Reviews and Comments

emma

emmaaum@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 8 months, 3 weeks ago

chronically fatigued (like long covid, wear your masks) trying to motivate myself to read more. goal for now is a book a week, but recognise it will be less, and sometimes the books will be crap and sometimes they'll be very short. when my brain's managing ok enough i like books from other parts of the world. if i was healthy i'd be an archeologist. or an anthropologist. or a historian. or an ethnomusicologist. but i'm not. wear your masks. please.

This link opens in a pop-up window

A Shining (Paperback, 2023, Fitzcarraldo Editions) 4 stars

original title: Kvitleik

who are you?

4 stars

this is a short story but as i haven't managed past the first chapter of anything in months and it's published as a stand alone, i'll let it be counted towards my goal.

it's moody and evocative, told as a single paragraph interior monologue of an experience the narrator/protagonist doesn't understand himself, but in the end it's perhaps quite simple.

The Orphan of Zhao and Other Yuan Plays (Hardcover, 2014, Columbia University Press) 4 stars

Worth the effort

4 stars

An academic text on a subject I didn't know anything about wasn't necessarily the wisest choice for me these days, but I've been watching a fair bit of Asian drama series, including some in historical Chinese settings and it's about the only non-mainstream book available through the e-book system our library uses so I wanted to give it some love in hopes of encouraging them to add more niche topics. I'm in no position to comment on accuracy. I found the contextual essays readable enough and I've learned bits and pieces of history and culture, like a section on filial piety, which have helped me better understand a few of the modern telly dramas. My impression of the longer versions of the plays is that they're prone to long Wagneresque narrative monologues rather than dialogue and action and it's all of course very male-orientated. The only play I enjoyed reading …

How to Be a Woman (EBook, 2011, Ebury Digital) 3 stars

1913: Suffragette throws herself under the King's horse

1970: Feminists storm Miss World

Now: Caitlin …

Outrageous, as it should be

3 stars

The combination of outrageous memoir and opinionated insights on being a woman is more than the sum of its parts. Many nods of recognition, though not the outrageous parts :)

Home Fire (2017, Riverhead Books) 4 stars

Isma is free. After years spent raising her twin siblings in the wake of their …

Difficult but intelligent

4 stars

Content warning Content warning

Seven Sisters (2015, Atria Books) 2 stars

Relieved that's done

2 stars

Content warning sort of spoilers

The Girl of the Golden West (EBook, Project Gutenberg) 5 stars

From Belasco's play came both this novel and Puccini's opera La Fanciulla del West. It's …

heart of gold

5 stars

From Belasco's play came both this novel and Puccini's opera La Fanciulla del West. It's a story of love and redemption set in a mining community in gold rush California. The Girl, whose name we don't learn until half way through, owns a saloon, teaches the miners to read and everyone looks out for each other. If you know the opera, you know the rest - it's true to the novel/play, including lines of dialogue. It's still worth reading this novel, even if it does lack music, as it's excellent in its own right and it fills in many details. We actually meet Nina Micheltoreña!

And if you don't know the story, you have all this to look forward to <3

If you can be persuaded to give opera a try, Eva-Maria Westbroek understands Minnie well and brings enormous heart to the role. A week's free trial from Met Opera …

The No Work Garden (Paperback) 2 stars

Getting the most out of your garden for the least amount of work. Advice on …

Shrug

2 stars

For a book about cutting out unnecessary work in the garden, parts of this are a lot of less than necessary work to read. Especially in the early chapters I found myself just wanting the author to get on with advice for what to do and how to do it more efficiently, but I suspect he rather enjoyed the cathartic snark in writing it. The fruit section was probably the most useful to me, but only because I know so little. Tidbits buried in the rest.

The Love List (EBook, AEJ Creative Works Inc) 2 stars

feel good beach romance/friendship novel

not for me

2 stars

Content warning sort of maybe spoiler

Best Murder in Show (2022, Boldwood Books, BOLDWOOD BOOKS LTD) 3 stars

Pleasant way to spend some evenings

4 stars

Five stars is frustrating. I'm inclined to rate is comparison with others in its genre (very broadly speaking), thus four stars, but if I were to compare it to other books I'd have to give it three at most, probably two but that feels so very low. It was good, not great, and succeeded at what it was trying to do.

I read this as a free e-book. It was a pleasant way to spend some evenings.

The mid-twenties protagonist is growing up and also inclined to imagine a bit too much, which is a good way of writing a low-stakes "cozy crime" novel. The genre-driven nature of publishing seems to push books into either crime or romance, but neither are truly central here. Instead it's more about the young woman, her aunt and creating a life worth writing about.

Manon Lescaut (EBook, Project Gutenberg) 2 stars

That was painful

2 stars

Content warning Maybe sort of spoilers

Camille (La Dame aux Camilias) (EBook, 1999, Project Gutenberg) 5 stars

Dumas' semi-autobiographical novel of the love between a Parisian courtesan and a young man. It …

Superb

5 stars

Cannot recommend this highly enough. Great emotional sensitivity and intelligence, looking into the nuanced whys of the life of a Paris courtesan and the double standards she contends with. Opera lovers will recognise much of it, even if it does lack music ;) Free to download or read here: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1608 #ReadingOpera

The House at Magpie Cove (Paperback, 2020, Bookouture) 3 stars

mixed feelings

3 stars

Content warning very mild spoiler but it's hardly a surprise

The Weight of Light (Center for Science and the Imagination, Arizona State University) 3 stars

A collection of science fiction stories, art, and essays exploring human futures powered by solar …

insert bad pun on the heaviness of the subject matter

3 stars

The output of a workshop involving authors, artists and researchers imagining solar energy-centric societies and likely problems in their implementation. I found out about this through a #solarpunk hashtag and had the mistaken idea it would offer hope. There is some but instead I'm left feeling down and aware of how likely it is that, even as the planet forces our societies to change, we'll do as little as we can get away with. Maybe if I'd read it at another time, or I was healthy enough to be involved in these sorts of projects I'd be motivated towards hope. It's a free e-book, via this link csi.asu.edu/books/weight/