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Date: 2025-04-09 10:38 pm (UTC)I read a popular novel billed as "feel-good" that I was enjoying until the author decided to drop some unsubtle racism bombs.
Now just over halfway through the 2024 Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing winner Late Light, The Secret Wonders of a Disappearing World, by Michael Malay, which is mostly four extended essays about four species of animal found in the UK (eel, moth, mussel, cricket) with more general top and tail chapters at each end. The writing is meditative and expansive but also melancholy and inevitably downbeat as it's tracking declining populations in reducing habitats. It deserved the award wins for both the prose and the content imo. I've read all the other shortlisted 2024 Wainwright books and the only two that came close are the travel memoir Local, A Search for Nearby Nature and Wildness, by Alastair Humphreys, and popular social history Rural, The Lives of the Working Class Countryside, by Rebecca Smith. I usually find at least one or two books I want to read through the Wainwright Prize shortlists (released August with three different categories) and I often read some of the books that don't especially appeal to me as well because they're all good one way or another.
Am considering trying to persuade a few people into a one-chapter-a-month readalong of some short, obscure, and not necessarily good anthology that's out of copyright everywhere and easily available such as Aurora Australis. If I'm not currently enjoying the reading then at least I'd appreciate the company and be amused by any ensuing fanworks. :-)
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Date: 2025-04-09 11:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-04-10 12:35 am (UTC)And then I just finished reading The Warlock in Spite of Himself in preparation for diving into another Crossroads Adventure book. It's a much better book than I'd have expected if I'd known ahead of time it was someone's first novel from 1969. OTOH, also has some of the expected faults of a popular sf novel of the time. On the third hand, contains way more political science than any reader now or then would have expected given the premise; all the stuff about popular uprisings leading to totalitarian dictatorships feels a bit awkwardly relevant, even if the author was at the time channeling paramoia about Communism.
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Date: 2025-04-10 01:44 am (UTC)I think I might be in a reading slump. I keep starting books and then not getting half way through before stopping. Just not feeling it so far this year I guess.
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Date: 2025-04-10 02:03 am (UTC)Lately I've been spending so much time working on excavating the depths of my to-read pile that I'd been beginning to forget what it's like to read a book I really enjoy, with characters I like spending time with.
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Date: 2025-04-10 02:24 am (UTC)It’s a sweet, whimsical, and energetic read.
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Date: 2025-04-10 04:02 am (UTC)I'm in a bit of a reading slump, so I'm reading very slowly. Currently on Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar, and it's decent so far, just haven't grabbed my interest yet.
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Date: 2025-04-10 06:20 am (UTC)I have one story left to go in Stag Dance by Torrey Peters. In non-fiction, I picked up Young Elizabeth by Nicola Tallis from a train station on Tuesday evening and am about a third of the way through - it's about the young life of Queen Elizabeth I, from birth to her coronation, aged 25.
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Date: 2025-04-10 09:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-04-10 12:50 pm (UTC)Next I'm eyeing the Hugo finalist list. I've only read one of the novels so I've got a lot to choose from. I'll see what the library has on the shelves to start with.
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Date: 2025-04-10 02:02 pm (UTC)However, I also read John Green's new book Everything is Tuberculosis in its entirety on Tuesday. It was fascinating, and the story of Henry Reider (a tuberculosis patient/survivor in Sierra Leone Green met in 2019) is astoundingly well-told.
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Date: 2025-04-10 07:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-04-11 01:59 pm (UTC)The main character drives by her former friend's home 12 years after she last saw her and sees her children who are somehow still 3 and 5 years old, just like they were 12 years ago. This doesn't appear to be a sci-fi book at all and I can't figure out what could be happening so I'm looking forward to getting to the end of the book and getting it all explained.