furyofvissarion: (Default)
2009-10-11 08:49 pm

a month's worth of books to catch up on...

Popco - Scarlett Thomas. Re-read. Nothing else to say that I haven't said before: I still adore this book & find it immensely comforting & inspiring.

Wild Meat and the Bully Burgers - Lois-Ann Yamanaka. ExpandRead more... )

Short Girls - Bich Minh Nguyen. ExpandRead more... )

"Lesbians" in East Asia: Diversity, Identities, and Resistance - Edited by Diana Khor and Saori Kamano. ExpandRead more... )

Wind Follower - Carole McDonnell. ExpandRead more... )

Bone Crossed - Patricia Briggs. ExpandRead more... )

White Witch, Black Curse - Kim Harrison. ExpandRead more... )

River's Daughter - Tasha Campbell. ExpandRead more... )

Lesbians Talk: Making Black Waves - Valerie Mason-John & Ann Khambatta. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2009-07-25 05:55 pm

catching up...

Chorus of Mushrooms - Hiromi Goto. ExpandRead more... )

Song of the Exile - Kiana Davenport. ExpandRead more... )

Trumpet - Jackie Kay. ExpandRead more... )

(that was also my 50th book for the [livejournal.com profile] 50books_poc challenge, hooray!)

The Chalupa Rules: A Latino Guide to Gringolandia - Mario Bosquez. ExpandRead more... )

Kitty and the Dead Man's Hand - Carrie Vaughn. ExpandRead more... )

Kitty Raises Hell - Carrie Vaughn. ExpandRead more... )

One Foot in the Grave - Jeaniene Frost. ExpandRead more... )

Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide - Andrea Smith. ExpandRead more... )

The Other Side of Paradise - Staceyann Chin. ExpandRead more... )

The Renaissance Soul: Life Design for People with Too Many Passions to Pick Just One - Margaret Lobenstine. ExpandRead more... )

San Francisco's International Hotel: Mobilizing the Filipino American Community in the Anti-Eviction Movement - Estella Habal. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2009-06-23 08:36 pm

(no subject)

Banker to the Poor: The Story of the Grameen Bank - Muhammad Yunus with Alan Jolis. ExpandRead more... )

Second-Class Citizen - Buchi Emecheta. ExpandRead more... )

Ten Little Indians - Sherman Alexie. ExpandRead more... )

Strangers - Taichi Yamada, translated by Wayne P. Lammers. ExpandRead more... )

The Dew Breaker - Edwidge Danticat. ExpandRead more... )

Walking a Tightrope: New writing from Asian Britain - Edited by Rehana Ahmed. ExpandRead more... )

Sour Sweet - Timothy Mo. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2009-06-06 05:09 pm

(no subject)

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian - Sherman Alexie. ExpandRead more... )

Silver Phoenix - Cindy Pon. ExpandRead more... )

The Darker Mask: Heroes from the Shadows - Edited by Gary Phillips and Christopher Chambers. ExpandRead more... )

Not Without Laughter - Langston Hughes. ExpandRead more... )

Buxton Spice - Oonya Kempadoo. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2009-05-30 04:31 pm

(no subject)

Londonstani - Gautam Malkani. ExpandRead more... )

As Long As Nothing Happens, Nothing Will - Zhang Jie. ExpandRead more... )

Gorilla, My Love - Toni Cade Bambara. ExpandRead more... )

The WisCon Chronicles Vol. 3: Carnival of Feminist SF - Edited by Liz Henry. ExpandRead more... )

A Letter to My Father: Growing Up Filipina & American - Helen Madamba Mossman. ExpandRead more... )

Mella & the N'anga: An African Tale - Gail Nyoka. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2009-01-24 09:29 pm

(no subject)

A Century of Migration (Bristol's Asian Communities) - Munawar Hussain. ExpandRead more... )

Chinatown Beat - Henry Chang. ExpandRead more... )

Once Upon a Time in the North - Phillip Pullman. ExpandRead more... )

The Summoning - Kelley Armstrong. ExpandRead more... )

Club Dead - Charlaine Harris. ExpandRead more... )

Definitely Dead - Charlaine Harris. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2008-10-04 10:44 pm

(no subject)

Firestorm - Rachel Caine. ExpandRead more... )

Thin Air - Rachel Caine. ExpandRead more... )

Funny Boy - Shyam Selvadurai. ExpandRead more... )

Waiting to Be Heard: Youth Speak Out about Inheriting a Violent World - The Students of San Francisco's Thurgood Marshall Academic High School. ExpandRead more... )

PopCo - Scarlett Thomas. ExpandRead more... )

Night Child - Jes Battis. ExpandRead more... )

Into the Wild - Sarah Beth Durst. ExpandRead more... )

Gale Force - Rachel Caine. ExpandRead more... )

Out of the Wild - Sarah Beth Durst. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2008-06-29 04:44 pm

(no subject)

Air - Geoff Ryman. ExpandRead more... )

Making Waves: An Anthology of Writings By and About Asian American Women - Edited by Asian Women United of California. ExpandRead more... )

Succubus on Top - Richelle Mead. ExpandRead more... )

Finding Your Own North Star: Claiming the Life You Were Meant to Live - Martha Beck. ExpandRead more... )

Days of Disquiet, Nights of Rage: The First Quarter Storm and Related Events - Jose F. Lacaba. ExpandRead more... )

Romancing the Dead - Tate Hallaway. ExpandRead more... )

Wolf Tales - Kate Douglas. ExpandRead more... )

Topography of War: Asian American Essays - Edited by Andrea Louie & Johnny Lew. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2007-12-29 10:37 pm

(no subject)

On the Goddess Rock - Arlene J. Chai. ExpandRead more... )

One Tribe - M. Evelina Galang. ExpandRead more... )

The NuyorAsian Anthology: Asian American Writings about New York City - Edited by Bino A. Realuyo. ExpandRead more... )

Rolling the R's - R. Zamora Linmark. ExpandRead more... )

The Road to Hell - Jackie Kessler. ExpandRead more... )
furyofvissarion: (Default)
2007-10-27 07:23 pm

(no subject)

Asian American X: An Intersection of 21st Century Asian American Voices - Edited by Arar Han and John Hsu. Disappointing. The editors of this anthology admit that the book has a class bias, being mostly of pieces by middle-class (or higher, I'd say!) college students (most of them seemingly at elite universities). They circulated the call for submissions to undergraduate Asian American student organizations at over 60 universities. Well, there you go. How hard would it have been to locate, say, youth organizations that were for non-middle-class kids off-campus & send them the call for submissions too?

Of the essays they did get, many are suffused w/unexamined class privilege. One talks about how, if you are confident in your own identity, nothing, not even money, can bring you down. Er. Another one cites the morals that wouldn't let her mother leave her w/a babysitter as a child. Uh, how about the class status that allowed her mother to do that?

Even aside from this, most of the essays seemed fairly trite, & not particularly well-written for the most part. Some of them veered into the "why can't we all be colorblind"/"I'm not Asian, I'm just me" territory that makes me want to scream. The editors say that this book was not intended to be definitive, & it clearly isn't. But I don't think that's an excuse for the narrowness of its scope. I can't recommend this one, sorry.

Take Back Your Time: Fighting Overwork and Time Poverty in America - Edited by John de Graaf. Did you know that Americans, on average, work nine more weeks a year than Europeans? And the US is apparently the only developed nation w/o a minimum paid leave law? And 25 percent of Americans got no vacation at all last year? Not to mention those of us working longer & longer hours (particularly salaried employees, who are not entitled to overtime pay), sometimes even on our supposed vacations, because we're afraid of getting laid off or otherwise punished if we don't do it.

Take Back Your Time Day (on October 24, which marks the point nine weeks before the end of the year, the difference between the hours Europeans & Americans work) seeks to change all this. This anthology talks about why. And there's a lot of reasons why: aside from the health issues, & the impact on family cohesiveness, the time crunch even affects how environmentally friendly a person's lifestyle is likely to be, as well as how happy (or even how non-abused) their companion animals will be!

The essays are short but don't usually feel like they're too short, & cover a wide range of topics & perspectives. Something probably most people wouldn't have known is that W. K. Kellogg--of cereal fame--instituted a six-hour day in his factories in 1930, in the middle of the Depression. Productivity increased, & families & neighborhoods benefited from the extra two hours daily that workers had. Cutting back long work hours can actually be good for business!