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August Reads | 52 Books 2016

09.29.2016 by Nicola //

What I Read in August

I had a great reading month in August: a new favourite book arose, I chose good novels, and we had a great book club pick which provided over an hour of intense discussion.

Want to know which books I’m talking about? Read on for my August Reads.

 

My Summer Recommendations

Since I didn’t do monthly reading wrap-ups on my YouTube channel this summer, I posted recommendations from my June, July, and August reads instead. Watch for more.

 

Capsule Reviews

As always, I’ve also written up capsule reviews of all the books I read in August – those I’d recommend and the others I read and will offer my opinions on.

A General Theory of Oblivion by José Eduardo Agualusa
40. A General Theory of Oblivion by José Eduardo Agualusa, translated by Daniel Hahn
★★★★★ – When the Angolan Civil War breaks out, an older woman named Ludo bricks herself into her apartment and fends for herself for 30 years, writing poetry on the walls until a young boy finds her and they strike up an unlikely friendship. That’s the synopsis you’re given – and there’s plenty going on besides, but it’s here where this novel’s heart lies. I’ve not much to say beyond that; it was just fine.
 
 

The Tidal Zone by Sarah Moss

41. The Tidal Zone by Sarah Moss
★★★★★ – I’m a sucker for a well-written interior monologue, and this book really did it for me. It follows Adam, a part-time academic and stay-at-home dad whose daughter collapses at school one day. It rocks his life, bringing worries and helicopter parenting tendencies to the fore. Moss’s voices are utterly credible and she successfully brews up a potent blend of thoughts, actions, worries, and a personal intellectual life within Adam’s mind.
 
 

Stranger on a Train by Jenny Diski

42. Stranger on a Train by Jenny Diski
★★★★★ – This has to sit on the top shelf as one of my favourite books. Diski brings together travel and memoir with these stories of stranger’s lives and her own in a mode that’s circular but also gives a sense of forward momentum. Moments from her journeys across the US by train harken back to her teen years being treated for mental illness, making unlikely friendships, and reading on London’s Circle Line for as many hours as the days allowed. She confers her own story with the benefit of hindsight and of empathy and acceptance, and the shared tales of her fellow passengers with warmth, humour, and understanding. Just a gem.
 
 

Play it As it Lays by Joan Didion

43. Play it As it Lays by Joan Didion
★★★★★ – I’ve been describing this one as a great book that I didn’t enjoy reading. Didion captures the bleak aridity of the American West, the veneer of glitz that barely coneals the misery and shallowness beneath. Her characters are spiteful, self-serving, careless people, chipping the glamorous sheen away where your F Scott Fitzgeralds would lay it on thick. It reads like a movie, but kicks like a book. I hated it, but it’s excellent.
 
 

The Comet Seekers by Helen Sedgwick

44. The Comet Seekers by Helen Sedgwick
★★★★★ – Arranged around celestial events, this novel follows comet seekers and romantics Roisin and Francois. It’s structurally sound but often focuses its details in the wrong places. Who are these people, beyond believers in ghosts and watchers of celestial events? They’re full of interests but lack clear motivation, and fall frustratingly often into immature habits of failed decision-making and simple interpersonal understanding. The implication appears to be that conversation doesn’t drive relationships, and it takes a little too long for its subtle complexities to take hold. I was more often impressed by its mechanics than involved in its story though, overall, it is good for a debut.
 
 

What was the best book you read in August?

Categories // Books Tags // 52 books 2016, book reviews, capsule reviews, helen sedgwick, jenny diski, joan didion, maggie nelson

Reading Week #115

09.23.2016 by Nicola //

Monterey, CA

It was 40°C earlier this week, but we’re getting some temporary relief with a seaside temperature in the low 20s today. With every reprieve, I think that Autumn must be around the corner, and yet it’s forecast to be in the high 30s again in a few days’ time. It’s taking some getting used to.

This week I attended an enormous womens’ conference, started spending some quality time at my new coworking office, and even bought myself a bed to sleep on. Evan and I move into our own place on Tuesday and I can’t wait to have my own space, a mattress and a couch I actually chose and own (our last flat came furnished), and continue to meet some new people here in my new hometown. Driving has come along surprisingly quickly, though I’m still getting used to juggling my keys, massive cup of iced tea, and handbag every time I get in and out of the thing. As with all aspects of life here, it’ll come with time.

How are things with you? Fancy some links for your weekend?

 

 

–– REAL LIFE ––

Buzzfeed made a list of 15 Historical Women They Should Have Taught You About In School. Can we have a book on this please? A curriculum, even? The only woman I remember learning about at school was Mary Queen of Scots. And we know what happened to her.

Historically, women on the autistic spectrum have been less likely to receive a correct diagnosis or treatment. Spectrum reports with this piece on how Women with autism hide complex struggles behind masks.

 

 

–– THE WRITING LIFE ––

…I think I’ve taken a lot of risks as a writer because I come from poetry and have not thought about a lot of people reading my work. I think that’s been great, because I think you should write whatever you want to write. Even with this award, I’m not sure that I’m airport territory. [Laughs] At the end of the day, maybe I’m old-fashioned in thinking that you just don’t get to choose what you’ve got in you to give. You’ve just got to do what each book demands. I’ve never thought intimacy was a goal of the writing, that violating my privacy was the best idea. I’m kind of an aesthetic purist about thinking that the work eventually tells you what needs to be in it for it to work, and it has to have what it has to have.

One of my recent favourite authors, Maggie Nelson, won a MacArthur Genius Grant this week. I love what she had to say to the LA Times.

In related, Rebecca Solnit did her take on a classic: her 10 tips for How to Be a Writer.

Author Merritt Tierce shares her story: I Published My Debut Novel to Critical Acclaim—and Then I Promptly Went Broke. Though I won’t compare myself to her, this struck a chord with me:

For over a year after Love Me Back came out I woke up every day with this loop in my head: I should write. But I need money. If I write something I can sell it and I’ll have money. But I need money now. If I had money now, I could calm down and write something. I don’t have money now, so I’m probably not going to be able to calm down and write something. To have money now, I need a job. I should get a job.

 

 

–– DIGITAL LIFE ––

If we’re the last people in history to know life before the internet, we are also the only ones who will ever speak, as it were, both languages. We are the only fluent translators of Before and After.

Leo Milani looks at What it feels like to be the last generation to remember life before the internet. Do I get to say I’m bilingual now?

Chelsea Hagan, co-founder of The Financial Diet, reflected on The Unfunny Things I’ve Realized As A Not-Rich Woman Starting A Media Company.

 

 

–– & CURRENTLY READING ––

Alexander Book Co. Haul

I’ve been starting a new book every other day of late. I started The Trip to Echo Spring by Olivia Laing (pictured) despite not having finished Known and Strange Things yet, and started on Sons and Daughters of Ease of Plenty by Ramona Ausubel because I stopped enjoying Behold The Dreamers by Imbolo Mbue.

On top of that, I joined the local library where I got The Long-Winded Lady by Maeve Brennan – one I started on Oyster ages back and didn’t manage to finish before my subscription ended; and Mara Wilson’s new memoir in essays Where Am I Now?, which I devoured 1/3rd of in one sitting.

Maybe next week I’ll have finished something. Meantime, which book(s) are you reading?
 

 

––

 
Your turn! Read anything good this week? Hit reply or tweet me, won’t you?

Have a lovely weekend!
Nicola x
 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, maggie nelson, reading week, rebecca solnit

A Bookish Catch-Up | Bookish Blether #44

09.21.2016 by Nicola //

It’s been a few weeks since we chatted, so this week we’re keeping it casual and having a bookish catch-up. Join us to hear about what we’ve been reading, buying, and otherwise enjoying so far this September.

Follow Bookish Blether on Twitter, or have a blether with us by email at bookishblether@gmail.com!

Subscribe to the Bookish Blether podcast: iTunes | SoundCloud | RSS

Categories // Bookish Blether Tags // book podcast, bookish blether, Podcast

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