Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Every Book a Winner or Came Close!

 

    North Woods by Daniel Mason is a fantastic book. It is filed under historical fiction but contains a ribbon of magical realism that gradually becomes apparent. The book starts with two Puritan lovers who run away to Western Massachusetts and proceeds through history until the present day, changing narrators with each chapter. It took a while to understand what was going on, I think, intentionally. As the filaments of stories coalesced into whole cloth, I was captured. I like a mind-bending story, and North Woods is that.

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 Good, Sad, Hopeful

    James McBride's award-winning book, The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store, is worth every minute spent reading it. The book opens with the discovery of a body in a well with a Mezuzah. The police go to the only Jewish person left on Chicken Hill in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, to find answers. The rest of the book, jumps back to the 1920s to explain the mystery. McBride vividly paints each character in his large cast, often giving their origin story. The reader comes to know Chona, Dodo, Nate, and others richly and is invested in their struggles. Because it is the 1920s and the characters are primarily black and Jewish, they face many hardships. McBride paints a painful picture of intricate relationships fueled by kindness, power, and the struggle to flourish.

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    I've been laid low this week with a stomach bug and sought comfort in fantasy. A River Enchanted by Rebecca Ross was a great choice. It was nominated as Goodread's best fantasy novel of 2022. Ross builds an intricate web of a world. Jack Tamerlaine is summoned home by his Laird from his training as a musician on the mainland. Young girls are being stolen from the Eastern side of the divided island where the spirits of the water, earth and wind are both kind and cruel. Magic surrounds the inhabitants, but there is a steep cost to using it. River Enchanted meets all the requirements of a fantasy series: reluctant hero, strong heroine, love, rivalry, danger and mystery. It is also part of series, so I now I'm waiting for the next book to become available.

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🎢🧝‍♀️🌬️🌱🌊πŸ”₯

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

πŸŽ­πŸΊπŸ›️Greek Tragedy and 2 Fun Fantasy Books πŸ§™‍♀️πŸ²πŸ¦‡πŸŽ¨πŸ–Œ️

 

    When the main character is famous for killing her husband, the king, because he sacrificed their daughter to the gods, you're prepared for tragedy. Costanza Casati's novel Clytemnestra balances the tragedies that Clytemnestra faces with her fierce intelligence and strength. As a warrior princess of Sparta who rules Mycenae while her husband fights in the Trojan War, Clytemnestra is a wonderfully complex woman. I found this book captivating and couldn't stop reading it except to occasionally go and look up a character to see what happened to them--like Aeschellus, Orestes, and Menelaus. 

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    Castle Hangnail by Ursula Vernon was a humorous middle-grade fantasy book. Ursula Vernon, also known as T. Kingfisher, is an author I'm crushing on currently. I'm willing to read anything she's written. Vernon writes delightful characters that you want to succeed. This book has an ensemble cast of minions like a goldfish, bat, and donkey/dragon, but the main character is a twelve-year-old trying hard to be a wicked witch. There are many secrets and "time bombs" that propel the story along. Castle Hangnail is aimed at middle-schoolers, but I was caught up in the story and had difficulty putting it down at bedtime.

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    Illuminations by T. Kingfisher is a fantasy middle-grade book about an Italian Renaissance family who makes illuminations that give magical protection to the things they are painted on. Rosa Mandolini accidentally releases a Scarling--an evil mandrake who steals magic from illumination--who seeks to destroy the family's livelihood. As things go wrong, Rosa's family blames her for the damage. Afraid to tell her family, she needs to recapture the Scarling. It is not a job she can complete alone. To help her, she has a thieving crow and her no-longer-best friend. Kingfisher is a suspenseful, gifted storyteller.

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Wednesday, February 14, 2024

ChristmasπŸŽ„, Horror πŸ’€, Fantasy 🧚‍♀️, and Black History Month



    I reserved this book in December, and it only became available this week, but I'm up for keeping Christmas in my heart all year! Three Holidays and a Wedding by Uzma Jalaluddin and Marissa Stapley is a holiday romance book placed during the rare intersection of Ramadan, Hanukkah, and Christmas. Two main characters, Maryam and Anna, are on the same flight to Canada when the weather grounds them in a small, picturesque Christmas town. Even though the book is full of holiday romance tropes--meet-cutes, mistaken identity, being snowed-in, let's do-a-show, and a nod to Dickin's Christmas Carol--it is delightfully done. 

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    I am relatively new to the author T. Kingfisher, but I'm a fan. Her book Nettle & Bone was my best book of 2023. This week, I read two of her books, A House with Good Bones and Thornhedge. A House with Good Bones leans into her horror side. Sam, a thirty-something archeological entomologist, returns to her childhood home for an unexpected extended stay with her beloved mother. Something is not right. Her mom is jumpy and terrified. The formerly cozy home is returned to its uptight decor of her grandmother. And why are there buzzards watching the house? It is a good blend of suspense, mystery, and Southern Gothic.

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    Thornhedge is a fantasy novella. Stolen by the fairies as a child and raised by toads, she is tasked to return to her family to save them from her changeling replacement. Kingfisher's characters are not superlative when it comes to beauty or bravery. This makes me root for them because they don't have advantages. They have to overcome themselves as much as the problems presented to them. I recommend this and everything I've read so far by T. Kingfisher.

Here are previous posts of some of her books: https://barbpruittwrites.blogspot.com/search?q=T.+Kingfisher

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    Why make a special to read black others one month a year? I would like to read widely about different genres and ethnicities all year. I try, but I find it beneficial to prioritize reading black authors one month a year. That makes it sound like I have a list ready to go. I do not. This is where I look to my library or Goodreads to help me find books. Here is a link to Goodreads's list of 100 Essential New Works of Fiction by Black Authors. https://www.goodreads.com/blog/show/2723?ref=ed_ads_1_24_bhm

 


    Leslie F*cking Jones by Leslie Jones is a lot. I listened to the audiobook by Leslie Jones. The word that describes this book to me is intense. Leslie Jones powerfully tells her dynamic story. As she narrates, she stops and gives advice. The advice springs from hard times and having to figure Hollywood, comedy, and finance out on her own. Jones is a yeller. She is. I cringe when someone yells at me, and sometimes, I felt overwhelmed by all of Jones's yelling and f-bombs. However, she is hilarious and fierce.

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Wednesday, February 7, 2024

A Large Helping of Sci-fi πŸ€–and Fantasy 🧚‍♀️with a Dollop of Historical Fiction⛓️

 

    The Best Science Fiction & Fantasy of the Year, edited by Jonathan Strahan, is challenging to review because it is about the pieces rather than the whole. Truthfully, I skipped a couple of stories, but for the most part, I enjoyed the variety and creativity. A stand-out fantasy story was "Probably Still the Chosen One" by Kelly Barnhill. An eleven-year-old girl enters a magical land under her sink and finds she's the chosen one. The priests train her and send her home, promising to return for her when the time is right. So, she waits, wonders, and grows up. On the science side, "Zen and the Art of Starship Maintenance," by Tobias Buckell, featured a rogue AI saving the day. Many of the science stories featured some form of AI. I appreciate a well-crafted short story, and many of these stories are that. It was an excellent book to read while watching three granddaughters for a week. I could finish an entire story and feel like I accomplished something! 

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    River Sing Me Home by Eleanor Shearer is a historical fiction novel. Rachel is a slave on a sugar plantation in Barbados. In 1834, England ended slavery. However, the plantation owners say that even though they are no longer slaves, they are now apprentices, unable to leave for at least six years. Rachel runs away to find her missing children, who were all sold. Eleanor Shearer draws on family history and her studies for her degree in Political History. It is lush with tactile detail and a formidable struggle. Rachel reminds me of a mythical hero facing enormous odds as she moves from understanding the world as a runaway slave to living as a free woman. 

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🧩Why is Everything I Read Depressing? 1 Horror, 2 Dystopian, 1 Opiod Crisis, and 1 🧩

      I have read Matt Dinniman's "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series and looked forward to Kaiju: Battlefield Surgeon , another LIT...