Okay – good to know. I knew that it used characters from American Gods, but was pretty sure it wasn’t about the same main characters from the first ones. Also, since I haven’t read Anansi Boys yet (I’ve only read AG), I didn’t know if there was any information in that one that would constitute a spoiler to events in the first.
I presume you’ve read them both? How is the new one?
I enjoyed Anansi Boys a lot, but have not yet read American Gods. It made perfect sense.
Last night my mom gave me a truly weird new book, called [url=]The clumsiest people in Europe. It is a selection from Mrs. Mortimer’s popular geography books for children, written in the mid-19th century. She wrote a lot of books, especially religious primers and readers for small children (Winston Churchill learned to read from her book), and was quite popular.
But her geography books are simply stunning in their horrifying awfulness. Every country in the world is vilified–she’s not even very keen on England itself. Europe, of course, comes off best, but everyone is awful. For example:
“Some places look pretty at a distance which look very ugly when you come up to them–Lisbon is one of those places.”
“The Greeks do not bear their troubles well; when they are unhappy, they scream like babies.”
(Iceland) “You must take care not to fall into one of these basins [geysers], for your poor little legs would be scalded…Sometimes the Icelanders do bathe in the warm basins–not as often as they should, for they are a dirty people–even their hands are so dirty that you would not like them to touch you…”
It’s not a book you can read for long, but it’s certainly interesting and…instructive. And it triggers screams of laughter, being alternately horrific and hilarious. Mrs. Mortimer may well have been somewhat mad–as you will learn if you read the introduction.
I finally finished D.H. Lawrence’s Women in Love. Ugh, it was awful. It took me most of a year of dropping and resuming it.
Then I read John Fowles’ The Collector. I liked it but the ending got me down. That bastard Ferdinand!
I’m currently reading “Rumpole’s Return,” a long short story. It’s the last in my Rumpole omnibus so I’ll have to get the next one, if it’s still in print.
Then I’m eagerly looking forward to In the Belly of the Beast by Jack Henry Abbott. I think it was recommended to me on these boards.
Plus my texts for the World History II class I’m taking and as many interesting magazine articles I can get hold of.
I’m reading A Feast for Crows by George R. R. Martin. I recently finished the others in the series and Love My Rifle More Than You by Kayla Williams. Next on my list is Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson.
I just finished skimming Hungry Planet: what the world eats, by Peter Menzel and Faith D’Aluisio. It’s a book made up of profiles of families in 24 different countries, including a photo of each family surrounded by one week’s worth of food. The text is fascinating. The kids and I enjoyed examining the pictures, looking at the clothing and homes of these people, and reading the statistics for each country, such as meat consumption per person per year, number of McDonald’s restaurants, life expectancy, etc. I’m planning to go back now and read it more carefully.
Just Finished: A History of the World in 6 Glasses by Tom Standage. A wide-ranging, fact-filled, but light and highly palatable discourse on six beverages, their origins in antiquity, and their role in world culture, commerce, and civilization. In order, they are beer, wine, spirits, coffee, tea, and cola. Dangerous Men: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Birth of the Modern Man, by Mick LaSalle. A survey of some of the most daring and dynamic periods in American moviemaking, the early Depression years, specifically their leading men their significance as stand-ins for Everyman. Recommended by a Doper, whose name, I’m sorry to say, I’ve forgotten. Whoever you are, thanks.
I just finished Mildred Pierce, and am planning to reread it before I give it back. It was great, and made me want to look for a book about local history. I’m torn about what my next book will be – a friend just loaned me a trashy chick lit revenge yarn (whose name escapes me), but I’ve also uncovered my book about dust, which I’d started a while back and then misplaced.
Actually, it got trapped under a collection of other books. Ever find that reading your layers of books is like reading tree rings? (“Yes, that was from my Obscure Poets phase. I remember that came right after my I Can Too Learn Science, So There phase and right after my Books I Should Have Read Before phase.”)
Yes, it’s called *The Secret Life of Dust*. I didn’t know dust had lives, or that they had to work so hard to keep them secret.
Aside from the many books I read in my graduate studies, I have started working on the Honor Harrington series. I was inspired to read some space opera because of my d20 Star*Drive campaign, and Honor Harrington kept coming up on these boards. At first I was worried, because the blurb I read said she had an empathic cat, which to me translates to “Warning! This book was written for 14-year-old girls.” But the one volume I’ve gotten through so far, On Basilisk Station, was simply a ripping yarn of space navy adventure while still being hard science fiction at the core. Possibly I’ll try this David Feintuch later, but there seem to be plenty of these Harrington books to keep me going for a while.
Just read Kushiel’s Chosen and Kushiel’s Avatar, by Jacqueline Carey. I read the first one, so I thought I’d finish the trilogy. It’s Late Medieval alternate history about a country that I think is France. The main character is a masochistic courtesan/spy/linguist. The story’s interesting, but all the sex is kind of boring.
I read that book a couple years ago. It’s actually quite interesting and far more informative than you’d guess. The author discusses “dust” of many varieties: the interstellar dust that coalesced to form stars and planets, microbial dust, airborne man-made pollutants, terrestrial naturally-occuring particles, smoke, household dust. . . .
I finished Altered Carbon, by Richard K. Morgan. I was surprised to really enjoy it despite its decidedly violent tone. It’s sort of cyberpunk crossed with noir detective. I’m looking forward to reading the sequels. The idea of stored minds living in sequential “sleeves” (cloned bodies) in order to gain immortality is a popular theme right now, but each author explores the vast implications differently.
Yea, it is set in a medieval france. The trilogy is very good, and theres a second coming out this/next year, set in Imriel’s point of view. As far as the sex, it is kind of boring. There isnt as much as in some other books I have read, but it is still a little much for my taste.
I am currently reading: Bread Givers by Anzia Yezierska, The Book of Splendor by Frances Sherwood, and a book of essays about Hamlet. The first two are for my Judaism class, and the second for English. I really miss reading for fun.
I’m finally reading The Onion Girl, by Charles de Lint. Over several years I’ve been reading the Newford novels and stories in sequence, but have stalled for the last couple of years because I’ve dreaded reading this sad story of Jilly. But Charles keeps putting out new work, and I won’t let myself read the newer Newford work unless I keep to the sequence. It would be nice to be caught up with the folk in Newford before Widdershins is published this spring.