Crystal Rain - Tobias Buckell. I almost didn't read this, because for some reason I thought it was a lot more science fiction-y than I normally go for (I skew towards fantasy, big time). But I saw a glowing review on the
50books_poc community (
here, &
here's one about
Ragamuffin, the sequel) & thought I'd give it a try. I'm so glad I did! There were a few times where I had to do things like poke my partner on the subway & squee ("Airship battle!!!!1").
Ahem. Anyway. John deBrun remembers only the past 27 years of his life, when he washed up on the beach in Nanagada, where the Caribbean descendants of "old-fathers" (who came to the planet via a worm-hole) live. Aside from the frustration of his missing memories, he's pretty content: wife, son, etc. etc. A constant threat to Nanagada from the south are the Azteca; their invasion of Nanagada comes pretty early on in the book, & John gets caught up in a quest for an old-father artifact that is probably the Nanagadans' last hope. Reading the book made me realize that any sort of invasion in a plot scares the crap out of me. I spent a lot of the time, when I wasn't squeeing (did I mention airships?), in dread.
The book runs really fast; there's so much fun adventure-y stuff, but w/o being fluff (not that I don't enjoy fluff, btw). Anyway--I thought the handling of dialect/accents/whatever (I'm no linguist) was well done; I didn't find it hard to read @ all, but scanning reviews online, apparently not having Standard English is, like, zomg scary! And, this goes w/o saying, but YAY for science fiction that feature POCs all over the place. I am psyched to read the sequel.
Introduction to Animal Rights: Your Child or the Dog? - Gary L. Francione. Francione systematically eliminates common arguments for why animals should be treated as property (as, in fact, they are legally now). His writing is succinct & clear, which is nice given how much stuff written by lawyers I've seen be totally head-wrecking before. I found the book really upsetting @ times b/c he is graphic about what animals slaughtered for food & tortured in research labs experience. But, y'know, some folks need a wake-up call.
I learned a lot about how jacked up the legal system is about animals: for example, if you treat your factory-farmed animals cruelly, but it is common practice in the industry or it is seen as necessary to make the animal more useful to humans, then it magically doesn't count as cruelty in the legal world. Also, some guys broke into an animal shelter & beat something like 16 cats w/baseball bats.
They only got charged w/a misdemeanor, not a felony, b/c, as they successfully argued, the cats were in the shelter b/c no one wanted them, hence they must be almost worthless. I was also shocked @ how many philosophers have tried to argue that animals have no interest in their own lives continuing, or in avoiding pain. Eh?
Francione placed the
appendix of the book online; it features the answers to 20 questions he gets asked most frequently about animal rights. It's a good summation of some of the issues in the book.