Merry scribbler. Monsters rescued; knights slain.

Category: books (Page 1 of 2)

Book Club: July 11 – For We Are Many by Dennis E. Taylor

It came up in Book Club that it would be nice to have notes about what people enjoyed or didn’t enjoy on our book club reads. So here’s the nutshell information about what we read and how we felt about it.

Book club: Cedar Rapids SciFi/Fantasy Book Club

Venue: Cedar Rapids B & N

Book:

Overall impression: Liked by people who finished, but it was a small meeting.

Warnings: Second in a series.

My personal take: I did not finish (DNF). I liked book one well enough but I had pacing issues with the book personally.

Ultimately, I came to the conclusion that all the Bobs are lonely. Worse, they will never get the human connection they are missing because they aren’t human anymore. They missed their opportunity, because should have been looking for that connection when they were alive.

That idea just seemed sad to me, and I wasn’t invested enough in the larger plot to continue reading.

Book Club: June 13th, 2023 – Horseman: A Tale of Sleepy Hollow

It came up in Book Club that it would be nice to have notes about what people enjoyed or didn’t enjoy on our book club reads. So here’s the nutshell information about what we read and how we felt about it.

Book club: Cedar Rapids SciFi/Fantasy Book Club

Venue: Cedar Rapids B & N

Book:

Overall impression: Book Club liked the book, though the ending wasn’t universally liked.

Warnings: LGBTQIA+ themes (non-sexual)

My personal take: I enjoyed the book. It felt like it trailed off, which was a little unsatisfying.

Book Club: May 9th, 2023 – A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine

It came up in Book Club that it would be nice to have notes about what people enjoyed or didn’t enjoy on our book club reads. So here’s the nutshell information about what we read and how we felt about it.

Book club: Cedar Rapids SciFi/Fantasy Book Club

Venue: Cedar Rapids B & N

Book: A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine

Overall impression: Liked by people who finished, but it was a small meeting.

Warnings: Colonialism, Long, unfamiliar words (assuming you’re a typical Midwesterner.)

My personal take: I was ill on book club day. That said, I can’t say enough good things about this story. I bought the sequel. Don’t be put off by the long words. The story is worth it.

Book Club: April 11th, 2023 – Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

It came up in Book Club that it would be nice to have notes about what people enjoyed or didn’t enjoy on our book club reads. So here’s the nutshell information about what we read and how we felt about it.

Book club: Cedar Rapids SciFi/Fantasy Book Club

Venue: Cedar Rapids B & N

Book: Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik

Overall impression: Split. One of the themes of the book is how tied into antisemitism the monster myths of the Western world are, and some found it an uncomfortable read. Some people liked the story.

Warnings: Antisemitism. First-person narration. Multiplicities of first-person narrators. My notes say 6 different first-person narrators.

My personal take: I skipped this month. I have a bias against first-person narration, especially when there are more than three first-person narrators in a book. Who is speaking again?

Book Club: March 14, 2023 – Radicalized by Cory Doctorow

It came up in Book Club that it would be nice to have notes about what people enjoyed or didn’t enjoy on our book club reads. So here’s the nutshell information about what we read and how we felt about it.

Book club: Cedar Rapids SciFi/Fantasy Book Club

Venue: Cedar Rapids B & N

Book: Radicalized by Cory Doctorow

Overall impression: Positive. 6 liked. 2 abstained.

Warnings: Politics. Police violence.

My personal take: Four short stories? What’s not to like? It was easy bedtime reading.

I enjoyed all the stories, but Model Minority was my favorite story. I see what you did there, Cory Doctorow.

Why hasn’t this happened yet?

What is missing from the world is a Quenton Tarintino movie adaptation of the book Trilby, by George du Maurier. It would be one dark film and it would cater to all the things Tarintino is good at: dark themes, a controlling manager (the trope namer for The Svengali) trying to own Trilby’s mind and soul, and Trilby’s a foot model – so it’s got plenty of reasons to film the feet of the actor who plays Trilby.

I mean, seriously. This book was practically written with Tarintino in mind, despite being a Victorian-era novel.

The Jedi guide to finishing that tough book in 3 easy steps

Have you ever started reading a book with the best of intentions, only to find what you thought you going to be reading was something entirely different than what you actually read?

Maybe you picked up a book with the best intentions for learning something new, but then the reading didn’t take you and you’re struggling to continue. There’s an easy solution to this problem.

I had this same problem in April and of all things Star Wars showed me how to deal with it. I’ll show you how to finish a tough book in three easy steps.

Step 1 – Choose your book wisely.

I started The Great Movies by Robert Ebert with the best of intentions. I thought that reading about some of the greatest films of all time, particularly ones I hadn’t yet seen would inspire me to broaden my horizons. I love a broad range of movies, but I have some gaps in my taste.

One hundred great movies in alphabetical order. Could anything be better for learning more about great films?

Surely expanding the breadth of my appreciation for movies would be a good thing. I thought so, but then I read the first essay in the book. I slogged through that first chapter, convinced that it would get better once I got past the introductory material.

Despite competent writing, it did not get better once I got past the opening material.

Step 2 – Persevere!

I heard my inner Master Yoda whispering to me as I struggled with every page. “Keep reading the book, you should. By a renowned personality in the field, it is. Let a book beat you, will you? Hmm?”

I set a goal to read three essays every day until I completed all 100 movies.

When I was young, I loved watching Siskle and Ebert at the movies. Even when I disagreed with them, I enjoyed watching them talk about the movies. After 5 days of slogging through three essays a day, trying to finish the book before the end of April, I came to two conclusions:

  • Roger Ebert’s essays didn’t have the same feel as him talking about a movie.
  • I enjoyed watching Siskel & Ebert disagree about movies more than I enjoyed them actually talking about movies.

If I’d read the essay about Casablanca as my enticement to watch the film, instead of seeing it at a festival on the big screen with my Gran, I’m pretty sure I would have passed on one of the greatest films of all time.

I’m nothing, if not persistent, so I kept reading. Three dry, dull, essays a day. No other reading unless I read my chunk.

I read every day. I didn’t manage three essays every day, but I kept reading. This continued until I hit the letter S on April 29.

In the essay on Star Wars, he talks about how much he loves the film. In particular, describes that great scene where Princess Leia gives the plans to the plucky C-3PO and tells him to take them to Obi-Wan Kenobi.

C-3PO? Plucky C-3PO?

Reading that, I discovered step three.

Step 3 – Let the Force be your guide.

It’s R2-D2 who carries the plans and the hope of the rebellion to enlist the aid of Obi-wan Kenobi.

So it wasn’t exactly the force. It was complete indignation at such a blatant error in the essay. Even my inner Master Yoda said, “Fucking kidding me, you’ve got to be.”

I stopped reading The Great Movies on April 29. The book might have had essays left in it, but I was finished reading it. Stopping reading, whether the book continues or not, is a perfectly legitimate way to finish a book.

It felt liberating.

Between April 30th and May 2nd, I started (and finished) The Ardent Swarm by Yamen Manai, which was delightful, The Miniaturist by Jessie Burton, which I found most satisfying, and started the latest Murderbot novel, Fugitive Telemetry,, which I’m finding most amusing.

Sometimes the answer is as simple as knowing when to move on. I wasted a whole month of that book. I didn’t gain the intended knowledge from it, but I did learn that I need I needed to trust myself enough to value my time.

Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time for that’s the stuff life is made of.

Benjamin Franklin

Your time is valuable.

When you’re reading for knowledge, it’s good to stretch yourself, but sometimes you’re going to make mistakes when choosing books. That’s okay.

Stop reading the book. Close the covers. Thank it for teaching you something about yourself.

Maybe your next book will catch your inner spark, and you’ll have more time to devote to it because you didn’t keep struggling needlessly with a book that wasn’t speaking to you.

They’re just books, after all. They don’t have feelings to be hurt if you don’t finish them.

Just don’t tell my copy of Something Wicked This Way Comes, that. He’s sensitive.

And May the Fourth be with you.

March 2021 – Roam Update

a close up of a bulky crochet granny square in blues and yellow.
I finished a chunky scarf, too.

The month has just seemed to fly by. I’ve changed roles at the day job, which I think has contributed to the feeling that time is just disappearing between heartbeats. I’m not nearly as far along on my reading as I’d hoped to be this month.

  • The Great Glowing Coils of the Universe – Jeffrey Cranor and Joseph Fink – Finished
  • The Great Movies – Robert Ebert – In Progress
  • H is for Hawk – Helen MacDonald – Finished
  • The Ardent Swarm – Yamen Manai – Not started
  • The 12 Week Year – Brian P. Moran, Michael Lennington – (added) Finished

The Great Glowing Coils of the Universe is a script book of previous episodes of Welcome to Night Vale and includes introductory information about the inspiration and writing of each episode. I enjoyed reading both the notes about each episode. Since I’d listened to all of these episodes previously, reading through each episode felt relaxing and familiar. As far as vacations to dystopian wastelands go, this one was ideal.

H is for Hawk wasn’t the trip I expected. I thought I was going on a trip through the English countryside with a falconer training a goshawk. Instead, I went on a trip through the author’s grief at the sudden loss of her father. My father passed away on March 1st nine years ago. In touring the author’s grief in H is for Hawk, I toured the shadows of my own grief, a dull ache that still informs the background of my life, but no longer overwhelms my daily experience. I found the book a satisfying read and even read the afterward, which I have to admit to skipping more often than I read them.

Somehow, I thought I could squeeze in one more book this month. The 12 Week Year was recommended by the A Beautiful Mess Podcast as the book they most credit with their successful working habits. I thought calling “work to fiscal quarterly results, not year-end results” a “12 Week Year” was a little cheesy, but the ideas in it seem actionable and sound.

I’m still working my way through The Great Movies. I feel like there’s a watch list here that I should devote a full month to exploring. Maybe I’ll put that on the calendar for September of this year since the topic of the month is “Learn.”

I’m not likely to start, let alone finish, The Ardent Swarm before the end of the month since I’m still working my way through The Great Movies and it’s only a week until the month is over.

April’s theme is supposed to be Money, but I think I’m going to do something completely different and make it Writing instead. April is Camp-Nanowrimo and I’d like to challenge myself to write and bring back the 2021 theme of “Creativity” back to the front of my mind.

March 2021 – Roam

Pictured: a tiny green statue with praying hands, a purple oddish, two miniature pink skull and crossbones erasers, and a miniature rubber chicken.
I really need to get away from my desk.

My theme for March is Roam and I plan to read books that feel like being transported to somewhere else. I only have three books on my list for next month, so there’s room to read other things and to do a few more things, too.

  • The Great Glowing Coils of the Universe – Jeffrey Cranor and Joseph Fink
  • March The Great Movies – Robert Ebert
  • H is for Hawk – Helen MacDonald
  • The Ardent Swarm – Yamen Manai

Iowa is still in Phase 1B Priority for coronavirus vaccinations and it doesn’t look like there will be a vaccination available for me any time soon, despite being in a high-risk category, so I won’t be able to do any real travel for some time. I’ll just have to use my imagination in the meantime.

February End of Month Summary

Pictured: a close up of bulky weight wool in muliticolored blue and white garter stitch

Final update of the reading list for February. I got through three more books than I thought I wood for the month. I didn’t focus on self-care, though. I just plowed through my reading and tried to stay warm, like I was hibernating, but with books.

Good books, for the most part, though some of them were tough reads. I’ve read enough books in the “History of the United States” series that I expected the onslaught of people behaving badly. I could brace myself mentally, and keep reading.

Nothing prepared me for Spectacle. That one, in particular, was horrifying to read and know that American people actually treated another human being that way. I feel like it’s an important book to read because it brings out the humanity of Ota Benga and the tragedy of his situation.

  • Hitting a Straight Lick with a Crooked Stick – Zora Neale Hurston Status: Finished
  • Uncomfortable Conversations With a Black Man – Emmanuel Acho Status: Finished
  • An African American and Latinx History of the United States – Paul Ortiz Status: Finished
  • The Witch’s Book of Self-Care: Magical Ways to Pamper, Soothe, and Care for Your Body and Spirit – Arin Murphy-Hiscock Status: Finished
  • Added:  The Self-Care Prescription by Robyn L Gobin, Ph.D. Status: Finished
  • The Conjurer – Luanne G. Smith Status: Finished
  • Added: Spectacle: The Astonishing Life of Ota Benga – Pamala Newkirk Status: Finished
  • Added: The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South – Michael W. Twitty Status: Finished

I started a scarf mostly because I can work on it in bits and starts. The sweater requires enough time to work through a set of decreases on the sleeve, and I don’t always have that.

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