Sunday, September 29, 2024

Links I love

 


I hope that everyone had a good week! This weekend is shaping up to be busy so I hope that you enjoy these links!

  1. Unfortunately we're headed into flu season.  Here's a guide for the upcoming season!
  2. Cat lost in Yellowstone is home after traveling almost 900 miles.
  3. The top banned books of 2023.
  4. Gladiator 2 everyone!
  5. 8 of the worst Science Fiction worlds to live in.
  6. Readers' top books in the last 60 y ears.
  7. Will bananas become more scarce?
  8. Brett Favre announced that he has Parkinson's. What are the warning signs?
  9. 12 character driven novels.
  10. Journaling prompts to use in the fall.

Sunday, September 22, 2024

Links I love

 


It went from fall back to summer this week. I guess Mother Nature has to have her say!  This weekend, I'm recharging by hiking at Wildcat and staying at the hut! I hope all have a good week!

  1. FDA approves some Apple Earbuds as hearing aids.
  2. 8 signs your  pet is trying to get your attention.
  3. Marcie Rendon on writing about murdered indigenous women.
  4. Some of t he best books set on Charleston, SC.
  5. 5 best campus books.
  6. One man's journey from prison to baking.
  7. David Bowie and the digital age.
  8. I've always liked fantasy books - and now I have a new list!
  9. Classic novels of the Civil War.
  10. Mysterious horseman may have been identified.
  11. Disney advent calendars!

Thursday, September 19, 2024

REVIEW All Fours by Miranda July

 


There has been a lot of buzz about this novel and that buzz is well deserved!  I'm glad that I picked this novel up. The unnamed narrator is in her mid 40's and is a multimedia artist in Los Angeles. When we meet her, she's planning a road trip from LA to NY and has told her husband and son that this is what she wants to do. Instead of completing the journey, she pulls over in nearby Monrovia and spends $20K to revamp a cheap hotel room with the goal of spending two weeks there instead. She loves them, but feels stifled by them. While in Monrovia she meets an attractive younger man named Danny and his wife, who she hires to redecorate the motel room that she is staying in. She and Danny are tremendously attracted to each other but struggle against that attraction. 

This book reframes the concept of a mid-life crisis - traditionally, it has seemed that only men have been acknowledged as having these, but what about women who are going through a massive hormonal shift at the same time (hello menopause!). I love how this novel explored menopause, and midlife shifts for women.  In that way, it is a novel that is revolutionary - I don't remember ever reading or hearing about a novel that took on that particular topic head on (which is mind boggling when you think that half the population deals with it). I enjoyed the narrator even in her unreliable narration - she's quirky but seemingly real.  She is what she is and I liked that. The book itself is deceptively readable and hard to put down!

Definitely worth it to add to your library. 

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Links I love


 

I hope that everyone had a good weekend. We enjoyed our last weekend watching football and running this 5K.  It is making me itch for a half marathon again! I hope you enjoy these links!

  1. Four gothic and neo gothic novels about mothers.
  2. 52 doorstopper books for the long fall (and winter) evenings.
  3. I just started watching this on Netflix and I'm hooked so far. Spoiler and a second season?
  4. five books set in historical Italy.
  5. Why you feel terrible after a flu shot.
  6. RIP James Earl Jones.
  7. All th e finalists for the National Book Award
  8. This blogger read every Elin H. book and ranked them.
  9. Signs of a legit medium reading.
  10. Probably No Goonies sequel thankfully.


Monday, September 9, 2024

Links I love

 


I hope that everyone had a great week and long weekend!

  1. Christa McAuliffe has a statue now!
  2. Sweet Valley High's spiritual successors - recs for teen girls for books.
  3. Shower at night or day?
  4. 20 most fun states in the United States.
  5. Best new fall books according to Bustle.
  6. Some movies that are turning 50 this year and where to watch.
  7. Not so nice origins of the term "bookworm."
  8. September's read with Jenna list.
  9. The countries that swear the most.
  10. The oldest universities in all 50 states.
  11. Horror as social commentary.
  12. History of the Bronx with Ian Frazier.
  13. 10 signs that the workplace is toxic.

Friday, September 6, 2024

REVIEW: The Guest by Emma Cline


 

In Emma Cline's newest novel, we follow an anxious, millennial grifter as she struggles to stay afloat in a barely concealed Hamptons location over the course of one summer. I had read  The Girls, also by Cline, and remembered enjoying it (I read it a long time ago) so I got this out of the library. The basic premise is that the protagonist struggles to maintain an outward aura of coolness while inwardly, they move closer and closer to a psychological break. This is the cause in The Guest, which also uses wealth to make the wounds and progression towards break all that much more quick.

Alex, the protagonist, is a sex worker from NYC and when we meet her, has no money, no friends and no home. She is addicted to drugs and stealing. She's pissed off her roommates and her ex-boyfriend, who is an ominous presence during the entire novel. Things look up when she meets Simon, a wealthy man who defines Alex's job as only being beautiful. If she does that, he'll take care of everything else. She makes an embarrassing misstep at a dinner party, resulting in Simon getting her a one-way train ticket back to Manhattan, but Alex is nothing but dogged (or delusional) so she won't give up that easily, instead electing to remain and try to win Simon back at his Labor Day party a week after her expulsion.  The book follows Alex during the week that she tries to survive until the Labor Day party. 

I had a really hard time reading this novel. The novel itself moved very quickly and I appreciated the themes very much.  It's an interesting and important premise.  However, I did not like Alex at all and found her to be pithy. Maybe I'm not supposed to like her and that's the point, but I found her to be tiresome.  I did appreciate the sense of dread and stress that I found myself unwittingly feeling as the result of Cline's writing. I still wouldn't re-read this or even recommending reading this book for the first time.  There are too many other books out there that are way more interesting.  

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Links I love


 

That photo from above is when I went to Montgomery, AL. It was very random but the Fitzgeralds had their home there. I hope all had a good week. :) I owe you at least two reviews coming up so keep checking back.

  1. Novels to read with your book club this summer.
  2. Books about Pompeii.
  3. My son gave me this link and the recipes are easy and good. And quick!
  4. A literary road trip across America.
  5. Yay for drinking coffee!
  6. Adding rucking to your workout routine.
  7. How hurricane names are picked.

Links I love

  Two weekends ago, the weekend before Halloween, we were at Head of the Fish  and that picture was taken from the launch site.  This weeken...