Strong opinions of a bibliophile about prose and poetry, writers and readers, libraries and bookstores... and comforting book photos.
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Rebecca's Books
For as long as I could read, books have been my constant companions. Like the diary entries some keep, my books remind me of the who, what, when, where, why and hows, and my scribbled notes in the margins range from pondering annotations to unrelated notes, as I often used the book leaves as makeshift journals and planners, filled with everyday reminders, phone numbers, doodles, and other inane information that would make a librarian shudder in horror. I dog-ear pages and break book spines, because after reading a book twenty times, you will lose a bookmark and inevitably leave the book on your couch. And anyway, books with broken spines are easier to hold in one hand while you lay in bed, turning the pages while slowly drifting to sleep.
This blog will discuss and review books, but not with necessarily with long critiques; I am more interested in sharing the effect the writing and story had on me. Did I dream about it afterwards, or was I unable to to finish it because the writing was too dull? DId the novelist combat cultural issues or was it a fun page-turner I read in two hours, or was it both?
The name of the blog is a throwback to my favorite poems as a child, a hardcover version of âCatsâ by the inimitable TS Elliot. Â But TS Elliot has stalked me my whole life, allowing me to remember, during times when my depression left me curled in bed weeping for reasons I couldnât identify, that angst is human; but I also still have his Cats collection memorized, and there, in that juxtaposition, is what I love about literature: One day, itâs âthis is how the world ends, this is how the world ends, this is how the world ends;â the next, we consider how to correctly name a cat. In this case, the Great Rumpus Cat.
So tell everyone around you back off, and sit down with an afghan at your favorite reading nook. Pour the tea (or whisky, or wine, or a bag of semisweet chocolate chips) Put the cat on your lap and read for the sheer joy of leaving this world and our government behind, going to to a better place, or maybe fighting a far worse one.Â
There will be no book snobbery in this blog. My John Grishams are nestled comfortably between my Foucault and Faulkner. I welcome discourse and discussion and I invite anyone to join me in my opinionated rants. And with that, I give you THE GREAT RUMPUSCAT.
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Itâs been a long time coming but Iâm finalllllly reading #mobydick #literature #whale #callmeishmael #hermanmelville so in a few days ask me all your whaling questions, Iâm sure Iâll be able to answer them đ (at City of Richmond)
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Beartown
(By Fredrik Backman )
Iâve decided just to share my reading notes for this book:
Wow, great opening:
Witty, unpretentious writing
Totally quotable, makes writing look easy
Wonderful rhythm unlike anyone else, rounds out his unique voice perfectly
Some boring hockey parts
Some stilted, cheesy dialog
OMG WOAH
This book makes my throat hurt trying not to cry
Profound
Four stars đ đ
Buy it here
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âSome very considerable part of the gestural language of public places that had once belonged to cigarettes now belonged to phones.â - William Gibson, Zero History
via @quotespile
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Little Fires Everywhere (Celeste Ng)
I didnât care too much for the acclaimed bestseller Everything I Never Told You, but I enjoyed Little Fires Everywhere more, yay. Ng definitely has a talent for allowing deeper thematic issues to arise naturally from her plots, a talent I appreciate. in LFE, a wayward mother and daughter move to a sleepy little town and shake things up, and set into motion an ugly custody battle that divides the town. Alongside this are sub-plots involving the teenagers of two families and their difficulties as they come of age.

Some parts were quite slow and employed more telling than showing, especially the charactersâ backstories, and this bugged the hell out of me as I love me a good, fleshy character. I found the backstories tedious to read and just couldnât get in to these parts of the novel. Plus, in spite of the backstories, the characters still often felt underdeveloped.

Still, Ng handles themes of socioeconomic disparity and racism with a thoughtful hand and allows them to emerge naturally from her story telling, and there is some true wisdom in certain quotes of the book.
Three stars. đ
#celeste ng#little fires everywhere#everything i never told you#book blogger#book blog#booklr#bookblr#book review#book recommendations
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The Bear and the Nightingale
By Katherine Arden
An absolutely amazing fairy tale you wonât be able to put down. Stunning and beautifully written, with lots of old demons and Russian folklore, this book holds your attention while letting your imagination run amok. And a strong female protagonist whoâs forward motion is not based on her finding a man! Love it.
I cannot wait to read the sequels. This is also a great winter read since frost demons and cold Russian winters permeate the story. Five for five. đ
#the bear and the nightingale#katherine arden#bookblr#book review#booklr#short reviews#winter reads#cozy
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The Great Rumpus Cat Great 2018 Reading Challenge
A twist on the olâ read fifty-two in fifty-two weeks, i made myself a more specific challenge. I hope I can find some people to play along with me! the rules are: read as many as you can, in whatever order you choose, post on this thread when youâre done with your challenge book and tell me what you chose and how you liked it! One book cannot count for two challenges; you have to choose which one you want to use it for. To be read in no particular order:
1: Around the world: read a novel that takes place in a county you know very little about
2: The procrastinator: finish a book you never get around to
3: indielove: read a book published a very small press (local if possible)
4: The Librarian: Read a new-to-you classic
5: The Biographer: Read a biography and
6: an autobiography
7: The Scholor: Read a non fiction book on a subject that is new to you
8: The Serial Reader: Read the first of a series with at least three books
9: The Dramaturge: read a play
10: The Linguist: Read a book translated from its original language
11: The Poet: Read a collection of poetry
12: The Chekhov: Read a book of short stories
13: The Art Spiegelman: Read a graphic novel
14: The Isms: Read a book about some sort of ism, racism, socialism, Judaism, Wiccanism etc
15: I felt like I was there: read a fiction or non fiction history
16: The Rory Gilmore: pick a book from The Rory Gilmore Reading Challenge
17: On Society: read a book about a problem in our society, like homelessness (can be fiction or non fiction)
18: The Raised Eyebrow: read a satire
19: The Romy and Michelle: Read a book from the year you graduated high school.
20: Punked!: Read a story about a punk, cyberpunk, steam punk, old school British rock band punk, etc.
20: The Pulitzer: Read a book that won a Pulitzer
21: The Edward Gorey: read an adultâs book with illustrations
22: The Director: read a book slated to be turned into a movie
23: The local: Read a book written by a local
24: the Warm and Cozy: Read a book with over 500 pages
25: The Our Town: read a book that takes place in your town.
26: The New Face: Read a book by a new author (their first book)
27: The traveler: Read a book set in a location you would like to visit.
28: The Mrs Marple: Read a whodunnit
29: the Robot: Read a sci-fi book
30: The Stephen King: Read a scary book, horror, ghosts, etc
31: The Gender Bender: read a book with a protagonist who isnât cis-gendered
32: Fuck that!: Read a book with an unlikeable protagagonist
33: Thatâs Ms to you: Read a book with a strong female protagonist
34: POVs: Read a story told from multiple POVs
34: The time traveler: Read a book that takes place in more than one era
35: The Truman Capote: Read a true crime story
36: Oh Captain My Captain: Read a nautical book
37: The Carl Sagan: Read a book set in space
38: Because Reese Witherspoon said so: read a book endorsed by a celebrity book club
39: The Sting: Read a book about a heist
40: The Glorious Cover: choose a book by its cover
41: The Muggles: Donât be a muggle! read a fantastical, magical book
42: All the Pretty Colors: Read a book with a color in the title ie Blue Highways
43: The Novella: Read a book thatâs less than 200 pages
44: The Grim Reaper: read a book about a death, or death in our culture
45: From me to you: Read a book written in letters, diary entries, newspaper clippings, etc
46: whosis: read a book by multiple authors
47: kids these days: read a YA novel
48: The Dr Doolittle: Read a book where an animal or multiple are front and center
49: The Nom de Plum: read a book written under a pseudonym
50: The treasure hunt: go into a bookstore a grab a book youâve never heard of
51: The bestseller: Read that book that youâve been hearing so much about
52: The Repeat: read a book youâve already read, but feel like it needs another go.
Get reading and talking about reading!
BONUS ROUNDS FOR THE OVERACHIEVER (or substitutes if youâre not digging/having trouble with any of the other prompts)
1A. A post apocalyptic novel
2B. A book tied to your ancestry
3C. A Goodreads choice winner
4D. A book that messes with time, time travel, etc
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The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
Have you ever kept putting off reading a book, then when you finally open it youâre like, WHY HAVE I NOT READ YOU YET, EVERY DECISION IâVE EVER MADE HAS BEEN WRONG, etc etc etc.
This book! Normally, with the exception of Dracula, I donât go for books told through letters but the writing here flows so smoothly itâs a joy to read and I couldnât put it down.
This book has everything: great characters you really get to know, parts that will make you literally lol, and parts that will make you cry. Read this one before its movie comes out in 2018. Itâs a lovely world and one you wonât want to step out of.
#annie barrows#mary ann shaffer#the guernsey literary and potato peel pie society#great books#book recs#book blogger#bookblr#booklr#book review
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Before We Were Yours
I quite enjoyed the plot of this book, but for the most part found the writing overly straightforward. The plot unfolds through the telling of two interwoven narratives, a past (told by Rill) and a present (told by Avery). I enjoyed reading Rillâs tale, itâs hard not to: thereâs stolen babies kidnapped from their houseboat off of the Mississippi and a historically accurate rendering of an orphanage with a murderess/con artist in charge. Rillâs voice is well developed in dialect and tone, and I found these portions of the book to be page turners. Learning about the âadoptionâ agency was interesting history, although this book isnât the only place to find it: thereâs multiple nonfiction books on it, as well as a 60 Minutes special (this is all referenced in the back of the book).
The parts of the story told from Averyâs POV were less interesting to me. Avery is the lawyer turned detective in the novel, trying to piece together what one May Crandall has to do with her family story and ancestral tree. Avery annoyed me as a character. Proud of her southern heritage and senator father but going through political and familial turmoil, sheâs supposed to be interesting to read but watching someoneâs personal life unravel has never really interested me. These were also the portions of the book that I found the writing suffered the most, so maybe the author didnât enjoy writing them as much as Rillâs story. Throw into that a dull, simple romance where you donât have any emotion invested into either character and the boredom is complete.
Iâm glad I read the book and learned about the history of orphanages in America, and got to know the fictional story of Rill. I wish Averyâs story had been written with the same passion. Three stars âď¸ đ
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A Head Full of Ghosts
Probably one of my top ten favorite scary books, reading this was an absolute joy. The ending is positively bone chilling, and as Iâve mentioned before, my biggest fear going into a horror novel is that the climax will be botched. Not here, folks, not here. This book just gets scarier as you go along and itâs all done very insidiouslyâ the fear and worry just sort of creep under your skin. Stephen King even tweeted that the book scared him, and thatâs a high fucking honor in my opinion.
The story is a classic possession tale, but told with a few post modern twists: a self-conscious narrative told in blog fom that addresses the myriad allusions and references in the story (Charlotte Perkin Gilmanâs âThe Yellow Wallpaper,â one of my all time fave stories in any genre btw, âThe Exorcist,â etc) and an examination of reality TV. Also examined is patriarchy and the family structure (and disintegration), narrator reliability and mental illness. The story is arguably open ended offering several readings from the mundane to a family drama with a psychological health crisis to possession. And man, the last chapter, wow. Youâll want to go back and reread the entire thing looking for new clues, and you will find them cleverly intertwined throughout- no matter how you interpret the story. Itâs so good. Read this fucking book! đ
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Uninspired
So. I just finished Alice Hoffmanâs âThe Rules of Magicâ and am feeling very blah about it. Itâs the prequel to âPractical Magicâ and it just doesnât hold up. Her writing style, which fit PM perfectly, is heavy handed in her newest book. Overly romantic and trying to hard to be poetic, the prose just comes across as desperate. I had to struggle to finish reading it because the plot was just a ramble interspersed with spells and superstitions. Total disappointment. But, mostly because I liked PM so much back when I read it in high school, I felt I owed it to her to finish the book, and any book I finish gets at least a 2/5. So there you go. Blargh. đ
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I go out, support the printed book industry, then spill a bottle of wine on my new #DaveEggers. This is why I canât have nice things. #thecircle #wino #clutz #irony (the book is about the increased ownership electronics have over our way of life, our privacy, then i buy it in print and immediately ruin it). Sorry Dave Eggers! After it dries Iâll read it anyway!
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Since last #November and a certain #election I've been rereading some favorite #dystopia #novels like this #philipkdick classic that I last picked up in college. It's so fun to see all my old notes; I've always seen my #bookcollection as a set of personal diaries both because I literally scrawl in them and fill their borders with reminders and phone numbers and movie-stub #bookmarks, but also because rereading a book always evokes my sense memory of all the other times I read it. Here's to #resistance #litmajors #themaninthehighcastle and the indescribable power of knowledge. #dystopianfiction #alternatereality #alternatehistory #fucktrump #bookstagram #bookstagrammers
#dystopianfiction#bookmarks#resistance#alternatereality#bookstagram#alternatehistory#dystopia#themaninthehighcastle#litmajors#bookstagrammers#philipkdick#bookcollection#november#novels#election#fucktrump
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I'm pretty picky about my #scifi but I'm really enjoying the writing style in #themartian #andyweir I've giggled aloud several times and he reminds me a bit of Chrichton or Sagan with his ability to go into a technicality enough to make it believable but vague enough to not bore the reader to tears.
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watched #meearlandthedyinggirl last night, loved it (although all the #brianeno made me want to cry with nostalgia, like when I hear #burningairlinesgiveyousomuchmore i just don't even know how old I am or what's going on). now I'm loving the #bookversion just as much, great style to compliment the plot and characters. #boomworm #readingrightnow #fortheloveofbooks
#meearlandthedyinggirl#readingrightnow#brianeno#burningairlinesgiveyousomuchmore#fortheloveofbooks#boomworm#bookversion
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reading is my forever magic #illgiveyouthesun
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