Saturday, May 31, 2025

May 2025 -- Second Half

Back to print books and there are some good ones here.  Two road trips with mixed up families. Both were a mixture of light and dark; serious subjects given a light touch. In fact most of what I read during the last half of May dealt with dark themes. Interesting how they were all given different treatments.

And I managed to continue collecting the word "last" in titles. (See February 28, 2025 post.) One was pretty good the other was a DNF dud. 

Fiction: 
The Names by Knapp, Florence 
Three tellings of the same lives.  All rather dark.
The Red House by Morris, Mary
Jews in WW2 Italy. More darkness.
Old School Indian by Curtis, Aaron John 
An ailing Akwesasne (St. Regis Mohawk Tribe) man returns to the Rez after living in Virginia and Florida.
Awake in the Floating City by Kwan, Susanna
Dystopian novel. San Francisco flooded. Artist/caregiver. debut novel
Run for the Hills by Wilson, Kevin
Newly found half siblings go on a road trip.
The Road to Tender Hearts by Hartnett, Annie 
A 60 something man, his single daughter, his newly found orphaned grand niece and nephew, and a cat go on a road trip. 
 
Famous Last Words by McAllister, Gillian 
Some suspense, some twists, some police procedures, family relationships, maybe too many notes. But I'll probably give this author anther try.
 
Target Island a story by Mariah Rigg
 
Nonfiction:
43. OUDEWATER, Stadswaag
Mijn Land, Zuid-Holland, Vol. 3 (of 11) by G. J. Nijland; Jan Godefroy, illustrator. (1929)
Just for the pictures, I don't read Dutch. 
 
Eat the City: A Tale of the Fishers, Foragers, Butchers, Farmers, Poultry Minders, Sugar Refiners, Cane Cutters, Beekeepers, Winemakers, and Brewers Who Built New York by Shulman, Robin
Interesting subject but the structure within each was choppy. It would have been nice to have some pictures,
 
Notes on Jacaranda Season an essay by Evelyn Fok
 
DNF:
The Book Eaters by Dean, Sunyi
It's rare for me to give up on a book when I'm half-way through but at page 157 I quit. 
Play the Fool by Chern, Lina 
Too many dumb choices in too few pages. Only read three (short) chapters.
Upon a Starlit Tide by Woods, Kell 
Read 122 of 432 pages and not much happened. The pace was way too slow.
The Last Ferry Out by Bartz, Andrea
Read the first fifty pages, got bored, skipped and read the end. I have no interest in what's in between.

Sunday, May 18, 2025

May 2025 -- Weekend Online Intermission

https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/45299/images/0012.jpg

Except for a few minutes of bedtime reading of actual physical books each night, my mid-May weekend was spent online.

On Saturday the 17th I did my usual morning puzzles and stuff and then went Net surfing.

I explored TSLR (The Shanghai Literary Review) Online which publishes poetry, fiction, nonfiction, translation, reviews, criticism, art, and interviews. 

Another lit magazine I spent some time with is Hazlitt which includes "journalism, fiction, columns, interviews, comics and more...."

A random Gutenberg search turned up some fun picture books and some oddities.

After a token amount of housework the exploring continued on Sunday....

Emma Sloley's web site led me to another lit magazine - Craft - which includes  fiction, creative nonfiction, essays and interviews. "All published creative pieces include an author’s note and an editorial introduction that both discuss stylistics in the work."  Also JMWW a weekly journal of fiction, poetry, flash, essays, and interviews.

A visit to one of my favorite sites The Good Life France revealed that I was a tad late for a special saint's day.  Saint Honoré | A French cake & Patron Saint of bakers  an essay by Ally Mitchell reminded me that it was Friday, May 16. As always, TGLF has gorgeous food pictures.  Cake!

Not to worry as my housemate did go bakery shopping that day and came home with muffins, scones, and croissants. But I don't have pictures because...there were snacks and breakfasts between then and my discovery of the article.

Fiction: 
Verse 1
Three Punky Dunk Books:
Published P. F. Volland, Chicago, 1912 with no author/illustrator credit. According to Wikipedia Charlotte B. Herr was the author. The illustrator was probably Frances Beem.
 
Other works  by Herr on  Gutenberg: 
The Wise Mamma Goose (Volland, 1913) Illustrated by Beem
How Freckle Frog Made Herself Pretty (Volland 1913) Illustrated by Beem
 
Their Mariposa Legend: A Romance of Santa Catalina (no publisher nor date given on the Gutenberg edition; The Library of Congress record has:  Pasadena, Calif. : Post Printing and Binding Co., c1921. LOC also credits an illustrator but the Gutenberg file has no illustration.)
This a longer work and is not a picture book. I am struggling to read this and doubt that I'll get any further than these opening paragraphs
   " It began to happen a long time ago, centuries ago, when, in a fragrant rush of rain, spring came one day to Punagwandah, fairest of the Channel Islands. Beneath the golden mists of sunrise danced a radiant sea. On steeply sloping hillsides where thickets of wild lilac bloomed, the lark shook from his tiny throat a tumult of glad music. In shadowed niches of the canyons lilies waited to fill with light their gleaming ivory cups. Spring in very truth was there.

And looking down upon it from her cavern bower high above the beach, watched the Princess Wildenai. Kneeling there, the light of dawn shining on her long black hair, she was, herself, the sweetest blossom of the spring. Loveliest was she among all the maidens of the Mariposa and of royal blood besides; although of this the great chief Torquam, who even at that moment lay sleeping in his lodge of deerskin on the crescent beach below, knew more than he had ever told.

With eyes rapt, her breath scarcely stirring the folds of softest fawnskin drawn across her breast, the princess bent her gaze to where the waves ran silver on the ocean's distant rim. There she knew the sun must rise and, as the first dazzling ray sparkled across the water, she rose slowly until she stood erect, a slender, graceful figure against the dim, gray rocks, and stretching her arms toward the East, spoke in the musical words of her people. "
 
Other works illustrated by Beem on Gutenberg:
Bully Bull Frog and His Home in Rainbow Valley by Elizabeth Stafford Fry (Rand McNally, 1921)
Dolly and Molly and the Farmer Man by Elizabeth Gordon (Rand McNally, 1914)

And now for something a little more serious...
A Simple Soul  a novella by Flaubert, Gustave
 
Two from TSLR:
 Nan a story  by Alyson McDevitt
 
from Craft:
The Sand Nests a story by Emma Sloley
 
Nonfiction:
From Gutenberg:
The Russian Ballet by Ellen Terry ; illustrated with drawings by Pamela Colman Smith (Bobbs-Merrill, 1913)
 
From Hazlitt:
shamanism in Korea

From JMWW:
Things I Wish I’d Bought essay by Emma Sloley
Your Lebanon: Four Sides an essay by Sandra Carlson Khalil

Friday, May 16, 2025

May 2025 -- First Half

“Waddle for your life!” squeaked Puddle, hanging on tight.

Started the month by finishing Outermark which was a great read. Then I started and rejected The Champagne Letters (not listed below because I only read a few chapters). Then the excellent A House for Miss Pauline. Then the so-so Sweet Vidalia. Is this how the month will go? Back and forth between great and notso great?

Looked up Dianna McCaulay which led me to PREE an online magazine for new contemporary writing from and about the Caribbean. It includes  fiction, non-fiction, poetry, essays, interviews and experimental writing. Also poked around a bit on the website of  The Jamaica Environment Trust which McCaulay founded.

Actually the first half of May delivered some fine reading!

Fiction:   
Outermark by Brown, Jason 
One Fifth Avenue by Bushnell, Candace
New Yorkers being at the center of their little universes.
Things Don't Break on Their Own by Collins, Sarah Easter 
Lots of things are broken in this tale of a dysfunctional family.
A House for Miss Pauline by McCaulay, Diana
Are there ghosts in this Jamaican house built from the rubble of a slaveowner's plantation? 
David Golder, The Ball, Snow in Autumn, The Courilof Affair by Némirovsky, Irène; translated from the French by Smith, Sandra; introduction by Messud, Claire
Perspective(s) by Binet, Laurent; translated from the French by Taylor, Sam
Yes! Loved this investigation of a murder in 16th Century Florence.
The Library of Lost Dollhouses by Hooper, Elise 
Another good one!
Elektra by Saint, Jennifer 
A good retelling.
The Lilac People by Todd, Milo 
A different look at WW2 in Germany. LGBT+
Midnight at the Dragon Café by Bates, Judy Fong 
Got a slow start on this but stayed with it and ended up liking it.
Red Clay by Fancher, Charles B. 
A promising debut.
Sweet Vidalia by Sandlin, Lisa 
soso
The Usual Desire to Kill by Barnes, Camilla 
Tedious.
 
The Dinky Ducklings by Lang Campbell (Algonquin Publishing Company, 1928) 
Fun artwork, some racist language typical of the times.
The Last Lady of Mulberry: A Story of Italian New York by Thomas, Henry Wilton; illustrated by Pollak, Emil
First published in 1900. I don't think it aged well.
 
Preservation a story by by Andrew Cominelli
Bouyon a story by Savannah Balmir
Cassiopeia a story by Gabriel Urza
 
Poetry:
Water, Water: Poems by Collins, Billy 
 
Nonfiction:
Raising Hare: A Memoir by Dalton, Chloe; illustrated by Nestor, Denise
Excellent! 
Irene Nemirovsky: Her Life And Works by Weiss, Jonathan; translated from the French by Weiss, Dace
Informative discussion. Sheds some light on Nimirovsky's depiction of Jews.
Be Ready When the Luck Happens by Garten, Ina
A pleasant read
Custodians of Wonder: Ancient Customs, Profound Traditions, and the Last People Keeping Them Alive by Stein, Eliot 
Too much padding, too much of the author.  After the first two or three essays they all sounded alike.

Domestic life in New England in the seventeenth century: A Discourse Delivered in the Lecture Hall of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, it being one of a Series designed to mark the Opening of the American Wing. By George Francis Dow. [1925}
 
Do we have peas in our freezer? Yes sir, yes sir, three bags full.
 
The Sutter County Museum  has a searchable archive of the Hustorical Society's Bulletin.
This publication interests me because I spent some formative years in the area. This issue contains an article by Marian Regli ("Teaching in a Rural School"). Her wedding in June 1947 is the first wedding I can remember attending.
 
Rejects These were returned to library unread (decided not to read after a chapter or less):
Checkout 19 by Bennett, Claire-Louise
Experimental novel that didn't work for me--didn't get far at all
The cure for women : Dr. Mary Putnam Jacobi and the challenge to Victorian medicine that changed women's lives forever  by Reeder, Lydia
Boring and not worth my time
The fact checker : a novel by Kelley, Austin
This "laugh-out-loud funny" book isn't --it doesn't even make me smile.
The big fix by James, Holly
Can't remember why I ditched this
Raw dog : the naked truth about hot dogs by Loftus, Jamie
Might be the worst book I tried to read this year.