Book Report

Jul. 1st, 2022 02:06 pm
stormkeeper_lovedoris: (Default)
[personal profile] stormkeeper_lovedoris
 The Magpie Lord by KJ Charles – This author wrote a trilogy that I loved, historical fiction plus mystery plus a gay lead character. It looks like this book is the first in another trilogy with the same formula, except replace ‘mystery’ with ‘the supernatural’. I’m not sure, though, what to say about this one. It didn’t grip me like the first series, and I question whether or not to read the next one. Maybe I will though. The author has written a lot of other books in this series….and dayum look at this – she’s written a lot, period! https://kjcharleswriter.com/books/

Grade: 6

 

The Barbizon by Paulina Bren – In the 1920s, a women-only hotel was created in NYC catering to white women who were heading to the Big Apple to work as writers, models, and the like. It had tiny rooms (you could lie in bed and close the door and reach your dresser), bathrooms down the hall for most floors, a strict policy of no men beyond the lobby. It was considered THE place to stay for the young and the up-and-coming white woman, though several women “failed” to marry or move on and lived there for decades. I love that someone researched and wrote a book about this. Some of the chapters get a bit boring, but I liked the section on the outcasts which included the Barbizon’s first Black resident. Today, the Barbizon has been turned into million dollar condos but the original dwellers were and are legally guaranteed the right to live there at the rate established when they first arrived in the 50s and 60s. There are 5 of the originals left, and they’ve all been upgraded to 1 bedroom condos; their legal rights include the same daily maid service as per their terms back when the first moved in. (During one of my NYC trips to see Alaska, my friend Eric and I stayed at another hotel where we were told a few of the units had original residents who’d been there for decades and who were allowed to remain there for low rents. Our room was like a small studio apartment: it had a kitchenette and a bathroom and two beds – but we couldn’t control the heat, and it was too hot in December!) Grade: 6

 

We Are The Weather by Jonathan Safran Foer – It’s hard to read books about climate change. The author doesn’t hold anything back either, laying out what the future will probably look like, and it sucks. But he’s not without hope. He provides the facts and the info to show that having two out of three meals a day without animal products will make a huge dent in the problem since animal agriculture is the biggest contributor to climate change. I had to grab onto the hopefulness while admitting that the reality of the next few decades….is scary. Grade: 8

 

(Addendum to the above review. The author points out that the 4 biggest things an individual can do about climate change are eat plant-based, avoid air travel, live car-free and have fewer children. He goes on to point out that many people don’t have a realistic ability to live car-free, most of us are not in the process of deciding whether or not to have children, and that some air travel is likely unavoidable. He also adds that of those 4, only plant-based eating addresses methane and nitrous oxide, the two most urgent greenhouse gasses. He gives other info but that’s in a nutshell how he arrives at his recommendation to avoid animal products in two of three meals each day).

 

Unthinkable by Jamie Raskin – The author is a Congressman from Maryland who suffered two horrible blows within a week: his son died by suicide and then January 6, 2020 happened. This is his memoir. Full disclosure: I did not read every word of this. There was too much. Too much about January 6, too much about the (second) impeachment vote and trial, and the fact that most Republicans continue to just do the wrong thing over and over and over again no matter what the evidence or logic or empathy would say. Yet the parts I could read were well-written and tragic and somehow readable. I loved hearing about his son’s life – his son was passionate, committed, brilliant. He’d worked as a staff member of Mercy for Animals. It’s such a tragedy that he’s gone. At one point, Raskin is going through thousands of condolence letters while preparing evidence and arguments for impeachment. How Raskin managed to weather all of this ….man, some people are a lot more resilient than I am! Grade: 7

 

Into The Forest by Rebecca Frankel – Reading a book about the Holocaust while reading the above book was not a good idea; you know, too much fascism. But putting emotions aside, this was an intriguing read. It’s the real life story of a Jewish family who hid in the Polish forest during Hitler’s reign. And there is a shocking reunion later on. Like any memoir about this subject, it’s heartbreaking and terrifying. Grade: 8

Date: 2022-07-03 07:57 pm (UTC)
rhoda_rants: Claire Danes (claire danes)
From: [personal profile] rhoda_rants
*looking up KJ Charles* Ooooooooh, I've seen these! I remember shelving in this section and getting very confused, double and triple-checking the author's name to make sure I was putting them in the right order, because there are SO MANY and they all look like they belong in a different genre.

Those last three look like they would be different to read one after the other. Yikes.

Date: 2022-07-05 03:01 am (UTC)
nytshd3: (Default)
From: [personal profile] nytshd3
What a bummer that the new series isn't grabbing your attention BUT with that many books surely she has others you will enjoy!

The Barbizon sounds amazing. I am also always totally fascinated about those rent-controlled apartments in NYC. Of course you'd stay in the same place forever! Certainly wouldn't be able to afford to go elsewhere! AND to get maid service? Amazing.

One of the interesting things to me about climate change and scientists is that they often report on _best_ case scenario stuff out of an abundance of caution. Like, hey, even in a best case scenario, this is what is likely to happen, but very very possible it's going to be much, much worse. And then it goes from 'things will be bad by 2100' to 'things will be bad by 2080' to 'things will be bad by 2040' to 'things will be bad by 2030'. Also half of the US could be uninhabitable and the republicans will still be joking on every chilly day that 'we could use some global warming about now'

I think I saw an interview with Raskin about this book. I can't even imagine how that must have been for him.

and yeah, those two in a row were a lot. I am getting myself back into reading and I'm trying to take it easy. Humor! Lightness! No concentration camps or Republicans!

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