We had a quiet 4th of July. A little too quiet, as I was hoping some illegal fireworks would convince Susiecat that the outdoors was a terrible place. Oh well, she’s wearing her new collar with an AirTag so if she sneaks out again we’ll track her down. Or at least track her collar down. Otherwise just a regular simmer week of farmer's markets, libraries, and heat.
Goodreads thinks I am reading 67 books. But I know I finished a bunch of them. The library thinks I have 62 physical books checked out, so I should work harder on reducing that.
Books Completed July 4 - July 11
Alien Clay, Adrian Tchaikovsky. Hugo finalist. This had some cool ideas; the dictatorship whose ideology dictated scientific results, the biology of the alien planet, the relationship among the people trapped on the planet with their different statuses. But the characterization was the weakest part, as I found it hard to care about the narrator and through him the other people as they didn’t seem real enough to worry about.
Hell Followed With Us, Andrew Joseph White. The apocalypse book for our Torches and Pitchforks book club was very interesting although it worked better as trans magic realism than as an apocalypse. Benji’s experiences as a trans boy who is literally turning into a monster brings the feelings to a new level, so that the reader mostly ignores the pseudo-science and even the unbelievable character arc of the boyfriend. But as an emotional foil for Benji he worked well. The club found a lot to talk about.
Navigational Entanglements, Aliette de Bodard. Hugo Novella finalist. The worldbuilding and aliens were really cool, and I liked the different novices dispatched to fail to deal with a situation. The love story dragged things down for me but I am old and curmudgeonly and hard to please.
Claudia and the New Friend, Ann M Martin. I’m comparing this to the graphic novel, and while there’s more nuance, the babysitters don’t come out looking good. They are very cliquish and unwelcoming to Claudia’s new friends and keep demanding that she choose between them. Of course, the new girl out does them in drama, so Claudia has an excuse to go back to her friends, but at the end of it she basically just picks the bullies she knows.
The Brides of High Hill, Nghi Vho. Hugo finalist novella. This was spooky and creepy, but I don’t th8nk it works without the previous ones. Also, the foxes aren’t as cool as mammoths or tiger.
Poppy and Marigold, Meg Welch Dendler. This was a Cybils nominee from last year that didn’t make it onto the short list so I didn’t read it fully. I’ve now read the whole thing and I agree that it’s not great but it’s interesting. The worldbuilding is shallow but has good imagery and the language is a bit old fashioned (“naughty” is not a very common word used on kids this age) but the writing is strong and Poppy does some real emotional growing.
Emma Jean Lazarus Fell In Love, Lauren Tarshis. Tarshis writes some fun books! I’ve been reading her “I Survived” series but I was interested 8n what she did before and I found the kids engaging and fun to read about.
Jessi Ramsey, Pet-sitter, Ann M Martin. It’s fun to see Martin playing with her structure. Here the pet job kicks off the drama subplot of Kristy being too bossy, but although Jessi spends most of her time with the dogs, cats, birds, rodents and snakes for this job, the other kids bring their charges over to say high so we still get to see the usual stuff.
Soul Taken, Patricia Briggs. Mercy and her friendship group can beat anything!
Books Started
I Survived Hurricane Katrina, 2005, Lauren Tarshis.
Emma Jean Lazarus Fell In Love, Lauren Tarshis. I wanted to see her pre-survival books.
Navigational Entanglements, Aliette de Bodard. Hugo Novella finalist.
Jessi Ramsey, Pet-sitter, Ann M Martin. Another babysitter book! Number 22.
Tribute, Sherwood Smith. For Scintillation book club.
The Brides of High Hill, Nghi Vho. Hugo finalist novella.
Wooing the Witch Queen, Stephanie Burgis. I’ve liked her kidlit so I grabbed this adult romance.
The Honey Witch, Sydney J. Shields. Cloudy pick.
Karen’s Grandmothers Graphic Novel, DK Yingst & Ann M Martin. Babysitter spin-offs about Kristy’s stepsister, which are recommended to me by the Talbot Hill Bookclub.
Heavenly Tyrants, Xiran Jay Zhao. Not-a-Hugo Lodestar YA finalist.
Bookmarks Moved
Hannelore’s Fifth Year at the Royal Academy, Miya Kazuki
Autistic Community and the Neurodiversity Movement, Steven K. Kapp (editor)
Endling: The First, Katherine Applegate
The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, Robinson Jeffers
Lyorn, Steven Brust
Wow No Thank You, Samantha Irby
Demon Copperhead, Barbara Kingsolver
Coyote Dreams, C.E. Murphy
Threads That Bind, Kika Hatzopoulou
The Wild Girls, Pat Murphy. Old Cybils finalist.
One Jump Ahead, Mark L Von Name
Bookmarks Languished
I have not given up on these! Ignore all evidence.
Into the Vast Nothing, J. Bruno.
Marry Me By Midnight, Felicia Grossmann.
Long Live Evil, Sarah Rees Brennan.
True Colors, Abby Cooper.
South Riding, Winifred Holtby.
Lepunia: Kingdom of the Gallopers, Kevin Ford
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell
I’m Nobody, Who Are You?, Emily Dickinson
A, B, C: Three Short Novels, Samuel Delaney. The A novel is the Foolscap pick.
Picture Books and Short Stories
I’ve been requesting the books the bigots got the Supreme Court to protect their kids from, and it’s clear that now any parent can object to any book for pretty much any reason, so have fun with that, teachers!
Love, Violet, Charlotte Sullivan Wild. Violet is a socially awkward child who wants to be friends with another kid, but is so shy about that she misses all the other girl’s signals, which are on the level of “Want to be friends?” They end up being friends after Violet’s latest dumb scheme goes awry. This apparently is objectionable because Violet has a cool haircut. Or maybe because girl-on-girl friendships are bad? But I’m pretty sure it’s the haircut, and the idea that maybe Violet’s liking is sorta a crush? If you are the kind of person who pushes that kind of thing on your kids.
What Are Your Words?, Katherine Locke. This is an earnestly tedious book about a kid who wakes up each morning and picks out what pronouns to use that day, with the kind of decisiveness you’d see in a toddler running late to preschool. The story is the kid walking to a park or something and saying hello to people who use different pronouns. It’s dull writing, the pictures are fine, the kid is vague, and I have no idea of what age it’s aimed at since the story is very basic but the concept of gender fluidity seems at least elementary aged.
Jacob’s Room To Choose, Jodie Patterson. This book strikes right at a topic crucial to young elementary school kids: what do you do if you can’t go to the bathroom? Jacob likes to wear dresses but this makes the other boys try to shoo him to the other bathroom. Very implausibly, his friend has the same problem in the girls’ room because of her pants and shirt (????!!??). Their teacher, clearly not wanting to deal with kids this age refusing to go potty, leads the class in starting a school culture of just letting people pee where they want, complete with cute slogans and posters.
The first pages had me thinking it was going to be an expose of why “gender at birth” rules are dumb if your aim is to keep beards out of the ladies’ and skirts out of the gents’, but then the girl wearing jeans also had a bathroom rejection and the teacher needed a solution.
Oops, I didn’t mean to read these next two yet, they are for next month’s book club where we judge the Cybils finalists. So I read them but I’ll report on them after the book club.
My Daddy Is A Cowboy, Stephanie Seales.
The Little Red Chair, Cathy Stefanec Algren.
“Rapport: Friendship, Solidarity, Communion, Empathy,” by Martha Wells. Ooooooh, Peri has a crush!
Books on Slow Mode
Home Comforts, Cheryl Mendleson. I read one section a day. I am learning about kitchen cleaning.
At the Feet of the Sun, Victoria Goddard. Friendship is the best magic.
50 Great Poets, ed. Milton Crane (no picture). Walt Whitman rolls on.
The Writer's Stance: Reading and Writing in the Disciplines, Dorothy U. Seyler. (no picture). Mail bribe.
Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Marlon. Mail bribe.
War Cross, Marie Lu. Mail bribe.
Teaching With Caldecott Books, Scholastic books. Mail bribe. Examples of how to go from reading a fun book like On Market Street to being a smart kid.
Year of Wonder, Clemency Burton-Hill. Mail bribe. Made it to December!
Books Acquired
I only notice when I’m caught up.
Future Plans
This is for the actual future, so weeks beyond the books in this post. It is also probably wrong.
I am reading:
- Book I own: Wolf Hall
- Library Book: Prince and Assassin
- Hugo Finalist: Heavenly Tyrant
- Ebook I own: When the Moon Met the Sun
- Foolscap Book Club Book: The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (completed)
- Sword and Laser Club Book: The Devils
- Scintillation Book Club: Wolf Hall
- Cloudy Book Club: Liar’s Text
- Torches and Pitchfork Book Club: Poverty, By America
- River Runs Under It Book Club: This Tender Land
- Talbot Hill Book: Summer Time! No Book.
- Friday Book Club: Dune
- Romance Book Club: Jane Austin!