Humph (
spiralsheep) wrote in
booknook2025-05-28 08:42 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
RIP (Read In Progress) Wednesday
What are you reading?
Weds is the time, is the place, is the motion,
Weds is the day we are reading....
Weds is the time, is the place, is the motion,
Weds is the day we are reading....
Aurora Australis readalong 6 / 10, An Interview with an Emperor
Reaction post 6 / 10:
https://spiralsheep.dreamwidth.org/668973.html
Text of An Interview with an Emperor, by Alastair Mackay:
https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Aurora_Australis/An_Interview_with_an_Emperor
Readalong intro and links to discussion posts 1-5:
https://spiralsheep.dreamwidth.org/662515.html
Reminder for next week, the poem Erebus by Nemo (Ernest Shackleton):
https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Aurora_Australis/Erubus
no subject
no subject
I've just read some early Muriel Spark short stories and there's not a likably character is the whole collection. Why? /rhetorical
no subject
Ah, interesting. Ha, ha, that disappointing. Yeah, why would you make nobody likable? Not one? And we haven't got to the murder yet so that's disappointing. I have my thoughts about what the 'twist' will be but I really don't care. They can all hang as far as I'm concerned.
no subject
I also finished listening to 'The Mistake' by Wendy James yesterday and 'Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear' by Seanan McGuire today as it's only short. Next up is 'The Golden Enclaves' by Naomi Novik - I'm not loving this series like I did with Uprooted but I'll stick with it to the end of this volume. In physical format, I'm almost at the end of 'Earthsea - the first four books' by Ursula le Guin (still - hopefully it'll be finished before the end of the month) and 'The Murderbot Diaries Vol 2' by Martha Wells. I think I need to look through my TBR pile for a few things that I'm excited to read when I've got through these (although the Murderbot ones are good - I loved the audio versions but this is my first opportunity to have the in print versions).
no subject
no subject
And Don't Kiss Me, the Art of Claude Cahun & Marcel Moore, which is a collection of essays about the lives and art of CC & MM, plus a generously illustrated catalogue of the Jersey Heritage Trust's collection of Cahun & Moore's art, letters, and other archived documents such as news clippings. 4/5
And Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries, by Heather Fawcett, a fantasy romance novel. 4/5
And Never Anyone but You, by Rupert Thomson, a historical novel about Lucie Schwob (Claude Cahun) and Suzanne Malherbe (Marcel Moore) which managed to combine the historical and the novel aspects very well. Warning for the Second World War, plus suicides, and anorexia. 4/5
no subject
no subject
I started The Anti-Ableist Manifesto by Tiffany Yu last night for a change. This appears to be very surface-level so far, which reminds me that I should probably pick up some more indepth books on disability in the future.
no subject
no subject
I'm still working through A Choice of Catastrophes. I've been increasingly encountering reminders that the book is fifty years old: the section on asteroid impacts doesn't say a word about the dinosaur-killer asteroid, for instance, because that wasn't in the conversation yet in 1979. I've just started the section on ice ages, and it'll be interesting to see if 1979 Asimov has anything to say about anthropogenic climate change.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject