Reviews
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Book Review: The Girls of Atomic City by Denise Kiernan
The Girls of Atomic City by Denise Kiernan is my favorite kind of history book. It takes the backdrop of a major even in history – in this case the creation of the atomic bomb – and puts in front of it the stories of everyday people who were involved. This is not the story of Oppenheimer or Fermi, though they are in here. This is not the story of Roosevelt or Truman, though they are obviously part of it. It is the stories of a few young women (and men) who worked in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, not even knowing what it was they were working on, and how those…
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Book Review: The Country of Ice Cream Star by Sandra Newman
I honestly am not certain how to review The Country of Ice Cream Star by Sandra Newman. I found it via Slate’s Underrated Books of 2015 list and saw that it was a YA dystopian novel. That’s perfect for me. Sara Goldsmith, who recommended it on Slate, thought that perhaps the reason it was underrated was the invented dialect in which people speak. I am here to tell you that is the number one reason to read the book. The dialect is beautiful. It may take a few pages to really get into it, but once you do, it just seems perfect. I cannot tell you how many times, while…
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Book Review: Uprooted by Naomi Novik
Uprooted is the story of a young woman taken by the local wizard to live in his tower for the next ten years. I feel like say more is to rob the reader of the joy of discovering the story on their own. Naomi Novik has written a lovely kind of fairy tale, and old fashion fantasy, filled with knights on horseback, wizards in their high towers, and lovely maidens be stolen away. It is a fairy tale, but one in which there is nuance, where evil is evil, yes, but something more, too. Where enemies come from multiple directions, and not all from evil, but perhaps with competing priorities.…
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Book Review: Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee
To Kill a Mockingbird was one of those rare books I managed to fall in love with despite my freshman English teacher (who was just certain our entire class was lying about not being bothered by Scout and Jem calling their father by his first name). I still own a copy and have re-read it a few times in the last 25 years. So when Go Set a Watchman came out, I knew I would read it. Go Set a Watchman is not so much a “coming of age” novel as it is a “becoming an adult” novel, because those really are two separate things. Scout has grown up. She…
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Book Review: The Golem and the Jinni by Helene Wecker
The real reason to read The Golem and the Jinni is for the writing, and by that I mean, for Helene Wecker’s use of language, and the way she combines ordinary words into something fantastical. I do not mean to take away from the story, which is good, or the characters, who are likable and (mostly) fully realized. But this is not a story which will blow your mind. These are not characters you will be aching for “more” about. What stands out in this book is the writing itself, and it is beautiful. The story is pretty basic. There is a Golem. She is brought to life on the…
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Book Review: YA Series – Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins and Divergent Trilogy by Veronica Roth
Sometimes I feel like I should write a separate review for each of these two series, but the truth is, I read them intertwined with one another, and my thoughts on each are deeply connected to my thoughts on the other. The other thing to mention, I think, is that in both cases, I saw the movie for the first book before I read any of the books. And to get it out of the way, I think The Hunger Games is the best book out of the six, but that overall, Divergent is the better series. In both cases we have a young woman as our protagonist. She is…
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Book Review: Mr. and Mrs. Disreali: A Strange Romance by Daisy Hay
It is the end of the year, and that means all sorts of “year’s best” lists are coming out. I like to troll the lists of books for any that seem interesting, that I may have missed. It was on one of those lists that I came across Mr. and Mrs. Disreali: A Strange Romance by Daisy Hay. This is a non-fiction book. It is kind of a biography, kind of not. I very much suspect that the majority of it was Hay’s dissertation, or something similar. This book traces the lives and relationship of Mr. and Mrs. Disreali. Do you know who they are? I did not, not before…
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Book Review: The Slow Regard of Silent Things by Patrick Rothfuss
When I talked to C about reading The Slow Regard of Silent Things, he mentioned that as much as he has enjoyed the first two books of the Kingkiller Chronicle, he had very little interest in this book. Of all the secondary characters he wanted to know more about, Auri was not high on the list. Besides, did we really need her origin story? Well, turns out, The Slow Regard of Silent Things is NOT an Auri origin story. It is an Auri story. Set concurrent with the other books. It is a story of the things underneath the Academy and how Auri feels herself to fit in amongst them.…
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Book Review: You’re Never Weird on the Internet (Almost) by Felicia Day
First, this book is almost exactly the length of a flight from Seattle to Minneapolis. Second, if you are looking for a book that tells you how Felicia Day met Wil Wheaton and Joss Whedon, this is not it. Joss wrote the intro, and he is mentioned once in the book. Wil is also referenced once, in the chapter on Gamergate, and only in that he called Felicia to tell her to disable comments on a post. That post is also only the second time her recurring role on Supernatural is mentioned. To be clear, this is not a book about any relationships. Her relationship with her brother, is barely…
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Book Review: The Water Knife by Paolo Bacigalupi
Back when I wrote my review of The First Law Trilogy by Joe Abercrombie, I said this: Books don’t necessarily have to have happy endings for me to like them. If a book can make me think, if it can leave me in tears, those are good things. But I’ll be honest, I do like my stories with a little bit of hope at the end. I read for enjoyment. I don’t read horror for a reason- I don’t enjoy it. If you are not going to give me a happy ending, or at least a moment of hope (Children of Men is one of my favorite movies ever, though…