Bonfires In The Sky: What Are You Reading, Winter 2021-22?

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The Vintage International trade paperback of Where I Was From has replaced the Didion/Corvette with Eve Arnold's spacious, tight photo: at the bottom, dappled waves of two-story tract homes roll over the hill, rising out of the dry plain of nowhere to 1950 "middle class" worktopia, toward 00s obsolescence---but very pretty, some houses looking like little emoji faces as the sun hits them---sere hill behind them to the left, but waaaaay up in the sweet blue yonder is a jet! This town, Lakeview, is bordered, defined by McDonnell Douglas, name running around the pylon in forward-leaning letters, ready to ascend---past one one of the aircraft industry spokesman dismisses as "green eyeshade," chickenshit coin-poking squints at Free Enterprise: they got the Gov. of Love money tit, they got artistic license, because this is a one-hand-waving-free, rodeo industry: if you want those stars to spangle, here's how.
But by '93, some of the programs are so far over-budget for so long that even the Pentagon, in the Post-Cold-War era---remember?---is getting ready to pull the plug---great found comedy of a glorious flight of eccentric cargo plane through media, even while back at the 'gon debate is over how not if it should be grounded, for more (handed-off) tweaking or pulling of plug.
Contracts are lost, companies are saved by downsizing---McConnell starts to focus on pulling operations back into its St. Louis home, shutting the gates----Didion walks into the Lakeview Center one day---that being the center of town, the shopping center, mall--village, as it was called near where I live: an ultra-modern triumph in 1950---but she says to a clerk, oh I've never seen a home sale booth in a mall before, and clerk says, "Oh, those are just FHA/VA repos."
Ripples spread back to L.A. proper, where the people who have paper on the mortgage holders out there start to feel it in the Beverly Hills, Brentwood etc. real estate market, blaming it on the Rodney King riots.
Meanwhile back in Lakewood, a media scandal erupts, spinning through afternoon talk shows especially: a suburban gang, the Spur Posse, has been accused of rape and other shades of sexual coercion, with pre-memes of "B-but the high school gives out free condomw!" (false, says author), and "blowing it out of proportion"--but this is traced back to a pipe bomb exploding on front porch of a family containing a Spur: it's Spur vs. Spur escalation, turns out---a meeting is held at school, somebody mentions rape, and whole thing gets narrowcast---for a while---yadda yadda at least one Spur goes to prison, and not for rape or bombs---it's like a book-within-a-book, one of several: that's how she rolls.

dow, Thursday, 20 January 2022 19:54 (two years ago) link

though her Californias, old and new and old and new and why cant these new new people be like us old right new people

dow, Thursday, 20 January 2022 20:00 (two years ago) link

John Aubrey - Brief Lives
Raymond Chandler - The Big Sleep
Joseph Conrad - The Secret Agent

Aubrey's Lives is outstanding. In an era with almost no parallel in England's literature this really has a place. Obviously "Lives" are a thing, but what makes Aubrey stand out is what I can only conceive as a lack of concentration which can reduce a life to scatterings, juicy gossip, plenty of (tall) tales, with an at times review of the funeral that Aubrey has attended. The other is the Civil War: on which side of the fence did the various participants in these lives stand, and what were the consequences? Its an insight into that particular episode in England's history, too, but you can just bask in the wonderful prose (but that isn't necessarily of note, there was so much good prose and poetry in England then).

Then onto Chandler's dialoguing and Conrad's moods.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 20 January 2022 22:13 (two years ago) link

I've begun Soldiers of Salamis, Javier Cercas, based on many favorable comments here on ILB when it came up during the recent 'Favorite Book of (Year)' polling. So far it seems like a very fine bit of storytelling. My only irritation with it is a pure quibble: the battle of Salamis was a sea battle so I keep thinking "but it's sailors of Salamis, not soldiers!"

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Friday, 21 January 2022 04:38 (two years ago) link

The second half of Sailors of Salamis is some of the best stuff I've read in the last, I dunno, five years. Great book.

I'm midway through what feels like about half a dozen things. JB Priestley's English Journey, wherein farty old Jack rambles around a Depression-affected England, visiting factories, drinking stale beer and complaining about how ugly everything is. Despite confusingly standing as an independent MP at one point, Priestley does have a coherent Socialist vision but there is a whiff of one-nationism about him. He sentimentalises his subjects rather than giving them subjecthood and, at times, there's a Heart of Darkness feel about some of the places he visits. Despite all of that, I do find him oddly good company.

Also most of the way through Flyboy in the Buttermilk. This is glib, but I could read Tate about anything, all day.

Peter Bogdanovich's book on Orson Welles (This is Orson Welles). I've got about 1/3 of the way through and it's breezy and damn do I wish I was drinking with them. I need to catch up on some films before I continue.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Friday, 21 January 2022 08:43 (two years ago) link

Pauline Hopkins Of One Blood
Black medical graduate reanimates a trainwreck victim then takes off to Africa with a british expedition in a book by black female writer from 1902. Interesting since this is supposed to be a proto Wakanda society. But she seems to be working with some pretty racist tropes and also seems a bit scathing about Arabs.
I stumbled on this on some recommended list possibly historic sci fi or balck sci fi or soemthing. It is included in a book anthology of Black Sci fi from a publishing house that specialises in sci fi and fantasy anthologies. Book has 4 or 5 stories/longer pieces in dating from mid 19th century to about the 1920s which is interesting. I wasn't sure teh whole novel was going to be included since it isw listed as tens of pages shorter than the listing i found for pp in a standalone copy. But format is different and it all appears to be here.

Kehinde Andrews back to Black
I finished this overview of black political movement in the 20th and 21st centuries. Quite interesting. Shares a lot of his own opinions on things. I may be reading too many things at teh same time but I seemed to devour this less hungrily than his New Age Of Empire at teh beginning of last year. Anyway he is a writer and interviewee that I enjoy. So will be trying to read more by him.

Stephen Fry Mythos
fry's retelling of Greek mythology which I've wanted to read for a couple of years. I find his writing pretty readable so will probably read Heroes his 2nd book in the series when I can.
Started this yesterday cos I wasn't in the mood to take in just how bad teh situations described in

White rage Carol Anderson were
just read about the situation concerning brown vs Board of Education and education in general for the black population.
Read that chapter this morning.
Disgusting history. & she hasn't talked about later attempts to overturn what was eventually achieved yet.

Stevolende, Friday, 21 January 2022 12:04 (two years ago) link

a book anthology of Black Sci fi from a publishing house that specialises in sci fi and fantasy anthologies. Sounds good, what's the title?

dow, Friday, 21 January 2022 17:34 (two years ago) link

Black sci-fi short stories : anthology of new & classic tales / foreword by Temi Oh
from Flame Tree publishing.
I've seen a number of anthologies from the publishing house on various aspects of sci fi and fantasy.

Stevolende, Friday, 21 January 2022 18:40 (two years ago) link

(that one should be public domain given 1920 publish date but i can only find a scan at the moment ( https://archive.org/details/HopkinsOfOneBlood ))

koogs, Friday, 21 January 2022 20:15 (two years ago) link

I persist with Alasdair Gray's story 'Sir Thomas's Logopandocy'.

It is a formally distinctive work in which eg: a verso (left) page is split into two columns, which carry on on subsequent verso pages, while each recto (right) page carries on another discourse. Thus three, or more, discourses are going on at once. I can well imagine a critic writing 'Gray challenges our reading practices, making us decide whether to read both pages at once, or reach each column in full then go back and read the other -- drawing attention to the practices of reading'. I can't say I find this hugely rewarding, in this particular instance, as the actual contents of each discourse are uninteresting.

Regarding the complex page layout, I'm impressed that Gray was somehow able to set it up. I can imagine ILB poster Tim of Halfpint Press doing something similar, though sadly I can't see him reprinting any Gray as, presumably, it's all been done. (If he did produce a Gray text, I'd buy it.) But poster Tim has printing skills. Did Gray actually have those? How did he do this?

Gray seems to have done a huge amount of historical research to write this story - mainly into Scottish Renaissance history. The content feels to me very obscure, but for some reason the author went into minutiae. Why? What's its interest for him? I don't yet know.

The story is, though, enlivened by small moments of humour, as when the titular narrator forgets something then remembers it.

the pinefox, Saturday, 22 January 2022 10:28 (two years ago) link

just realised that Verso books is a Leftist print publishing house. Have put out some really good books but have unfortunately stopped having a differentiation between post to Europe and teh rest of teh world . Shame pesky brexit. I wanted to get a copy of a few things from there. The Omnibus Invention of teh White Race, WEB du Bois Darkwater and some Walter Benjamin but now seeing all post is £10 not what I payed last year and there is a postage category missing.

Stevolende, Saturday, 22 January 2022 10:39 (two years ago) link

Nelson Algren Never Come Morning
1940s era book about day to day life in the underclasses in Chicago in the Polish community and others. JUst read the first chapter and its pretty rough.

Owen Hatherley Clean Living Under Difficult Circumstances
A collection of short pieces by British writer under the theme of Pete Meaden's description of what mod meant. It looks at things from a perspective tied into architecture among other things. Seems interesting. Will see how I feel after i read afew more.
First piece has music by Marlene Dietrich as a central focus.

D.t. Suzuki The Zen Doctrine of No Mind
populariser of Zen in the West talks about the subject and gives a load of aphorisms.
I was lkooking at this a couple of weeks ago but thought I was overspending so left it in teh charity shop then rgretted not getting it went back and found it this week.

Stevolende, Saturday, 22 January 2022 10:48 (two years ago) link

i just finished didion's democracy, thought it was staggeringly beautiful and well-constructed, a novel of "fitful glimpses" as she put it, but these fitful glimpses gradually, invisibly mass into a narrative flow like an underground river

ppl who do not favor her politics will find the main character falling in love with a spook hilarious, but also the book is at least partially about the failure and folly of colonialism and the mean emptiness shared by a family of hardcore colonists, what can you do

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Saturday, 22 January 2022 17:25 (two years ago) link

i have started reading the sluts by dennis cooper which i will probably finish in two days bc it's like reading a really lurid message board thread

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Saturday, 22 January 2022 17:27 (two years ago) link

I finished Soldiers of Salamis last night. It's always pleasant to read a book where all the parts mesh together and deliver such satisfaction.

It wasn't journalism by any measure, but it benefited a lot from the author's sense of journalistic restraint and discipline in handling factual material. After so much restraint, the final few pages of unrestrained, almost euphoric, prose came as a surprise. The real weight of the book culminates just at the inflection point where Cercas realizes he knows exactly how he'll write the book. The final burst of relief is like a release from captivity; it says nothing the reader hasn't already concluded, but the abrupt change of tone has value.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 22 January 2022 17:33 (two years ago) link

I'm reading David Copperfield by Dickens and Blood Meridian by Mccarthy. The opening to David Copperfield was glorious but I got a bit bogged down 100 pages in so put it down for a month or two. But I'm back into it and enjoying it again - Mr. Dick is such an interesting character!

Blood Meridian is astonishing - I'm not sure I've read anything like it.

ceci n'est pas une messi (cajunsunday), Saturday, 22 January 2022 17:53 (two years ago) link

i am also reading Blood Meridian. spoilers: they have just shot up a small town.

(as above, i prefer Grebt Expectations to David Copperfield, which makes me the only one)

koogs, Saturday, 22 January 2022 18:03 (two years ago) link

I think I just read that bit too! The violence is so intense.

ceci n'est pas une messi (cajunsunday), Saturday, 22 January 2022 18:18 (two years ago) link

NYT: Anne Arensberg, Insightful Novelist of Mysteries and Manners, Dies At 84---paywalled of course, but brief wiki bio incl.
Her stories "Art History" and "Group Sex" were chosen for the 1975 and 1980 O. Henry Award Stories collections. After writing her two novellas, Arensberg won the American Book Award for First Novel in 1981 with Sister Wolf while the award replaced the National Book Awards during the 1980s. Her later publications include a novelization of "Group Sex" in 1986 and an additional novel, Incubus, in 1999.
is she good?

dow, Saturday, 22 January 2022 18:20 (two years ago) link

Blood meridian is very good

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Saturday, 22 January 2022 19:01 (two years ago) link

JUst finished Pauline Hopkins Of One Blood
it's a bit gothic or something. Not exactly what I was expecting might compare to an H Rider Haggard or something.
Well I've read it now. Think I was more impressed by WEB du Bois' contribution to this book The Comet. Well will try to get through the rest of it anyway.

also
Carol Anderson White Rage
which is really depressing and aggrovating and did clarify what Shelby County meant. So pretty topical still in a way that one would have hoped might have been corrected. It does go into corruption too which might also be topical. It was published the year taht t got the Presidential role and this copy does add an epilogue covering some of that era

Stevolende, Sunday, 23 January 2022 11:12 (two years ago) link

Small Things Like These and Foster by Claire Keegan, short and beautiful and I wept at the end of the second. Now on to The Count of Monte Cristo, I know it's a celebrated example of the genre but at the moment I feel like I wouldn't be too unhappy if I only had similar adventure stories to read till the end of my days. Not sure how he's going to spin it out for another 1000 pages though.

for 200 anyone can receive a dud nvidia (ledge), Monday, 24 January 2022 09:11 (two years ago) link

It spins out and spins out and never lets up imo

Make sure you read the Robin Buss translation!

Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 24 January 2022 11:04 (two years ago) link

I heard that it originating as magazine instalments meant that is not as coherent as it might have been if it was written as a stand alone book. I know i read an article on teh subject, may be in an Umberto Eco anthology I read.
NOt read much Dumas. have heard about his background him being the son of a black general who had managed to build up his own rank through merit I think. has been a few years since i listened to the Stuff You Missed in History podcast on Dumas pere. But interesting story.

Stevolende, Monday, 24 January 2022 12:43 (two years ago) link

The Alasdair Gray story becomes slightly more cogent: the narrator is interviewed in the Tower of London by an official and they discuss the history of language and the Tower of Babel. The narrator claims that he can reunify the languages of humanity.

The Tower motif strongly echoes the tower of the other story, about the 'Axletree': so I perceive some coherence across the book.

the pinefox, Monday, 24 January 2022 12:47 (two years ago) link

Make sure you read the Robin Buss translation

Any particular reason? I'm reading the Gutenberg version, presumably the original anonymous English translation and it seems fine, only occasionally obscure in matters of 19th century French politics which is perhaps unavoidable.

for 200 anyone can receive a dud nvidia (ledge), Monday, 24 January 2022 13:32 (two years ago) link

This is a thing from 2019 where Eco talks about Monte Cristo. I think what I was remembering was older though and had been anthologised at a much earlier date
https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2019/10/28/the-cult-of-the-imperfect/

I had thought some details had actually changed between instalments as it was gradually published in a magazine when it first appeared.

Stevolende, Monday, 24 January 2022 16:09 (two years ago) link

Monte Christo is not the greatest novel ever written, but when I'm reading it and learn I haven't moved an inch in an hour it's the greatest novel ever written.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 January 2022 16:12 (two years ago) link

I just read The Prisoner of Zenda, a great little adventure story, very nicely paced, and thankfully short enough that it didn't lose its charm by the end. The sequel looks intriguing too - apparently it takes a darker turn.

jmm, Monday, 24 January 2022 16:36 (two years ago) link

Not read the book though may have it somewhere. have seen at least a couple of films of it.
Ruritania what a lovely place to visit, but possibly a bit white.

Stevolende, Monday, 24 January 2022 16:50 (two years ago) link

Oho, will have to try those, now that Melville's truly high generic (for Melville) historical Israel Potter has given me a good taste of those.
re A. Gray's parallel columns: can work, like when I briefly got Bible-curious around the turn of the century, read some of an edition with the Synoptic Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke & John all lined up with their own accounts of how it all went down---think it's pretty well established that none of these versions were actually written down by the eyewitness Disciples who got their names on the covers: the earliest known manuscripts are from several hundred years later, whatever relationship they had to the ur-sources--but still engrossing, once you get used to reading that way.
The only other example that I've come across is in some passages of Long Time Gone: The Autobiography of David Crosby, where co-author Carl Gottlieb asks various Croz associates how something happened, if at all---I think he just asked cold, without reading them David's side of the story. Makes it an even better read: whole thing even had me wanting to revisit some of his music that I'd dismissed, if not detested. Well-played, DC & CG.

dow, Monday, 24 January 2022 17:00 (two years ago) link

I am reading a WWII memoir, And No Birds Sang, by Canada's favorite beardo, Farley Mowat. He spent months continuously under heavy fire at the front lines in the Italy campaign, which, as he strongly conveys, was a highly unpleasant place to be.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 24 January 2022 18:51 (two years ago) link

finished plotters - good but didn't quite maintain it's early momentum.

currently reading Outline , Rachel Cusk. terrific so far.

oscar bravo, Monday, 24 January 2022 22:13 (two years ago) link

Reading Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped for the first time (I vaguely remember the Disney film from when I was a kid). A decent boy's adventure story so far, and queerer than Treasure Island, at least.

Les hommes de bonbons (cryptosicko), Monday, 24 January 2022 22:17 (two years ago) link

Make sure you read the Robin Buss translation

Any particular reason? I'm reading the Gutenberg version, presumably the original anonymous English translation and it seems fine, only occasionally obscure in matters of 19th century French politics which is perhaps unavoidable.

― for 200 anyone can receive a dud nvidia (ledge), Monday, 24 January 2022 13:32 (eight hours ago) link

They're both good but IMO the Buss is better and more faithful: Buss keeps the dirty innuendoes and the fourth-wall-breaking asides that get cut from the Gutenberg version; his sentences and paragraphs are closer to the original Dumas without being cloth-eared and awkward in the Richard Pevear style; the jokes are funnier; and the Gutenberg version flattens everything in a Walter Scottish way, without Dumas's joie de vivre. But they're both good! I read the Gutenberg as a kid and still loved it. Try and chapter from both and see which you prefer. Just don't read the abridged version!

Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 24 January 2022 22:36 (two years ago) link

just realised that Verso books is a Leftist print publishing house

The Slavoj Zizek book that I'm currently reading (Living in the End Times) is published by Verso. Its kind of interesting to me despite knowing very little about Hegel and even less about Lacan. I take it he repeats a lot of the same jokes in other books, but they are new to me. I do have to skim when the dialectical reasoning gets too heavy going.

o. nate, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 04:10 (two years ago) link

'when we cease to understand the world' by benjamin labatut. just started it but i'm loving it so far. it's supposed to be dystopian historical short stories about science and mathematics. but so far it's mostly about nazis

flopson, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 05:26 (two years ago) link

Cold Water, Gwendoline Riley's book. She's so good. The voice is fully there, even in the debut she wrote in late teens. Proper "fold up my biro and go home" good.

Chuck_Tatum, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 10:37 (two years ago) link

Glad to see all the Cercas love itt

Billy Bragg's history of skiffle just introduced a guy who was "gardening critic for the Sunday Times". The past truly if a foreign country.

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 10:49 (two years ago) link

Maybe son or grandson of the guy who reviewed the countryside in Scoop!

dow, Tuesday, 25 January 2022 18:23 (two years ago) link

I'm on a Clark Coolidge kick right now, reading his massive Selected Poems and often finding myself seeing if the books that poems are taken from are available. They often either aren't or are vanishingly rare. Great poet, the selected is well worth getting for any poetry fan.

I've also been tasked (a paid task, at that) to review Dennis Cooper's most recent book for a publication, so will be diving back into some damaged Twink ass for a while.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 January 2022 00:20 (two years ago) link

White tears brown scars; How white feminism betrays women of color. / Ruby Hamad
Finding this quite compelling. have read about half of it since picking it up from the library yesterday.
Australian Arabic feminist talks about race and the ideal of the white damsel and how white tears are a negative tool. I've seen this compared to Robin DiAngelo's White Fragility but this seems to look much closer at history. Colonisers attitudes to various ethnicities that they are attempting to control sexualising women in a very instrumental way. She talks about the abuse of aboriginal Australian women as black velvet which is something i hadn't come across before, the veil in its earlier form and its ability to disguise women in their sexual endeavours in a way contrary to the way the tabloid press depicts the more recent version of the veil.
Yeah quite enjoying this book.

Bessie Chris Albertson
Later update of a thoroughly researched biography of the 20s/30s blues singer. Slowly reading this.
Includes a series of stories of her ribald carrying on as well as the recording process.

The History Of White people Nell Irvin Painter
I'm now up to the 18th and 19th century.
Author has just been talking about the popularisation of German thought in the 18th century when I wasn't sure there was a Germany to have thought in that way. & has then moved onto de Tocqueville and his companion Gustave de Beaumont travelling around the US and leaving with different foci. De Beaumont made a lot of the one drop of black blood idea and used it as a basic hingepoint for the novel he wrote whereas de Tocqueville concentrated on teh boston white male asan ideal . de Beaumont appears to have been largely written out of history including having his name removed from the title of the book about their travels which is now simply called Alexis de Tocqueville In America

Stevolende, Wednesday, 26 January 2022 10:21 (two years ago) link

Bought the Buss translation of Monte Cristo, it's half as long again as the Gutenberg one! Also sadly lacking repeated use of 'mephitic' ('méphitique'), replaced with 'sulphurous' or 'musty'.

for 200 anyone can receive a dud nvidia (ledge), Wednesday, 26 January 2022 11:06 (two years ago) link

Just now made it almost all the way through Klara and the Sun before echoing another ilxor's recent cry re another offering, "What the Hell, Ishiguro?!" Because of a spot of fantasy appearing in the swirl and clank of fairly rigorous, or at least committed, faith-keeping science fiction, the kind with nuances of individual characters, in context of small group and societal dynamics, influenced by technological options and some related shades and spaces back there (a lot of detail, but gaps for readers to fill as well, agreeable balance, I think).
So better to think of it the way Wells labelled his most popular novels as "scientific romance," like, don't expect total rigor, and know that this sweetened spot (though not "sweet spot," in terms of ideal balance) of authorial convenience leads around and back into the overall cadence, groove of involving elements (Eliot did some of this shell game switcheroo too). What the hell, still, but already thinking of checking the rest of local library's KI stash.

dow, Wednesday, 26 January 2022 18:56 (two years ago) link

re show and tell, lots of expository conversations, but also hearing yourself say that, and how verbalization x thought loops, plans, decisions snowball that way, re diff ideas and "Oh it wasn't even really an idea...(later, re same conversation)Mom just had this shitty idea..." as everything keeps moving along.

dow, Wednesday, 26 January 2022 19:02 (two years ago) link

I finished And No Birds Sang. The book's major narrative momentum was simple enough, following Mowat's transition from a youth impatient to participate in the war, up through his escalating battle experiences to the point where his battalion had suffered more than 50% losses including many close friends, he was experiencing frequent and crippling panic fear he manages via large infusions of rum.

The book ends shortly after his apparently fearless and battle hardened commanding officer hands him a poem he wrote that amounts to a suicide note, then the next day commits suicide-by-enemy-fire by charging at a machine gun emplacement. His epilogue is brief, not specifically pacifist, but harshly anti-war, warning younger generations that war grinds up both soldiers and civilians into unrecognizable shapes, both living and dead, and is neither glorious nor usually even necessary, and any suggestion to the contrary is a lie. His story reinforces these facts with brutal clarity.

I started Riddle of the Sands, a pre-WWI tale of espionage last night, but may set it aside for something less war-centered.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Wednesday, 26 January 2022 19:17 (two years ago) link

Yeah, those two in a row sound like a lot, though have seen RINTS referred to as a classic of its kind, so would be worth coming back to. The plot's pretty tight, so hard to highlight w/o indicating spoilers, but, re xpost Klara and the Sun as scientific romance, I now notice that Library of Congress data has it classified as Science Fiction and Love Stories, which is right: these are the love stories, as told by Klara, AF (Artificial Friend) series B2, of her and her chosen child owner,Josie, of Josie and her longtime best friend, Rick, as they now struggle with new roles of boyfriend and girlfriend, also stories of love of children and parents, incl. more struggles of course.
Model B2, state of the art/being superseded by new B3, but perhaps compensating for relatively limited features, is here especially challenged tune into and understand humans, sometimes remixing on the fly, as do the humans--because Josie is one of those lucky children, not just gifted, but lifted, genetically edited, which is risky, expensive in a lot of ways, but worth it, if you want your child to have a chance at anything in this world, which is strange and getting stranger, also more familiar, just up the road a little way (copyright 2021, but no pandemic culture; he probably wrote it before we were assured of the probably lingering elements of that, but isolation is a way of life in this story, though Josie and her privileged peers are now reaching the age, as part of college prep, when they must have meetings, which means learning how to be with people outside of the immediate family and household---and that's enough for this month, kids).

dow, Wednesday, 26 January 2022 21:15 (two years ago) link

Wah? RotS, sorry.

dow, Wednesday, 26 January 2022 21:16 (two years ago) link

I seem to be sticking with Riddle of the Sands. It is sedately paced and has spilled no blood so far.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 27 January 2022 20:06 (two years ago) link

finished the sluts, started outline

the sluts was a hilarious thrill-ride about homicidal topping fantasies

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Thursday, 27 January 2022 22:47 (two years ago) link


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