Showing posts with label Just Julie's Fine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Just Julie's Fine. Show all posts

2024-11-13

Phew.
or, Julie's first print review

.

I got a whole stack of the new Dialogue in the mail today thanks to my poem in its pages.

You’ll like the poem. It’s sexy.

ANYWAY, I was flipping to the table of contents to admire myself in print (a natural impulse) but I landed in the toc’s list of reviews first and it was a long list! So I read that first. And what was the very last one, but a review of . . .Just Julie’s Fine.

Ever since Alison Maeser Brimley’s story “The Pew” appeared eight years ago, she’s been an artist to watch and so her opinion on Julie . . . would hold weight. I mean, if I were reading her review, it could well make or break my desire to read a book.

And let’s be honest: I wrote a book with so many landmines that the odds of me screwing it up or angering people were always high.

So it is with perhaps more relief than joy that I share with you that Alison gave Julie a positive review!

Phew!

Anyway, see what she has to say then pick up a copy or ask your library to do it for you.

(If you need even more convincing, Julie J. Nichols wrote the very first review of Julie and it’s also pretty persuasive. You’ll know this Julie from her genuinely hilarious review of Byuck.)

2023-10-23

Coupla classics et al.

.

Not all classics are created equal is surely true but what's even more true is that no classic is for every person. One here was for me. One was not. Which is a theme of the poetry collection as well. And other stuff.

I'm fairly skilled at picking things I like and I've given myself permission not to finish what I don't, so the bias of liked is no surprise, but is it okay? Should I read more that I do not like? And if so, which dislikes should I engage?

Anyway, here's some stuff, most of which I liked:

.

110) A Cluster of Noisy Planets by Charles Rafferty, finished October 6

This is a pretty great collection of prose poems. One small paragraph per page. Lots of wonderful lines and juxtapositions. But sometimes an excellent one would be spoiled by a prosaic final sentence. Or a prosaic one would shock with a brilliant close. A couple would have been better served by being poem poems rather than prose poems. Sometimes an interesting rhythmic choice was murdered, intentionally or not, who can say?

Anyway. It's what he likes to write. And I liked reading them. That sees like enough.

a week


111) Ramona Forever by Beverly Cleary, finished October 7

I love these books. The baby's getting impatient with my needing to pause to compose myself, but this volume had a funeral and a marriage and a baby. Tears are gonna flow!

The ones were reading have fresh 2020 illustrations which is good and all but these are definitely period pieces. I mean---the baby goes home from the hospital on Mom's lap! That feels criminal in a 2020 illustration!

Anyway. Beverly Cleary did a terrific job. These are certainly kids books but reading them as an adult you can sense the adult wisdom carried by the adults and the narrator, even though we're in Ramona's p-o-v. But Ramona does a lot of growing up in each book—and gets a whole barrelful of growing-up epiphanies in the final pages—and I imagine a child reading these books feels the seepings of wisdom as well.

like ten weeks
 

112) The Mysteries by Bill Watterson and Bill Kascht, finished October 10

What a delightful surprise to discover on my portch, months after ordering it then forgetting all about the glorious fact that Bill Watterson had a new book.

The book is strange and wonderful. And it's not about what, partway through, it seems to be about.

In the end: it is about mysteries.

a sit
 

113) The Sandman: A Game of You by Neil Gaiman et al, finished October 12

A returning character from A Doll's House stars in this story, another strong one. I do wonder how Gen Z responds to the trans woman in this story. I'm reminded of Just Julie's Fine because I would not be surprised by some Gen Z blowback, but what can I say except that is what 2005 was like? You can say something similar here. This is what the late 80s / early 90s were like. People did what they could.

I don't know, but I can't help but wonder if this was the first trans character I ever read. It's very possible.

The story is set up much like many of my favorite X-Files episodes where Mulder and Scully are minor characters. Thus it is here, for Dream.

a week
 

114) The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder, finished October 13

I picked up this copy some time ago. I don't recall if I was aware of the book's reputation or just the author's (whom I know as a playwright, having read Our Town in high school and The Skin of our Teeth in 2017; incidentally, that review makes me believe I was on the lookout for the book when it finally turned up).

Anyway, I finally decided to read it when the great Margaret Blair Young blurbed the upcoming Just Julie's Fine like so:

Reading this lovely novel had me chuckling, nodding, and periodically gasping. Though BYU student Julie is the center (or at least an important context) of most of the action, we get to know the quirks and endearing phrasings of several others connected to her in some way. The book reminded me of Wilder’s Bridge to San Luis Rey, wherein we get glimpses of several lives about to end (the bridge will collapse as they cross it), and of the events that led them to the bridge. Just Julie’s Fine does not end with everyone’s death, but with the compelling initiation of the title character into a new life—not the one she had always imagined. [Th: I could stop here, but let's keep going!] Julie, who is perpetually pursued by young Mormon men in search of a beautiful and {parenthetically} good wife, realizes that she wants to be an engineer, even though she will lose many of her accumulated university credits. This may seem like a simple thing, but it is a true rite of passage, a change of trajectory, and emblematic of the cultural changes happening around all of the characters.

Just Julie’s Fine is also a fascinating time capsule in which we see BYU students grappling with the standard coming-of-age issues, but also with feminism, sexuality, faith, and duty.

I found every character to be likeable—except [one character who, alas, it based on a real experience I, Theric, had at BYU], who seemed vacuous. The clever dialogue felt real and inviting. The writing itself flowed beautifully.

This is a fun novel, and I think Jepson enjoyed writing it [I did]. The energy of FUN comes through in every page. It is not a comical novel, but the dialogue is often so witty that the reader will certainly smile. It’s not a sad novel either. It’s a slice-of-life novel wherein the reader gets introduced to a variety of fascinating characters who reflect their age and their time perfectly.

Since this is appearing in the front pages, I felt I ought to've actually read Bridge in case anyone asked me about it.

The basic structure of Bridge is that a bridge fell and five people died and three chapters reveal these now-dead to us. They sometimes share connections (they do, after all, all live in Lima) or even know each other, and now they are dead.

But I knew that much coming into it. So far I see where Maggie's coming from.

As I read the novel (which I loved and kept wanting to return to even though I had library books) I tended to think the comparison to Julie made less and less sense. And then it ended and Bridge struck me as much more a mini Middlemarch than anything else.

And that's certainly true, but as I sit with Wilder's writing and accomplishment I'm starting, more and more, to see Sister Young's point. And she's right. And I am deeply, deeply flattered.

Anyway, it's a tiny masterpiece. You should knock this one out.

perhaps a month


115, 116) Cymbeline by William Shakespeare, finished October 16, 17

Fine to do with a class, but not as delightful as the most fun plays (Hamlet, Romeo & Juliet, Merchant of Venice, Richard III, Measure for Measure, Coriolanus, Julius Caesar, Macbeth, Titus Andronicus....)

What a weird one, too. Complicated and strange. Shame the Victorians decided it was no good and thus we've mostly forgotten it. Maybe then we would have enough dialogue to convince me.

over a week


117) Kaya: Book One by author, finished October 21

This is a fabulous new fantasy world people by simply drawn (metaphorically) characters that still have real depth and personality. Their adventures and situations are exciting. And, at least so far, it's all-ages, so share away!

two short bursts broken up by a couple weeks



 118) White Noise by Don DeLillo, finished October 23

Don DeLillo is one of the midcentury male American authors I've never had any interest in reading, perhaps simply because I cannot distinguish among them (DeLillo, Roth, Mailer...).

But then Noah Baumach made a movie and I ended up reading quite a bit about it and the novel it's based on. This is the article that talked me into reading the book. And now I have. And I get all the praise and whatever but I didn't like it. I found it screamingly difficult to continue caring about page after page after page after page. Part of the problem is that the book is "funny," but the narrator is funny in the same way each funny character is funny. It's the same joke page after page after page. And while there are a couple transcendent moment, egad, it just goes on and on and on and one. It's only three hundred pages but I suspect I'll remember it as much, much longer.

That said, I think it will make an excellent Noah Baumbach / Greta Gerwig movie. I'm looking forward to watching it.

months




 

Previously. . . . :

final posts in this series from
  2007 = 2008 = 2009 = 2010 = 2011 = 2012 = 2013
2014 = 2015 = 2016 = 2017 = 2018 = 2019 = 2020 = 2021 = 2022

 
 
Earlier in 2023

001) The Dark Room by Gerry Duggan & Scott Buoncristiano, finished January four
002) The Only Harmless Great Thing by Brooke Bolander, finished January 6
003) Rose by Jeff Smith and Charles Vess, finished January 10
004) Acting Class by Nick Drnaso, finished January 10
005) Red Scare by Liam Francis Walsh, finished January 11

006) The Short Reign of Pippin IV by John Steinbeck, finished January 18
007) Filmish by Edward Ross, finished circa January 20

HOW many times?

008) Maddy Kettle Book: The Adventure of the Thimblewitch by Eric Orchard, finished January 24 
009) Fantastic Frights: A Beginner's Guide to Scary Stories, finished January 24
010) Ramona the Pest by Beverly Cleary, finished February 2
011) Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman, finished February 3
012) The Postman Always Rings Twice by James M. Cain, finished February 4

013) Is that all there is? by Joost Swarte, finished February 6
014) Edge Case by YZ Chin, finished February 7

If it weren't for a friendly sex talk, everything here would be miserable

015) Double Indemnity by James M. Cain, finished February 10
016) Sex Educated: Letters from a Latter-day Saint therapist to her younger self by Bonnie Young, LMFT, finished February 13
017) Unmask Alice: LDS, Satanic Panic, and the Imposter Behind the World's Most Notorious Diaries by Rick Emerson, finished February 20 

A Bookful Bounty for thee and thine 

018) I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jeannette McCurdy, finished February 27
019–21) The Abominable Charles Christopher by Karl Kershl, finished March 6
022) Displacement by Kiku Hughes, finished March 6
023) The Many Deaths of Laila Starr by Ram V and Filipe Andrade, finished March 6
024) The Homeland Directive by Robert Venditti and Mike Huddleston, finished March 7
025) Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare, finished March 14
026) Last West: Roadsongs for Dorothea Lange by Tess Taylor, finished March 15
027) 22 Young Mormon Writers edited by Neal E. Lambert and Richard H. Cracroft, finished March 19
028 & 029) Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare, finished March 23 & March 27

Literarily solving for X

030) X by Sue Grafton, finished March 28
031) Ramona the Brave by Beverly Cleary, finished April 5
032) Camera Man: Buster Keaton, the Dawn of Cinema, and the Invention of the Twentieth Century by Dana Stevens, finished April 5
033) Abe Lincoln in Illinois by Robert E. Sherwood, finished April 8
034) Theology of Play by Jürgen Moltmann, finished April 12
035) The Male Animal by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent, finished April 12
036) Bluffton by Matt Phelan, finished April 16
037) Number One Walking: My Life in the Movies and Other Diversions by Steve Martin and Harry Bliss, finished April 15

From Lolly to Elias

038) Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner, finished April 17
039) The Emperor's Soul by Brandon Sanderson, finished April 19
040) Beware the Eye of Odin by Wager/Odland/Madsen/Dukeshire, finished April 19
041) The Complete Peanuts: 1965–1966 by Charles M. Schulz, finished April 20
042) A Wealth of Pigeons by Steve Martin and Harry Bliss, finished April 22
043) Elias: An Epic of the Ages by Orson Ferguson Whitney, finished April 23

Old Hollywood & Olden Times

044) Straight Lady: The Life and Times of Margaret Dumont, "The Fifth Marx Brother" by Chris Enss and Howard Kazanjian, finished April 25
045) Voices from the Radium Age edited by Joshua Glenn, finished April 26
046) The Ballad of YFB by Aaron Brassea, finished April 28
047) Reynaud's Tale by Ben Hatke, finished May 3
048) Superman: Up in the Sky by Tom King and Andy Kubert, finished May 5
049) Ramona and Her Father by Beverly Cleary, finished May 5
050) Resurrection Row by Anne Perry, finished May 6 

Saying good bye to our friend Kinsey

052) More Gross: Cartoons by S. Gross, finished May 9
053) I Am Blind and My Dog Is Dead by S. Gross, finished May 9
054) Batgirls: One Way or Another by Becky Cloonan / Michael W. Conrad / Jorge Corona / Sarah Stein, finished May 11
055) Batgirls: Bat Girl Summer by Becky Cloonan / Michael W. Conrad / Neil Googe / Robbi Rodriguez / Rico Renzi, finished May 11
056) Y is for Yesterday by Sue Grafton, finished May 12 

The tyranny of getting stuff in the right order

051) On Tyranny by Timothy Snyder, finished May 8
057) Superman Smashes the Klan by Gene Luen Yang and Guruhiru, finished May 13
058) Four in Hand by Alicia Mountain, finished May 17
059) The Glob by John O'Reilly and Walt Kelly, finished May 20
060) Why They Can't Write: Killing the Five-Paragraph Essay and Other Necessities by John Warner, finished May 24
061) Less by Andrew Sean Greer, finished May 25
062) Children of the Woods by Ciano/Hixson/Stevens/Otsmane-Elhaou, finished May 27
063) The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece by Tom Hanks, finished May 29

Such quality. Such excellence.

064) Here by Darlene Young, finished June 1
065) Theseus Volume 1 by Jordan Holt, finished June 1
066) Theseus Volume 2 by Jordan Holt, finished June 1
067) Reviews for Non-Existent Movies by Eric Goulden Kimball, finished June 5
068) The Scarlet Plague by Jack London, finished June 6
069) Anne of West Philly by Ivy Noelle Weir and Myisha Haynes, finished June 10
070) Ramona and Her Mother by Beverly Cleary, finished June 10

 Books read: a forensic investigation

073) These Precious Days by Ann Patchett, finished c. June 17
074) Grass by Keum Suk Gendry-Kim, finished c. June 19
075) The Burning Book: A Jewish-Mormon Memoir by Jason Olson and James Goldberg, finished c. June 21
076) The Night Watchman by Louise Erdrich, finished June 23
From prehumanity to eternal destiny

077) Tuki: Fight for Fire by Jeff Smith, finished June 28
078) Tuki: Fight for Family by Jeff Smith, finished June 29
079) The Writer's Hustle by Joey Franklin, finished July 8
080) Future Day Saints: The New Arrivals by Matt Page, finished July 16
081) Binti by Nnedi Okorafor, finished July 18
082) Ramona Quimby, Age 8 by Beverly Cleary, finished July 19
083) Just One More by Annette Lyon, finished July 20
084) The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six More by Roald Dahl, finished July 22
085) Somewhere Out There: My Animated Life by Don Bluth, finished July 22

Two women, in comics form

085) Beast by Marian Churchland, finished July 24
086) Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow by King/Evely/Lopes, finished c. July 28

The sex-and-metaphysics Venn diagram

087) Banana Sunday by Paul Tobin and Colleen Coover, finished August 2
088) Falconer by John Cheever, finished August 3
089) Still Life with Woodpecker by Tom Robbins, finished August 3
090) Homunculus by Joe Sparrow, finished August 5
091) Cuckoo by Joe Sparrow, finished August 9
092) Fatal by Kimberly Johnson, finished August 16
093) The Unsinkable Walker Bean by Aaron Renier, finished August 17
094) The Infinite Future by Tim Wirkus, finished August 22
095) Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne by Katherine Rundell, finished August 23 

What, is this nothing but comics?

096) The Unsinkable Walker Bean and the Knights of the Waxing Moon by Aaron Renier, finished August 24
097)
Just Julie's Fine by Theric Jepson, finished August 26
098) Bea Wolf by Zach Weinersmith and Boulet, finished August 28
099) Assassinistas by Tini Howard / Gilbert Hernandez / et al., finished August 31
100) Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons by Kelly Sue DeConnick / Phil Jimenez / Gene Ha / Nicola Scott, finished August 31
101) The Sandman: Preludes & Nocturnes by Neil Gaiman et al., finished September 6
102) Slapstick, or Lonesome No More! by Kurt Vonnegut, finished September 11

We got mysteries, we got apples, we got St. Paul. . . .

103) The Sandman: The Doll's House by Neil Gaiman et al., finished September 14
104) Hallowe'en Party by Agatha Christie, finished September 2023
105)
The Sandman: Dream Country by Neil Gaiman et al, finished September 27
106)
Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty, finished September 29
107)
Paul Among the People: The Apostle Reinterpreted and Reimagined in His Own Time by Sarah Ruden, finished October 1
108) Cymbeline by William Shakespeare, finished October 5
109) The Sandman: Season of Mists by Neil Gaiman et al, finished October 5



2023-09-11

What, is this nothing but comics?

.

The short answer is no. But don't blink or you'll miss the evidence.
.


096) The Unsinkable Walker Bean and the Knights of the Waxing Moon by Aaron Renier, finished August 24

This books is so bananas. It's so strange, so weird. And although I don't understand it, it makes sense. I know it knows and I trust it.

I liked the first one but this volume is even more ambitious (and insane). We have animals made out of stars and doppelgangers and magic alloys and granddaughters of Neptune and ghosts rising from folktales and a floating city and visions and evil kings and all that just makes this book sound borderline ordinary. Believe me when I tell you it is not.

It is something else.

one marathon sitting


097) Just Julie's Fine by Theric Jepson, finished August 26

This was my last chance to do any edits prior to publication. I couldn't imagine there was anything left to catch but I ended up reading the entire novel anyway. I found about a dozen tiny errors still extant. Which means there's probably a dozen more I missed.

Sigh.

Editing is hard.

But I can announce that this book's pretty good. I don't know what you'll think but hoo. I enjoyed it.

today
 

098) Bea Wolf by Zach Weinersmith and Boulet, finished August 28

I loved this. I knew it was based on Beowulf and I know Weinersmith and I expected something more dumb than anything else.

That's not what I got.

He's taken the story of Beowulf and transposed it to the world of suburban childhood, bringing fantasies child me had to life but in the glories of Anglo-Saxon alliterative verse.

Last year I had a work published that fits that same description and I can tell you that there is something intensely natural (which is not to say easy) about embracing the pre-Norman forms of English poetry. To embrace alliteration and kenning and just go for it. And that's what Weinersmith does here. And it is glorious. And you can tell he respects kids. Why else throw out words like thole?

And Boulet's art is manic and heroic and absurd. It ties into classic looks of Grendel while staying true to Bea Wolf's own unique conceits.

And then the short essay at the end about Beowolf and the poetry and the process is likewise intelligent and carries a high opinion of child readers and is funny and insightful and, honestly, I suspect this book will make some writers. And baby am I excited to see their work appear twenty years from now.

A total success.

And I am delighted to tell you that just the other day Lady Steed saw someone on her free group looking for a large stuffed bear that could be gutted because her daughter is planning her Bea Halloween costume.

This is as it should be.

an evening
 

099) Assassinistas by Tini Howard / Gilbert Hernandez / et al., finished August 31

I guess you could call this a fun little satirical look at the American violent-story tradition. It did have some cool elements but it just didn't come together for me.

a week or more
 

100) Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons by Kelly Sue DeConnick / Phil Jimenez / Gene Ha / Nicola Scott, finished August 31

This is one of the most astonishing comics I've read in some time. It amazes on practically every page.

There are a few reasons for this. Let's start that it feels real. By which I mean these spins on ancient Greek myth carry genuine mythic weight and seem true in a deep and meaningful way. These are stories you can believe in. And they explode the Amazon-based mythos of the Wonder Woman universe in awesome ways. The characters birthed here I reckon will be with us a long long time.

The art has depth and rigor. I'm grateful for the brief notes in the back because there I discovered how little I was even seeing. Read this book with good lighting and perhaps a magnifying glass. There is much to find here.


In short it is beautiful and moving and deadly dangerous. This book is not here to play games.

Astonishing stuff.

You don't have to care half a whit about superheros to love this story.

two days, possibly not back-to-back


101) The Sandman: Preludes & Nocturnes by Neil Gaiman et al., finished September 6

I read the original Sandman run in the early Oughts, but I didn't read them in order and I frankly don't know if I read them all. I've always intended to start over at the beginning, but just have not.

But I have a son I thought would like them so I got the first two from the library. Dad's suggestion didn't take but, hey, the first two volumes of Sandman!

You know what? I think the time has come.

The first volume does read like the team figuring out what they're doing, but the gist is right and I'm excited to rediscover where it goes from here.

Onward!

four days


102) Slapstick, or Lonesome No More! by Kurt Vonnegut, finished September 11

Now that I'm back to teaching Vonnegut, I'm hopping back on my novel-a-summer routine. I don't have many left to firsttime as you can see:

 This is not one of the better ones.

Honestly, it feels like something that should have been published posthumously. It has a lot of great Vonnegut spark and plenty of (half-developed) ideas, but it never congeals into a novel and it ends in such a way that makes me feel like he just lost interest in it.

Plus, there is some racial stuff that is satirical, sure, but for every bit that is arguably antiracist, there are ten that just feel racist here in 2023. I would be shocked if that were his intention, but, well, you can't always control how your stuff will be read.

Plus, this is the 2019 Vintage edition and I don't know if it was just the process of changing the punctuation to be more British, but there are several punctuation and other typesetting errors. It's hard to believe that this could happen at a major house to a major author's 47yrold book. How? How? How?

a couple months or even more even though it's quite short

 

Previously . . . . :

final posts in this series from
  2007 = 2008 = 2009 = 2010 = 2011 = 2012 = 2013
2014 = 2015 = 2016 = 2017 = 2018 = 2019 = 2020 = 2021 = 2022

 
 
Earlier in 2023

001) The Dark Room by Gerry Duggan & Scott Buoncristiano, finished January four
002) The Only Harmless Great Thing by Brooke Bolander, finished January 6
003) Rose by Jeff Smith and Charles Vess, finished January 10
004) Acting Class by Nick Drnaso, finished January 10
005) Red Scare by Liam Francis Walsh, finished January 11

006) The Short Reign of Pippin IV by John Steinbeck, finished January 18
007) Filmish by Edward Ross, finished circa January 20

HOW many times?

008) Maddy Kettle Book: The Adventure of the Thimblewitch by Eric Orchard, finished January 24 
009) Fantastic Frights: A Beginner's Guide to Scary Stories, finished January 24
010) Ramona the Pest by Beverly Cleary, finished February 2
011) Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman, finished February 3
012) The Postman Always Rings Twice by James M. Cain, finished February 4

013) Is that all there is? by Joost Swarte, finished February 6
014) Edge Case by YZ Chin, finished February 7

If it weren't for a friendly sex talk, everything here would be miserable

015) Double Indemnity by James M. Cain, finished February 10
016) Sex Educated: Letters from a Latter-day Saint therapist to her younger self by Bonnie Young, LMFT, finished February 13
017) Unmask Alice: LDS, Satanic Panic, and the Imposter Behind the World's Most Notorious Diaries by Rick Emerson, finished February 20 

A Bookful Bounty for thee and thine 

018) I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jeannette McCurdy, finished February 27
019–21) The Abominable Charles Christopher by Karl Kershl, finished March 6
022) Displacement by Kiku Hughes, finished March 6
023) The Many Deaths of Laila Starr by Ram V and Filipe Andrade, finished March 6
024) The Homeland Directive by Robert Venditti and Mike Huddleston, finished March 7
025) Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare, finished March 14
026) Last West: Roadsongs for Dorothea Lange by Tess Taylor, finished March 15
027) 22 Young Mormon Writers edited by Neal E. Lambert and Richard H. Cracroft, finished March 19
028 & 029) Titus Andronicus by William Shakespeare, finished March 23 & March 27

Literarily solving for X

030) X by Sue Grafton, finished March 28
031) Ramona the Brave by Beverly Cleary, finished April 5
032) Camera Man: Buster Keaton, the Dawn of Cinema, and the Invention of the Twentieth Century by Dana Stevens, finished April 5
033) Abe Lincoln in Illinois by Robert E. Sherwood, finished April 8
034) Theology of Play by Jürgen Moltmann, finished April 12
035) The Male Animal by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent, finished April 12
036) Bluffton by Matt Phelan, finished April 16
037) Number One Walking: My Life in the Movies and Other Diversions by Steve Martin and Harry Bliss, finished April 15

From Lolly to Elias

038) Lolly Willowes by Sylvia Townsend Warner, finished April 17
039) The Emperor's Soul by Brandon Sanderson, finished April 19
040) Beware the Eye of Odin by Wager/Odland/Madsen/Dukeshire, finished April 19
041) The Complete Peanuts: 1965–1966 by Charles M. Schulz, finished April 20
042) A Wealth of Pigeons by Steve Martin and Harry Bliss, finished April 22
043) Elias: An Epic of the Ages by Orson Ferguson Whitney, finished April 23

Old Hollywood & Olden Times

044) Straight Lady: The Life and Times of Margaret Dumont, "The Fifth Marx Brother" by Chris Enss and Howard Kazanjian, finished April 25
045) Voices from the Radium Age edited by Joshua Glenn, finished April 26
046) The Ballad of YFB by Aaron Brassea, finished April 28
047) Reynaud's Tale by Ben Hatke, finished May 3
048) Superman: Up in the Sky by Tom King and Andy Kubert, finished May 5
049) Ramona and Her Father by Beverly Cleary, finished May 5
050) Resurrection Row by Anne Perry, finished May 6 

Saying good bye to our friend Kinsey

052) More Gross: Cartoons by S. Gross, finished May 9
053) I Am Blind and My Dog Is Dead by S. Gross, finished May 9
054) Batgirls: One Way or Another by Becky Cloonan / Michael W. Conrad / Jorge Corona / Sarah Stein, finished May 11
055) Batgirls: Bat Girl Summer by Becky Cloonan / Michael W. Conrad / Neil Googe / Robbi Rodriguez / Rico Renzi, finished May 11
056) Y is for Yesterday by Sue Grafton, finished May 12 

The tyranny of getting stuff in the right order

051) On Tyranny by Timothy Snyder, finished May 8
057) Superman Smashes the Klan by Gene Luen Yang and Guruhiru, finished May 13
058) Four in Hand by Alicia Mountain, finished May 17
059) The Glob by John O'Reilly and Walt Kelly, finished May 20
060) Why They Can't Write: Killing the Five-Paragraph Essay and Other Necessities by John Warner, finished May 24
061) Less by Andrew Sean Greer, finished May 25
062) Children of the Woods by Ciano/Hixson/Stevens/Otsmane-Elhaou, finished May 27
063) The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece by Tom Hanks, finished May 29

Such quality. Such excellence.

064) Here by Darlene Young, finished June 1
065) Theseus Volume 1 by Jordan Holt, finished June 1
066) Theseus Volume 2 by Jordan Holt, finished June 1
067) Reviews for Non-Existent Movies by Eric Goulden Kimball, finished June 5
068) The Scarlet Plague by Jack London, finished June 6
069) Anne of West Philly by Ivy Noelle Weir and Myisha Haynes, finished June 10
070) Ramona and Her Mother by Beverly Cleary, finished June 10

 Books read: a forensic investigation

073) These Precious Days by Ann Patchett, finished c. June 17
074) Grass by Keum Suk Gendry-Kim, finished c. June 19
075) The Burning Book: A Jewish-Mormon Memoir by Jason Olson and James Goldberg, finished c. June 21
076) The Night Watchman by Louise Erdrich, finished June 23


From prehumanity to eternal destiny

077) Tuki: Fight for Fire by Jeff Smith, finished June 28
078) Tuki: Fight for Family by Jeff Smith, finished June 29
079) The Writer's Hustle by Joey Franklin, finished July 8
080) Future Day Saints: The New Arrivals by Matt Page, finished July 16
081) Binti by Nnedi Okorafor, finished July 18
082) Ramona Quimby, Age 8 by Beverly Cleary, finished July 19
083) Just One More by Annette Lyon, finished July 20
084) The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six More by Roald Dahl, finished July 22
085) Somewhere Out There: My Animated Life by Don Bluth, finished July 22

Two women, in comics form

085) Beast by Marian Churchland, finished July 24
086) Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow by King/Evely/Lopes, finished c. July 28

The sex-and-metaphysics Venn diagram

087) Banana Sunday by Paul Tobin and Colleen Coover, finished August 2
088) Falconer by John Cheever, finished August 3
089) Still Life with Woodpecker by Tom Robbins, finished August 3
090) Homunculus by Joe Sparrow, finished August 5
091) Cuckoo by Joe Sparrow, finished August 9
092) Fatal by Kimberly Johnson, finished August 16
093) The Unsinkable Walker Bean by Aaron Renier, finished August 17
094) The Infinite Future by Tim Wirkus, finished August 22
095) Super-Infinite: The Transformations of John Donne by Katherine Rundell, finished August 23

 

2022-02-16

Books, beginning at twelve

.

012) Just Julie's Fine by Theric Jepson, finished January 28

BCC Press accepted this almost two years ago and they keep delaying its release so I decided to do another pass. In part because I was getting paranoid about its quality and partly because another pass never hurts. I weeded our a few typos and a couple grammatical errors, tightened a couple things. The total differences are probably under a hundred words (as it currently stands, the manuscript stands at 37,000 words even, a nice number and a short novel—a novella, in fact, were it eligible for a Nebula or Hugo) but this draft is better than the one they accepted in April 2020. So hey!

It's no less fun, to be honest, to pick up a book and really enjoy it, even though I wrote it.

Look for it soon*!

*(whatever that means)

a week


013) The Art of Description by Mark Doty, finished January 28

This too is not the one I first asked the library for. That was The Art of Intimacy and I don't know if I didn't enjoy its first chapter enough or if I had become too excited to consider description, but I returned it and dove into this one instead. (Incidentally, I have two or three more, as well, waiting for me beside the bed.)

And this one delivered! My biggest takeaway is one of those insights that seems so obvious once stated but that I can't be sure I'd ever coherently thought before. Namely, that description reveals not only the world, but the perspective that gave us that particular view of the world. Of course!

The second half of the book is an abecedary of description. You can get a sense of Doty's play if I give you the entry titles:

ART
BEAUTY
COLOR
CONTOUR DRAWING
DESIRE
ECONOMY
FIGURES
GESTURE DRAWINGS
HUNGER
INCOMPLETE
JUXTAPOSITION
KNOWING
LANGUAGE
MOON
MORALITY
NAMES
NEVER
OPPOSITION
PROJECTION
QUALIFIERS
QUEER
REAL
SONIC
SYNESTHESIA
TONE
UNCERTAINTY
VERB
WEST WIND
X-RAY
YIELD
A to Z

certainly more than a week probably more than two
 

014) Green Lantern: Legacy by Minh Lê and Andie Tong, finished February 5

This one was not great for reading out loud. It was also just so-so in terms of introducing and developing characters. But it made one brilliant, brilliant choice that makes it maybe my all-time favorite Green Lantern debut. And I'm going ahead and spoiling this now, so buckle up.

The first thing to know is that our new Lantern, Tai, is just a kid. Thirteen years old. The ring moved from his grandmother to him, which perplexes John Stewart but hey---the ring wants what the ring wants.

Anyway, Grandma dies and Tai's mentors are both largely offworld. But a charismatic billionaire moves into that roll, having known Grandma, and before you know it---oh no!---he's a Yellow Lantern. Gee whiz.

Yellow plays on Tai's feelings of being apart and alone but Tai plays back by using the ring not to make a giant hammer or pie or mecha but his family. And those projections stand with him and give him strength and you know what? It's really beautiful.

So while it's not a very good book, it made one really wonderful decision that made me cry. Well done.

one morning
 

015) Serious Concerns by Wendy Cope, finished January 9

I'm aware of Cope because of her poems collected in a Norton (this one). All her poems collected there are brilliant and they were all lifted from Serious Concerns (1992).

I have now read Serious Concerns and it is consistently delightful. Some recurring themes (darn men, heart-skipping love, the absurdity of professional poets) and some poems sing louder than others, but I don't see how anyone could fail to be charmed.

None of my favorites seem to be online, but a short google will reveal to you the wonders of Wendy Cope. I commend to you the exercise.

three or four noncontiguous days
 

016) The Art of Mystery by Maud Casey, finished February 11

These books are great. I don't know if I would have enjoyed them as a younger writer as they're moving around in near-pretentious air, but they are sincere and personal and I've dug all the ones I've read, and appreciated the ones I've skimmed. Pick one that attracts you and give it a shot

This one is about the ineffable and the liminal, the unseen and the haunting, the unknowable and the only-felt. In other words, the stuff fiction does best. Because no matter how closely we look, a good book leaves room for the reader.

You can see some of what I liked by seeing what I added to Wikiquote today. Here's something that can't really be added:

 "The poet and critic Yvor Winters one said of a poem that it should contain both paraphrasable and unparaphrasable content, and the same holds true of fiction.

I also owe this book for pointing out that l'amour and la mort are homonyms. Something I don't know how I have not noticed. I mean—how.

since the last one


017) The Art of Bible Translation by Robert Alter, finished February 13

This book was fascinating. And delightfully catty. He has no qualms and lambasting other translations and calling them out for their literary and artistic (and occasional scholarly) failures.

And I'm glad he did because it explained to me just why, for all their additional modernity and "clarity" they just felt less . . . biblical. I never thought it could just be that new ≠ holy, but what was it?

Alter persuasively argues that the issue is fidelity to the Hebrew. The King James translators felt the Bible was inerrant and thus tried to capture all the weird quirks of ancient Hebrew, to the point of italicizing the little words they had to add for the sake of English grammar. Modern translations have made a point of rejecting that in an attempt to be more vernacular, to the result that any sense of style the original writers possessed is lost. Alter, in his translation, makes effort to capture as much of the original style as possible.

I picked up his Five Books of Moses from the library (a heft volume, more notes than text) and it is excellent. It feels literary. It feels scriptural. It feels serious. And it's a dang good read. It maintains much of what is excellent about the KJV while bringing it into our century.

I only regret that buying his entire bible runs close to a hundred dollars and it's split into three (too-heavy) volumes only.

Nevertheless, I want it.

some weeks


018) No Longer Human by Junji Ito, finished February 15

Having just rediscovered the brilliant Jinji Ito, I put everything else by him the library had on hold (it wasn't a lot) and started by reading this adaptation of a classic Japanese novel.

I didn't know that was the case until it was almost over and started putting some pieces together and read the back flap where both Ito and the original author were identified.

In short. There's this kid. He is sexually assaulted by two of the family's servants, one male, one female. While there may be more to it, these experiences lead him to be utterly disconnected from humanity. He has no real capacity for maintaining positive feelings toward other humans. Though he has moments of really trying, largely his inability to connect just leads to disaster. Incest and suicide and murder and all sorts of terrible stuff.

He ends up moving from woman to woman and from professional failure to professional failure. The lives he ruins are legion, but most notable are the series of women he finds himself in bed with—most of whom are dead at the end of the affair. But before their deaths, they move from beautiful humans, inside and out, to hollow shells for whom death is a release. Only one of these women dies before her inner destruction. Our protagonist, with his inner damage and his fears and his insecurities and his addictions, destroys them each. Not intentionally, but he is poison. And slowly he destroys them, no matter his intentions.

It's not a happy book. And I can't speak to the (apparently great) original. But Ito's presentation of this story is relentless. His mastery of face and body and expression and line drag us down into the horrors these characters suffer. His other books of supernatural horror are terrifying, but this–notwithstanding its (possibly) supernatural elements—is a story that feels possible. And that is so much worse.

A beautifully told story of realism. A horror story. And the least arousing panoply of sex I've ever come across.

perhaps a week

Previous Posts 

Let's start the year off with some old friends
001) U Is for Undertow by Sue Grafton, finished January 4
002) Far Sector by N.K. Jemisin et al, finished January 7
003) Joseph Smith and the Mormons by Noah Van Sciver, finished January 7
004) The Blank Wall by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding, finished January 11
005) The Art of Perspective by Christopher Castellani, finished January 11
006) Bad Kitty Goes on Vacation by Nick Bruel, finished January 12

Comics (not that comical) and a novel (pretty comical)
007) Remina by Junji Ito, finished January 15
008) The Tea Dragon Society by Katie O'Neill, finished January 15
009) The Tea Dragon Festival here by Katie O'Neill, finished January 15
010) A Hat Full of Sky by Terry Pratchett, finished January 18
011)  Diana: Princess of the Amazons by Shannon & Dean Hale and Victoria Ying, finished January 26


final posts in this series from
  2007 = 2008 = 2009 = 2010 = 2011 = 2012 = 2013
2014
 = 2015 = 2016 = 2017 = 2018 = 2019 = 2020 = 2021

___related___
UNFINISHED BOOKS
REJECTED BOOKS