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Books read, early September
Karen Babine, The Allure of Elsewhere: A Memoir of Going Solo. Babine's take on both camping and more generally living as a single woman is particularly interesting because she is very much not solo most of the time in this book--this is a book that is grappling with her roots, her family, and engaging with her current family. It paints a picture of a life that can be satisfying without fitting prior molds--and our demographics are such that there are a lot of tiny details that really resonated with me.
Angeline Boulley, Sisters in the Wind. This is the third YA thriller about Native issues in the US, centering around the same families and clusters of characters. Boulley is writing them to try to be stand-alone but interwoven, and I'd like to see how someone who hadn't read the earlier volumes felt about how well this succeeded. I did read the earlier volumes, and I felt like there was quite a lot of "here's an update on someone you already know" going on here, and like the balance of that with the narrative at hand was a bit off. I also think she's set herself a very hard task, because when the real life issues you're writing about genuinely produce people who behave like cartoon villains, you don't want to sanitize them into something more understandable, and yet then you're stuck with the people who behave like cartoon villains. It's a tough problem. So I still found this worth reading, but I felt like the earlier volumes were stronger in some ways.
A'Lelia Bundles, Joy Goddess: A'Lelia Walker and the Harlem Renaissance. I picked this up from the "new books" shelf in the library, and I fear it's one of those books where the author had a reasonably good bio of a famous ancestor in her, and she wrote that already (a bio of Madam C.J. Walker) and has gone on to what is clearly a labor of love writing about her famous ancestors but doesn't rise to be nearly as interesting to me as the events and subjects on the periphery of the book. Probably mostly recommended for people with a special interest in this era/location.
Martin Cahill, Audition for the Fox. My copy of this arrived early, but it's out now, I think? Interesting take on gods and their relationship with humanity, a fun fantasy novella.
Emilie A. Caspar, Just Following Orders: Atrocities and the Brain Science of Obedience. This is a fascinating book by a neuropsychologist who has not only done the more standard kind of campus studies into obedience and the variables that affect (or, apparently, in many cases do not affect) it but has also done a lot of interviews and various kinds of brain imaging (fMRI and EEG primarily) on groups of people who could reasonably be described as the foot soldiers of genocide in Cambodia and Rwanda. Caspar's willingness to admit which things she does not know is only one of the things I find refreshing about her work. She's also willing and able to engage with these interviewees on the subject of stopping either themselves or others from committing similar acts, what factors might be important there. This is not a book with all the answers but I'm really glad she's out there asking the questions.
Susanna Clarke, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. Reread. The curious thing about this reread is that it's so smoothly written, it's such a pleasant and easy read, that it was startling to notice how little momentum this book has. Each chapter is a lovely reading experience if you like that sort of thing! (You've seen the number of 19th century novels I read. Of course I like that sort of thing.) But also each chapter is a conscious decision to have more of it, because there's very little of either plot or character pushing forward in any way.
Brandon Crilly, Castoff. Discussed elsewhere.
Sasha Debevec-McKenney, Joy Is My Middle Name. Only a handful of these poems really resonated with me, but the ones that did really resonated with me, which is an interesting experience to have of a poetry collection.
Georges Duby, France in the Middle Ages: 987-1460. This is largely about the evolutions of the concepts and theoretical bases of power in French society in this era, and was really interesting for the things it bothered to examine in that way--where and when and how the Roman Catholic church got involved in various life milestones, for example, generally later than one might think while living in a world so shaped by those processes that they may seem obvious. Worth having. Did not hate Philip Augustus enough but is that even possible.
Xochitl Gonzalez, Anita de Monte Laughs Last. I found this harrowing in places, because I am auntie age, so the story of young women making themselves smaller and less interesting for men has my auntie heart wailing "OH BABY NO DON'T DO IT" without, of course, being able to do one darn thing about it. Do they come through the other side from that behavior: well, what is the title, really, it's not a spoiler to say yes. More concretely: this is about a murdered (fictional) Latina artist in the 1980s and an art history student in the late 1990s putting the pieces together. Most of it is not about the putting the pieces together in any kind of thriller/mystery sense. If you're used to that pacing, this pacing will strike you as very weird. Mostly it's about the shapes of their lives. I liked it even when I was reading it between the cracks between my fingers.
Guy Gavriel Kay, Written on the Dark. I feel like the smaller scale of this bit of fantasized history doesn't serve his type of writing well--there's not the grand sweep, and he's not going to turn into a painter of miniatures at this stage of his career. I also--look, I know he's writing these things as fantasy, so he's allowed to change stuff, I just feel like if a character is still obviously Joan of Arc I'm allowed to disagree with his take on Joan of Arc, which I do, on basically every level. Ah well. If you like Kay books, this sure is one all the same.
T. Kingfisher, Hemlock and Silver. I was mildly disappointed in this one. The mirror magic was creepy, but the romance plot felt pro forma to me, some of the plot beats more obvious than a reinterpreted fairy tale novel would strictly require. Of course she can still write sentences, and this was still an incredibly quick read, it just won't make my Favorite T. Kingfisher Books Top Three.
Kelly Link, Magic for Beginners. Reread. This title could also have matched up with The Book of Love but definitely not, not, not vice versa. This is not a book of love. It's a book of disorientation and weirdness. Which I knew going in, but having been here before doesn't make it less like that.
Alec Nevala-Lee, Collisions: A Physicist's Journey from Hiroshima to the Death of the Dinosaurs. Look, I can't explain to you why Alec, who seems like a nice guy, has chosen a career path that could be described as "writing biographies of nerds Marissa would not want to have lunch with." But he does a good job of it, they're interesting books and manage to learn a lot about--even understand--their subjects without falling the least bit in love with their subjects. This one is Luis Alvarez. Did a lot of interesting things! Also I went into this book with the feeling that even an hour in his company would be more than I really wanted, and I did not come out of it with any particle of that opinion altered.
Lyndal Roper, Summer of Fire and Blood: The German Peasants' War. An account of a really interesting time, illuminating of things that came after, somewhat repetitive.
Vandana Singh, Ambiguity Machines and Other Stories. Reread. Yes, the stories here were also satisfyingly where I left them, science fictiony and vivid.
Travis Tomchuk, Transnational Radicals: Italian Anarchists in Canada and the US, 1915-1940. This is actually a book about Italian anarchists in Canada that recognizes that there was a lot of cross-border traffic, so it also looked at those parts of the US that directly affect Canada--Detroit-Windsor, for example. Lots of analysis on Italian immigrants' immigration experiences either as caused by or as causing their radicalism. Interesting stuff but probably not a good choice My First History of Early Twentieth Century Radicalism.
Natalie Wee, Beast at Every Threshold. It is not Wee's fault that I wanted more beasts. Poets are allowed to be metaphorical like that. I did want more beasts, but what is here instead is good being itself anyway.
Fran Wilde, A Catalog of Storms. This was my first reading of this collection but not my first reading of the vast majority of stories within it. This is the relief of a collection by someone whose work I enjoy, knowing that each of the stories will be reliably good and now I have them in one spot, hurrah, glad this is here.
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For your listening pleasure
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to the general joy o' the whole table
It's a uniquely useful coffee table - a lift top so we can dine atop it, casters to easily shift it about, a shelf on the bottom to keep essentials like a basket of remotes and random handy stuff like my sewing kit since TV-watching is when I mend things... Of course we didn't want to lose the features, an in our casual inquiries over the years we hadn't spotted anything that had them all, but how hard could it be to find something similar if we really put our mind to it?
But first, we should try to see if we can fix it. We flipped it, but between the awkward attachment points and the warped wood in short order we admitted defeat - this called for skills and tools that we did not have on hand.
In examining the patient I descended to the floor, and a muscle in my lower back decided that I shouldn't have done that and I will not be getting up now, thank you very much. So, picture the first several weeks of this narrative me groaning about with my stick as my cranky knee and my cranky back disagreed on how to compensate for each other. I could stand almost comfortably, I could sit if I kept my back straight, but shifting between these two states required planning, effort and pain. Laying down seemed safe so long as I didn't try to move at all. I'm much much better now.
We walked (or in my case limped) into every furniture store in our town. Some stores admitted defeat immediately. Some stores showed us the one thing that fit all but one criteria. Bob's had something that checked all the checkboxes, but had a belt of metal around its legs at shin-kicking height, which added "rounded corners without added bruise-maker features" to the requirement list. Ashley had something that checked all the checkboxes, so despite being absolutely the wrong color of wood to go with anything else in our house, it entered our contender list. LaZBoy had something that checked all the checkboxes and didn't look too ugly, but pricier than anything else we've seen. Very well, then, we mapped every furniture store in Rockville which has a lot of them. Nothing useful. Back to LaZBoy, then, confirming that it's the best we can do, checking availability... and being told that it can be ours in mere 4-6 weeks. With a mandatory delivery fee on top.
My friends buy furniture on Wayfair, thought I, why don't I try to see what I can find there. It was a little awkward, because its search lumps "casters" and "lift top" into the same criteria-set and will give you pieces with either if you try to ask for both. No worries, we'll search for casters because there are fewer of them and Ctrl-F "lift" on item names. This yielded, among many other things none of which were quite right, the LaZBoy table - not just its clone, but literally the same product complete with LaZBoy product name in its assembly instruction PDF. It would ship for free in 3 days! It had no restocking fee beyond paying reverse shipping!
A few days after it arrived I had gained some limited ability to bend and lift things again, so we put it together. Ikea it wasn't - the instructions were sparse and in one step self-contradictory, as one was to insert screws without tightening them all the way, attach a cover, and then tighten the screws in the now no longer accessible space. (Spouse spent a half-hour on hold with the help line who cleared him to just go ahead and tighten them before attaching the cover.) It was heavy, and some parts needed to be suspended awkwardly to attach other parts: for one step it was useful to make the table straddle the old coffee table perpendicularly, and for another I loaded the shelf with a third of my leather-bound complete Agatha Christie collection to support the top in the right spot to attach it to the base and legs. Finally it was assembled. We gleefully rolled it to the couch, sat down and lifted the top...
And discovered that this table pre-supposed a much taller couch, and instead of lifting to a comfortable dining height this one was a good 5" taller. We attempted to eat a meal on stacked cushions with an optimistic refrain of "we can get used to this, can't we,", and then we looked at each other, and Spouse went to look up return information.
Given the weight of the parts, disassembling it was as awkward as assembling, but by then we'd figured out the tricks and workarounds.
Onward to another round of the nearby stores, then, and every store in about 20 mile radius, now with one more requirement: lifted height of about 2'. Which of course nobody documents. The almost-good Ashley turned out to be 3-4" more than our ideal. (We found several resellers who'd sell it to us for about 2/3 of the actual brand name store.) No luck if we wanted it all, though there were some possibilities cheap enough that we might compromise.
After some weeks of this nonsense Spouse wondered if it may be repaired. Sure enough, furniture repair still exists, and we contacted several of them. One responded to the contact form within a day. We gave the others 24 hours to do likewise, and when they didn't, we responded back and we were offered a repair visit the same day. Two hours and about a third of the Wayfair cost of the LaZBoy later, we had a functioning (and slightly better reinforced) table - for my future self's reference courtesy of Freelance Finishing.
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Capclave!
I have my schedule for Capclave! I'm doing three panels and a reading (should probably figure out what I'm reading...). Here's what we've got:
The Power of Places. Friday, 5:00. Every work of fiction has a setting. This is especially true of science fiction and fantasy where the settings are imaginary – other planets and fantasy realms. How do writers decide on a setting and communicate it to the reader? What makes some settings seem real while others mere painted backdrops? How does society help to shape the world around it? What writers have effective settings and what techniques do they use?
The Absolute Boss. Friday, 7:00. Much of SF/Fantasy has Galactic Emperors and Kings of fantasy kingdoms. We have Disney Princesses but not Disney Elected Leaders. Many plots feature the Return of the King. Why are there so few democracies in SF/Fantasy? What does it mean when our entertainments focus on absolute rulers?
Author Reading, Marissa Lingen. Saturday, 3:00.
Hopeful Fiction for Dark Times. Saturday, 4:00. The world seems to be in a dark place, such that "peddling hope" could appear irresponsible. Panelists will talk about hopepunk, cozy fantasy, and other forms of "lighter" fiction, giving examples, and talking about how hope is particularly important.
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Motorcycles, shelves and firewood
Several weeks ago I sold my motorcycle to my younger brother. He came and picked it up on Sunday. I had several boxes of bits and pieces to go with it. My brother and I managed to get the bike up into his trailer, but it was a stressful and depressing task. I feel like I'm closing out a whole chapter of my life. I'll never own another motorcycle. It's admitting that I'm old.
The Ikea shelf unit that I had all my A/V equipment on had a shelf collapse. Luckily nothing was damaged but the shelf. I ordered and new rolling shelf unit from a commercial kitchen supplier and have transferred all the components to the new shelves. That left us with this huge, white, Ikea shelf. I put it on FB marketplace as free and had six responses within an hour. One of the respondents wanted to come and get it right away. So now that is gone and not taking up space.
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Castoff, by Brandon Crilly
Review copy provided by the publisher. Also the author is a friend, as you will find out if you read to the end and see that I am in the acknowledgments for the honestly light and easy work of being Brandon's pal.
Good news for those of you who wait until a series is complete to read it: this is the second book in a duology! So you can just pick up Catalyst and Castoff and read them together, if you haven't yet. I'm going to try not to spoiler the first book too much, which is going to leave me vague, because this is definitely my favorite kind of sequel: the kind where the consequences follow on hard and fast from the first book. Happily for those with shaky memories, there's a quick summary at the beginning of this one.
So there are airships! There are strange vast somewhat personified forces! There are people working out their relationships in the face of personal and social change! It's that lovely kind of fantasy novel that almost might be a science fiction novel in its concern with human interactions with truly alien intelligences. I love that kind. I want more of that basically always. And if it can come with airship adventures alongside the ponderings of the nature of intelligence and caring about others, even better. Very glad this is about to make it out into the world so I can talk to more people about these books.