What I Read This Month: September 2009
September 30, 2009 at 12:56 pm | In Books, Monthly Reading | 2 CommentsTags: Children's literature, Josephine Humphreys, Kim Stanley Robinson, Margaret Atwood, Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin, Virginia Baker
It was not such a productive month, reading-wise. I only finished two books, both of which were meh, and I abandoned two books as well. I am excited about the book I am currently reading: Margaret Atwood’s The Year of the Flood. But that one will have to go in next month’s roundup.
The reason why I didn’t read much is that I spent so much time on Green Mars, the second in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars trilogy. Green Mars did not hold my attention nearly as well as Red Mars, the first book in the series. I tolerated the endless scenes of driving around on the Martian surface in Red Mars; in Green Mars, it was getting a little old. The book did get exciting during the Martian Revolution at the end, but I had to wade through like 600 pages just to get there.
I also read another one of Ursula K. Le Guin’s young adult books, Gifts. Having just finished A Wizard of Earthsea, I thought that Gifts, while well written and engaging, was a little too familiar to really grab my interest. A good book for young readers, surely, but not for jaded old me.
The books I abandoned were Nowhere Else on Earth by Josephine Humphreys and Jack Knife by Virginia Baker. The first is set during the Civil War in Lumberton, North Carolina, and is about the Lumbee Indians, but I just found it too confusing, with far too many characters, to engage me. The second is a suspense thriller time travel novel set during the Jack the Ripper years, but the jump-cut style of writing broke up the story way too much to hold me.
Roundup: 2 books read, 2 abandoned (click the titles for my full reading notes)
Nowhere Else on Earth, Jack Knife (abandoned)
My rating scale:
- 1 star: Abandoned before finishing. Don’t waste your time.
- 2 stars: Poor. Avoid with extreme prejudice.
- 3 stars: Average. Read it, have a good time and move on. Or not.
- 4 stars: Great. Push it on your friends and family.
- 5 stars: Excellent. Keep it, treasure it, reread it.
Disclaimer: My ratings are very personal and may have little to do with the book’s artistic or commercial merit, or its place in the literary canon. Rather, the rating reflects how the story, characters and writing spoke to me and augmented my understanding of the world.
What I Read This Month: August 2009
August 31, 2009 at 1:02 pm | In Books, Monthly Reading | 2 CommentsTags: American literature, Essays, Evan Wright, Fantasy, John Brunner, Ken Grimwood, Nick Hornby, Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin, Valerie Martin
Hi there! I am trying a different format for my monthly roundup, because I was getting a bit bored with the old listy format. This is a bit more talky, and I hope you like it.
It was a very good month, as I read three books that I can highly recommend. Ken Grimwood’s Replay is contemporary science fiction that asks what if you could live your life over and over again (full review). I also reread the fantasy classic A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin and rediscovered a childhood favorite (full review). Property by Valerie Martin is an acerbic little novel that takes the point of view of a woman slaveholder in Antebellum Louisiana. All three are books you can down in one gulp, perfect for end-of-summer reading.
I have also been reading Nick Hornby’s last collection of essays about what he’s been reading, Shakespeare Wrote for Money. Hornby’s essays didn’t inspire me to start journaling my own reading — I was already doing that — but they did get me to take my journaling more seriously. While this final collection wasn’t as strong as the previous two volumes, The Polysyllabic Spree or Housekeeping vs. the Dirt, there were several genuine laugh-out-loud moments. Once again, I am struck by how much wittier Hornby is in this column than in his actual novels. All three books are available in handsome editions from McSweeney’s.
Back to science fiction, I gave John Brunner another try and read his ’70s dystopian classic The Shockwave Runner, which some say is the forerunner to cyperpunk. I don’t think I like Brunner’s writing style very much, unfortunately. He seems purposefully obtuse, and I don’t relish the feeling of things whizzing over my head. Still, there are some good ideas in Shockwave Runner, and I actually finished it (as opposed to Stand on Zanzibar). I can say that it is worth reading, just.
I only abandoned one book: Generation Kill by Evan Wright. It wasn’t because the writing wasn’t good; it was very good. But I couldn’t stand reading about all the horrible deaths of children. I have never supported the Iraq War; I don’t need to be convinced.
Roundup: 5 books read, 1 abandoned (click the titles for my full reviews/reading notes)
Replay, A Wizard of Earthsea, Property
Shakespeare Wrote for Money, The Shockwave Runner
Generation Kill (abandoned)
My rating scale:
- 1 star: Abandoned before finishing. Don’t waste your time.
- 2 stars: Poor. Avoid with extreme prejudice.
- 3 stars: Average. Read it, have a good time and move on. Or not.
- 4 stars: Great. Push it on your friends and family.
- 5 stars: Excellent. Keep it, treasure it, reread it.
Disclaimer: My ratings are very personal and may have little to do with the book’s artistic or commercial merit, or its place in the literary canon. Rather, the rating reflects how the story, characters and writing spoke to me and augmented my understanding of the world.
Worth Reading: A Wizard of Earthsea
August 30, 2009 at 11:42 am | In Books, Reviews | 3 CommentsTags: Bildungsroman, Earthsea, Fantasy, Series, Ursula K Le Guin
A Wizard of Earthsea, Ursula K. Le Guin (1968)
In this young adult fantasy, a young wizard releases an unnamed evil into the world of Earthsea during a spell that goes wrong and comes of age in a quest to defeat it.
Only in silence the word,
only in dark the light,
only in dying life:
bright the hawk’s flight
on the empty sky.–from the Creation of Éa
I’m sure I read A Wizard of Earthsea as a young adult, although I didn’t remember it very well. But like the best novels written for young people, it holds up excellently in this second reading as an adult.
In Earthsea, Le Guin has fully realized a land of islands, where people live as much on the sea as on the land, where there are dragons and wizards and magic. As a young boy, Sparrowhawk discovers his talent for magic when he protects his village from invasion by creating an obscuring fog. He is apprenticed to a wizard on his home island, then goes to the school for wizards across the sea, where his powers become evident. But his hubris gets the better of him, and in attempting a dangerous spell, he looses a nameless shadow in the world, which is bound to him and determined to possess him.
The rest of the story describes Sparrowhawk’s coming-of-age quest to learn how to defeat the shadow, and to learn who he is. Le Guin’s simple but evocative prose brings her imaginary world of Earthsea to life, and while reading this short book, I felt like I was traveling along with Sparrowhawk among the islands’ rocky cliff faces, desolate moors and heaving oceans. Whether rediscovering Earthsea or visiting it for the first time, the trip is worthwhile.
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Book News and Views
August 6, 2009 at 11:04 am | In Books, On the Web | 4 CommentsTags: Neil Gaiman, Ursula K Le Guin
Random bits about books culled from my wanderings through the Interwebs:
- A new e-book publisher hopes to bring e-books to general readers (Boing Boing)
- Your racism is showing — a publisher puts a picture of a white girl on the cover of a book whose protagonist is black (Boing Boing)
- Ursula K. Le Guin talks about her fantastic novel The Left Hand of Darkness (The New Yorker)
- Re-reading Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman is a highly recommended activity (Tor.com)
- And here’s a terrific review of Gaiman’s Hugo-nominated The Graveyard Book (Tor.com)
- Barnes & Noble has moved up in my list of hangouts due to free wi-fi and other perks (yours truly)
Old Favorite: The Left Hand of Darkness
July 19, 2009 at 12:05 pm | In Books, Reviews | 1 CommentTags: Anarchy, Androgyny, Bisexuality, Feminism, Hugo award, Nebula award, Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin (1969)
5 stars!
I’ll make my report as if I told a story, for I was taught as a child on my homeworld that Truth is a matter of the imagination. The soundest fact may fail or prevail in the style of its telling: like that singular organic jewel of our seas, which grows brighter as one woman wears it and, worn by another, dulls and goes to dust. Facts are no more solid, coherent, round, and real than pearls are. But both are sensitive.
A rereading of this science fiction classic proved to be even more rewarding the second time around.
The Left Hand of Darkness is set in the future on a distant planet called Gethen, or Winter, which is in the midst of an Ice Age. The inhabitants of Winter are human, but with a twist — they do not have two genders. Instead, they are androgynous most of the time, except when they go into kemmer, or become sexually active, at which time they may become either female or male. This simple difference has given rise to a vastly different culture than ours; the politics, social mores, folklore and day-to-day life of Winter are all disclosed through the observations of a Terran diplomatic visitor on a mission to persuade the Gethenians to join the cooperative of human-inhabited planets.
But underneath all this is a rather simple story, really, of the development of a friendship between two men who at first are literally aliens to each other, but who come to discover that their similarities are much greater than their differences. Their trek across Gethen’s Ice Sheet should be counted among the best written examples of the journey in all of literature.
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Book News and Views
May 18, 2009 at 4:20 pm | In On the Web, Publishing | 3 CommentsTags: Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin
The latest findings from my wanderings around the Interwebs include science fiction debates galore, more news on our favorite Goliath in the book business (Amazon) and literary twittering:
- Ursula K. Le Guin on truth in labeling when it comes to science fiction, even by “mainstream” writers (via Ellen Datlow’s LiveJournal).
- Speaking of labeling, is alternate history science fiction? Join the debate over at Tor.com.
- A rundown on the most realistic and ridiculous uses of science in TV and film (somehow I don’t think time travel made the realistic list).
- For fans of ridiculous sci fi, here’s your summer 2009 move sellout survival guide.
- Some rules for time travelers that cannot be debated (and don’t you go breaking them, Lost writers!)
- Amazon is now in the publishing business, discovering highly rated books that have fallen out of print and republishing them — genius!
- For your following pleasure, here’s a list of the best authors on Twitter. (And I am on Twitter too.)
- Finally, something a bit surreal: sculptures from books.
Monthly Reading: October 2008
October 31, 2008 at 9:07 am | In Monthly Reading, Reviews | 2 CommentsTags: Allegory, Books about books, Classic, Environmentalism, George Orwell, Marisha Pessl, Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin
Always Coming Home by Ursula K. Le Guin — environmental science fiction
Animal Farm by George Orwell — classic allegory
Special Topics in Calamity Physics by Marisha Pessl — fiction about books
My rating scale:
- 1 star: Abandoned before finishing. Don’t waste your time.
- 2 stars: Poor. Avoid with extreme prejudice.
- 3 stars: Average. Read it, have a good time and move on. Or not.
- 4 stars: Great. Push it on your friends and family.
- 5 stars: Excellent. Keep it, treasure it, reread it.
Disclaimer: My ratings are very personal and may have little to do with the book’s artistic or commercial merit, or its place in the literary canon. Rather, the rating reflects how the story, characters and writing spoke to me and augmented my understanding of the world.
Other reviews of favorite books from around the blogosphere:
- The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (Book Lady’s Blog)
- Bird by Bird (Sophisticated Dorkiness)
- Clay’s Ark and Icehenge (From a Sci-Fi Standpoint)
- The Haunting of Hill House (Things Mean a Lot)
- Fragile Things (You Can Never Have Too Many Books)
Worth Reading: Always Coming Home
October 27, 2008 at 5:45 pm | In Books, Reviews | 2 CommentsTags: Anarchy, California, Environmentalism, Post-apocalypse, Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin
Always Coming Home, Ursula K. Le Guin (1985)
The people in this book might be going to have lived a long, long time from now in Northern California.
At first, I didn’t think I would like this unusually structured book, but it very gradually and completely captured my imagination. It is a collection of writings–poems, songs, stories and essays–about the life and culture of a group of people living in California far in the future, long after our own civilization has collapsed and been almost obliterated. It is not clear who has collected these writings, but it seems to be a character named Pandora, an emissary from our present time who is perhaps merely dreaming this utopian future society.
The Kesh, as these people are called, are in many ways very primitive, with a Native American-style culture that revolves around seasonal celebrations, growing crops, caring for livestock, hunting and gathering, and taking care of all the work of life. The Kesh’s society is the opposite of capitalism, in that wealth comes through giving things away, not owning them, and everyone shares in the village’s resources.
But the Kesh are not entirely primitive. Though all fossil fuels are gone, they have electricity (sun-, wind- and water-powered, no doubt), as well as access to a network of computers–a network that extends around the globe and into outer space via unmanned probes and satellites–that store all of human history and knowledge. The Kesh just don’t seem interested in progressing past their idyllic state, and they refer to societies like ours as “people with their heads on backwards.”
Not that life is perfect for the Kesh. They suffer from a high rate of birth defects and early mortality due to radiation and chemical poisoning, leftovers from our defunct civilization, which keeps the population from growing too large. And their stories reveal that they suffer from human nature just like any of us.
One such story–the longest in the collection, almost a novel–presents a dystopian alternative to the Kesh. A warlike society called the Condor people come to the Valley where the Kesh live, and one of the soldiers marries a Kesh woman and fathers a daughter, Stone Telling. When she gets older, she chooses to accompany her father to his home. Her story is the only the knowledge the Kesh have of how the Condor people live. They hold slaves, are ruled by a dictator and worship a single powerful god. The women have no rights and are not allowed to leave their homes without completely covering themselves. They are obsessed with war and building war machines that they don’t have the fuel to power, at the expense of feeding their people. Eventually, Stone Telling escapes back to her own people, but we get the sense that the Condor people are well on the path to self-destruction.
It took me a while to get caught up in the stories of the Kesh. Stone Telling’s long memoir, broken into three parts and interspersed by other writings, helps anchor the book. I gradually found myself enchanted and fascinated by the Kesh as I learned more about them, especially their spiritual practices and the important ritual dances they hold at significant times of the year. Mostly, I admired their approach to life, without judgment or a strict moral code, respectful of both the individual and the whole, which includes the animals, plants, stones, earth, stars, everything.
I have lately felt overwhelmed by depressing world events, our materialistic culture and the problems we felt, particularly our environmental problems. This book offered both an escape and an alternative way of thinking about those problems.
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Old Favorite: The Lathe of Heaven
September 2, 2008 at 9:35 am | In Books, Reviews | 1 CommentTags: Dystopia, Post-apocalypse, Psychiatrists, Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin
Image via Wikipedia
The Lathe of Heaven, Ursula K. Le Guin (1976)
Current-borne, wave-flung, tugged hugely by the whole might of ocean, the jellyfish drifts in the tidal abyss.
In a near-future decimated by climate change and overpopulation, a perfectly ordinary man discovers an extraordinary talent: whatever he dreams becomes real. His efforts to escape what he considers his curse land him in the clutches of a psychotherapist, who uses a machine of his own invention and hypnosis to control the dreams and attempt to solve the world’s problems. What results is a bizarre merging of the “real” world with the infinite worlds of dreams until the two can no longer be told apart and all worlds are on the brink of the void. This is a fascinating novel that explores the unknown power of our dreams, the dangers of playing god and the possibilities of infinite worlds.
Monthly Reading: April 2007
May 1, 2007 at 12:57 pm | In Monthly Reading, Reviews | Leave a CommentTags: Dystopia, Food and cooking, Octavia Butler, Post-apocalypse, Ruth Reichl, Science fiction, Ursula K Le Guin
Click the book titles to read my full review or notes.
Lilith’s Brood by Octavia Butler – post-apocalyptic science fiction
The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin — dystopian science fiction
Garlic and Sapphires by Ruth Reichl — food and cooking
My rating scale:
- 1 star: Abandoned before finishing. Don’t waste your time.
- 2 stars: Poor. Avoid with extreme prejudice.
- 3 stars: Average. Read it, have a good time and move on. Or not.
- 4 stars: Great. Push it on your friends and family.
- 5 stars: Excellent. Keep it, treasure it, reread it.
Disclaimer: My ratings are very personal and may have little to do with the book’s artistic or commercial merit, or its place in the literary canon. Rather, the rating reflects how the story, characters and writing spoke to me and augmented my understanding of the world.
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