Saturday, March 30, 2019

Books of 2019- Installment #7

31. The Travelling Cat Chronicles by Hiro Arikawa and translated by Philip Gabriel
This is a sweet book about a man and his love of cats and two cats in particular. He adopted a stray and then years later can't keep the cat anymore, so he takes Nana (Seven) to different friends to see who would make a good home for Nana. My favorite part is Nana's narration!

32. The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo
A novel told in verse! I had to check it out. It's really good but sad!! My year of reading women throws into stark relief the universal experience women have of being boxed up, told to be this, that, more, less, better, different, less, less, less. This is a heartbreaking experience to have to go through. To have it happen to so many of us, over and over and over again, is wrenching. To have your parents be the one giving you the message is devastating.

33. The Paragon Hotel by Lyndsay Faye
I have never heard of Lyndsay Faye and have no idea about her, but man, oh, man, the book sucked me in with its first words. Oh, how I wanted to savor this book!! And I did... I did... It's good. It is good, but there are things in this book you don't want to savor, things you want to be over, to be firmly in the past since we can't undo them. Oh, to have never had a society like this, that would be grand. But to have them happening anew! Horrifying! Horrifying!! And sadly all to real and omnipresent.

34. The Lady from the Black Lagoon: Hollywood Monsters and the Lost Legacy of Milicent Patrick by Mallory O'Meara
I listen to a podcast called Reading Glasses, and one of the hosts is the author of this book, which is how I learned about it. Ostensibly this book is about Milicent Patrick, but it's also about women in the film industry that also didn't get any recognition. Another group of hidden figures!

35. Famous Men Who Never Lived by K. Chess
I kinda hate the title because so what, but the book is really good! Basically an Earth has some horrible cataclysm and around 150,000 people from that Earth come to another Earth (very similar to ours but not necessarily ours...) It is a one-way trip and the ultimate refugee experience. I was asked if there is really any sci-fi in this book or if it really is just a refugee story. That's such a challenging question to answer. For me it had plenty of sci-fi. But the sci-fi drives the refugee storyline.

I've read 35 books so far and 24 were by women, 8 by men, and 3 anthologies with both female and male authors two of which were mostly female authors. My year of reading lots of women is still going strong!!

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Books of 2019- Installment #6

26.  (Don't) Call Me Crazy: 33 Voices Start the Conversation about Mental Health edited by Kelly Jensen
I am not sure how I came across this book, but it is excellent! I really enjoyed all the different perspectives on an array issues people face! Really thoughtful!!

27. The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
There's been so much great buzz around Circe that I wanted to read it. Then I learned that Madeline Miller wrote this one first, so I checked it out. It's a great retelling of the story of Achilles from the perspective of Patroclus. He is from what I understand Achilles closest friend but not well-fleshed out in the Greek myths. This one does that.

28. The Devil and the Deep: Horror Stories of the Sea edited by Ellen Datlow
I love the sea and I love short stories, so when I saw this combination of the two I had to snatch it up. This is a great collection of scary stories of the sea. Some are truly horrifying and some are just spine-tingling, but they are all engaging!

29. The Psychology of Time Travel by Kate Mascarenhas
This book is so good!! I devoured it! A page-turner indeed! The cast of characters is fascinating, the plot keeps you engaged, and there is a pleasing old school Doctor Who reference at the very beginning of the book.

30. The Haunting of Tram Car 015 by P. Djèlí Clark
I love reading stories about jinn. This wasn't about jinn exactly but jinn figure prominently in the story AND it is an alternate history of Egypt with tons of supernatural elements AND part of the alternate history was women demanding more rights! Yay!! (Plus I super loved the England part of this alternate history!)

I've read 30 books so far and 19 were by women, 8 by men, and 3 anthologies with both female and male authors two of which were mostly female authors. My year of reading lots of women is still going strong!!

Friday, March 8, 2019

Books of 2019- Installment #5

21. Gmorning, Gnight!: Little Pep Talks for Me  & You by Lin-Manuel Miranda & Jonny Sun
Oh, my how sweet is this book!!! And the drawings put me over the moon!!!

22. Earthly Delights by Kerry Greenwood
I love the Phryne Fisher mysteries, so I was excited to start another series by Kerry Greenwood. This is like and not like Phryne. The main character Corinna is a baker and is surrounded by cats, so I'm so happy!

23. The Bees by Laline Paull
My friend keeps meeting beekeepers, and I heard that this book had a nonhuman narrator. Sign me up! I am fascinated with the societies of the other inhabitants of this planet, that we for the most part act like don't exist. So this book is really fascinating because we are immersed in a beehive and their society.

24. Disappearance at Devil's Rock by Paul Tremblay
I joined an online horror book club, and there was a poll to see which book would be our first book. This book was in the lead and I was afraid if I waited until the book was chosen that I wouldn't be able to get. The library had it so I got it. Now I'm not really into horror, but I have enjoyed quite a few books that are considered horror and I was considering A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay a long time ago, so... here we are. Turns out, I devoured this book and don't think it was horror at all. Scared me but not as much as other books but definitely good!!

25. Dead Man's Chest by Kerry Greenwood
This is the 18th book in the Phryne Fisher mysteries. I have been enjoying it so very much that I decided to savor them. And I have, but this year I decided I would finish this series. I even started a different Kerry Greenwood series (Earthly Delights is the first!) to prep myself! And this book is so good! I'm so glad I read it! It really lifted my spirits!


I've read 25 books so far and 17 were by women, 7 by men, and 1 by mostly women. My year of reading lots of women is still going strong!!