furyofvissarion: (Default)
No More Bull! The Mad Cowboy Targets America's Worst Enemy: Our Diet - Howard F. Lyman with Glen Merzer and Joanna Samorow-Merzer. This short book felt like it didn't really provide a ton of information not covered in other books, like Mad Cowboy (Lyman's previous book), but it was quick & readable. I didn't know about the possible connection between Alzheimer's & meat & dairy, though--v. frightening. There's also an extensive recipe section, which has a lot of basic stuff for beginners.

Brother, I'm Dying - Edwidge Danticat. Absolutely wrenching. Haitian-American novelist Danticat gives us an account of her father & uncle's lives, looking backwards from their deaths: her father's of pulmonary fibrosis, & her Uncle Joseph of pancreatis, which occurred while he was in detention in Miami after requesting asylum. Even though Joseph was 81 & ailing, & had just had his church in Haiti burned down & his life threatened by gangs, he was thrown into detention & didn't receive proper medical care (I actually remember writing letters through Amnesty International requesting an investigation into the circumstances of his death, when this happened).

Joseph was a second father to Danticat for years, while her parents were in the US working. The book portrays the agony of families separated this way really well--& also what it feels like when Danticat & her brother are sent to rejoin their parents in New York:
"Uncle seemed sad," Bob answered for me. "I think he was sad to see us leave."
"I suppose that's how it is sometimes," my father said in a whisper of a voice. "One papa happy, one papa sad."

Others in Danticat's family make multiple migrations as well, spurred in part by the political turbulence going on in Haiti: to Cuba, to the Dominican Republic, to the US, sometimes leaving & reclaiming children in the same way. And even though this is obviously sad & painful, it also shows the strength of family bonds, how people are willing to step up & take care of children who need it, how supportive of each other Danticat's family is.

The writing is clear & simple; Danticat doesn't need to use fancy tricks in order to break your heart.

Smoke and Shadows - Tanya Huff. This book is the first in a new series following Tony & Henry from Huff's Blood series. Unfortunately, it left me kind of cold. I think that's partly because Vicki & Mike are missing, & the interplay between all four of them adds more interest than when it's just Tony & Henry. Also, the premise: seven years ago, a wizard fleeing the destruction of her world opened a gate into ours. Now, the gate is open again & the Shadowlord is trying to destroy this world, too. It just made me feel like, weren't vampires & zombies etc. on Earth enough? The secondary-world stuff just felt kind of annoying. Also, the wizard, a woman named Arra who works in the same TV studio as Tony, is really irritating. I'll probably end up reading the next Smoke book, anyway, but if it's like this one I'll probably put it down.

Bento Box in the Heartland: My Japanese Girlhood in Whitebread America - Linda Furiya. Furiya grew up in the only Japanese American family in Versailles, Indiana. Her memoir has some good insights about shame, & how white friends alternately acted like her family's cultural differences were exotically exciting or anathema. I got frustrated w/the zillion typos & other errors (for example, each chapter ends w/a recipe, & one recipe appears twice; also, who was the fact-checker that thought that Finland was famous for its hot springs???), though. The writing is decent enough, but I finished the book feeling like something had been missing.

Mortal Engines - Philip Reeve. I knew I had to read this book when I saw the first sentence: "It was a dark, blustery afternoon in spring, and the city of London was chasing a small mining town across the dried-out bed of the old North Sea." In this book, Municipal Darwinism holds sway over Europe--now the Great Hunting Ground; cities & towns chase each other & devour the weaker ones. The barbarian static cities of the Anti-Traction League--that include China & India--are behind a huge wall. London has plans, however, to open up that part of the world. Tom Natsworthy, a Third Class Apprentice in the Guild of Historians, gets caught up in these plans inadvertently when he saves the city hero, Head Historian Thaddeus Valentine, from girl assassin Hester Shaw. The book is fundamentally a fun adventure story, & it succeeds on this one. There's also some critique of imperialism & war & growth for growth's sake, which was reassuring, since it was set out pretty quickly that the non-European nations were barbaric for not having traction cities. This is the first book in a series, & I'll be continuing on to read the next one for sure.

Grave Sight - Charlaine Harris. After being hit by lightning as a teenager, Harper Connolly can sense dead people, & how they died. She & her stepbrother Tolliver use this unique skill to make their living, although often the same people who hire them are disgusted & disbelieving. Harper & Tolliver are in Sarne, Arkansas, paid to locate the body of a teenage girl. But when the body is found, & that of her boyfriend, someone else is killed, Harper gets threatened multiple times, & the sheriff advises them not to leave town just yet. In all of Harris' books that I've read, I like that she writes about small towns like someone who knows them well (as I believe she does): with a good eye for both their charms & their weaknesses; she doesn't condescend, either. Here she captures the oppressive atmosphere of a small town where most of the people seem to have it in for you (Harper's talent must come from the devil, & why did she stir up all this stuff, etc. etc.). I also like that her characters are people who have to work for a living, & that they tend to be rather matter-of-fact. Sometimes this means they end up sounding a bit similar, though; I'm not sure that Harper sounds all the different from Lily Bard or Sookie Stackhouse to me just yet.

behind!

Jan. 27th, 2008 07:56 pm
furyofvissarion: (Default)
Starting off 2008 by letting this journal sit too long. Here are mostly-brief writeups of what I've read thus far:

Felinestein: Pampering the Genius in Your Cat - Suzanne Delzio and Cynthia Ribarich. Read more... )

The Shadow Speaker - Nnedi Okorafor-Mbachu. Read more... )

Parrotfish - Ellen Wittlinger. Read more... )

Not Home, But Here: Writing from the Filipino Diaspora - Edited by Luisa A. Igloria. Read more... )

Homelands: Women's Journeys Across Race, Place, and Time - Edited by Patricia Justine Tumang and Jenesha de Rivera. Read more... )

The Feeling Good Handbook - David D. Burns, M.D. Read more... )

Learn to Play Go: A Master's Guide to the Ultimate Game - Janice Kim and Jeong Soo-hyun. Read more... )

The Blood Books, Volume Three - Tanya Huff. Read more... )

The Thread That Binds the Bones - Nina Kiriki Hoffman. Read more... )

Extras - Scott Westerfeld. Read more... )

The Sherwood Ring - Elizabeth Marie Pope. Read more... )

Poltergeist - Kat Richardson. Read more... )

The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex - Edited by INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence. Read more... )

Stormwitch - Susan Vaught. Read more... )

So Long Been Dreaming: Postcolonial Science Fiction & Fantasy - Edited by Nalo Hopkinson & Uppinder Mehan. Read more... )

The Rules for Hearts - Sara Ryan. Read more... )

Dime Store Magic - Kelley Armstrong. Read more... )

Industrial Magic - Kelley Armstrong. Read more... )

PopCo - Scarlett Thomas. Read more... )
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The Vampire Tapestry - Suzy McKee Charnas. Read more... )

Rebolusyon! A Generation of Struggle in the Philippines - Benjamin Pimentel. Read more... )

Redemption: The Myth of Pet Overpopulation and the No Kill Revolution in America - Nathan J. Winograd. Read more... )

Prom Nights from Hell - Meg Cabot, Kim Harrison, Michele Jaffe, Stephenie Meyer, Lauren Myracle. Read more... )
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The Emotional Lives of Animals - Marc Bekoff. Read more... )

Vegan Freak: Being Vegan in a Non-Vegan World - Bob Torres and Jenna Torres. Read more... )

The Asian Mystique: Dragon Ladies, Geisha Girls, & Our Fantasies of the Exotic Orient - Sheridan Prasso. Read more... )

Tantalize - Cynthia Leitich Smith. Read more... )

Name Me Nobody - Lois-Ann Yamanaka. Read more... )

Appetite for Profit: How the Food Industry Undermines Our Health and How to Fight Back - Michele Simon. Read more... )

Heads by Harry - Lois-Ann Yamanaka. Read more... )

The Dogs Who Found Me: What I've Learned from Pets Who Were Left Behind - Ken Foster. Read more... )
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What the Dog Did: Tales from a Formerly Reluctant Dog Owner - Emily Yoffe. Read more... )

Kitty Takes a Holiday - Carrie Vaughn. Read more... )

Cat Women: Female Writers on Their Feline Friends - Edited by Megan McMorris. Read more... )

A Snowflake in My Hand - Samantha Mooney. Read more... )

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life - Barbara Kingsolver, with Steven L. Hopp & Camille Kingsolver. Read more... )

The Blood Books, Volume Two - Tanya Huff. Read more... )

Real Vampires Have Curves - Gerry Bartlett. Read more... )

No Humans Involved - Kelley Armstrong. Read more... )

Tripping to Somewhere - Kristopher Reisz. Read more... )

Blue Bloods - Melissa de la Cruz. Read more... )

We Don't Need Another Wave: Dispatches from the Next Generation of Feminists - Edited by Melody Berger. Read more... )

White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son - Tim Wise. Read more... )

Restoried Selves: Autobiographies of Queer Asian/Pacific American Activists - Edited by Kevin K. Kumashiro, Ph.D. Read more... )
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Blood Bound - Patricia Briggs. Read more... )

Dead Sexy - Tate Hallaway. Read more... )

Hothouse Kids: The Dilemma of the Gifted Child - Alissa Quart. Read more... )

Does My Head Look Big in This? - Randa Abdel-Fattah. Read more... )
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Why We Love the Dogs We Do: How to Find the Dog that Matches Your Personality - Stanley Coren. Read more... )

All Together Dead - Charlaine Harris. Read more... )

Half Life - Shelley Jackson. Read more... )

The Autumn Castle - Kim Wilkins. Read more... )

Bananas, Beaches and Bases: Making Feminist Sense of International Politics - Cynthia Enloe. Read more... )
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The Blood Books, Volume One - Tanya Huff. Read more... )

Think Like a Cat: How to Raise a Well-Adjusted Cat, Not a Sour Puss - Pam Johnson-Bennett. Read more... )

The Dedalus Book of Finnish Fantasy - Edited by Johanna Sinisalo. Read more... )
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Horns and Wrinkles - Joseph Helgerson. Read more... )

Whole Health for Happy Cats - Sandy Arora. Read more... )

Cat vs. Cat: Keeping Peace When You Have More Than One Cat - Pam Johnson-Bennett. Read more... )

For a Few Demons More - Kim Harrison. Read more... )

The New Natural Cat: A Complete Guide for Finicky Owners - Anitra Frazier. Read more... )

White Time - Margo Lanagan. Read more... )
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Behold the Many - Lois-Ann Yamanaka. Yamanaka's books are always heartwrenching, & this is no exception. It's Hawaii in 1913, & Anah & her two sisters have been taken away from their home & put into an tuberculosis orphanage for children whose families can't afford treatment. Eventually, Anah's sisters die, & she lives the rest of her life fighting off their bitter, angry hauntings. Sometimes magical realism is hard for me to sink my teeth into (odd considering how much fantasy I read), but this was amazing: disturbing & compelling & upsetting. Yamanaka always gives a real window into poor, multicultural communities in Hawaii. I love the other books of hers that I've read (& I don't think Blu's Hanging is anti-Filipino--I don't think anyone in that book gets off lightly), but this one might be the best.

Kissing Sin - Keri Arthur. And now for something completely different! This is the second in a series, & not much of a departure from the first (Full Moon Rising): slightly ridiculous plotlines, lots of smut, & too many beautiful people. Still, this is fun, if fluffy. Riley Jenson is half-vampire, half-werewolf, which makes her really attractive to scientists trying to genetically engineer super-creatures. Plus, in this universe, werewolves have a massive sex drive. Hence, danger! Sex! Danger! Sex! I don't mind the "werewolves must have lots of sex" world-rule from any sort of moral basis--I think it's neat to have a female protagonist who argues that sex can just be sex, for fun, & there's nothing immoral about it. But it still seems a bit silly in how it's deployed in the plot, even if it makes for lots of steaminess. Whatever, I'll keep reading, although I probably will never reread this series.
furyofvissarion: (Default)
Reading Matters: What the Research Reveals about Reading, Libraries, and Community - Catherine Sheldrick Ross, Lynne (E.F.) McKechnie, and Paulette M. Rothbauer. Read more... )

Farthing - Jo Walton. Read more... )

The Machine's Child - Kage Baker. Read more... )

Nobody Passes: Rejecting the Rules of Gender and Conformity - Edited by Mattilda a.k.a. Matt Bernstein Sycamore. Read more... )

Murder by Magic: Twenty Tales of Crime & the Supernatural - Edited by Rosemary Edghill. Read more... )

Greywalker - Kat Richardson. Read more... )

Making Peace with the Things in Your Life: Why Your Papers, Books, Clothes, & Other Possessions Keep Overwhelming You - and What to Do About It - Cindy Glovinsky. Read more... )

Home, and Other Big, Fat Lies - Jill Wolfson. Read more... )

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Readers' Advisory: The Librarian's Guide to Cyborgs, Aliens, & Sorcerers - Derek M. Buker. Read more... )

Homage to Catalonia - George Orwell. Read more... )

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