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Beebarth
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This book was brilliant. Each character flawed yet knowable. It asks what it means to be a parent. Does it hinge on an ability to provide for your child? Is it contingent on an unceasing desire to be a parent to your specific child? Does biology create an indissoluble bond or is it love? Do mistakes impact your right to parent your child? The parent-child relationship is fraught with unparalleled complexity. As in life, Ng offers no easy answers.

Kaylamburson Great image! Did you create it or was it from somewhere? 6y
Beebarth @Kaylamburson Thank you! I used a stock photo and edited/added the quote using the Snapseed app 😊 6y
Kaylamburson So cool!! I love it! @Beebarth 6y
29 likes3 comments
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Beebarth
Lost Boy | Christina Henry
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Pickpick

From my first encounter with Peter Pan as a child, the idea of a boy who never grows up always struck me as somewhat sinister. Henry‘s reimagining delves into this shadow lurking within the fantasy of a land where children cease to age or grow. While a life lived purely for adventure and enjoyment surely holds a certain magic and appeal, it comes at a high cost. This was dark, creepy, and both introspective and action-packed.

30 likes1 stack add
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Beebarth
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Pickpick

This book left me thinking about the intersection of capitalism and healthcare. Capitalism takes for granted that money is the primary motivating force of society. Thus, without the promise of monetary gain, progress/scientific discovery would cease. This is one assumption underlying the debate about patient rights in human tissue research. I find the idea of money dictating our willingness to care for each other extremely problematic. Thoughts?

wanderinglynn I agree it‘s problematic b/c then healthcare isn‘t viewed as a fundamental right, but as a “luxury” that only people with money can afford. We see that happening now - people with money get better care, while the poor are relegated to use overcrowded, underfunded, & overworked clinics & ERs. 6y
wanderinglynn The dental industry is an excellent example. Dentistry is an essential healthcare service, yet rural areas lack qualified professionals, service is often expensive (even if you have insurance); and yet, dental health is crucial & it can even be an indicator other health issues. 6y
batsy I agree. I think the logic of capitalism is not just problematic, but dehumanising. Anti-human. It is the logic of profits. 6y
Beebarth @wanderinglynn @batsy Yes! Capitalism creates a structure in which people, especially those of marginalized populations, are disposable, able to be sacrificed for the supposed greater (economic) good. 6y
28 likes4 comments
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Beebarth
Beartown: A Novel | Fredrik Backman
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This book invites us to consider the paradoxes inherent within our daily experience of the world. While the simplicity of duality is attractive and integral to our survival, truths are never as cut and dry as our brains would like them to be. Contradictions exist as a natural part of the fabric of our universe. If we can learn to hold the messiness and complexity of it all, can we then unlearn hate as a way to cope with our own confusion?

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Beebarth
The Hazel Wood | Melissa Albert
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Pickpick

How much of our lives are informed by stories we‘ve created or have been told about our past? What about those stories that live within us but are hidden from view? How can these two be reconciled while also leaving space for us to imagine new, ever-unfolding narratives for ourselves? This book was a dark and whimsical look into these questions of self-identity, putting me in touch with my own inner dark-fairy-tale-girl. She was very pleased. 💕

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Beebarth
The Book of Joan: A Novel | Lidia Yuknavitch
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Panpan

I really wanted to like this and found many passages thought-provoking and beautifully, if brutally, written. But taken as a whole, I thought the book ultimately took itself too seriously, coming across as pompous and hard to connect with on anything other than an ultra-heady, superficial level. My heart felt left out which surprised and disappointed me for a book tackling topics such as bodily autonomy and the power of narrative.

readinginthedark That‘s so frustrating, when a book you‘re really excited about disappoints. 😕 6y
11 likes1 comment
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Beebarth
A Little Life: A Novel | Hanya Yanagihara
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This may be the most human book I‘ve ever read. Complex and heartbreaking and beautiful. These characters, they are all of us, muddling through life and doing the best we can. 💕

readordierachel Nice review and pic! 6y
21 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Beebarth
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A little over the halfway point and I'm equal parts disturbed and delighted at the flashes of Catch-22 absurdity that emerge when Leovy details the inner workings of murder investigations within one of America's most violent enclaves. Problematic to say the least.

Procrastireader I finished this book a week or so ago. As I was near the end I heard part of an interview with Sebastian Junger on his new book, "Tribe." It made me go back thru Ghettoside & reread the passages about murder in tribal societies and the interdependence and closeness of the community Leovy writes 8y
Procrastireader About here. It seems to me that one of the main differences is the presence or absence of a clearly defined, universally accepted (and applied) top-down hierarchy in the military. (Tribe is about the unrivaled and intense closeness that develops in small units in combat.) in my TBR pile now 8y
9 likes2 comments
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Beebarth
Jane Steele | Lyndsay Faye
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If Jane Eyre and Sweeney Todd had a love child...😍😍😍

KateTheBookworm This is the BEST description of this book I've heard yet! Dying to get my hands on it. :) 8y
RaimeyGallant Welcome to Litsy! #LitsyWelcomeWagon And here's a compilation of Litsy tips that some of us put together:
https://raimeygallant.com/2017/10/31/litsytips/
6y
Mollyanna Welcome to Litsy! 6y
13 likes2 stack adds3 comments