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Sally Strange

SallyStrange@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 9 months ago

Interests: climate, science, sci-fi, fantasy, LGBTQIA+, history, anarchism, anti-racism, labor politics

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Sally Strange's books

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Riot Baby (AudiobookFormat, 2020, Blackstone Publishing) 4 stars

Moody scifi, social justice, but mostly brother-sister healing

4 stars

I liked it, it was very atmospheric. It starts out in a world that seems normal and ordinary, recognizable as the one we all shared in the early to mid 1990s (for those of us that old). Then, as the LA riots loom and the little girl is revealed to have strange, frightening, unexplainable telekinetic abilities, things get weirder and weirder. The main focus, though, is on the relationship between the girl and her younger brother, the one born during the height of the violence. They journey through pain and injustice to find a place where they can forgive each other, and their mother, and maybe even the world, for what they've been through. Sad but not hopeless.

River Spirit (2022, Grove/Atlantic, Incorporated) 5 stars

1890s Sudan. When Akuany and her brother are orphaned in a village raid, they are …

Luminous, evocative, poetic storytelling

5 stars

This is a piece of historical fiction that takes us to Sudan, during the 1880s, the end of the Ottoman empire. There are several main characters, but the one whose arc unites them all is a spirited young woman who loves the river as if it is her own mother. Her journey from the lush highlands, through the desert, to the cities of Sudan (mainly Al-Ubeid and Khartoum) introduces us to a young merchant turned Islamic scholar, a lout turned soldier, a mother-in-law who keeps her penchant for trading a secret, a widowed Scottish painter who wishes only to return to his daughter, and historical figures such as British Generals and a Muhammad Ahmed ibn Abdullah, a self-styled messianic prophet and leader of the uprising against Egyptian rule. Throughout, the experiences and voices of women in war, women in a patriarchal society, are centered and uplifted.

Listening to the audiobook …

Desert Creatures (2022, Erewhon Books) 5 stars

In a world that has become treacherous and desiccated, Magdala has always had to fight …

Flawless storytelling; one of my favorite cli-fi books so far

5 stars

Correction: The exiled Vegas priest is actually named Arturo.

Long ago, the earth's rains turned poisonous. Thus, the only places where humanity survives (barely) are in the deserts. The people who dwell in the North American desert west of the Mississippi call it "the Remainder." This is where Magdala is born.

But the desert also sickens and kills its occupants. Madgala must survive thirst, hunger, animal predators, human predators, and "stuffed men": those who've succumbed to the sickness and become one with the desert and its creatures. The sexual violence of human predators is dealt with realistically but not gratuitously. Although the author's vision of the future is dark, it's also shot through with threads of hope and rumors of miracles.

People who liked Rebecca Roanhorse's "Sixth World" series will love this. "Poetic precision" is a good phrase for the storytelling. In this world, there are still a few road …