Sunday, October 29, 2023

October Read Harder update

It's weird how time feels like it moves so slow and so fast at the same time. Time, you strange and fickle construct. Anyway, it's the end of October, only two months left in 2023, and here we are, once again, to talk about the books that I've been reading. Not only did I finish Scattered Showers, I reviewed it earlier this month! 'Twas good, in case you skipped that review. (It's fine if you did. My feelings aren't hurt.) Ghost Squad was also a solid read - a little bit spooky and a little bit magical, a perfect read for October. I also reviewed that one, and again, if you skipped it, that doesn't hurt my feelings...at all...

Moving on from my hurt feelings, at long last I have finished The 1619 Project, which I recommend all white people read, preferably with an open heart and open mind and any defensiveness left at the door. It provides a much-needed education for those of us (I would hazard to say most of us) who were taught a white-washed version of history and sold the illusion that the United States has made significant racial progress when, in fact, we have not. The book painstakingly demonstrates and documents how multiple disparate injustices and inequities weave together, illustrating that addressing only one piece of the puzzle is a band-aid over a mortal wound. We can't fix what's broken about the United States by slapping a little gauze over symptoms as they pop up, and we certainly can't fix things while pretending the root problems don't exist. (Psst. Write your representatives and push them to consider HR40 and HR414. You can also sign this petition and email the White House to request President Biden create a commission on reparations by executive order.)

Now, in addition to Hood Feminism, which I'm still working on, I've got two challenges left for the year, neither of which I'm feeling super enthused about. Maybe my tune will change when I actually look at options, let's see.

📚📚📚

#23: Read a social horror, mystery, or thriller novel: NOT MY JAM! I'm going to read White Smoke by Tiffany D. Jackson, because I've read her stuff before and I like her, so maybe I'll like this, even though I'm a big baby and don't like horror stuff.


#24: Pick a challenge from any of the previous years' challenges to repeat: I don't know, maybe some people like this as a challenge option, but I don't. Just give me a challenge, don't make me pick my own from a previous challenge. Y'all came up with twenty-three, you couldn't come up with one more? 💤 Boring.

Okay, after a lot of soul searching and a nap, I've landed on challenge #18 from 2017: Read a superhero comic with a female lead. I'm going to read La Borinqueña by Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez. It was generously donated to my school library my first year there, and every time I see it on the shelf I want to check it out, so this seems like a good opportunity to finally do so.

And that's that, the last two challenges for the year! 

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Ghost Squad - Claribel A. Ortega

Initial Draw: ☆☆☆☆
Character Development: ☆☆☆☆☆
Plot/Writing Style: ☆☆☆☆
Overall: ⭐⭐⭐⭐


From the cover:

"For Lucely Luna, ghosts are more than just the family business.

Shortly before Halloween, Lucely and her best friend, Syd, cast a spell that accidentally awakens malicious spirits, wreaking havoc throughout their hometown of St. Augustine, Florida. Together, they must join forces with Syd's witch grandmother, Babette, and her tubby tabby, Chunk, to fight the haunting head-on and reverse the curse to save the town and Lucely's firefly spirits before it's too late."


Middle Grade Mega Awesome Super Fantastic Massive Review Spree!

Clocking in at 237 pages, this book is blessedly on the short side for middle grade books with enticing storylines that I've come across. Hooray for telling a story that will capture the attention of kids who love ghost stories without making it 400+ pages! The blurb on the back compares it to "Coco meets Stranger Things with a hint of Ghostbusters," which is fairly apt. 

Ortega dives into the action almost immediately, so the story hooks you from the start, and the short timeline for when their town's ghost problem needs to be solved creates a sense of urgency that keeps you reading. I think that spooky story afficionados might find this one a bit tame, but for kids looking for something just a little on the scary side for Halloween it will be just right.

Sunday, October 15, 2023

No One Leaves the Castle - Christopher Healy: Part 2

Initial Draw: ☆☆☆☆
Character Development: ☆☆☆☆
Plot/Writing Style: ☆☆☆☆
Overall: ⭐⭐⭐⭐

From the cover: 

"The Lilac. The bard songs say that she's the world's most fearsome bounty hunter. That there's no criminal she can't catch, no mystery she can't solve.

None of that is true. Yet.

In reality, the Lilac is just a kid, and the bard who wrote all that is her best friend, Dulcinetta. But when a priceless artifact goes missing from the home of famed monster hunter Baron Angbar, the Lilac and Netta see their chance to apprehend the thief and make a name for themselves.

When they get to Castle Angbar, however, and meet the Angbar family and their servants and guests - an unsavory group of nobles, mages, and assorted creatures, each more shady than the last - the Lilac begins to wonder if the reward is worth the trouble.

And that's before the dead body is discovered.

Now everyone is magically sealed inside the castle - and there is a murderer among them. If the Lilac wants to make it out with her reputation intact, it's going to be up to her to figure out who the killer is. But everyone in the castle - even the Lilac herself - has secrets to hide, and as the walls literally start to close in around them, the Lilac worries that her first job as a bounty hunter may be her last..."


Welcome back to the Middle Grade Mega Awesome Super Fantastic Massive Review Spree! I finally finished this, and I was definitely right that this book is less spooky, more silly, but that wasn't a bad thing. I thought Healy found a great balance between goofy moments and establishing a sense of urgency and a little bit of an ominous tone. I think the pace could have been stepped up a teensy bit (I've griped about this before - this book is almost 400 pages, please give me a middle grade fantasy that is shorter and snappier!), but as I got further in, things sped up enough that I think if a kid gave it a chance and got into it, they would get invested and want to find out what happens.

Aside from the Lilac and Netta giving everyone nicknames, which is something I also do and a detail I loved, I think my favorite thing about this book was all the red herrings. An embarrassment of red herrings! It was so fun! Which of these are real clues? Are any of them?! Did someone even actually steal the artifact? Or was this all some giant trick? In this book, nothing is as it seems and like the Lilac, you've got to keep your wits about you. It's a solid read, and I actually think it would be a good non-spooky fall/Halloween read. I give it a solid four stars, and I can't wait to recommend it to students once I get it added into my collection.

Sunday, October 8, 2023

Scattered Showers - Rainbow Rowell

Initial Draw: ☆☆☆☆☆
Plot/Writing Style: ☆☆☆☆☆
Overall: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

This is a collection of nine short stories, some based in existing Rainbow Rowell worlds and some featuring new characters and places. All in all, I greatly enjoyed it! Individually, I definitely had my favorites. Shall we go story by story to hear my thoughts? We shall.

Midnights: Loved it. So cute. The flashback, the slow burn, the dance moves and jokes about allergic reactions. Just adorable.

Kindred Spirits: Pretty good! I think this one struck a chord with me because my first job was at a movie theater, so people camping out for a movie brought back memories. I thought the character development was impressive given the length of the story, it had some excellent reveals, and overall I really enjoyed it. 

Winter Songs for Summer: Oh, this one might have been my favorite. Benji is adorable - I love him, his weightlifting gloves, and his mixed CDs. It's set at the same college, so it makes sense, but it gave me big Fangirl vibes.

The Snow Ball: Looooook...this one fell off a bit for me. Maybe it was the pace? I didn't check page numbers, but it felt like one of, if not the, shortest, and it was all one scene, super heavy on dialogue. I just didn't see the chemistry between the characters. It felt forced.

If the Fates Allow: REAGAN! This is set in the Fangirl world, and I love Reagan, and I love it. I'd read most of it before, when it was initially released as a standalone short story, but Rowell expanded it a bit for Scattered Showers (either that or I totally deleted part of it from my brain?), and while it's kind of tough reading a very COVID-centric story while the majority of the Western world pretends it no longer exists and abandons those of us who still try to be safe to bear all the weight of the pandemic on our own, I still love Reagan, and I still love her story. And I love her for being so COVID-responsible!

The Prince and the Troll: Hahaaaaaa, this one drove Joel up a wall! Is it an allegory? Is it not? What is happening?! Nothing makes sense! I thought it was very entertaining and odd and fascinating. Was it maybe sponsored by Starbucks? Could be! Reading it definitely makes me want a coffee.

Mixed Messages: This is set in the world of Attachments, which lands solidly in the middle on my ranking of Rowell's books. I found the characters' ages slightly confusing - kind of assumed they were younger than they were until toward the end - but also thought it had some funny moments. Much like the novel the characters come from, middle of the road for me.

Snow for Christmas - SIMON SNOW, babyyyyy! I'll read anything with Basilton Pitch in it. I love him forever. And I thought this was a very sweet story. Have you read the Carry On series? If not, what the fuck are you waiting for? Get after it!

In Waiting - Last one, and oooooh, it was so interesting! Not only was I intrigued from the start, it really got me in a writing mood. Of course, I was reading this in bed to Joel before we went to sleep, so I did not actually write after reading it...but I wanted to, and that counts for something, right?

Sunday, October 1, 2023

Starts and Finishes

Finishes and starts. New thing! Let's talk a little bit about a book I finished this week and a book I'm starting. (Dewey, this is a very transparent attempt to come up with a blog post because you're in such a reading slump and don't have anything to review! Yeah, I know it is. Leave me alone, I'm just trying to make it to fall break.)

This week, I finished reading How to Raise an Intuitive Eater, which I highly recommend to anyone who spends time in some capacity with young people, or is just curious to learn more about intuitive eating and how much better it is than fucking dieting and embracing diet culture.. Very informative, lots of great tools for changing how we think about food, dieting, and bodies and how we teach children to understand and care for themselves. Excellent book.

Also this week, I started reading How to Be You: Stop Trying to Be Someone Else and Start Living Your Life by Jeffrey Marsh. I adore Jeffrey Marsh, and I acquired this book a long time ago and have been meaning to read it, so we're diving in! So far, I've only gotten through the introduction and am already in love. I'm ready to dig in and discover what "zaps me in the heart," as he puts it. It's gonna be good.