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#bookbingonw2017
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Spiderfelt
The Thing Around Your Neck | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
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Pickpick

This is the third book I've read by Adichie, and my favorite so far. The characters in the stories are fascinating individuals and no two stories are the same. The author sets the stories in both the city and the suburbs, and in the liminal places where people are often invisible. Like the best short story collections, I wanted more time with each set of characters, but was also satisfied with the fragments I was fed.

#bookbingonw2017

17 likes1 stack add
review
Spiderfelt
American War | Omar El Akkad
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Pickpick

This story is set just beyond the world we know, in a time where the current politics lead to secession by Southern states and climate change has flooded coastal regions driving refugees from their homes. It was a fascinating book, well written with devastating clarity. "War is fought with guns; peace is fought with stories." This is at the top of my favorite books read for #bookbingonw2017.

review
Spiderfelt
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Pickpick

One of the last squares remaining for #bookbingonw2017 was a collection of poetry. Not sure where to start, I recalled the national poet laureate when Obama was inaugurated in 2008 was a Cuban American. A quick search turned up this evocative collection filled with stories of Blanco's childhood, and of his exiled extended family who dream of the land they loved and left. The poems are complete pictures of a time and place elegantly rendered.

8 likes1 stack add
review
Spiderfelt
Their Eyes Were Watching God | Zora Neale Hurston
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Pickpick

I picked this up without any background understanding of the author, and no familiarity with the setting of the story. It appeared on a Banned Books list, and was written by a WOC, so it filled a #bookbingonw2017 square. Once again, the prose was so lyrical it left me savoring sentences, rolling them around in my head like a piece lemon drop candy. The audiobook narration gave life to dialogue and an energy to the characters.

Spiderfelt Does anyone know why this is a banned book? Which elements of the story would cause it to be put on a list? 7y
AllenTStClair LOVE this book! @Spiderfelt The book was banned for "language and sexual explicitness". This translates to "how dare a 16-year-old black girl go through a sexual awakening??" The book has some coarse language, but it has no sexually explicit language. 7y
Spiderfelt Thanks for clarifying @AllenStClair. I suspected as much, but like you didn't find anything particularly explicit in the text. 7y
See All 11 Comments
Mariposa_Bookworm I love how you describe the language in the novel. When language is so lush, it feels like you could literally roll it around in your mouth and savor it. Another novel with incredibly luscious language is 7y
AceOnRoam Love this review, I have been wondering about this book. Like you I know nothing about it, but with God in the title I've been reluctant about picking it up. 7y
RealBooks4ever I love this important book!! 💜 7y
Spiderfelt Dive in @AceOnRoam. There is very little religion in the story. The title is pulled from an episode towards the end of the story, a commentary on the mindset of people waiting out a hurricane. @RealBooks4ever 🙌 7y
AceOnRoam Ok thanks, I've just put it on hold at Overdrive :) 7y
Spiderfelt My idle mind spent a good chunk of time thinking of alternate titles to this book today:A Soul Awakens, Love At Last, Not Afraid to Love, Walk Boldly. All cheesy titles that do Hurston no favors, but reflect more of the book's themes. @AceOnRoam 7y
AceOnRoam Thanks @Spiderfelt I'm looking forward to it. 7y
22 likes2 stack adds11 comments
review
Spiderfelt
Exit West: A Novel | Mohsin Hamid
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Pickpick

This book was lyrical in a way that I don't often encounter in prose. Many passages were more like poems than I encounter in most stories. I loved the way Hamid dove in and out of the relationships that bound the characters, the way he defied my expectations of who these characters would be, what their backgrounds were and where they would go. There's a dash of suspended reality required of the reader, but I didn't mind a bit. #bookbingonw2017

Cinfhen Beautiful review 💗just read this one too & was blown away! 7y
Spiderfelt Thanks @Cinfhen. I had to wait a long time to get it. Now I understand why. 7y
21 likes2 comments
blurb
Spiderfelt
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How do you keep cool on hot days? Two books in two days, both written by Vietnamese émigrés. #bookbingonw2017

charl08 Thought they were both great reads. 7y
Spiderfelt @char108 I loved reading them back to back. They complements each other so well. 7y
16 likes1 stack add2 comments
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Spiderfelt
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Pickpick

Can you imagine a book so lush it propels you into a world you've never visited? The scents, sounds, colors and feelings of Delhi, Kashmir and Kerala were almost tangible. Arundhati Roy possesses the ability to build people who tower over a story, sharp and mesmerizing. This book was worth the wait, clearly constructed with care, thought and precision; it left a bittersweet taste in my mouth. #bookbingonw2017

Spiderfelt The construction reminded me strongly for Infinite Jest. I would be curious to hear whether anyone else saw the parallels. 7y
21 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
Spiderfelt
Pachinko | Min Jin Lee
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Mehso-so

Seriously mixed feelings here. The historical aspects of the book were interesting, filling a gap I didn't realize I had. That's exactly why I read. Books are a continuing education to help foster cross-cultural understanding.

With that said I didn't enjoy the book. I finished only bc I had invested so much time, and was determined to ✔️a 🔲on my bingo card. The story lacked depth and insight, nor did I understand the characters' motivations.

Reviewsbylola I'm sorry this one didn't work for you. I loved it but the spare writing style was different. 7y
18 likes2 comments
review
Spiderfelt
The Breadwinner | Deborah Ellis
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Pickpick

This story affirms my sense that children are often stronger, braver and more resilient than the adults in their lives. Perhaps it is because she hasn't lived long enough to be lose faith, and hope is the gift of the young. Regardless, this story introduced me to a world I did not know, which the best reason to read. Thumbs up for more stories featuring young heroines. #bookbingonw2017 #booksmadeintomovies

13 likes1 stack add
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Spiderfelt
Transit: A Novel | Rachel Cusk
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Pickpick

What a bittersweet feeling to finish. I've loved every minute spent w/ the transitory people filing the pages of Transit. There is so much to ponder here. It is rich with meaning, filled with both observation and insight that bears rereading. #BookBingoNW2017

Proustian Have you read Outline? It's also wonderful! 7y
merelybookish I'm fascinated by where the she is going to take the story next. 7y
Spiderfelt @Proustian Yes, my bookclub read it in March. I couldn't wait to start Transit. I wonder what it would be like to read Transit without having the previous experience of Outline. 7y
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Spiderfelt @merelybookish Me too. In some ways, Transit was completely different from Outline. I learned more about Faye (was she even named in Outline?). Because the stories were mostly grounded in London, there was a different atmosphere. The narrator's motherhood also figured more prominently here. However, the individual stories seemed just as random and disconnected to each other. I loved them both. 7y
merelybookish @Spiderfelt I feel like the connection is the hole of her marriage and its demise. We learn about it obliquely, through holes, gaps, her interactions with others. But it seems so defining also. 7y
Spiderfelt Absolutely @merelybookish. In Transit, we see just how large the hole is. There was so little personal about the narrator in Outline. 7y
27 likes6 comments