osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Jared Cohen’s Accidental Presidents: Eight Men Who Changed America, which chronicles the vice presidents who stepped into office when the president died/was assassinated, answered a question that had long bothered me: what the hell was Lincoln thinking when he selected Andrew Johnson as vice president?

Andrew Johnson was the only loyal senator from a southern state, and Lincoln (among many others) greatly admired his moral courage in standing strong against the secessionist tide. Moreover, during the war Johnson embraced emancipation and civil rights for the formerly enslaved. It was only after Lincoln’s assassination (which occurred right after the war ended) that it became clear Johnson had embraced these things only as war measures to knock out Confederate fighting power. Now that the war was over, he fought any further civil rights measures tooth and nail.

He also proved far more lenient with former rebels than anyone could have expected, given that during the war he advocated harsh punishment for the leaders & instigators of the rebellion. In the event, however, he handed out pardons left and right. Even Jeff Davis only spent two years in prison.

I also finished Aoko Matsuda’s Where the Wild Ladies Are, which was a delight. I’m not usually a big fan of short story collections - often I find the quality of stories really variable - but the tales in this book are uniformly excellent, and I loved Matsuda’s quirky retellings and remixes of Japanese folk tales in contemporary Japan.

And I read two more Newbery Honor books from the 90s, both of which are pretty Peak Newbery, although I must say Carolyn Coman’s What Jamie Saw is far more restrained than it could have been: it had the perfect set-up for Tragic Baby Death (given the book begins with a baby being thrown across the room), but instead the baby gurgles on.

Laurence Yep’s Dragon’s Gate, on the other hand, is chock full of disaster - and chock empty of dragons. After accidentally killing a Manchu, young Otter flees China to work with his father and uncle on the Transcontinental Railroad in California… where Otter’s father is blinded, his uncle breaks his leg and freezes to death and his body is lost on the mountainside, and (this is truly the Peak Newbery moment) after Otter’s messmate Doggy’s moon guitar is stolen, the whole crew heartwarmingly comes together to buy him a new one… only for Doggy to lose two fingers to frostbite the very night before they present him the new guitar. His guitar-playing fingers, obviously.

And finally (possibly because I needed something lighthearted after… all of that) I read Dorothy Gilman’s Mrs. Pollifax Pursued, which delighted me with its unusual riff on the Mrs. Pollifax formula: instead of being sent on a mission by the CIA, Mrs. Pollifax sets off on a mission of her own, intending to save a young woman who took refuge from foul pursuers in Mrs. Pollifax’s closet. Soon, they are hiding out in a carnival! Genuinely tragic that Mrs. Pollifax didn’t end up pretending to be a fortuneteller, as the carnival’s owner briefly suggested, but overall a lively fast-paced read.

What I’m Reading Now

Russell Freedman’s Eleanor Roosevelt: A Life of Discovery. Well-written, like all of Freedman’s books, but wow! Eleanor Roosevelt had a pretty sad life! I’ve just gotten to the part where Franklin has an affair with Eleanor’s social secretary and I just want to kick him. Of all the girls in all the world, couldn’t he find one who wasn’t a friend of his wife’s?

What I Plan to Read Next

I’ve got just two Newbery Honor books from the 1990s left, both by Nancy Farmer: The Ear, The Eye, and the Arm and A Girl Named Disaster. I’m so close! I can do this!

Date: 2021-05-12 11:53 am (UTC)
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
I lost it at the Peak Newbery moment, but my first loud laugh was at "chock empty"--a phrase that deserves wide dissemination.

I read A Girl Named Disaster! Or most of it... I recall kind of losing interest around the 3/4 mark, but also enjoying the set-up and early adventures. And I feel like I started The Ear, The Eye, and the Arm, on the grounds that I ought to like it, but somehow didn't end up actually reading it.

Date: 2021-05-12 09:21 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Rotwang)
From: [personal profile] sovay
I actually did start The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm just a few years ago, but I didn't get very far. This time I will have to stick to it.

I have been tremendously fond of it since it came out and will be fascinated to know how it reads to someone who didn't hit it in early adolescence. Whether it holds up or not, I suspect it of being one of my first pieces of Afrofuturism.

Date: 2021-05-12 12:46 pm (UTC)
troisoiseaux: (Default)
From: [personal profile] troisoiseaux
Ooh, I had my eye on that Eleanor Roosevelt biography, actually! Glad to hear it's well-written, but yikes.

I am SO delighted you discovered/recommended Where the Wild Ladies Are because it was such a treat.

In terms of false advertising in books-- glad that the baby didn't die; BOOO for lack of dragons.

Date: 2021-05-12 05:02 pm (UTC)
copperfyre: (Default)
From: [personal profile] copperfyre
I'm very much enjoying all your Newbery book summaries! And I'm forever annoyed at the large numbers of books that promise dragons in the title and then don't have any dragons in them! I want dragons!

Date: 2021-05-12 09:14 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
From: [personal profile] sovay
Dragonless books should have dragonless titles!

If it helps, Yep's Dragon of the Lost Sea (1982) and sequels all have dragons in the title and are chockablock with actual dragons, also humor, numinous, and occasional downright nightmare fuel. I love that quartet.

Date: 2021-05-13 07:56 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
From: [personal profile] sovay
I never picked them up because I had picked up this book so many times and put it back when I realized there were no dragons that I concluded ALL of Yep's dragon titles were metaphorical.

I read Dragon's Gate in sixth grade and Dragonwings circa fourth, so I had the advantage of having acclimated to metaphorical dragons. (As opposed to books by Anne McCaffrey, whose dragon-based compound nouns were always literal.) I didn't actually read his Dragon quartet until late middle/early high school when they were reprinted in matching paperbacks by HarperCollins and I still have those rather beat-up editions in my bedroom as we speak. I had read his two collections of retold Chinese folktales, The Rainbow People (1989) and Tongues of Jade (1991)—also recommended—so I knew he wasn't allergic to the fantastic. He started as a writer of adult sf and those stories are fascinating.

Publishers, take note!

At least make it clear in the jacket text!

Date: 2021-05-12 09:27 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Rotwang)
From: [personal profile] sovay
Laurence Yep’s Dragon’s Gate, on the other hand, is chock full of disaster - and chock empty of dragons.

It probably is the roughest of the Golden Mountain Chronicles, but it's also the one I read right after Child of the Owl and Dragonwings, so it's a fairly key part of the saga for me. If you have not read them, I highly recommend both of the novels about Otter's parents, The Serpent's Children (1984) and Mountain Light (1985). They're really the same story split over two books; there are tragedies, but there's also revolution and awkward romantic comedy.

Date: 2021-05-13 02:45 am (UTC)
skygiants: Rebecca from Fullmetal Alchemist waving and smirking (o hai)
From: [personal profile] skygiants
YES they're so good, I love Cassia and her enormous butcher knife .... it's the only time I've ever seen Yep write rom-com and it charms me beyond measure.

(I also love the Dragon of the Lost Sea quartet with all my heart.)

Date: 2021-05-13 08:00 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Cho Hakkai: intelligence)
From: [personal profile] sovay
.... it's the only time I've ever seen Yep write rom-com and it charms me beyond measure.

I haven't read any of his novels since City of Fire (2009), so it's conceivable that he's done it again, but I also feel strongly that nothing is ever going to top Cassia and Squeaky and I am fine with that. "Don't you think the Manchus could hire better spies than me?"

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