Brower

genre: historical fiction

As I look back, nothing particularly huge or outlandish happens here in this second volume but DANG they are a pleasure to read. I find myself chuckling out loud and  wishing that I could share Emma's garret with her.  There are several dreamy men on the scene and I do definitely care to find out what happens next for our Emma.  This is just good reading.

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Women's Hotel by Daniel M. Lavery

 genre: historical fiction


The title really gives the book's plot away, in this case.   It's about the women who live in a women's hotel.  There's no plot, really.  Not even a whole lot happens. But as a piece of historical fiction, I was intrigued by this slice of life for single women trying to survive with some kind of respectability in New York City in the 1960s.  I chose it because of the comparison to Lesson in Chemistry but this is NOT in the same vein, in my opinion.  That book gripped me and I couldn't wait to finish - and it made me FEEL so much. This one did not grip me, unfortunately, and I don't even think the author necessarily was writing to MAKE me feel something.  The writing isn't bad, not at all, and I did highlight several different paragraphs that explained an idea in a way that caught my attention.

Okay, I just went back and looked and I did highlight sort of a lot.  Apparently, I did like the writing.  It just felt like several different character stories strung together instead of a cohesive story that I could get engaged in.  Perhaps it was just not the right book at the right time.  It gets three stars for all the times I liked how Lavery turned a phrase but I can't say I was ever particularly eager to read it.

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Here One Moment by Liane Moriarty (audiobook)

 genre: contemporary fiction

When the older woman on the plane stands up and begins speaking, no one could imagine how her words will change the lives of every one who hears them.  Is she a fortune teller?  Is she a psychic?  Can she really know the future?  Because, what if she can, and there is no way to change your fate?  Or what if we have more control over our future than we think we do?

I have not read many Liane Moriarty books, but this audiobook hooked me from the beginning.  It's a mystery but it's not.  It's a character study of one particular person but also it is many stories about many different people, whose lives are all impacted by those words spoken on a plan.  There is a lot of back and forth between the main narrator and LOTS of other narrators, and there is also back and forth in time, which sometimes is hard to keep straight. It's a little bit longer than it needed to be.  But for me, it was worth sticking with it because our main narrator is wildly quirky and I loved her "voice," there were a lot of twists and so much grace and when I finished, I had this lovely sense that maybe I do have more control over what my life is like than I sometimes think and isn't that a hopeful thing?

Excellent narration.  

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