how is september halfway done?
Sep. 15th, 2022 01:16 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
1. Josh turned 44. We had a house full of people. Josh's cousin and his wife who currently live in DC came to visit, his sister came to visit, Emma came for the weekend, and our Atlanta friends (D & J & kids) came, too. It was wonderful!
His cousin's wife has worked for NPR off-and-on for twenty years, and I very much enjoyed all the name dropping and peeks behind the curtain.
Josh's favorite gift was a personalized video message from the announcer of BattleBots. Emma and D conspired on this one. A+++ work
2.
Theft by Finding: Diaries 1977-2002 by David Sedaris
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Sedaris's diary entries are much more candid about the violence, homophobia, racism, and sexism in which he is constantly immersed in his twenties-thirties than the short story collections (which makes sense). I feel a real kinship with him when he describes how disgusted and uncomfortable he is with that racism and sexism despite having few positive models to encourage those feelings. He's also much more candid about his drug and alcohol use; it's a wonder he survived his twenties.
Sedaris is always funny; I laughed out loud more times than I can remember while reading this book. He also tugs wonderfully on the heartstrings.
Highly recommend this one.
View all my reviews
Two-Headed Poems by Margaret Atwood
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Beautifully crafted poems about love and motherhood among other topics. I always walk away from reading anything Atwood has written with intense feelings of satisfaction and wonder and jealousy (wish I could write like that).
I've been reading a lot of poetry lately, and what I appreciate about Atwood's poetry is that while her poems are interesting on the sonic level, she never sacrifices meaning for sound. I also appreciate that everything she writes is narrative and that I am able to follow that narrative.
View all my reviews
Train Whistle Guitar by Albert Murray
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I read this in grad school for a class I took on literature inspired by the blues, but I have absolutely no memory of reading it (though I clearly did; there's the marginalia to prove it LOL), so reading it now was like reading it for the first time.
I don't think I can say enough positive things about about this novel. It is so evocative of time and place, and the way the novel is crafted with the conventions of the blues (the call and response, the repetition) grounds it even further in the African American culture of the Deep South following World War I when Jim Crow is king and Prohibition casts a dangerous pall over so many communities.
This is a coming of age story, a boy's story, and it's absolutely lovely. Highly recommended.
View all my reviews
Fellow Feelings: Poems by Richard Howard
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
How have I never heard of this poet before? Wow and wow!
The entire collection is wonderful, but two of my favorites are "Decades for Hart Crane" (about the poet's responses to Hart Crane over the years) and "Discarded" (in which he finds a discarded library book with a page that was restored on his birthday).
I will be seeking more Howard.
View all my reviews
My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me: Forty New Fairy Tales by Kate Bernheimer
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I thoroughly love reworkings of fairy tales, and many of these stories are delightful. However, some of them become incomprehensible to me in their attempts to subvert the original fairytale; the handful that try too hard to be avant garde or transmute the original story into a different setting or a different trope were not good reads. On the whole, though, I enjoyed this collection.
I also wanted to make note of this quote from the intro (xviii): "The fairy tale belongs to the poor. I know of no fairy tale which upholds the tyrant, or takes the part of the strong against the weak. A facist fairy tale is an absurdity."
View all my reviews
Selected Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is a phenomenal collection of poetry. I suspect most of the people reading this blog are familiar with "The Mother," Brooks's poem on abortion, but other favorites of mine include "the preacher: ruminates behind the sermon" and "The Sundays of Satin-Legs Smith."
Brooks's formal, classically inspired poems leave me cold, but her poems about African American culture that are written more colloquially resonate with me strongly.
View all my reviews
His cousin's wife has worked for NPR off-and-on for twenty years, and I very much enjoyed all the name dropping and peeks behind the curtain.
Josh's favorite gift was a personalized video message from the announcer of BattleBots. Emma and D conspired on this one. A+++ work
2.

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Sedaris's diary entries are much more candid about the violence, homophobia, racism, and sexism in which he is constantly immersed in his twenties-thirties than the short story collections (which makes sense). I feel a real kinship with him when he describes how disgusted and uncomfortable he is with that racism and sexism despite having few positive models to encourage those feelings. He's also much more candid about his drug and alcohol use; it's a wonder he survived his twenties.
Sedaris is always funny; I laughed out loud more times than I can remember while reading this book. He also tugs wonderfully on the heartstrings.
Highly recommend this one.
View all my reviews

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Beautifully crafted poems about love and motherhood among other topics. I always walk away from reading anything Atwood has written with intense feelings of satisfaction and wonder and jealousy (wish I could write like that).
I've been reading a lot of poetry lately, and what I appreciate about Atwood's poetry is that while her poems are interesting on the sonic level, she never sacrifices meaning for sound. I also appreciate that everything she writes is narrative and that I am able to follow that narrative.
View all my reviews

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I read this in grad school for a class I took on literature inspired by the blues, but I have absolutely no memory of reading it (though I clearly did; there's the marginalia to prove it LOL), so reading it now was like reading it for the first time.
I don't think I can say enough positive things about about this novel. It is so evocative of time and place, and the way the novel is crafted with the conventions of the blues (the call and response, the repetition) grounds it even further in the African American culture of the Deep South following World War I when Jim Crow is king and Prohibition casts a dangerous pall over so many communities.
This is a coming of age story, a boy's story, and it's absolutely lovely. Highly recommended.
View all my reviews

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
How have I never heard of this poet before? Wow and wow!
The entire collection is wonderful, but two of my favorites are "Decades for Hart Crane" (about the poet's responses to Hart Crane over the years) and "Discarded" (in which he finds a discarded library book with a page that was restored on his birthday).
I will be seeking more Howard.
View all my reviews

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I thoroughly love reworkings of fairy tales, and many of these stories are delightful. However, some of them become incomprehensible to me in their attempts to subvert the original fairytale; the handful that try too hard to be avant garde or transmute the original story into a different setting or a different trope were not good reads. On the whole, though, I enjoyed this collection.
I also wanted to make note of this quote from the intro (xviii): "The fairy tale belongs to the poor. I know of no fairy tale which upholds the tyrant, or takes the part of the strong against the weak. A facist fairy tale is an absurdity."
View all my reviews

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is a phenomenal collection of poetry. I suspect most of the people reading this blog are familiar with "The Mother," Brooks's poem on abortion, but other favorites of mine include "the preacher: ruminates behind the sermon" and "The Sundays of Satin-Legs Smith."
Brooks's formal, classically inspired poems leave me cold, but her poems about African American culture that are written more colloquially resonate with me strongly.
View all my reviews
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Date: 2022-09-15 11:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2022-09-17 10:17 am (UTC)