moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Jul 26, 2019 23:42:22 GMT -5
As a sequel to Jimmy James' brilliant London Calling Reading Challenge of the past year I have developed a new challenge for 2020 based my third favorite (but undoubtedly longest) Smiths album*, Louder Than Bombs. Here it is outlined below, along with my tentative selections. As before, my selections are largely motivated by my desire to consume the books sitting around my house and cross items off my unwieldy reading list. I look forward to your suggestions and/or participation. The prize for completing this challenge shall be a bouquet of gladioli. Louder Than Bombs Reading Challenge - a reading list inspired by the tracklist of the Smiths album, Louder Than Bombs 1. "Is It Really So Strange?" - read a science fiction or fantasy book
my pick: The Sandman Annotated Volumes 1-4 by Neil Gaiman [2276 pages]2. "Sheila Take a Bow" - read a book by a female author
my pick: And I Do Not Forgive You: Stories & Other Revenges by Amber Sparks [224 pages]3. "Shoplifters of the World Unite" - read a book that is anti-capitalist or anti-consumerist
my pick: The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism by George Bernard Shaw [450 pages]4. "Sweet and Tender Hooligan" - read a book where the protagonist changes dramatically
my pick: The Jungle Books by Rudyard Kipling [380 pages]5. "Half a Person" - read a book about childhood or adolescencemy pick: The Hairstyles of the Damned by Joe Meno [278 pages]6. "London" - read a book where the city features prominently in the story
my pick: Chicago by David Mamet [352 pages]7. "Panic" - read a thriller
my pick: Fantomas by Marcel Allain & Pierre Souvestre [295 pages]8. "Girl Afraid" - read a book with a female protagonist
my pick: The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Murial Barberry [325 pages]9. "Shakespeare's Sister" - read a play
my pick: Under Milk Wood by Dylan Thomas [93 pages]10. "William It Was Really Nothing" - read a book by an author called "William" (or some derivation thereof in either their first or last name)
my pick: White Mughals by William Dalyrample [459 pages]11. "You Just Haven't Earned It Yet, Baby" - read a book about finance or the economy
my pick: Bullshit Jobs: A Theory by David Graeber [368 pages]12. "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now" - read a sad story my pick: The Year of the Runaways by Sunjeev Sahota [512 pages]13. "Ask" - read about an investigation or mystery
my pick: An Elderly Lady is Up to No Good by Helene Tursten [184 pages]14. "Golden Lights" - read about a famous person
my pick: The Rise, The Fall, and the Rise by Brix Smith Start [457 pages]15. "Oscillate Wildly" - read a book about science
my pick: Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters In the End by Atul Gawande [304 pages]16. "These Things Take Time" - read a history or historical fiction
my pick: The Master & Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov [448 pages]17. "Rubber Ring" - read a book where the protagonist has an 'alternative lifestyle' my pick: The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp [240 pages]18. "Back to the Old House" - read a book about aristocracy
my pick: A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh [308 pages]19. "Hand In Glove" - read a book that takes place in the Victorian or Edwardian eramy pick: Night and Day by Virginia Woolf [600 pages]20. "Stretch out and Wait" - a book about sports/exercise OR a book about lazy catsmy pick: I Am a Cat by Natsume Soseki [638 pages]21. "Please, Please, Please, Let Me Get What I Want" - reader's choice!my pick: Ayoade On Top by Richard Ayoade [audiobook]22. "This Night Has Opened My Eyes" - read a book about a single eventmy pick: Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist by Sunil Yapa [320 pages]23. "Unloveable" - read a book with an unlikable protagonistmy pick: London Fields by Martin Amis [470 pages]24. "Asleep" - read a book about drugs, dreaming, or altered consciousnessmy pick: How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence by Michael Pollan [480 pages]TARGET # of pages attempted: 10,000-12,000 (based on my performance in the last challenge) *technically it's a compilation complete currently reading
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Nov 10, 2019 17:53:15 GMT -5
Updates & Thoughts:
I wanted to start with a bang, so during my weekly face mask regimen, I've cracked open the complete annotated Sandman. Each volume contains 20 issues and each issue takes about 15 minutes to read, so I'm going to try to make this my bedtime reading (especially since it's an unwieldy tome) from November - February. Starting in January, I will start the challenge proper with my commuter reading, The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism (since unfortunately, my friend Amber's publishing date has been pushed back to February).
Right now, I am in possession of 20 of the 24 books in this challenge. The only ones missing are TBDs, the as-yet-unreleased And I Do Not Forgive You: Stories & Other Revenges, and my gay white whale, The Naked Civil Servant - for which I've been scouring used bookstores here and abroad for about a decade. If you have a copy you can loan me, do please get in touch ;-)
That means I'm not planning to do any audio books and if I substitute, I will try to grab something from my own collection before buying something new. The number of reading list books I'm attempting to get to is tentatively 6 - perhaps 8 with TBDs. The number of owned books (not purchased for the challenge) that I'll be tackling in this challenge is 8-10. The number of books I have purchased from Amazon thus far is currently 10, which is less than 50%, so I'm hoping that having more time to look in local shops will prove fruitful. The number of non-assigned books laying around my house is about 20, and I am determined to maintain/decrease that number by 1) reading as many as I can by January 1 and 2) NOT BUYING MORE BOOKS.
I mention these things because, from my experience last year, I've found that a more mindful approach to reading has yielded time better spent. When I look back at the books I read back in my DC commuter days - when I routinely consumed the latest buzz titles with Borders discounts - I can hardly remember them. I kept very few of those paperbacks and I feel bad about the waste I contributed to. Now I spend more time cherishing my books instead of just amassing a collection.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Nov 22, 2019 23:16:12 GMT -5
Mini update: I've completed the first 20 issues of the complete annotated Sandman.
First impressions: This wasn't exactly what I expected, but it got me hooked - even when it went places I didn't want to go. I was expecting high Goth fantasy - unconnected to the world of DC superheroes - but Arkham Asylum figures in the first issue and there are many references to obscure corners of the DC Universe. For this reason, I'm especially glad I got the annotated editions. The first story arc is pretty cool. It's a revenge narrative like Oldboy, but with a supernatural world-building twist. I particularly enjoyed his run-ins with John Constantine and Lucifer. I particularly struggled with issues #6 "24 Hours" and #17 "Calliope" - the former for dark sadism and the latter for queasy misogyny.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Having thoroughly enjoyed the TV adaptation of Good Omens, and since I'm leaning into my goth side these days, I figured this would be a good fantasy selection - especially since I'm not a fan of conventional 'fantasy' in the slightest. NOT EVEN LOTR.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? Good question. Since it's a comic, my guess is not very likely. Especially not 2000+ pages.
What's Next? I've started Volume 2 of 4, and at this rate I might finish by the end of January, in which case I will be able to start The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism early!
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Dec 18, 2019 23:25:32 GMT -5
UPDATE!: Two weeks early (at least) and on the final day of my convalescence, I have finished The Complete Annotated Sandman, Volumes 1-4.
Per Amazon: "One of the most popular and critically acclaimed graphic novels of all time, Neil Gaiman's award-winning masterpiece The Sandman set the standard for mature, lyrical fantasy in the modern comics era. Illustrated by an exemplary selection of the medium's most gifted artists, the series is a rich blend of modern and ancient mythology in which contemporary fiction, historical drama, and legend are seamlessly interwoven."
Comics are not known for their consistency and this one was no exception. Some plotlines were stronger than others and there were patches of tedium (particularly the Worlds' End story-within-a-story-within-a-story ad nauseam). It started and finished strong, though. I loved the characters, much of the artwork, and the overall scope/ambition of the series. I will probably read a couple of the spin-offs.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: It don't get any stranger than the realm of Morpheus, King of Dreams. Though I'm not a literature geek (thus all the stuff with Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, and Christopher Marlowe mostly went over my head) I am a bit of a goth and I was really into the visuals. And since many of the characters were inspired by/inspiration for musicians, I could geek out on that.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? Again, not at all likely, given my lifelong aversion to actual comic books. My brother is/was an avid collector, with weekly trips to the comic store to pick up special orders, mylar sleeves, and the whole bit. Every time we watch a Marvel movie adaptation, he gives me the backstory and context, which I appreciate. Generally, I appreciate the creative character designs in conventional comics, but I find the actual plots simplistic. Even in Sandman, it bugged me how all these characters across continents were conveniently connected with each other.
What's Next? While I'm waiting for my female author selection, I'm going to try to get through as much of The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism & Capitalism as bedside reading for "Shoplifters of the World Unite". Come January, I'll be taking all 470 pages on the daily commute.
Tally ho!
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Jan 3, 2020 22:06:47 GMT -5
Mini update: On my first day back in the office, I started The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Capitalism and Socialism. The Table of Contents alone took about an hour, since it acts as a convenient set of abstracts for each chapter. Thankfully, the book itself isn't nearly has dense as I was expecting. It's quite conversational and I have been tempted to post quotes from it on social media (not that I'm the kind of person that actually does that). This is the second lengthy tome I've read wherein a learned author writes everything they know about a given subject for the edification of some woman in their life (the other being Glimpses of World History by Jawarharlal Nehru, which I HIGHLY recommend). I like the element of autobiography that adds to the reading, so I'd be open to suggestions for other books following this format.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Jan 13, 2020 18:39:08 GMT -5
I just found a wonderful resource in my attempt to stop buying (so many) books from Amazon! www.indiebound.org/Not only does it connect me with indie bookstores in my area, but I can order online as well!
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Jan 29, 2020 0:27:45 GMT -5
UPDATE 2!: I have completed The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism & Capitalism for "Shoplifter's of the World Unite" Ramsay MacDonald calls it the most important book since the Bible on the cover blurb, and indeed, this book is alarmingly prophetic. It's basically a textbook of 20th century political economy that explains how we've gotten to where we are now, with massive inequality and demagogues exploiting people's misery. Shaw covers the fundamentals of economics and then demonstrates how it interacts with other aspects of life such as politics and religion in order to make the case that capitalism must be replaced as the governing principal of society. Because he is a Fabian, he suggests that this can be done through peaceful means, rather than destructive revolution, but he's no hippy utopian. His writing is witty and acerbic, like one long Henry Higgins monologue, and while 90% of his ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to his newsletter, the last 100 pages were kind of a slog - particularly when he praises Prohibition in the U.S. (noting, however, that it could not succeed under capitalism) and criticizes vaccination (though this was written in 1927 and he might have changed his tune post-Salk). How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I think it's a good fit - very anti-capitalist. I picked this because I find myself aligning politically with a lot of the early socialist thinkers like Shaw and William Morris. They aren't dogmatic or preoccupied with the class struggle as a talking point. Shaw's intention with this book was to show an "intelligent woman" (his sister-in-law) how these abstract ideas affected daily life, from marriage and child-rearing to heating one's home and banking. He definitely convinced me that the auto industry bailout and banking bailout were mistakes and missed opportunities to nationalize key industries. How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? I wanted to read the book, but who knows when I would have done it. 470 pages is intimidating. What's Next? Still waiting for "Sheila Take a Bow" so I've started a ripping yarn, The Jungle Books by Rudyard Kipling, for "Sweet and Tender Hooligan"
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Feb 6, 2020 22:53:56 GMT -5
UPDATE 3!: I have completed The Jungle Books by Rudyard Kipling for "Sweet and Tender Hooligan" You know the story: boy is raised by wolves, learns about the Bear Necessities and captures the Red Flower to rid the jungle of a suave, villainous tiger. At least that's how I remember the story from the highly amusing Disney cartoon of my youth. The actual stories cover much more violent ground, which makes them kind of awesome. Really, I was expecting cliches and groan-worthy Eurocentrism, but this was just a really solid collection of writing. Aside from reflecting the mild anti-Muslim bias that was probably harbored by many of the Indians of Kipling's acquaintance, I didn't find anything offensive or condescending. On the contrary, I found the portrayal of Mowgli as an ethnically brown ubermensch (unlike that ripoff Tarzan, deliberately coded as white) again, kind of awesome. The non-Mowgli stories were pretty good too, including my best-beloved, Riki-tiki-tavi. Kipling's legacy - like colonialism itself - is a mixed bag of good and ill, but in any case, it's undeniable. How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: As a fan of Kipling from childhood (particularly the Just So Stories and the aforementioned rodent assassin) whose Asian Studies minor is informed by my experience as an Indian-American, I'm particularly interested in postcolonial critique of stuff like this. But perhaps I should have known Kipling's talents as a writer would get the best of me. "If" is one of my favorite poems to teach ESL students, in part because it's such an encapsulation (for better or worse) of the white-cis-male mentality that dominates Western culture. As for the theme, I was glad to get the rest of Mowgli's story, which is quite satisfying, rather than the very thin cartoon plot of the movie. How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge?: I picked up the Penguin edition at one of my top 3 bookstores in Chicago, The Dial, with the expressed purpose of reading this on my commute. It's a keeper. What's Next? "Sheila Take a Bow" should be shipping next week. In the meantime, I'll knock out The Hairstyles of the Damned by local author Joe Meno for "Half a Person".
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Feb 13, 2020 21:33:39 GMT -5
UPDATE 4!: I have completed The Hairstyles of the Damned by Joe Meno for "Half a Person"
This book fucking sucks. Or at least, that's how the protagonist might describe it, being a 'regular dumb kid' growing up up on the South Side of Chicago in the early 90's. Basically, this book was Ready Player One for the PWT* burnout set. All the signifiers are there: bad haircuts, wizard vans, AC/DC, etc. etc. None of that would be a problem, though, if the protagonist or any of the main characters were fleshed out, likable, or intelligent. But boy, this story goes nowhere. I would almost believe it's a YA novel, with a "then this happened, then this happened..." story structure, if not for the many salacious descriptions of teenage 'messing around' and a grody fixation on catholic schoolgirls. I understand that it's told from the perspective of a hormonal teenage boy, but unless you nostalgically identify with said teenager (which, as someone who was harassed in her teen years by kids like this, I do not) you're not going to enjoy spending time with this mouth breather, his violent friends, or their shitty shitty parents. There are germs of a good story about, say, a white kid becoming politically conscious by discovering punk music, or kids learning how to connect with each other emotionally in lieu of good parental role models, or even a kid navigating his feelings about his female best friend. But none of the dots connect and there is something emotionally inauthentic about this. Like, this kid is supposed to be really into music, as indicated by his love of metal and being in the marching band. But does he start a band? No. Does he meet anybody cool or interesting in band class? No. In the first half of the book, he's working on a mixtape for his friend; that's just dropped when she starts dating a white power guy and he meets this other girl who dumps him a few chapters later. Either the writer is bad and the editor tried to salvage it or the writer is good and the editor destroyed it. Either way, this was so pointless that even at 270 pages, I struggled to finish it. Unsurprisingly, many Goodreads reviewers didn't finish it either. After I finished, I did something I almost never do with a book: I tossed it in the trash.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Such a shitty book for such a great song...I got this book at the gift shop at the Chicago History Museum because it was a local author and the cover looked fun. It looked like a book about 90s misfit punk kids - which I would have enjoyed, since many of my high school friends fit that description. But maybe why that's why I'm so mad at the emotional in-authenticity of this book. The kids I knew may have had dysfunctional families and strange adolescent tendencies, but they weren't stupid. They were legitimately cool, likable, kids who mostly turned out fine. Every kid in this book is so aggressively stupid I cannot bring myself to care what happens to any of them. [EDIT: I acknowledge some class bias on my part that could affect my reading] The only likable character is the black nerd, who barely figures in the story at all.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge?: It was cheap and short, so I probably would have picked it up for commuter reading. I regret it, though. I could have spent those 8 hours on something much better.
What's Next? I started David Mamet's Chicago during my weekly face masking time. So far I like it. I'm picking up And I Do Not Forgive You for "Sheila Take a Bow" this weekend and I'll start it next week, hopefully.
*I know the term PWT might be offensive, but it really is how POCs conceive of a certain underclass of white people
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Feb 20, 2020 22:02:37 GMT -5
UPDATE 5!: I have completed And I Do Not Forgive You: Stories & Other Revenges by Amber Sparks for "Sheila Take a Bow"
This enchanting collection of microfiction/short stories is about women at their most chthonic, with many allusions to folklore, mythology, and fairy tales juxtaposed with modern feminist sensibilities.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Amber is a friend of mine from the DC days. She and her husband were regular guests at the bbqs we had every summer at the group house I shared with two of their grad school classmates. Her first book, May We Shed These Human Bodies, was published by the Chicago indie Curbside Splendor and I got her to sign my copy when she came through town on a book tour. Hopefully I can get her to sign this one too. I really enjoyed it.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge?: I missed her breakthough novel, The Unfinished World, but the premise of this one really intrigued me, so I definitely would have read it at some point.
What's Next? I've started Fantomas for "Panic" and Chicago for "London". Exciting stuff!
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Feb 28, 2020 21:06:23 GMT -5
UPDATE 6!: I have completed Fantômas by Marcel Allain & Pierre Souvestre for "Panic" This book was so friggin' cool. It's the first installment in the French pulp crime franchise about a dastardly murderer and master of disguise known as Fantômas. Fast-paced, lurid, and stylish, this was a pleasure to read - I only wish I had access to the many sequel books to tie up some of the loose ends and get more of the characters in whom I have become invested. How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Well, lets see. It started when I read an article about Fantômas in a goth zine I picked up somewhere a couple years ago. Apparently he's is a cult figure up there with Lupin - popular with the Surrealists and Mexican wrestlers alike. When I later spotted a used Penguin edition at my beloved Dial bookstore - with its awesome cover art - it seemed like fate. How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? It's about an early 20th century criminal mastermind. That is so up my alley I can't even measure it. To quote the problematic inspiration for this thread, "I love the romance of crime". I'm renting the silent serials from Facets and trying to hunt down the (inevitable) wacky 60's version as well. Call me a Fan(tômas). What's Next? Still working on Chicago for "London" which I hope to finish in the next couple weeks. The Elegance of the Hedgehog will accompany me to work.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Mar 1, 2020 17:34:44 GMT -5
UPDATE 7!: I have completed Chicago by David Mamet for "London"
In the midst of writing all that 'chewy' dialogue, Mamet somehow forgot to write a story. Or rather, he remembered in the last 50 pages to unload 300 pages worth of plot exposition, which was about 250 pages too late. Ostensibly, this is a Prohibition-era story about a reporter who gets mixed up in gangland warfare between the North side Irish and South side Italians in Chicago. Both the dialogue and settings are picturesque, but the pacing is TERRIBLE. The first 100 pages are a complete slog where we are introduced to a couple interesting characters (not the main characters) and a whole lot of WWI flashbacks. The middle of the book is just maddeningly repetitive, as if the author forgot what wrote in the previous chapter. Then the last 100+ pages finally start unraveling the 'mystery' for anyone who cares, even though it wasn't really set up well in the first place.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: It fits the theme to a tee, being a book about a city - the city I live in - by one of the foremost chroniclers of said city. I picked this up as a signed hardcover shortly after its release, when it curiously went on sale at Unabridged Books, an indie bookstore on the North side notable for its extensive gay pornography room. As a fan of all things gangster, I had high hopes for this, but it was rather a letdown. I'm now debating if I want to keep it for guestroom reading (I mean, it is signed by Mamet) or regift it in our office white elephant exchange at Christmas.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? I definitely wanted to read it, being set in one of my favorite settings and eras. I'm glad it didn't take long, though. I was able to finish most of it while my internet was on the fritz.
What's Next? The Elegance of the Hedgehog will accompany me to work and Under Milk Wood will be my leisure reading at home.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Mar 2, 2020 19:59:40 GMT -5
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I think it's a good fit - very anti-capitalist. I picked this because I find myself aligning politically with a lot of the early socialist thinkers like Shaw and William Morris. They aren't dogmatic or preoccupied with the class struggle as a talking point. Shaw's intention with this book was to show an "intelligent woman" (his sister-in-law) how these abstract ideas affected daily life, from marriage and child-rearing to heating one's home and banking. He definitely convinced me that the auto industry bailout and banking bailout were mistakes and missed opportunities to nationalize key industries.
I like Shaw (only man to win a Nobel Prize and an Oscar!), and fin de Siècle stuff in general, but those prefaces he wrote for his plays really are…something. Lot of yikes mixed in with insight in the early twentieth century.
Lord Lucan and I were talking about this. Shaw's Shakespeare analysis is similarly tough to read, though highly regarded, I guess.
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Post by Superb Owl 🦉 on Mar 3, 2020 17:08:58 GMT -5
I just found a wonderful resource in my attempt to stop buying (so many) books from Amazon! www.indiebound.org/Not only does it connect me with indie bookstores in my area, but I can order online as well! So how does the ordering from this site work? Is the book delivered to a local store of your choice and, if so, do they get a cut of the profit from the sale?
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Mar 3, 2020 20:12:57 GMT -5
I just found a wonderful resource in my attempt to stop buying (so many) books from Amazon! www.indiebound.org/Not only does it connect me with indie bookstores in my area, but I can order online as well! So how does the ordering from this site work? Is the book delivered to a local store of your choice and, if so, do they get a cut of the profit from the sale? I think you have the option of picking it up at a store near you or paying the shipping to have it delivered to you. I had a book delivered for pretty much the same price I'd pay to get it used on Amazon.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Mar 17, 2020 21:12:18 GMT -5
UPDATE 8!: I have completed Under Milk Wood: a Play for Voices by Dylan Thomas for "Shakespeare's Sister"
A lilting, lyrical, and lurid litany of verse dramatizing the lives and loves of Llareggub, a fictional Welsh fishing village dripping with dreamy atmosphere and colorful characters. This was a fun read and it's worth seeking out performances headed up by the likes of Richard Burton, Anthony Hopkins, and Michael Sheen.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Whenever faced with the drudgery of daily life, I dream of escaping to a Welsh fishing village. I think this is because of something I saw on a British home renovation show I streamed once, combined with my general affinity for the Welsh. Welsh is my all-time favorite accent - rather like if white people spoke with Indian accents - and there are a lot of pretty cool people from Wales: Super Furry Animals, John Cale, Rob Brydon, Tom Jones AND Shirley Bassey... I've only read a few poems by Dylan Thomas, but I was sufficiently impressed to seek this out, since there aren't many plays on my reading list.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? This was a quick read, so likely, I think.
What's Next? I was one commute away from finishing The Elegance of the Hedgehog, so expect me to post on that tomorrow. Since last year, I've been reading White Mughals at the allergist, but now that my commute is indefinitely on hold, I imagine I'll be doing more bedside reading. It's going to be a challenge maintaining a pace of 160-200 pages per week if I don't have a solid 5 hours per week to read, but I will try my best...
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Mar 18, 2020 23:25:27 GMT -5
UPDATE 9!: I have completed The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barberry for "Girl Afraid"
On the surface, this is an 'ugly duckling' don't-judge-a-book-by-its-cover story, but it's also more than that. The novel's dual protagonists, the 54-year-old widowed concierge of a fancy Paris apartment building and a precocious 12-year-old resident of said building, tell the story through richly detailed inner monologues, like a couple of Flauberts. It's a lovely, bittersweet book about friendship and the stages of life, with a nice helping of social satire and even some heady philosophy.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I picked this out of a "Little Free Library" around the corner from my house, having seen it in bookstores for years and being a fan of Europa editions. It's ideal commuter reading in every sense.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? Since I got the book for free, I probably would have read it when I needed something to read, but it wasn't on my list at all.
What's Next? Despite starting last year, I'm still only about 1/3 finished with White Mughals - not that it's a bad book. I am also just over 1/3 finished with the Louder Than Bombs Reading Challenge as a whole now - though again, it will be hard to keep the same pace and there are still plenty of challenging books ahead.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Apr 1, 2020 22:42:41 GMT -5
UPDATE 10!: I have completed White Mughals by William Dalyrample for "William It Was Really Nothing" Per Wikipedia: "The book is a work of social history about the warm relations that existed between the British and some Indians in the 18th and early 19th century, when one in three British men in India was married to an Indian woman. On one level, the book tells the tragic love story of James Kirkpatrick, ‘the thoroughly orientalised’ British Resident in Hyderabad and Khair-un-Nissa, a beautiful young Muslim noblewoman. On another level, the story is about trade, military and political dealings, based on Dalrymple’s researches among letters, diaries, reports, and dispatches (much of it in cipher). Out of these sources he draws a fascinating picture of sexual attitudes and social etiquette, finding an 'increasingly racist and dismissive attitude' among the British ruling class towards mixed race offspring, after the rise of Evangelical Christianity. He paces the gradual revelations with a novelist's skills, leading us on, after the death of Kirkpatrick, to 'the saddest and most tragic part of the whole story.'" How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Lord Lucan recommended this book upon learning that my family is from Hyderabad. In fact, my parents both attended college on the site of the former British Residency, which is one of the key settings of this book. How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? Considering I started this book last year, I was fairly committed to reading it - it was just a challenge finding the time. What's Next? In an effort to maintain some healthy routine during this trying time, I will be devoting approximately 1 hour per night to reading and keeping pace with my challenge. Up next is the extremely relevant Bullshit Jobs: A Theory by David Graeber .
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Dellarigg
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Post by Dellarigg on Apr 2, 2020 9:19:38 GMT -5
UPDATE 8!: I have completed Under Milk Wood: a Play for Voices by Dylan Thomas for "Shakespeare's Sister" A lilting, lyrical, and lurid litany of verse dramatizing the lives and loves of Llareggub, a fictional Welsh fishing village dripping with dreamy atmosphere and colorful characters. This was a fun read and it's worth seeking out performances headed up by the likes of Richard Burton, Anthony Hopkins, and Michael Sheen. How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Whenever faced with the drudgery of daily life, I dream of escaping to a Welsh fishing village. I think this is because of something I saw on a British home renovation show I streamed once, combined with my general affinity for the Welsh. Welsh is my all-time favorite accent - rather like if white people spoke with Indian accents - and there are a lot of pretty cool people from Wales: Super Furry Animals, John Cale, Rob Brydon, Tom Jones AND Shirley Bassey... I've only read a few poems by Dylan Thomas, but I was sufficiently impressed to seek this out, since there aren't many plays on my reading list. How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? This was a quick read, so likely, I think. What's Next? I was one commute away from finishing The Elegance of the Hedgehog, so expect me to post on that tomorrow. Since last year, I've been reading White Mughals at the allergist, but now that my commute is indefinitely on hold, I imagine I'll be doing more bedside reading. It's going to be a challenge maintaining a pace of 160-200 pages per week if I don't have a solid 5 hours per week to read, but I will try my best... Apologies if you knew this, but the name of that Welsh village backwards is quite interesting ...
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Apr 10, 2020 16:17:00 GMT -5
UPDATE 11!: I have completed Bullshit Jobs: A Theory by David Graeber for "You Just Haven't Earned It Yet, Baby"
Anarchist/Anthropologist Graeber expands upon his provocative 2013 Strike! essay to present a unified theory of why the modern economy proliferates with meaningless employment, who benefits from it (I'll give you three guesses), and what alternatives might look like - including advocacy for social/economic equalization through Universal Basic Income. Although the social scientist in me doesn't love the anthropological focus on anecdotal evidence - of which about 50-100 pages could have been cut - there are some really fresh insights in this book. I very much appreciate his consideration of 'women's work' and the value of caring jobs as opposed to the 'productive' labor that has historically driven the labor movement (despite not being the majority of work in which the majority of people have ever been engaged). I also think he makes a good case that there is no real institutional reason why the economy needs to be set up this way. His call to realign "value" with "values" and direct energies to creating a better society than the one in which we currently toil is inspiring and reaffirms my plan to return to teaching after retiring from the Fed.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I read something by David Graeber in The Guardian and, being that I am a career civil servant currently on full-time telework, this could not have been more timely or relevant.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? Very likely, but perhaps not now. This would have made great commuter reading, but alas...
What's Next? I want to save the next two books on the list for an eventual return to commuting and take on a bulkier tome instead. So next I'll be plowing through the 450-page The Rise, The Fall, and the Rise by icon and legend Brix Smith Start!
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Apr 17, 2020 22:12:53 GMT -5
UPDATE 12!: I have completed The Rise, The Fall, and The Rise by Brix Smith Start for "Golden Lights"
Finally, we hear Brix's side of the Mark E. Smith story in this super-compelling and readable autobiography from the former Fall guitarist/co-leader, fashion maven, and all-around cool person. As one might guess, Brix went through a lot of difficult stuff - including child abuse, rape as a teenager, bouts of anorexia AND six years of marriage to Mark E - but she never paints herself as a victim. Years of therapy have clearly helped her make peace with those who hurt her and she writes with clarity and intelligence. Of course, it probably helps that she was born wealthy and successful and is still wealthy and successful, thanks to family connections completely outside her life in The Fall. Much like Viv Albertine (another accomplished postpunk musician and writer) you can't pigeonhole her. That is why she is goals.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: So I love The Fall and I generally love the Brix-period albums: Perverted by Language - I Am Kurious Oranj. This isn't even the first book I've read about the band. And Brix is famous in a couple ways - as the first Mrs. Mark E, but also as a successful fashion stylist and boutique owner on British television. Her recent solo record with Brix & the Extricated was also solid, if a bit predictable.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? I picked this up as soon as it came out, but once I saw how big it was, I became intimidated and put it on the back-burner. I admit, I would have needed the challenge to read this - but I'm glad I did, since I blew through the first half of the book in 2 days. It was a good read!
What's Next? I suppose it's time I read Being Mortal by Atul Gawande for "Oscillate Wildly"
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Apr 26, 2020 19:08:15 GMT -5
UPDATE 13!: I have completed Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End by Atul Gawande for "Oscillate Wildly"
This one hit close to home, since I've been taking care of my widower father for the past 15 years. I'm not even sure what to say about it, except that I think everyone who worries about their parents should read it. It made me feel better about 'that which I hope and that which I fear.'
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: It doesn't really get into the science of dying - which was more of what I expected - so much as the philosophical implications of how medical practitioners approach death and how that can conflict with a dying person's wishes. It gets into a lot of public policy/public health concerns about the medical system and lack of supports for aging in place.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? I have a couple books like this in my reading list, but it has been hard to conjure up the emotional strength to read them. This was a quick and easy read, though, and widely available, so I'm glad I got around to it.
What's Next? I'm taking on The Master & Margarita for "These Things Take Time"
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on May 18, 2020 12:53:03 GMT -5
UPDATE 14!: Seven days behind schedule, I have completed The Master & Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov for "These Things Take Time"
How this hasn't been adapted into a hit film/miniseries is beyond me. A delightful screwball farce about Satan visiting Soviet Russia, the novel reads like a Billy Wilder or Preston Sturges film, or if Neil Gaiman/Terry Pratchett wrote Good Omens in the 1930s. There are, of course, beautiful and potentially controversial passages about the crucifixion interspersed through out the book, but even without the philosophical bits, it's still a great story.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I picked this because it was a trending title on the North Side of Chicago, where the colorfully-jacketed Penguin edition was displayed at the Amazon store I like to browse on my way home from therapist appointments on warm summer evenings. I also have a number of friends who are Russia hands and they've been pushing me toward more Russian lit. In retrospect, it didn't fit the the of the challenge very well if you consider that 100% of the book is fantasy. Despite praise for its realistic and detailed depiction of Stalinist Russia, it is a very silly take on that setting, and the early Christian stuff is, of course, pure speculation.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? The cover is so tantalizing and it was so engrossing from the first chapter that I think I would have read it. I only regret futzing around for about a week and falling behind schedule.
What's Next? In an effort to complete at least 2 books per month during quarantine, I WILL finish A Handful of Dust for "Back to the Old House" by May 30th!
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Post by moimoi on May 23, 2020 0:00:39 GMT -5
UPDATE 15!: Back in the saddle, I have completed A Handful of Dust by Evelyn Waugh for "Back to the Old House"
Is there any modern author more sadistic and misanthropic toward his own characters than Evelyn Waugh? A horror story disguised as drawing room comedy, I wouldn't say this is his best book (I prefer Brideshead Revisited for drama and Decline and Fall for comedy) but it might be his most provocative. It has a lot of Waugh tropes (full disclosure, this is the 5th of his books I've read), including: unlikable characters, multiple protagonists, mother fixation, and pitch black comedy combined with straight up bleakness. The characterizations are sketchy, but then the story doesn't require much; you know exactly who these people are from what they say. Waugh's hatred of women is much more apparent than it was when I was in my teens reading Brideshead, along with some unsurprisingly casual racism. And yet somehow, I found myself emotionally engaged and gutted by the end of it. I'm glad I read it, but I wouldn't want to read it again, if you know what I mean. I might recommended it for a particularly wild book club.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: All of Waugh's books are about poshers, being some kind of super-Tory himself, so it was going to be him or Wodehouse. I couldn't find any Wodehouse at my beloved Dial Bookstore (or indeed, in any American bookstore), but I did find a lovely hardcover edition of this, and since I've read so much Waugh already, it was the natural choice. Plus an estate figures prominently in the narrative.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? I'm kind of surprised I didn't read it earlier. I went through quite a tear after falling in love with Brideshead (and Sebastian Flyte in particular) as a youth, taking on The Loved One, Vile Bodies, and Decline & Fall. Handful of Dust is about being middle-aged and complacent, though, so perhaps that's why it resonates with me now.
What's Next? Lord help me, I am attempting Virginia Woolf's obscure second novel Night and Day for "Hand in Glove"
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on May 23, 2020 13:17:56 GMT -5
moimoi The Seminary Co-Op of all places used to have a ton of Jeeves & Wooster, in really nice little hardcover editions, although I could only get a couple from there at the time. Other than that I’ve also had a lot of trouble trying to buy them new, but paradoxically I found them used constantly (and not just old editions—maybe people deposited their Amazon buys at Myopic and Half-Priced Books?) Also, Dolma! Yes! Dolma is a badass And as if I needed another reason to special order from the Co-Op! I've already placed a June order from Better World Books, but I'll certainly hit the Co-Op again by the end of the year - especially in preparation for my Hurry Up, We're Dreaming 2021 Reading Challenge... I never even considered looking for Wodehouse at Myopic, but it's worth a try. I'm trying to place orders with different indie booksellers each month.
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Post by moimoi on Jun 5, 2020 23:58:02 GMT -5
UPDATE 16!: Right on schedule (for the month of June I'm keeping a schedule) I have completed Night and Day by Virginia Woolf for "Hand In Glove"
According to the book jacket, this is Woolf's early attempt at a Victorian novel in the tradition of a Bronte sister. It revolves around a handful of prospective young(ish) lovers and their various pairings within the milieu of turn-of-the-century London. We are first introduced to Ralph Denham, an angsty barrister with a heartwarming home life and Katherine Hilbury, scion of a literary family who is a cipher for the first half of the book, after which she unfortunately becomes the protagonist. Next, we meet Mary Datchet, a wholesome country girl who moves to the city to work on suffrage and host literary salons - just an all-around cool chick who this book does so dirty... We also meet Katherine's poet fiance William Rodney (never trust a man with two first names) who is actually a pretty decent bloke and her charming cousins Henry and Cassandra Otway, who both belong in a better book. Finally, there's Katherine's parents - her silly, doddering mother and her stern but reasonable father.
The first half of the book starts out strong. Woolf is a master of description and her prose is impeccable. The picture she paints of Edwardian London - strolling down the Strand, visiting Kew Gardens, sitting around flats at all hours reading and discussing ideas - is tantalizing. Unfortunately, she literally loses the plot in the second half. Ralph is infatuated with Katherine and has a strong platonic friendship with Mary, who carries a torch for him. Katherine envies Mary's independence because her family expects her to be a literary hostess and all she really wants is to be alone and study math. Now, one way to write this story is for Ralph's infatuation to dissipate once he understands that Katherine isn't interested and for him to realize Mary's the one. This would also allow Katherine to accomplish her own self-realization outside her family by breaking her engagement to Rodney and letting the world know she's a pioneer in STEM, thus reaffirming the early feminist themes of the book. The other story might be Katherine settling for Rodney and Ralph settling for Mary, with everyone unrequited and unfulfilled. This would be the true-to-life, non-Victorian ending to the Victorian set-up - unsatisfyingly satisfying in its modernism.
Maddeningly, Woolf takes neither approach, having Ralph callously and half-heartedly propose to Mary to 'get Katherine out of his system'. Mary intelligently has to turn him down and spends the rest of the book enduring repeated visits from Ralph and Katherine as they fret about how they've wronged her and how conflicted and not-in-love they are. Seriously, fuck these people. Ralph shows no concern for the large family who depends on him or for the important work Mary is doing. As the 'heroine' Katherine is just a complete fucking drip: passively attentive to her family, with no personal drive or ambition, and no interest in art or love. I seriously wonder if this character is supposed to be on the spectrum, since the only thing that stimulates her mind is math and science and she can neither interpret nor express human emotion (I'm really not exaggerating). She manages to pair Rodney up with her cousin Cassandra, a much more realistically human young woman while she, despite knowing Mary is in love with him, keeps Ralph at arms length and insists she does not love him. Finally, after having done nothing to earn Katherine's affections beyond hanging out in front of her house a lot, Katherine decides that she maybe kinda likes Ralph, but not enough to marry him. She changes her mind immediately when her mother finds out and tells her to give up math so she can be a wife. Fuck.
E.M. Forster told Woolf that he didn't like this book because the characters were unlikable. I don't think all the characters are unlikable, she just picked the wrong one on which to center the story. The chapters at the beginning that focus on Mary are great and on his own, Ralph is likable too. Their relationship is real and touching. Cassandra is a Victorian-style waif, but also an injection of fun halfway into the story. The gaping void at the center is Katherine and the inexplicable way she treats Rodney - a classic Baxter. I do not want her to be happy; I want her to walk in on Mary having a loud threesome in her flat and then curse her pointless existence.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: Virginia Woolf is my favorite author and I've read most of her major works. This was a new, illustrated edition that I spotted at my local indie bookstore on Roscoe and I'm tempted to keep it just because it's so pretty. It definitely fits the theme of the song, covering the vicissitudes of romance and complexities of the heart.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? I bought the book because it was pretty, but it's also pretty bulky. This might have sat on the shelf indefinitely.
What's Next? I've started a new tape flagging system to mark my progress and stay on track with some of these bigger books, so my goal is to complete all three volumes of I Am a Cat by the end of the month.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Jun 9, 2020 21:02:26 GMT -5
UPDATE 17!: I have completed Ayoade On Top by Richard Ayoade for "Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want"
Actor/Director/Humorist Richard Ayoade's third satirical exploration of film is a shot-by-shot close reading of the 2003 Gwyneth Paltrow romcom View From the Top. Much of the humor is derived simply from describing the stupidity of the film, although there are many flights of absurdity, such as digressions about the Parable of the Unjust Steward, time machine theft, and the savagery of moths. There are also some funny stories about Ayoade's life, for as he puts it "Donna Jenson, c'est moi."
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I've been dying to read this one after devouring Ayoade on Ayoade: A Cinematic Odyssey and The Grip of Film. It was a treat to listen to this during today's telework.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? The only books I normally consume as audiobooks are those read by comedian authors and this was a perfect example of why. I was disappointed I didn't get a chance to read this when it came out last year, since we get almost no British titles in U.S. bookstores.
What's Next? I'm taking my time with I Am a Cat, as befitting its subject matter, but I still expect to finish by the end of the month.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Jun 24, 2020 23:26:23 GMT -5
UPDATE 18!: I have completed I Am A Cat by Natsume Soseki for "Stretch Out and Wait"
For about two years, Natsume Soseki (or Soseki Natsume in the Western fashion) the most important Japanese novelist of the 20th century, wrote a serialized novel presenting a cat's-eye-view of the country's changing mores. Unfortunately, it appears Natsume got paid by the word, since there is a lot of chaff amidst the grains of humor and philosophy in this 600+ page collection. The translation is generally clever, aside from some weird Anglicization, and the characters are all pretty fun. The lack of narrative drive and frequent digressions into half-baked philosophy (a la Ayn Rand) are a real problem, though. If only an editor had taken a crack at abridging this - I bet there's an absolutely charming 300-400 page novel in there somewhere. The passages about the cat's drives and its observations of children are hilarious.
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I bought this at Kinokuniya bookstore because I had been assigned Kokoro in college and it was life-changingly good. Since I allowed myself some leeway, it fit my theme quite nicely.
How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? This was a classic folly in that it's the kind of book I would like to have read, but would be unlikely to commit several weeks to reading.
What's Next? I'm excited to start the very timely Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist, which centers around the WTO protests, for "This Night Has Opened My Eyes". After that, I have to take a break to read the as-yet-unannounced selection for One Book, One Chicago so I can work on a CPL-commissioned playlist and blog post...
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Post by Desert Dweller on Jun 25, 2020 5:07:28 GMT -5
How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I bought this at Kinokuniya bookstore because I had been assigned Kokoro in college and it was life-changingly good. Since I allowed myself some leeway, it fit my theme quite nicely.
I guess I should bump Kokoro up my list, then. I own a copy of it, but I haven't gotten around to it yet. I'm going to try to get through at least 15 more books on my "to be read" shelf by the end of the year. I'll try to make this one of them.
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moimoi
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Post by moimoi on Jul 1, 2020 14:53:13 GMT -5
UPDATE 19!: I have completed Your Heart is Muscle the Size of a Fist by Sunil Yapa for "This Night Has Opened My Eyes" This novel is set in 1999, during the Battle of Seattle, and provides a Rashomon-like recounting of the chillingly familiar events from the perspectives of seven characters: three cops, three protesters, and one of the WTO delegates. This book could have been written last week, with its discussions of late capitalist despair, police brutality, and rising anarchy. I feel like the ending particularly is like an update of The Grapes of Wrath. Deep stuff, told in a deceptively simple way. How Well Did It Fit the Theme of the Challenge/Why I Picked This: I love when a perfect fit for my theme falls in my lap. I had no idea what to read for this prompt until I went to the Open Books semi-annual sale downtown after work one summer evening. I was a politically disengaged teen in 1999 (I didn't even vote in 2000 election though it was the first one for which I was eligible) and all I remember about the WTO protests was shots of protesters and tear gas on the news. I never understood what the protests were about and the media (predictably) never bothered to explain them. The cover for this, with an anarchy symbol used as the A for "A Novel" and the title intrigued me. Once I saw what it was about it, I was sold ($9 for the hardcover). How likely would you have been to read the book without the challenge? Probably not at all, but I'm glad I did and I feel like others should read it too. If only there wasn't so much cursing and violence, I'd pass it on to a young person... What's Next? Now that I only have 5 books to finish in 5 months, I'm going to ease my pace and start working on the stack of roughly 20 non-challenge books I also want to consume (to make way for more monthly purchases).
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