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inclineto · 4 years ago
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Books, May - June 2021
Tess of the Road - Rachel Hartman [dnf]
A River of Stars - Vanessa Hua
The Sealed Letter - Emma Donoghue
Giant Bones - Peter S. Beagle
Moominsummer Madness - Tove Jansson *
The Beacon at Alexandria - Gillian Bradshaw *
The Phantom Tollbooth - Norton Juster *
Libertie - Kaitlyn Greenidge 
Stay - Nicola Griffith
Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age - Annalee Newitz [Thoroughly enjoyable, but also the sort of pop archaeology book where things like this happen repeatedly, and I’m sorry, but I laughed: “And then, as if by magic, the eminent University of Cambridge archaeologist Andrew Wallace-Hadrill appeared.” (As far as the narrative admits, they did not have an appointment; while they were wandering around Pompeii, collecting information about his speciality, he was wandering around Pompeii, happy to be encountered and become a source.)]
Teach Me - Olivia Dade
The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power - Deirdre Mask
We Are Watching Eliza Bright - A.E. Osworth [“I am not going to read the gamergate novel,” I said, “and especially not when it’s using 1st person plural MFA POV half of the time,” but then I voyeuristically devoured the gamergate novel which is, really, its point: “We are obsessed with what goes on where we can’t see it.”] *
Ivory Apples - Lisa Goldstein [what the hell?!? no.]
The Future of Another Timeline - Annalee Newitz
The Scarlet Seed - Edith Pargeter [the scenes that made me cry as a child still make me cry now, and that’s rather nice]
The Perilous Life of Jade Yeo - Zen Cho [Five books later, I’m prepared to admit that Zen Cho and I aligned for one glorious novel and some related characters (Sorcerer to the Crown; Rollo & Aunt Georgiana), and I’m mostly indifferent to everything else, but I keep trying because there’s always a sentence like this: “Being good-looking and interesting and having the heavy-lidded gaze of a romantic tapir does not excuse writing a foolish book.”]
Elementals - A. S. Byatt
Searching for Black Confederates: The Civil War’s Most Persistent Myth - Kevin M. Levin
What Katy Did Next - Susan Coolidge
Feed the Resistance: Recipes + Ideas for Getting Involved - Julia Turshen et al.
A Duke, the Lady, and a Baby - Vanessa Riley [dnf]
The Sibyl in Her Grave - Sarah Caudwell
Sabriel - Garth Nix *
Outcrossing - Celia Lake [dnf]
Mending Matters: Stitch, Patch, and Repair Your Favorite Denim & More - Katrina Rodabaugh [so I feel like this was a couple of blog posts inflated into a book]
Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake - Alexis Hall [extremely funny, made me want to bake during a heat wave, likely to suffer in reviews from mismatched genre expectations: it’s romantic comedy, not romance (I’ve just looked and yep! this is a major complaint)] *
Tales from Moominvalley - Tove Jansson
Goblin Fruit - Celia Lake [dnf]
Coffee Boy - Austin Chant [trying to do more than its length and thin characterization can carry, but also heartening in the main character’s explicit refusal to embody a limited and patronizing narrative of marginalized suffering; I wouldn’t want every trans romance to do this so overtly, just as I don’t want every queer romance to be about overcoming homophobia, but I want a few of them to (fair also to note that in contemporary settings, I find boss/intern scenarios really unappealing, and no, I don’t care if they talk about it; had it been longer I would almost certainly have bailed)]
Uncanny Valley - Anna Wiener [didn’t really plan to read this; definitely didn’t expect to enjoy it as much as I did - I thought it would be just another new adult navel-gazing indictment of tech bros, and it is, but it’s got seriously good style to go with it] *
Lord John and the Private Matter - Diana Gabaldon
Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England - Amanda Vickery
On Juneteenth - Annette Gordon-Reed
Salt Magic, Skin Magic - Lee Welch
Lord John and the Hand of Devils - Diana Gabaldon [read the first two novellas, but my tolerance for Diana Gabaldon’s Diana-Gabaldon-ness is relatively low and the second novel wore it out; dnf]
Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade - Diana Gabaldon
A Seditious Affair - KJ Charles [because once you’re 75+ comments into an increasingly-involved modern AU, the only reasonable thing to do is give in (looking back at the innocence of this mid-June annotation...oh, you sweet summer child)] *
Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America 1619-2019 - edited by Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain [in the end, I’m not sure the organizing principles of 5 year chunks and short word counts really allow enough scope for many of the essays, but look for this to show up on Most Challenged lists and as a target of reactionary legislation anyway]
A Gentleman’s Position - KJ Charles [see prev. entry in series]
The Secret Adversary - Agatha Christie [sometimes you should not reread your childhood books]
Fire Watch - Connie Willis
The Ruin of Gabriel Ashleigh - KJ Charles [possibly shouldn’t be an entry, but what the heck, it’s sold separately; see prev. entry in series]
The City of Brass - S. A. Chakraborty
American Quilts: The Democratic Art - Robert Shaw [that subtitle tells you exactly what to expect from the text, but the quilts are lovely]
Engaging Diverse Communities: A Guide to Museum Public Relations - Melissa A. Johnson
Strange the Dreamer - Laini Taylor [dnf]
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