Sunday, August 16, 2020

August 2020

Lousy weather, great reading. 

8/4 - Tropical Storm Isaias - 12 hour power outage; several limbs from maple tree down in driveway fortunately not to large for us to drag aside.
8/5 - Internet/phone out - about 36 hours
8/7 - PO to mail primary ballot
8/13 - library curbside pickup; JC Farm; Lyman Orchards

Fiction:

Echo on the Bay by Masatsugu Ono: translated from the Japanese by Angus Turvill

At Least We Can Apologize by Ki-ho Lee; translated from the Korean by Christopher Joseph Dykas

Garden by the Sea by Mercè Rodoreda; translated from the Catalan by Martha Tennent and Maruxa Relaño

The House with a Sunken Courtyard by Won-Il Kim; translated from the Korean by Ji-Moon Suh )

Stingray by Kim Joo-Young; translated from the Korean by Inrae You Vinciguerra and Louis Vinciguerra

Tokyo Ueno Station by Miri Yū; translated from the Japanese by Morgan Giles
  
Girls Lost by Jessica Schiefauer; translated from the Swedish by Saskia Vogel

Lake Like a Mirror by Ho Sok Fong; translated from the Chinese by Natascha Bruce

A Hundred Million Years and a Day by Jean-Baptiste Andrea: translated from the French by Sam Taylor (review copy, LibraryThing giveaway)

Book of the Little Axe by Lauren Francis-Sharma (review copy, Goodreads giveaway) 

Fiction/Poetry:

The Love Story of the Century by Märta Tikkanen; translated from the Swedish Stina Katchadourian

A Grave is Given Supper
by Mike Soto 

Nonfiction:

Why We Swim by Bonnie Tsui

Cape Town: A Place Between by Henry Trotter 

Online:
The Easiest Eight Thousand Words Ever Put Together: the story behind the story of David Dodge's To Catch A Thief. by J. Kingston Pierce

Why is Malaysia’s Chinese Population Leaving in Droves? by Wing Wong 
 found this because I needed some background for one of the stories in Lake like a Mirror

Saturday, August 01, 2020

July 2020

Not a good month for getting out the house because it was too hot to spend much time and energy outside and we are still not ready for indoor places. Weather was so humid that we really enjoyed the few meals we were able to eat on the outside porch.  But I found some excellent reading!

Breaks from quarantine:
7/15 produce shopping at JC Farms; Mozzicata (ice cream); Veterans Park (to eat ice cream)
7/21 to firehouse to vote (drive-up)
7/23 Shopping at Rogers Orchards
6/30 Pick up library hold (curbside)

Other diversions:
The WNBA is back! So I spent the end of July watching lots of  basketball games (six in one weekend). They are living and playing in a bubble with no on site fans but they play as hard and well as ever.
(I've watched so little television in the past five months that I forgot how to work the remote.)

Reading - Fiction (the notes are not intended as reviews, they are just to help me remember the books!):
 
The House of Deep Water  by Jeni McFarland - 4+ stars
Interview with the author at Debutiful. 

The Vanishing Half  by Brit Bennett - 4 stars
 Twins. One is black, the other passes as white.

All Adults Here by Emma Straub - 4 stars

The Restoration of Otto Laird by Nigel Packer - 4 stars
 Aging Austrian/British architect reflects on his life & work

My Part of Her by Javad Djavahery; translated from the French by Emma Ramadan - 5 stars
 Iranian Revolution

The Bear by Andrew Krivak - 4 stars
 Last person on Earth fantasy

62: A Model Kit by Julio Cortázar; translated from the Spanish by Gregory Rabassa - 5 stars
 The "City"

Queenie Malone's Paradise Hotel by Ruth Horgon - 4 stars

Elizabeth's Field by Barbara Lockhart, Barbara - 4 stars

Cuyahoga by Pete Beatty - 4 stars

Reading - Nonfiction:

Creating Connecticut: Critical Moments That Shaped a Great State by Walter W. Woodward
 Interesting history bits. Mostly stuff I didn't know about my adopted state.
Days on the Road: Crossing the Plains in 1865  by Sarah Raymond Herndon
 Gutenberg find.  Things that side tracked me:
  "The Icarian Community" (Diary entry of May 12) The Icarians established communities in  Texas, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and California. The one Sarah writes about was in Corning, Iowa.
   Icarians - Wikipedia

Reading - Online:

A 13th-Century Persian poet’s lessons for today
 by Joobin Bekhrad

Who Did What in Every Agatha Christie Murder Novel
 Colorful graphs by Dorothy Gambrell plotting the plots.

Bostock and Originalism
 by Mark Tushnet, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, discusses Bostock v. Clayton County. 

Forgotten Best Sellers a Project of Lapham's Quarterly.
 I haven't yet read the selection that goes with this essay, but it seems like an interesting project.