User Profile

altlovesbooks

altlovesbooks@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 3 months ago

I read a lot. Like, a lot, a lot. I’ve been reaching for a way to talk about books with people who care about books for a long time, and haven’t quite gotten it right yet.

I don’t have a preferred genre. I started reading fantasy as a kid, but have since branched out in many (many) different ways. If it has words, I’ll more than likely read it, especially if it comes recommended.

I'm also an actual honest-to-god librarian, am very active on the Book Lover’s Club Discord server, and play video games. I have a lot of things going at once, because I can’t stand to be idle.

I have (in order of preference) one husband, one cat, no kids.

This link opens in a pop-up window

altlovesbooks's books

View all books

User Activity

The Mountains Sing (Hardcover, 2020, Algonquin Books) 4 stars

The Mountains Sing tells an enveloping, multigenerational tale of the Trần family, set against the …

Review of "The Mountains Sing"

4 stars

"Cruelty dispensed, cruelty served."

This was a sad book about Vietnam. I guess I'm slowly making my way around the world and reading books about all the worst parts in history. I have a thing for stories that need to be heard.

This book uses the dual viewpoints of Trần Diệu Lan in 1920 and her grown granddaughter Hương during the Vietnam War to tell a family story of loss. Trần Diệu Lan had 5 young kids and owned a farm during the land reform period of Vietnam's history. She was ousted from her house, beaten, separated from one of her kids, and the only reason she survived was because of the intervention of a friendly neighbor. Her land and belongings were divided up amongst her village, and she fled with no money and 5 kids to look after. Meanwhile, Hương lives with her grandma, after her uncles, father, and …

Frugal Wizard's Handbook for Surviving Medieval England (2023, Dragonsteel Entertainment, LLC) 4 stars

A man awakens in a clearing in what appears to be medieval England with no …

Review of "Frugal Wizard's Handbook for Surviving Medieval England" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

"The more I've studied history, the more I've maintained that great achievements aren't so much about aptitude as about timing."

This one never really came together for me. I had similar concerns going into Tress of the Emerald Sea, but I ended up finding it pretty charming in the end after I'd spent some time with it. This one lacked that charming part, and just felt a bit of a chore to get through. It just wasn't what I expect out of Sanderson, and even beyond that, it was just....fine. Even reading it blind without knowing who the author was, I probably wouldn't rate it much higher.

I'll keep this brief and un-spoilery. A man wakes up in a field, surrounded by burned grass, doesn't remember how he got there or what he was doing or even who he was. Around him in the burned grass are charred pages …

Ex-Yakuza and Stray Kitten Vol. 1 (Paperback, 2022, Seven Seas) 4 stars

Review of 'Ex-Yakuza and Stray Kitten Vol. 1' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This was a fun manga about an ex-Yakuza adopting a small stray kitten he found left outside in the cold. This ex-Yakuza now runs a cat cafe (I approve of this job choice), and our kitten friend Sabu is now one of his "employees". Lots of gags involving how dangerous Jin looks to Sabu.

I liked it, but I feel like it hits the same notes as Way of the House Husband. I like that the cat is the viewpoint here though, and there's enough differences to make it mostly interesting to me.

Aster of Pan (Hardcover, 2021, Magnetic Press) 4 stars

Review of 'Aster of Pan' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

"I'm not some cold, mechanical thing. I am alive!!!"

What a surprising delight! I picked this up at my local comic book store because of the art, and actually really liked the core story being told here as well!

Aster is an outcast of Pan, a village in what I'm assuming is a post-apocalyptic Earth given the names and such. She's allowed to trade with members of Pan, but isn't considered a member herself. They live a meager, poor existence, but when a larger nation rolls in and wants to take over their crops and food for essentially slave labor, she gets drafted into Celestial Mechanics--essentially, a post-apocalyptic dodgeball variant. Their hastily constructed team is squaring off against Fortuna's better funded and more practiced team to remain free of Fortuna's grasp.

Essentially, it's like Final Fantasy X (if you play video games) or Cool Runnings (if you remember your 90s …

The Palace of Illusions (2008, Doubleday) 4 stars

A reimagining of the world-famous Indian epic, the Mahabharat--told from the point of view of …

Review of 'The Palace of Illusions' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

"She who sows vengeance must reap its bloody fruit."

I don’t read much Indian fiction. I think to date, I’ve only read two of this author’s previous works, The Forest of Enchantments and Independence. I mostly enjoyed both of those with some caveats, and I think this one was no exception. I can’t say I know the source material at all, and from a quick glance at the reviews, I can see the low reviews come from a place of not liking aspects of the retelling. I only mention this to say that I don’t know the retelling at all, and I thought this was an enjoyable, flawed story.

Panchaali was born with a destiny to change the course of history. The daughter of King Draupad, she struggles with impatience born from being forced into a female role she doesn’t want to play. Forced to marry five brothers (at …

Old God's Time (2023, Penguin Publishing Group) 3 stars

Review of "Old God's Time" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

TW: child abuse within the church, pedophilia

I don’t use trigger words lightly. My reading is never dictated by content warnings and the like, but this is one of the very few books I’ve read that I want to make very clear up front isn’t for everyone. It isn’t even for me, as you can tell from my rating.

Tom Kettle is a retired policeman who is visited by some of his former colleagues on the force about a death that had occurred when Tom was on the force. Evidently new evidence had come to light, and they wanted Tom’s opinion on the matter, as it had been a matter he was very involved in. The brief visit stirs memories loose, and Tom begins to spiral into confusing the past with the present. We’re present as he relives memories he had buried for years, and leaves you questioning throughout the …

Evening and the Morning (2021, Pan Macmillan) 4 stars

Review of 'Evening and the Morning' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

"The first casualty of a civil war was justice."

Well, I finally did it. I finally knocked this one off my to-read list at the expense of my yearly goal (I’m two books behind now!), and I feel good about finally working my way through it. This is a weird book for me to rate, because I’m not very religious and I can’t exactly say I enjoyed it all the way through, but I’m still putting book two on my to-read list for….sometime in the future. Maybe next year.

This is a book about a man with a dream to build a church. Things start small, then quickly snowball as these things do, creating a real mess of church problems and state problems along the way. The lines between the two were, basically, nonexistent back then. Lots of political infighting, jockeying for position within the church/country, stuff like that. Amongst …

Review of 'House of Suns' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

"No act of knowledge acquisition is entirely without risk."

This had all the makings of a great book for me, but it ended up feeling like the harder I tried putting the pieces together, the worse the book felt. Such a great story idea! Great writing! (Theoretically) interesting characters! But once you start putting any sort of thought into what was going on, the cracks start showing. Ultimately I rated this based on feel—I had a lot of fun reading it in the moment—but the ending turns the story into a big nothingburger of a letdown.

Because of the sheer scale of this book, it’s hard to summarize. A regular gathering (every 200,000 years) of the clones of Abigail, a brilliant scientist and founder of the Gentian Line, goes terribly wrong, and the investigation into why this all happened is the core plot of the book. We get to know …

If I Had Your Face (2021, Penguin) 4 stars

Review of 'If I Had Your Face' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

"I would live your life so much better than you, if I had your face."

An interesting story about four women living in the same officetel (a style of housing in Korea with mixed purpose units available for rent). Each has their own different background and life story, but because of their living situation in the same building, all four know each other very well. We learn each woman’s story through their different chapters, each one taking a different woman’s point of view. Ara is a hair stylist who, because of a traumatic injury when she was in high school, cannot speak, and has a crush on the lead singer of a K-pop band. Kyuri is a “room salon girl”, like a high class prostitute, who works for a madam and wines and dines expensive clients. Miho is an artist who grew up poor, earned a scholarship to a prestigious …

Review of 'Truffle Underground' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Hi. I don’t really like truffles. I’m not a fan of their smell, their taste, or their price tag. But this book made me wonder if maybe I just haven’t had an actual truffle. How would I know? I’m just some rube in the United States. I’ve never gone truffle hunting, steeped myself in truffle culture, or created an entire business empire based around it. I’m also not shady, underhanded, or an evil person who poisons other truffle hunters’ dogs, so maybe I just wouldn’t cut it anyway.

This book was incredibly interesting, even for someone who’s not a fan of truffles. I learned so much about this humble fungus that I never really would have guessed. For instance, we’re still not really sure how or why truffles form. I sort of figured everything consumable was already studied, broken down, and science’d into efficiency by now, but that was a …

Review of 'Kamen Rider Kuuga Vol. 3' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Hey I actually followed this one a bit more than the last two. Did they clean up the translation?

The story with Godai and the UL was super sad. Not having watched the series (yet), I'm continually surprised at how dark the manga twists turn out to be. I think there's going to be a ton of volumes for this one eventually, though, so I might shelve this for the time being and come back to it when I have more shelf space.

Review of 'Island of the Lost' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

People getting stranded in places they shouldn’t be seem to be a recurring theme in the books I’m picking up. Up to this point, it’s been disastrous arctic expeditions. This book was an “if you like those, you might like this” recommendation by Goodreads, and I thought it was really interesting! The stakes were a bit lower than what I’ve read before, but this was still a pretty good read about—not one—but two different shipwrecks on the same island! Two stories for the price of one!

We start out reading about Captain Musgrave’s ship the Grafton, marooned on Auckland Island after a series of bad calls and trusting in bad information. Him and his crew of four band together almost immediately and actually get themselves set up rather comfortably (given the circumstances). They built a sturdy structure, had a regular routine they followed, and when they realized the people they …

The Diary of a Bookseller (2017, Profile Books Ltd) 4 stars

"The funny and fascinating memoir of Bythell's experiences at the helm of The Bookshop, Scotland's …

Review of 'The Diary of a Bookseller' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

"Some people just want you to know what their reading habits are, and have no intention of buying anything."

I work at a library, and while we don’t sell books, I do see a lot of the same behaviors in library patrons as Shaun Bythell does in his bookshop in Wigtown. The patrons who want you to know what they’re interested in without actually checking anything out, the kids who shove perfectly faced books to the back of the shelves, the colorful regulars, the list goes on and on. To that end, I found a lot to identify with and find humor in in this book.As I said, Shaun Bythell owns The Bookshop in Wigtown, Scotland, the world’s largest second-hand bookshop. He started keeping a diary in February of 2014 of all the notable interactions, observations, and events that happen in his bookshop, as well as some of the daily …