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Reading Week #92

03.18.2016 by Nicola //

berks

Happy Friday!

I’ve been feeling introspective this week. Maybe it’s because my birthday is tomorrow, maybe it’s impending life changes, or maybe it’s incidental – but I’ve been really into everything I’ve read this week.

As always, I’ll share some highlights below. Keep scrolling!

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

Nothing new year – I’m realising that I tend to make things one week, then post them the next – but ICYMI the current episode of Bookish Blether is all about Underhyped Reads [AUDIO].

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Zadie Smith wrote this amazing long review essay on The Polar Express in 4D, the uncanny valley, Anomalisa and Schopenhauer – Windows on the Will. (How does she do that?!)

The Dutch European Literature Prize longlist was announced this week. And it contains more books with naked women on the cover than books by women. Look at all these serious, white, grey-haired middle-aged men, though! They must be so wise.

Incidentally, Only wilful disregard can hide the need to publish more women.

An excellent interview with Jessa Crispin, author of The Dead Ladies Project. (More on this below).

 

 

–– DIGITAL / LIFE ––

Probably almost everyone on the internet is more into typography than I am, but I enjoyed this piece on How The World’s Most Beautiful Typeface Was Nearly Lost Forever. It also reminded me about the lovely watercolour graphic novel The Bind by William Goldsmith about a family of bookbinders.

You know how much I love Call Your Girlfriend by now. In a recent live episode they talked to Rebecca Traister about her new book, All the Single Ladies, and it’s well worth a listen [AUDIO]. Key takeaway: Sex and the City did it all first.

I loved Eva Wiseman’s lament to gentri-fried cafés and closing KFCs. Then I went to my favourite Brooklyn-style coffee shop and was like, Nope! This is amazing.

Sobering: 2016 is breaking all kinds of global temperature records.

 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

I finished Gone With The Wind by Margaret Mitchell and I’m utterly bereft.

In the past few days I’ve started The Dead Ladies Project by Jessa Crispin (which I’m loving) and I Love Dick by Chris Kraus (which… we’ll see). I also treated myself to a couple of new purchases, as you can see above…

What are you reading?
 

 

–– &c. ––

I really enjoyed Leena’s recommendations of films about writers [VIDEO, 7 mins] – the good and the deliciously bad.

It’s been a while since I’d heard a compelling argument for writing morning pages, but here’s one.

Books Are My Bag is launching a Tinyletter yeahhhh!

 
 

––

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

Have a lovely weekend!
Nicola x
 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

Reading Week #91

03.11.2016 by Nicola //

weekend

Happy Friday!

It’s been a busy week around here yet I’ve not much to report. It’s been a good and bookish one, though, and full of forward momentum. Wishing the same for you – with verrrry slow weekends to measure things out.

And a weekend requires links, doesn’t it? Here goes.

 

–– ON ROBOTNIC.CO ––

My emigration plans are in full swing – so this March Book Haul [VIDEO] may be the last one for quite some time (personal restraint permitting).

On Bookish Blether, we shared some recommendations of Underhyped Reads [AUDIO]. PS my girl / co-host Holly also started a newsletter this week so if you want MOAR from her sign up here.

I also recommended 5 Short Non-fiction Gems [VIDEO] for the non-fiction-phobic amongst us.

 

 

–– ARTS & CULTURE ––

Rivka Gretchen on The Only Thing I Envy Men is everything. And speaking of “women writers”…

The Man Booker International Prize longlist was announced this week. Once awarded to an author, the prize will now award a book in translation.

Coinciding with this, Katy Derbyshire reminds us that only 26% of English translations are books by female authors in this article: Translated fiction by women must stop being a minority in a minority.

Incidentally, Scottish Book Trust also listed 10 Mexican Novels in Translation – which includes a couple of my favourites.

 

 

–– DIGITAL / LIFE ––

Exclusive new data shows how debt, unemployment and property prices have combined to stop millennials taking their share of western wealth – so I guess it’s only true now that we have data from economists?

She Wanted to Do Her Research. He Wanted to Talk ‘Feelings.’ On how men exploit their power in the workplace; make life miserable for the women they “admire”.

Stef recommended this honest piece from Anna Maltby who asks, “Why Am I Not Supposed To Tell You I’m Trying To Get Pregnant?” Naturally, then, we had to check in about whether we were discussing it for a reason. (We weren’t.)

I largely avoid US election chat but Kaleb Horton explains the appeal of Trump for some Americans in Hell’s Been Empty – which resonated with my husband and which I’ve earmarked for later.

 

 

–– ON PAPER ––

Remember how I said it was a bookish week?

Well, I finished the wonderful short story collection Treats by Lara Williams and reviewed it for The List Magazine.

I also read When We Were Alive by CJ Fisher and The Lonely City by Olivia Laing – with reviews of those coming soon.

And yes, I’m still reading Gone With The Wind.

What are you reading?
 

 

–– &c. ––

This week I’ve been bingeing the current mini-series from the You Must Remember This podcast – the Hollywood Blacklist. Listen here.

 
 

––

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

Have a lovely weekend!
Nicola x
 

Categories // Reading Week Tags // link list, reading week

Treats by Lara Williams | Book Review

03.10.2016 by Nicola //

treats-cover

This review was originally published at The List Magazine.

Once in a while a small publisher will bequeath you a wee gem, and Lara Williams’ debut collection, Treats, is one such book.

Published by Glasgow’s Freight Books, Treats chronicles the milestones of twentysomething life in the 21st Century and its perils – taking in experiences ranging from graduate job-hunting to new motherhood, with all of the tough decisions, break-ups, and more of life’s detours. No matter the situation, Williams’ articulately observed scenes capture the throes of early adulthood and tableaux of life at the very moment of change.

Far from the trendy internet vocabulary of ‘adulting’, these are stories firmly grounded in the contemporary short story form. Williams’ rare mastery is demonstrated through her successful use of second person narration and risky plays with potentially clichéd subject matter. Staccato stories sit alongside forays into longer, more traditional narrative styles like that of the title story ‘Treats’, which has a distinctly novelistic feel.

Joining the consistently solid narration across stories are remarkable turns of phrase and evocative prose as the author laces the narrative with tangible, almost Instagram-able details that hint at her characters’ deepest desires. The through-line between these stories and varied narrative voices is an ability to imbue timeless life experiences with contemporary meaning. These are characters who can’t look themselves in the eye, who stay still in fear of what comes next. They’re women who worry about the space they inhabit, and men whose anxieties are expressed in sneezing fits. These hints create deep characterisation that allows the reader to forge great empathy for the personalities whose stories, at between three and six pages, feel eerily complete.

With hints of Noah Baumbach’s youthful existentialism and shades of Janice Galloway’s visceral prose, Lara Williams is one to watch.

Treats is out now, published by Freight Books.

Categories // Books Tags // Book Review, freight books, lara williams, short stories, the list magazine, treats

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