Reviews and Comments

emma

emmaaum@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 2 years 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.

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Antoine-François Prévost: Manon Lescaut (EBook, Project Gutenberg) 2 stars

That was painful

2 stars

Content warning Maybe sort of spoilers

Alexandre Dumas figlio: 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

Kennedy Kerr: 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

Brenda Cooper: 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/

R. J. Ruppenthal: Fresh food from small spaces (Paperback, 2008, Chelsea Green Pub. Co.) 3 stars

Many gardening books describe ample land and space as being a prerequisite for growing flowers, …

Superceded by the internet

3 stars

Loads of enthusiasm, some useful information but in general the internet is better these days. It's best where it can be the most specific but many sections try to talk about a broad range of possible circumstances and end up saying not enough about any. I picked up a couple of things which might be useful, that the pots sold as tomato planters are probably too small, some ideas about growing fruit, and an interest in trying mushrooms (if I can figure out where to get good logs).

reviewed A New Start for the Wrens by Vicki Beeby

Vicki Beeby: A New Start for the Wrens (EBook, 2022, Canelo Digital Publishing) 3 stars

"A compelling and heartwarming WW2 saga"

This was alright :)

3 stars

Posh young woman grows up, learns about friendship, love, responsibility and self-reliance. Mostly on the Orkney Mainland, where the weather is also very much a character. Not my usual but it was free e-book of the week and I needed something easy and engaging. It telegraphs its plot well in advance, so no big surprises. Lots of cliches but it moves at such a pace there isn't much time to dwell on them. The only romance writer (in my limited experience) I'm interested in reading more from.

Jessica Au: Cold Enough for Snow (2022, Fitzcarraldo Editions) 4 stars

A mother and daughter travel from abroad to meet in Tokyo: they walk along the …

Past and present

4 stars

Still not sure what to make of this one, even on a second reading. The first time was inclined to wonder Why are we doing this or how does this all fit together, second time was more taking each moment as it's told. Enjoyed the experience of it, which is what matters most.

A daughter takes her mother, originally from Hong Kong, to Japan for a holiday. It alternates between precisely observed details of the present and the daughter's narration of memories from her past, her mother's, sister's and partner's.

wants to read Short Fiction by Poul Anderson

Poul Anderson: Short Fiction (2019, Standard Ebooks) No rating

Poul Anderson’s prolific writing career began in 1947, while still an undergraduate physics student at …

found this on the Standard Ebooks site and it seemed a good one to try out, see how i get on with reading on the tablet and if it's better or worse for bad brain days. (has become clear that dark mode for books increases the days i can read, so this is very good news.) it's 3 average novels worth of writing. some of it i really like. has been good for reading every day but will take ages to finish. short stories, so easy enough to take a break.

Andrey Kurkov: Death and the Penguin (Panther) (2002) 5 stars

Death and the Penguin is a novel by Ukrainian author Andrey Kurkov. Originally published in …

Do read it :)

5 stars

A friend found this for 30p in an out-of-the-way charity shop and got it for on the basis of it being a very good deal and being unsure how to pronounce the author's name (and therefore one I'd like it). It's sat on the shelf all these years, but I'm very glad he did. Quietly absurdist, yet feels well grounded in the realities of time and place. Pacing, flow and details are excellent; exceptionally well written and translated. Don't find out more about it, wondering what is going on is part of its appeal, just read it :)

reviewed The Private Lives of Trees

The Private Lives of Trees (Paperback, Fitzcarraldo Editions) 5 stars

short novella about imagination, families and relationships

a wee gem of a book

5 stars

gentle, short, very readable, and probably very re-readable. lingering impression is more atmosphere than plot but enough of a storyline for a sense of movement and expansiveness, often through memory.

Chile #novella #InnerLife