osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Finished Reading

Emily Henry’s Book Lovers, which I really liked while I was reading it: for years I have yearned for a book about an uptight career woman who finds someone who loves her in all her uptight glory, and this book really delivers on that front. But after waiting a few days to write the review, I find I’ve forgotten the names of all the characters except the lead’s sister Libby? Puzzling.

I suppose that I often have this experience with, for instance, Mary Stewart books too, and there is something to be said for reading books that you enjoy even if they are not books that stick in your mind forever and ever.

I really liked this quote: “Maybe love shouldn’t be built on a foundation of compromises, but maybe it can’t exist without them either.”

I also finished Kim Todd’s Sensational: The Hidden History of America’s “Girl Stunt Reporters,” a fun and fascinating read that profiles a number of female reporters from the 1880s and 1890s: Nellie Bly, Elizabeth Jordan (of Tales of the City Room fame), Ida B. Wells. (I don’t think Wells is technically a stunt reporter but sometimes one must stretch one’s ostensible topic to include interesting people.) Todd suggests that Nellie Bly and her colleagues were the origin of the “girl reporter” character type - a direct line to characters like Lois Lane.

Naturally I just had to follow up by reading Nellie Bly’s Ten Days in a Mad-House, which is about Bly’s undercover investigation of the conditions at the Women’s Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell’s Island in New York City. An interesting (deeply depressing) source about conditions in American asylums in the 1880s, as well as general attitudes toward mental illness and the medical understanding (or lack thereof). Bly notes that once she got to the asylum she dropped her “mad” act as once, but none of the doctors or nurses ever even entertained the idea that she might be sane.

And I’ve continued my John McPhee journey with The Crofter and the Laird, his most famous and easily accessible book - so easily accessible, in fact, that I found it on my parents’ bookshelves! This is a fascinating look at life on the island of Colonsay in the Hebrides in the late 1960s, with lots of interesting tidbits about the history and folklore of the island.

What I’m Reading Now

Bruce Catton’s Terrible Swift Sword. In 1861, the U.S. Navy conquered two forts and a whole bunch of harbors in North Carolina - so much more than they expected to conquer that they were quite at a loss to follow it up by marching on Savannah, even though the Confederates had almost no forces to oppose such a march.

One thing I’ve learned from reading these military histories is that “unexpectedly huge victory” can be almost as disorienting as “catastrophic defeat.” Have a contingency plan just in case you succeed beyond your wildest dreams!

I’ve also begun T. H. White’s The Goshawk. The library only has this on audiobook so I approached it with trepidation, but actually the reader (Simon Vance) seems wonderfully in tune with the rhythms of White’s prose.

What I Plan to Read Next

In Sensational, Todd mentions that former girl stunt reporter Caroline Lockhart later (in 1912) wrote a book called Lady Doc, which involves lesbians and abortion and happens to be on Gutenberg so of course I HAVE to read it.
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Joan G. Robinson’s Charley, also sometimes called The Girl Who Ran Away, an enchanting book about - well, a girl who runs away! Through a series of miscommunications, no one realizes that young Charley never arrived at the house of the relation with whom she was meant to spend a holiday. Instead Charley spends a week on her own, making a home for herself in an old hen house and beneath a chestnut tree, finding food and a source of water and wandering in a beautiful copse where she makes up adventures for herself and an imaginary animal companion, a beautiful fawn.

Highly recommended if you like books about runaway children, with lots of rich detail about finding food and water and just generally looking after themselves. Charley comes to the end of her resources a little more swiftly than the Boxcar Children, but she has a wonderful time while it lasts.

I also finished Frances Hodgson Burnett’s T. Tembarom! It 100% turned out just as I expected - this is not a book that you read for surprises - but there’s great pleasure in watching Burnett do a fairly realistic take on a melodramatic plot involving a wandering amnesiac, the unexpected inheritance of a vast English estate, a haughty society beauty, and a self-made fortune from an invention in which Burnett is so uninterested that she simply calls in “the invention.” What does it do? What industry is it used in? Who knows! Who cares! Burnett certainly doesn’t, and honestly it’s inspiring how she flings such trifles aside to focus on the culture clash between a New York street kid made good and the fascinated gentry who live in the county around the estate he just inherited.

And I read ND Stevenson’s Nimona, which I expected to love and ended up hating. I am just extremely over stories where the protagonist kills a bunch of redshirts, and the narrative treats this as a quirky and even adorable personality flaw (Nimona just gets kinda murdery out on heists sometimes! Lookit, she turns into a dragon to do it, so fun), and the protagonist’s friends give her a mild scolding and then continue to shower her with love and acceptance.

I also hate that this story seems completely unable to grasp that there is a difference between “persecuted for being a shapeshifter!” (insert allegory for minority of choice here) and “prosecuted for destroying a WHOLE CITY with MANY CASUALTIES!” and treats ANY attempt to stop Nimona from murdering again as an example of the first. The ONLY allowable method of stopping her is to shower her with love and acceptance until she decides maybe she wants to stop.

And of course the book expects us to root for Nimona and presents “Nimona roams free!” as a happy ending, when she’s just spent the whole book killing people and she’s clearly going to kill again as soon as she feels like it.

What I’m Reading Now

I really meant to keep going with Black Narcissus and Sensational but then my hold on Emily Henry’s Book Lovers came in and as there are 479 holds on it (sadly this is not an exaggeration) I thought that PERHAPS I ought to prioritize that. I’ve enjoyed all of Henry’s books but so far this is a strong contender for my new favorite. Love the protagonist, a literary agent so intense that her colleagues call her the Shark, love her relationship with her sister, tentatively loving her dynamic with the love interest but we’ll see how that develops over the book.

In Dracula, Jonathan Harker has crawled along a ledge outside Dracula’s castle to sneak into Dracula’s room and thereby discovered that the count sleeps in a coffin in the crypt! Fascinating information no doubt but I personally hope that Harker soon turns his attention to the life-or-death question of “How is he going to escape?”

What I Plan to Read Next

Have discovered that the library has David Sweetman’s biography of Mary Renault and I am contemplating whether to read it now or to wait until I’ve read all or at least almost all of Mary Renault’s books. (No one has anything nice to say about Funeral Games so I may… just… not read that one.)
osprey_archer: (books)
“Your style is, like, 1960s Parisian bread maker’s daughter bicycling through her village at dawn, shouting Bonjour, le monde whilst doling out baguettes.”

After all this World War I reading, I needed something light, and because I’d enjoyed Emily Henry’s Beach Read so much, I turned to her new book People We Meet on Vacation.

Just what the doctor ordered! The conceit of the book is that Poppy and her best friend Alex have been going on a summer trip every year for the past twelve years… except Something Went Wrong on their trip to Croatia two years ago, and they’ve barely talked since. So not only do we get the present day trip where they try to reconnect, but also snippets from nearly a dozen vacations past, too.

This did fan the flames of my unappeasable wanderlust, but such is life! Maybe when you can’t travel, the next best thing is reading books about travel?

Also, Emily Henry is just so good at capturing how millennials talk, right down to the slightly self-conscious obsession with being millennials. I particularly love the bit where Poppy is making her dinner, and thinking about how she’s going to have to make dinner for herself every day! For the rest of her life! And that’s so many dinners, it will never end, she will have to do it even when she’s got a fever of 102, because there will be no one there to do it for her…

Not sure if that is a millennial mood or just a mood that I have sometimes, but. Such a mood.

I mostly liked the romance while I was reading, but the more I think about it, the more reservations I have, because ExpandSpoilers )

It’s testament to the incredible charm of Poppy’s voice that I found this only mildly aggravating as I read the book. Will these two crazy kids make it? I really have no idea, but I loved watching them try.
osprey_archer: (Default)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Emily Henry’s Beach Read, which would indeed be a good beach read! Ten years after graduation, college writing class nemeses January and Gus find themselves living side by side in beach houses in Michigan. January writes rom coms, Gus writes literary fiction, but they’re each stuck on their current projects, so they make a bet: they’ll swap genres and see if that gets the words flowing. Do they fall in love? Of course they fall in love!

I also really liked January’s banter with her best friend Shadi (a strong presence in the book even though for almost the entire story they only communicate by text) and her complicated relationships with both her parents - or rather, with her mother and with her father’s memory in the wake of his death.

What I’m Reading Now

I’ve finally started Thomas Hughes’ Tom Brown’s School Days, the novel that really rocketed the boarding school story to the status of a full-blown genre, and unsurprisingly I’m enjoying it a lot. It makes being a Rugby schoolboy in the 1830s sound so amazing even as I recognize that I would loathe literally every aspect of it if I ever had the bad fortune to get plunked down in the middle of a multi-day football match so helter-skelter that boys are regularly carried off the field with broken collarbones.

I’m also reading Sarah Rees Brennan’s In Other Lands, which I’m finding somewhat slower going than Fence: Striking Distance, but then you can’t expect everything to light up your world like Fence, now can you. I have a strong suspicion that Striking Distance had a tight wordcount, and In Other Lands might have benefited from the same.

Although it is a little slow, I am loving parts of the book, particularly elven culture, which has a sort of gender-swapped Regency going on: elven women are swashbuckling rakes and warriors, elven men are blushing maidens. I wasn’t too sure about this at first (must all sexist fantasy cultures be sexist just like 19th century England?), but actually I’m really enjoying the way that this interacts with Elliot’s assumptions. He’s a human boy from the modern world, and for a while he just sort of rolls with the sexist things the elf girl he’s crushing on says, but once they start dating he slowly starts to realize that his beautiful, courageous, wonderful elven girlfriend who loves him very much nonetheless really means the sexist things she says, and these attitudes will in fact shape his entire life if they stay together.

What I Plan to Read Next

The above-mentioned books are but two of the many books I have in progress. I really must finish a few before I start in on any other new books!
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

At night in the sugarhouse, a person can only think and dream and tend the arch. But it doesn’t matter, for it is a gentle darkness that smells like maple clouds and reminds you of a winter now gone and a spring just born.

I loved Kathryn Lasky’s Sugaring Time, a 1984 Newbery Honor winner. I’ve read many books about sugaring off (it seems to be a perennial favorite topic in American children’s literature), but this is the most lyrical, and captures the experience so evocatively that you can almost feel yourself sitting in the sugarhouse in the clouds of maple steam.

I also knocked off two additional Newbery Honor books: William Steig’s Doctor De Soto, in which a mouse dentist cleans a fox’s mouth ( and cleverly escapes being eaten) and Rhoda Blumberg’s Commodore Perry in the Land of the Shogun, which was nothing to write home about.

What I’m Reading Now

Emily Henry’s Beach Read. After the death of her father reveals his duplicitous life, broke-as-hell romance novelist January moves into her father’s beach house… and discovers that her college nemesis, literary novelist Augustus Everett, lives next door. After gazing at each other’s genres in mutual disdain, they hatch a clever bet: January will write a literary novel, while Augustus Everett will write a romance! And they will give each other genre tutorials, which will look surprisingly like dates, without, of course, being dates in any way.

Do they fall in love? I’m only halfway through the book… but of course they fall in love. Is this hampered in any way by the fact that Augustus Everett sometimes goes by the nickname “Gus”? It does not seem to be! This is very cute so far; January’s backstory sounds more taxing than it actually feels as you read it. (Augustus Everett also has a traumatic backstory, still in the process of revelation, but I expect this will be sad in a way that doesn’t make the book less cute.)

What I Plan to Read Next

I’m continuing this year’s Sad Robot theme with Kazuo Ishiguro’s Klara and the Sun. (I realize Murderbot is not technically a robot, but you know what I mean.)

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