Constant Reader discussion
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Constant Reader
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What I'm Reading - May - June 2021
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Mary Anne
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May 02, 2021 05:02AM

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Home – Nnedi Okorafor – 4****
Book 2 in the marvelous “Binti” science fiction trilogy. Okorafor is a wonderful storyteller! I love the way she crafts her tale, combining science fiction and traditional mysticism. I also like how she weaves in a message of social justice and against racism. Binti is one strong female lead. I’m looking forward to Book 3, to see how (I’m not even wondering whether) Binti manages to bring peace between warring factions and ensure the future of her people.
My full review HERE

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I'm about halfway through now with Hamnet for our upcoming discussion. I hope that a lot of you are reading it; it's an easy, pleasant read.



Mary, I loved it, too and was just trying to choose an audiobook version — Donal Donnelly, Colin Farrell or a BBC Dramatization — I’m not sure which narrator I’ll choose.


And Lost in a Good Book












Oh yeah, thoroughly enjoyed this one. Good blend of blazing action and tough but poignant family life. I believe he has new one coming out shortly, with new protagonist.

Recently bought an old Heritage Press edition with good illustrations. Been 30+ years since first read. Need to reread.

It really was an awful but breathtaking story, Tom. I'll need to steel myself for the next one, I think. :)

The conclusion poses ethical considerations for the humane treatment of all animals who are, scientists are coming to believe, sentient creatures. An interesting statistic to consider in that regard: 3/4 of the world’s vertebrate biomass is in the farming industry.





Just started listening to an audio version (all I could get from library) of Beach Music. Am having the odd experience of not liking the narrator, who reads in a fast, no nonsense style, while the language of the book is lush and dramatic..., so I'm experiencing a disconnect. I may end up waiting to get the book and read it.





I've just started "really" reading it after reading references to Eleanor Roosevelt via the index.

Lynne Olson is a favorite of mine.







Not one I've come across but now on my list. Mary, if you are reading Yaa Gyasi's Transcendent Kingdom with CR group then it could be an interesting tie in as church plays a huge part in Gifty's story. I read the book as my in person book club choice for our last meeting

I'm 2/3 the way through his novel Leaving the Atocha Station. It is a rambling, uncertain, first person fictional (?) memoire of an American student's time in Spain. He's drunk and or drugged up for a lot of it, a poet supposedly writing but with no intention of completing the work required by his scholarship - his project is “a long, research-driven poem” exploring the legacy of the Spanish Civil War about which he knows nothing - instead he is hiding behind the supposed inadequacy of his Spanish as he negotiates friendships and lovers, translators of his poems, reading Tolstoy, Ashbery and Cerventes in a spaced out stupor. All that said the novel and the writings is very engaging, oftimes funny, clearly the writer has a way with words and a little research showed me that he is in fact a published poet. The Audio version is narrated by the author himself and I found it very good to listen to, helping me truly 'hear' the voice of his main character and get the book's humour. I'm very taken with his writing hence my initial question.

I agree that there was a lot to learn from this book. What our country did is criminal.



I enjoyed this book, too. Thought I knew Roman history pretty well, but Beards fills in lots of gaps for me, filling out the grand, big picture in the process. Her essay collection is quite good, too. Confronting the Classics: Traditions, Adventures and Innovations(and available in audio for stair-master readers!)


Quite a Year For Plums – Bailey White – 3***
A charming look at the eccentric people who inhabit a small town in Georgia. I had a hard time getting into the book. That was my problem, I think, rather than the book’s. I usually enjoy these slower, meandering, character-driven works, but it just didn’t quite work for me at this time. It was okay. There was nothing really wrong with it. But I barely remember it just a day after finishing it.
My full review HERE








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I rated it *** stars. It was gritty and raw. It showed Odessa Texas in the mid-70s, and truly, the town today is as horrible as it was then. It's the oilfields of Texas and is truly like hell on earth, and it smells horribly just like in the story. The men are damaged because of the nature of the work they do - men's men, macho, dirty.

As I Lay Dying is my favorite. Many years ago, when Constant Reader was much smaller, we went on a Faulkner binge. Read almost everything of his. We had a great time.

Having worked in the oilfield myself (in Wyoming, Colorado, and Nebraska, not Texas), and having been born & raised around others who did so as well, I take some exception to this. There certainly were some misogynistic, macho men in the patch. There were also a lot of others. And I’m not saying “not all roughnecks”; I’m saying those kind of men weren’t even necessarily the norm. The oilfield has a different culture in different places. I wouldn’t live in Rock Springs, WY again for any reason, and the oilfield is partly why. But in the Nebraska panhandle and in northeast Colorado, it was a perfectly fine job. The work was the same, more or less (rough on the body, certainly, and taxing on relationships), but the culture was different—in both locations, the attitudes of oilfield workers (towards women, e.g.) didn’t vary greatly from the attitudes of the miners, farmers, ranchers, factory workers, or other men around the area.
I haven’t read this book, or spent much time in TX, but there’s more to a deep cultural misogyny than just the type of work people are doing.
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