The myth-busting science behind our modern attitudes to exercise: what our bodies really need, why …
TFW you start a book because the topic genuinely interests you, only to realize halfway through that a well-written longform article would have satisfied your curiosity (but you have to finish the book anyway).
How to Keep House While Drowning felt like a distilled therapy session about cleaning. I saw this recommended on fedi somewhere, and felt like this was useful for me to read right now. It's less "here's my life hack productivity advice for folding shirts" and more "here's some better ways to think about and emotionally approach taking care of yourself and your space". (Honestly, this is probably the more valuable thing.)
A bunch of thoughts I enjoyed that stuck with me:
* cleaning is morally neutral
* your space exists to serve you (do you hang clothes on a chair? if that works for you, then that's awesome)
* interrogating preconceived notions of what cleaning looks like
* prioritizing health > comfort > happiness in care tasks (and cutting out perfectionism saying you have to do all of these things all of the time)
* balance in care tasks between …
How to Keep House While Drowning felt like a distilled therapy session about cleaning. I saw this recommended on fedi somewhere, and felt like this was useful for me to read right now. It's less "here's my life hack productivity advice for folding shirts" and more "here's some better ways to think about and emotionally approach taking care of yourself and your space". (Honestly, this is probably the more valuable thing.)
A bunch of thoughts I enjoyed that stuck with me:
* cleaning is morally neutral
* your space exists to serve you (do you hang clothes on a chair? if that works for you, then that's awesome)
* interrogating preconceived notions of what cleaning looks like
* prioritizing health > comfort > happiness in care tasks (and cutting out perfectionism saying you have to do all of these things all of the time)
* balance in care tasks between people being less "am I contributing enough?" and more "am I taking advantage of someone else?"
Dorian Leith can see ghosts. Not only that, he listens to their problems and tries …
The story had a lot of heart and, on the whole, I liked it a lot. However, even though the main character is literally a therapist for ghosts, I could have done without all the therapy-speak that he or some other characters use, especially outside therapy sessions.
Fetter was raised to kill, honed as a knife to cut down his sainted father. …
Weird, inventive, and pointed commentary at the same time
5 stars
I tore through this book, and might just re-read it immediately, which is something I never do.
It starts out as a fantasy story that feels exceptionally weird because Chandrasekera's willing to do his world building / exposition very slowly. I kept going through a lot of confusion because the writing itself is just so beautiful. And then gradually as the exposition falls into place it becomes clearer that the book is at least partly a critique of religious fanaticisms and chauvinisms... but each time I felt I really had a handle on the book something in its world would shift - either the protagonist learning a new piece of his own story or a significant detail the the author waited until a dramatic moment to show the reader. Even the ending feels like another instance of that, and it is a relatively unclear ending, though it fits the whole …
I tore through this book, and might just re-read it immediately, which is something I never do.
It starts out as a fantasy story that feels exceptionally weird because Chandrasekera's willing to do his world building / exposition very slowly. I kept going through a lot of confusion because the writing itself is just so beautiful. And then gradually as the exposition falls into place it becomes clearer that the book is at least partly a critique of religious fanaticisms and chauvinisms... but each time I felt I really had a handle on the book something in its world would shift - either the protagonist learning a new piece of his own story or a significant detail the the author waited until a dramatic moment to show the reader. Even the ending feels like another instance of that, and it is a relatively unclear ending, though it fits the whole mood of the book enough not to be frustrating.
To be clear: I like this kind of storytelling better than spending pages and pages on worldbuilding before anything happens, and all loose ends tied up by the conclusion. It just needs a damn good writer to make it work, and Chandrasekera is one. I also never felt like I was more confused than the protagonist himself, which I think is how the book managed not to fall into feeling like a cheap trick.
After reading it, I read up on the story of Rāhula, and realised that many more details in this book are clearly-intentional references to that than I'd picked up on. And I read some Sri Lankan history and realised that much of what felt like echoes of Myanmar or Israel were more direct references to specific aspects of Sri Lanka's civil war. Part of why I want to re-read is to have those things in mind, but I think it's also a strength of the book that it works as a more general allegory too. I think I would advise other readers to go in the same order as me: dive into the book first, and catch up on its references after.
New York City. 1907. Malcolm Irina is the greatest inventor the world’s never heard of, …
It makes me so mad, seriously. A creative team made of established creators, alt covers drawn by some of the hottest queer male artists and the result. IS. JUST. MID. It's basically this thread.
Crown Jewel Tourmaline, a dwarf princess, would do almost anything to get out of her …
Come for the smut, stay for the worldbuilding and especially the way gender works for dwarves, as well as additional worldbuilding posts on Titmouse's socials.
WOE! SCREAM! MEOW! ...PURR? Join the hilarious and of course dramatic world of Linney the …
It’s weird to read it again, five years after its content was published on social media. I remember being a HUGE fan of it, and if I had had to do an end-of-year list with my favorite comics from 2019, all the strips that Lucy Knisley posted about her cat Linney would be my #1.
But in 2024 it feels like this kind of voice is now present in a ton of cat videos on social media. Reading the book didn’t make me feel anything, but reading the strips again this morning on Instagram - where they’re still available - instantly brought me back to where I was working in 2019, how a new publication would be the highlight of my day (OF MY WEEK) and how I felt when the last strip was published.