Books for January
Feb. 2nd, 2020 09:54 pmOK,
rachelmanija has raised the challenge to blog about every single book read this year. I don't know that I can handle this for an entire year, but let's take this a month at a time and see :) Fortunately (I guess?) I didn't read too many books this month, so I can do it for this month :P
Émilie du Châtelet: Daring Genius of the Enlightenment (Judith Zinsser) - reviewed in a portmanteau post here along with
mildred_of_midgard's review of a Voltaire/du Châtelet bio by David Bodaris. (To find my review, scroll down about halfway or search for my username.) Briefly, I liked the bio a lot; although Zinsser had a couple of flaws as a biographer (I'm not always convinced of her arguments) but they were ones I could live with; and as a very big plus she generally is good about citing her sources. She also clearly really doesn't like Voltaire :) (And may have convinced me. What do you do with a guy who, comparing his writing a play to Émilie's just having had a kid (and by the way was also finishing her math-physics magnum opus AT THE SAME TIME, LITERALLY ON HER BIRTHING BED), says, "I am one hundred times more fatigued than she." )
Wylding Hall (Elizabeth Hand) - 4/5. This is an interesting and weird book that
rachelmanija's review convinced me to read. Apparently I missed
skygiant's review entirely?? because that would have convinced me to read it too. (Mild spoiler -- the same spoiler -- at both links.) It's told entirely in a series of interviews with people in or associated with a folk rock band, and I am here for that!
But also --
skygiants described it as "Wylding Hall feels like someone took the premise of 'what if FAIRIES! met a FOLK ROCK BAND!' and ruthlessly stripped all the romanticism out of it and just kind of let a chilly wind blow through the empty spaces that were left." And, yeah.
(ROT-13'd for spoilers, but
jung jnf hc jvgu gur raqvat?? Yvxr, V gubhtug V jnf sbyybjvat gung gur tvey vf guvf snrevr/zbafgre/jera gung Whyvna pnyyf naq gung qribhef uvz va fbzr jnl. Ohg gura ubj qbrf ur fubj hc ntnva va gur irel ynfg erzvavfprapr?)
The Dutch House (Ann Pratchett) - 4/5. The blurb that made me want to read it is "stepmother kicks brother and sister out of their house." Because, uh, family history (my step-grandmother kicked my dad and his sister out of the house). But it's really a story about families and people, and I really liked it.
The Quantum Doctor (some guy I don't remember) - 1/5 DNF. UGH. This is the kind of book I hate more than anything because it preys on people's troubles with legit medical issues AND is horrible terrible no-good very bad science, and I only looked at it because my sister asked me to. Even then I had to stop after the first couple of chapters. Like, I don't even disagree with his main idea that mind and body affect one another! But don't bring quantum consciousness (ARRRRGH) into it.
Best Science Fiction Stories of Clifford D. Simak (Simak) - reread. I was looking for something sweet and comforting and Simak isn't always that, but he is frequently that. He believes that human beings are good at heart, that we can grow and learn, and I just wanted to read something like that. My favorite story is "Immigrant," which maybe reads as old-fashioned these days, but is just really... sweet.
Émilie du Châtelet: Daring Genius of the Enlightenment (Judith Zinsser) - reviewed in a portmanteau post here along with
Wylding Hall (Elizabeth Hand) - 4/5. This is an interesting and weird book that
But also --
(ROT-13'd for spoilers, but
jung jnf hc jvgu gur raqvat?? Yvxr, V gubhtug V jnf sbyybjvat gung gur tvey vf guvf snrevr/zbafgre/jera gung Whyvna pnyyf naq gung qribhef uvz va fbzr jnl. Ohg gura ubj qbrf ur fubj hc ntnva va gur irel ynfg erzvavfprapr?)
The Dutch House (Ann Pratchett) - 4/5. The blurb that made me want to read it is "stepmother kicks brother and sister out of their house." Because, uh, family history (my step-grandmother kicked my dad and his sister out of the house). But it's really a story about families and people, and I really liked it.
The Quantum Doctor (some guy I don't remember) - 1/5 DNF. UGH. This is the kind of book I hate more than anything because it preys on people's troubles with legit medical issues AND is horrible terrible no-good very bad science, and I only looked at it because my sister asked me to. Even then I had to stop after the first couple of chapters. Like, I don't even disagree with his main idea that mind and body affect one another! But don't bring quantum consciousness (ARRRRGH) into it.
Best Science Fiction Stories of Clifford D. Simak (Simak) - reread. I was looking for something sweet and comforting and Simak isn't always that, but he is frequently that. He believes that human beings are good at heart, that we can grow and learn, and I just wanted to read something like that. My favorite story is "Immigrant," which maybe reads as old-fashioned these days, but is just really... sweet.
no subject
Date: 2020-02-03 09:43 pm (UTC)Look at the dude's other books! He basically just inserts the word "quantum" into a title.
Quantum Doctor
Quantum Creativity
Quantum Economics
How Quantum Activism Can Save Civilization
The Quantum Science of Happiness
The Quantum Book of Living, Dying, Reincarnation, and Immortality
no subject
Date: 2020-02-04 05:21 am (UTC)I love your icon, though. VERY relevant.