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Anna40

Anna40

Joined November 2016

review
Anna40
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Pickpick

Japan 1903:Ichi,daughter of an ama&a fisherman from Iojima, is sold into prostitution. In the Shinonome brothel she is trained in the art of pleasing customers but also attends school where Tetsuko,a failed prostitute from the family of a samurai, teaches “writing to women trapped in the prison of bestial desire” and finally to read and understand their account books since the women are often charged too much for food or clothes&deliberately kept

Anna40 Dependent on their owners. The novel is based on a real historic event when prostitutes went on Labor strike inspired by a shipyard strike in the UK. I loved the beautiful language, the rich depiction of place, the women& their struggles. “ ‘Because prostitutes are not human‘, they said. ‘Not human?‘ ‘Lower than humans.‘ Shinonome bit her lip and listened in silence as Tetsuko‘s voice continued like the steady dripping of rain. ‘The law (Livestoc (edited) 4d
Anna40 Emancipation law) stated that prostitutes have lost their human rights and therefore are the same as livestock. (…)‘ “ 4d
27 likes2 comments
review
Anna40
The Divorce: A Novel | Moa Herngren
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Bailedbailed

Divorce is a difficult topic for a book& although the writing is good, it feels too much like a reality tv show where we get too close to a couple &witness something that should be private. It doesn‘t help that Bea &Niklas are both unlikeable characters.Bea “sacrificed” career for the sake of family & with divorce looming has financial worries, that feel very real for many women even today.Yet she also loves luxury items

Anna40 &spends too much money. Financial responsibility weighs on Niklas & forces him to take on a job he doesn‘t want. There‘s a lot of ranting & ugliness that is normal perhaps when two people separate but do I want to read about it? No. Really disappointed as I was looking forward to the novel. Not sure if it could have been a better book if the story had been written differently. Is it even possible? Divorce is not a good topic for a novel, I guess 1w
21 likes2 comments
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Anna40
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Mehso-so

The graphic novel written by Evie Wyld and illustrated by Joe Sumner was only ok. Evie remembers growing up in Australia where her shark obsession begins. Interspersed with shark attack stories this is really about family and loss but stays too much on the surface to be a moving, heartfelt memoir. I enjoyed Sumner‘s artwork.

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Anna40
Long Island | Colm Toibin
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Mehso-so

Eilis returns to Ireland after 20 years for her mother‘s 80th birthday &to escape her husband‘s infidelity& the child he has with the other woman.She gets close to Jim again who is now secretly engaged to Nancy& who in turn doesn‘t tell Nancy about his feelings for E.A big mess in the States is followed by a big mess in Ireland.Frankly this is a telenovela script&although I do appreciate the questions of:can you return to an old unfulfilled love?

Anna40 What does marriage mean and are you still bound by vows when they are broken? I also the theme of betrayal BUT I disliked all the characters, especially Jim & Eilis and Nancy is really better off without Jim. 2w
Susanita I liked Brooklyn but didn‘t love it, so I didn‘t feel the need to read this. 2w
Anna40 @Susanita I bailed on Brooklyn. The first 50 or 60 pages of LI were actually pretty good and Tóibín is a fantastic writer, yet, after that I got more and more annoyed with the characters and I only read to the end because I hoped none of them would be as terrible as they turned out to be. … 2w
AmyG This one disappointed me. 2w
Anna40 @AmyG me too 2w
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Anna40
God of the Woods | Liz Moore
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In 1975 Barbara vanishes from the summer camp on her family‘s property.In 1961 her brother disappeared in the same woods&was never found.Told through the eyes of several mostly female characters&jumping back&forth in time could have been confusing but is done so well that it adds to the suspense.I love that Moore wrote both an engaging story with an unexpected (sad) ending&created characters the reader can relate to.Her criticism of sexism

Anna40 Resonated with me too. This book is worth the wait! I was initially 433rd in line at the library!!! 2w
35 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Anna40
Three Years | Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
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Laptev falls madly in love with Yulia who does not reciprocate his feelings but marries him anyway. They move to Moscow,the only thing that makes the marriage bearable for her.Both suffer. “There did not seem anything to talk about, and both had been silent since morning. From time to time he looked at her over the top of his book and thought:whether you marry for passionate love or entirely without love-isn‘t it all the same?”

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Anna40
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In the first case of the Avraham Avraham Series, a teenage boy,Ofer, disappears without a trace.Told alternating from Ze‘ev,the boy‘s creepy& strange neighbor, &Avraham‘s perspective,Ofer always remains a mystery as neither the parents nor the few people who knew him have much to say about Ofer-except Ze‘ev.But is he a reliable witness?The story with its focus on complex characters rather than filled with action&red herrings is very Israeli.

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Anna40
Stone Yard Devotional | CHARLOTTE. WOOD
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Perhaps one of the most beautiful books I have recently read. The narrator, a woman in the middle of her life, removes herself from this world of greed&destruction. In a convent she finds time to reflect&we have the privilege to accompany her on her contemplative journey into memory,remorse &grief. There‘s so much to unpack in this book:spirituality& the meaning of religion&community, the plague &the nemesis who are also a symbol for the

Anna40 Narrator‘s past mistakes & our greed that has led to the distinction of species, destruction of nature. Throughout the book the horror of death&disappearing emerge in the form of past & current events. A wonderful book & writer that deserve every bit of praise they have already received. 3w
rachaich Really want to read this! 3w
Anna40 @rachaich it‘s wonderful! Based on your reviews I think you‘d love it too! 3w
See All 14 Comments
Jas16 I really liked this one too. 3w
Anna40 @jas16 I think your review brought this novel to my attention 💕 3w
squirrelbrain I loved this one too! 3w
Suet624 So good and I do think I could use a reread 3w
BarbaraBB Yes! I loved it too! 3w
Anna40 @Suet624 @BarbaraBB I already miss the narrator 😊 this will definitely be a reread for me too 3w
quietlycuriouskate This would have been my Booker Prize winner. 3w
Anna40 @quietlycuriouskate she would have deserved it 3w
Gleefulreader I‘m really looking forward to reading this one. 3w
Anna40 @Gleefulreader hope you enjoy it 3w
42 likes14 comments
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Anna40
Il mare non bagna Napoli | Anna Maria Ortese
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Published in English under the title Neapolitan Chronicles&translated by Goldstein&McPhee, Ortese is one of the best post Ww2 Italian&perhaps most overlooked authors.The book consists of 5 chapters (3 fiction,2 journalistic accounts) that present a Naples shattered by war&corruption. Ortese‘s style is a blend of realist narrative&”almost surreal tone”.Ortese talks about her book having the effect of disorientation.

Anna40 Central themes are the inability&the need to ‘see‘. I absolutely loved A pair of eyeglasses & maybe even more so Family Interior. Highly, highly recommend! 3w
23 likes1 comment
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Anna40
The Rabbi's Cat | Joann Sfar
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An Algerian rabbi‘s cat can speak, argues with the rabbi about theological matters, demands a bar mitzvah, is jealous when his mistress (the rabbi‘s daughter) falls in love with a young rabbi from Paris and accompanies the couple and rabbi to France to meet the in laws. Funny, clever. Thanks @Adventures_of_a_French_Reader for recommending! 🥰

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review
Anna40
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Pickpick

I read this with my son to get him to read books with a broader vocabulary than what he encounters in the comics he reads 🙄. We both enjoyed it. It‘s a bit slow at times for the attention span of a 10 year old but I love how the author transports their readers into the past and introduces them to art while telling an entertaining story. The writing too is good. I think this could appeal to 9-11 year olds.

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Anna40
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I think this needs to come with many warnings: kidnapping/incarceration in a bunker,suicide,murder. I wanted to bail towards the end but decided not to. It‘s a claustrophobic, heartrending story ¬ for everyone. It reminded me a bit of The Wall by Haushofer because of its focus on women,solitude & there‘s this element of “fantasy” which is the wrong word, speculation perhaps “what if” without answering questions of why,how or even when or where?

Anna40 while creating a world where women are cut off from the rest of the world. But what is this world? It‘s simultaneously familiar and foreign. The story is filled with metaphors and the book overall is one “big” metaphor. This is a novel that shocked me, moved me, made me feel as if I was locked up alongside these women,caught in this dreadful world. A masterpiece but a very tough read. (edited) 1mo
35 likes1 comment
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Anna40
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Bailedbailed

Miranda‘s grandparents are survivors from France. Anna,a doctor, & Armand,an interpreter at the Nuremberg Trials& later the UN,separate after the war, divorce & don‘t speak to &only with hate about one another for fifty years.Miranda goes on a journey to find out why/what happened to them. As much as I wanted to get to the end, this is another book I‘m bailing on. 😢

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Anna40
Barkskins | Annie Proulx
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Bailedbailed

I did make it to chapter 27 (there are 70 chapters) and I did, really did want to hang in there but I fear I‘m in a reading slump and a 700 page novel is perhaps not the best book to get me out of it.

Lcsmcat It is long. I did it on audio and had to renew it multiple times! 1mo
35 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
Anna40
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This book about the hospital Craiglockhart & two of its most famous patients, Siegfried Sassoon & Wilfred Owen, tracks the effects of industrial warfare on soldiers & the origins of PTSD. Shell shock was seen by many commanding officers not as an illness but cowardice& thus punished. It was thanks to physicians such as Dr Rivers who treated the men with compassion that some lucky few found healing. The strongest parts of the book are the poems

Anna40 written by Sassoon & Owens. I also enjoyed learning about the pacifist movement in the UK & how the war was perceived by those not involved in combat. Overall, the men who received treatment all had very privileged backgrounds, the poor private was sent right back to the front without any compassion or treatment … 1mo
Suet624 Ugh. So sad. 1mo
CarolynM Stacked🙂 1mo
See All 10 Comments
Anna40 @suet624 yes, it is. I think many more than we think still believe PTSD in soldiers = coward or is something to be ashamed of 😢 1mo
Anna40 @CarolynM it‘s not an easy read but it really pulled me in. I‘m interested in reading Sassoon‘s and Owens poetry collections. Very powerful poems 1mo
CarolynM I‘ve got a particular interest in First World War literature with particular reference to Owen and Sassoon. Owen is a tragic figure and his poems are really moving. Sassoon was such oddbod, he is endlessly fascinating. Have you read his Sheraton trilogy? 1mo
Anna40 @CarolynM I had never heard of either of them before reading this book. Would you recommend starting off with Sheraton trilogy? 1mo
CarolynM It‘s fictionalised autobiography so it‘s a good way to get to know him. The first volume, Memoirs of a Fox Hunting Man is pre war, the other 2 during the war and cover the Craiglockart experience. Sassoon also features in Robert Graves‘s memoir Goodbye to All That. 1mo
Anna40 @CarolynM thanks! Sounds great 💕 1mo
CarolynM And for a fictional take on Owen and Sassoon at Craiglockart 1mo
35 likes3 stack adds10 comments
review
Anna40
The Burning Plain and Other Stories | Juan Rulfo, Pablo Cortes, W.C. Miller
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I give it a pick although most stories were not for me but that‘s me not the author. The stories feature fugitives,migrants, revolutionaries or widows.The strongest story is The Man. Narrated first in 3rd person, the perspective switches back and forth from “the man” to his “pursuer”. Then it‘s narrated in first person from the perspective of a shepherd.But who is the pursuer&who the pursued? I think overall the stories were too bleak…

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Anna40
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I‘m glad I didn‘t bail, almost did a few times.There are 5+ characters who are connected,2 timelines,the story is only told through diary entries,letters or newspaper articles. It‘s a bit boring at the beginning & Sophie&Allen‘s love declarations for one another are a bit too saccharine.I‘m also normally not a fantasy/magical realism fan but this worked for me because the “fantasy elements” were taken from

Anna40 Alaskan myth, fable or folklore(hybrid beings:part human,part animal). I found the characters (especially Sophie) well developed & each voice so deftly captured. The evocation of place was also outstanding. I enjoyed this very much & it helps that it‘s not too gloomy. So the saccharine in the end turned out to be a good thing. Our world is gloomy enough (edited) 1mo
37 likes1 comment
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Anna40
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Mehso-so

Katie Holten is an artist who collected poetry, recipes, excerpts from essays, thoughts related to trees. Some are philosophical, some scientific. Authors range from Ross Gay to Ada Limon, Robert MacFarlane, Richard Powers, Plato or Radiohead. I enjoyed reading bits and pieces but overall, I wonder: what is this? I don‘t understand what “a rewilding of literature and landscape” means and what the point of this book is. Not for me.

CatMS That picture of the trees is beautiful 2mo
Anna40 @CatMS yes! You‘re right! The artwork is great and especially this one 2mo
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Anna40
The Weekend | Charlotte Wood
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Adele (a broke &once successful actress),Wendy (an intellectual & once acclaimed writer)&Jude (a former restaurant manager) gather at Sylvie‘s beach home to clean out the house so that Sylvie‘s daughter can sell it. Sylvies‘s death impacts their relationship in ways none of them could have anticipated.They all deal with grief, aging & other losses differently. Wonderfully relatable, beautifully written. Switching points of view is so

Anna40 skilfully done & gives the reader so much insight into the thoughts & memories of the women but is never boring or shallow. Oh & there‘s also Finn, Wendy‘s old & deaf dog. Relatable, deeply moving, funny with wonderful characters. What an amazing book. I couldn‘t put it down. This is how you write female characters in their 70s. We need more books like this one! 2mo
Bklover Sounds wonderful! 2mo
kspenmoll I just got this from the library! Great review! 2mo
Anna40 @Bklover 😊yes, I think it‘s a wonderful book @kspenmoll hope you enjoy the book as much as I did. 2mo
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Anna40
The Wall: A Novel | John Lanchester
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Mehso-so

We follow Kavanagh as he starts his 2 year tour of duty as Defender at the Wall.The Wall was built to keep water and the Others out of an unnamed country which has been affected less by climate change than the rest of the world,hence,the Others are trying to get in.The ones who make it are either sent back, killed or can become Help=slaves.Life at the Wall is dull,dangerous&cold.yet if you become a Breeder,I.e. start a family

Anna40 you‘re exempt from serving at the Wall&receive privileges. Story&characters didn‘t work for me.It all sounded a bit ludicrous,twists& social commentary fell flat for me too. I thought this was a great idea & I liked the first 20ish pages. But once the whole breeder, help, robots, intergenerational conflicts started, Lanchester lost me. It was a bit too silly, far fetched for me. 2mo
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Anna40
The Drowned: A Novel | John Banville
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Ireland in the 1950s: A man appears out of nowhere in the night claiming he lost his wife, then says that she drowned. He behaves oddly: seems more excited than distressed. Told through the eyes of different characters this is such a well written and skilfully constructed story. The ending was a bit rushed and weak but it doesn‘t matter, I couldn‘t put the book down. I absolutely loved it.

kspenmoll I just got this from the library! Great review! 2mo
Anna40 @kspenmoll 😊thank you! Hope you like it too 2mo
35 likes2 comments
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Anna40
Reality: And Other Stories | John Lanchester
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I‘m not a big fan of ghost or horror stories but for this author I make an exception. Lanchester can scare you, make you laugh and nod your head in agreement at the social commentary in his stories (cell phone addiction, social media, Trump and stupidity or reality TV). My favourite were Coffin Licker, We happy few and Reality.

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Anna40
You Were Made for This | Michelle Sacks
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Mehso-so

Warning: contains child abuse. This started out dark& depressing but also powerful. Merry& Sam move to Sweden with their baby Connor. Sam has inherited a house in the woods. Slowly we learn that he‘s a mysoginist but Merry too is no saint. When Frank, Merry‘s best friend,comes to visit, things get worse not better. Initially I thought this was a feminist take on motherhood & marriage borrowing from Bergman films& Stepford Wives, sadly

Anna40 It isn‘t. This is between a so-so and a pan. Disappointing, because I really liked Sacks‘ short story Freedom and Death in Michigan Quarterly Review Summer 2024. 2mo
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Anna40
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This is a solid mystery with lots of leads that mislead. I love Vera.She‘s a fantastic character&detective. The reveal is bit disappointing & so was the tedious older-women-are-invisible, unattractive or good looking “for their age” repeated one time too many 🙄. But the strong, reliable characters and the outstanding writing make up for the shortcomings. Would love to watch the series. I wonder if the actress plays Vera as Cleeves envisions her.

Bookwomble We love the Vera TV show, and my wife says that (national treasure) actor Brenda Blethyn interprets the character very well. I also heard an interview with Cleever on the radio a couple of years ago, and she said she was very happy with the TV adaptation, so it might be worth your time checking it out 😊 2mo
Anna40 @Bookwomble I just got back from the library with a set of Vera episodes. Sadly, our dvd player isn‘t working 🙄😬. But I‘ll definitely try to find a way to watch Brenda Blethyn as Vera. Thanks for the insights - now I‘m really curious to watch it. In the meantime I‘ve started another Vera book. … 2mo
27 likes2 comments
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Anna40
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Bailedbailed

I decided to bail after trying for weeks to read Rabbi Sacks‘ essays on morality. I‘m having a hard time getting over some of his conservative views on family and marriage. His essay on media (Unsocial Media) fell flat for me too. I do want to get back to this book sometime later …

27 likes1 comment
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Anna40
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Mehso-so

I wanted to love this collection but although I did enjoy Creed or The Quiet I was disappointed with many of the stories, especially The Travelers and Wicked Fairy.

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Anna40
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Dufour has a background in anthropology and the arts. This book is inspired by her doctoral research-who inhabits Canada? What is their history, who are Canadians? The graphic novel was created with the help of more than fifty Indigenous and non-Indigenous contributors. Dufour is “convinced that all inhabitants of the territory should feel concerned by questions of coexistence, equality and social justice.” Sadly, my French is

Anna40 Terrible. Have to get it in the English translation. (edited) 2mo
26 likes1 comment
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Anna40
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A brief graphic novel about the abduction, sexual assault and murder of Helen Betty Osborne in the 1970s. It draws attention to the epidemic of missing and murdered indigenous women in Canada and the failure of police/ government to investigate these murder cases and/or protect these women. Henderson‘s artwork is powerful.

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Anna40
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Baron emigrated to Palestine in 1910, wrote in Yiddish and Hebrew, yet her stories were not set in her new home but in the world of the East European shtetl. Themes in her short stories are marriage, divorce, death or birth but giving the Jewish woman a voice. Kaddish, Sister or Burying the books are critiques of misogyny in traditional Jewish communities. I loved that Baron‘s Torah and Talmud knowledge shaped her literary work. In the beginning

Anna40 marks the passing of time (summer, fall, winter) with the Torah portions read throughout the year. Baron‘s prose is well crafted, the translations by Seidman and Kronfeld are a pleasure to read. (edited) 2mo
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Anna40
The Mission House | Carys Davies
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The story is told mainly through Mr Byrd‘s point of view, a middle aged English man traveling through India after a breakdown in the UK. In the remote mountain town where the English had found respite from the heat in the plains, Byrd also finds an idyllic quiet home in the bungalow near the presbytery. He fills his days driving around town with Jamshed, having dinner with the padre& teaching his young protege Priscilla. But … .

Anna40 Davies is an Exceptional storyteller. I loved this book & couldn‘t put it down. (edited) 3mo
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Anna40
The Passenger: A Novel | Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz
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Shortly after Reichskristallnacht,Otto Silbermann boards a train unsure of where to go&what to do.His wife is Aryan,thus safe,& so Otto is on his own.Since he looks Aryan&has money, he can travel without being arrested,yet his passport is already stamped with the infamous J for “Jude”&he cannot leave the country without a permit.The novel relies heavily on Otto‘s thoughts,observations&conversations with other passengers.Hate,indifference is what

Anna40 He encounters&a world turned upside down. There are no decent people pretty much sums up this nightmarish story until the devastating end. Not a perfect novel but since this was written by a young German Jew in the late 1930s who did make it out of Germany, it truly is a literary sensation. 3mo
Dilara Oh that's another book in my wishlist! 3mo
Anna40 @Dilara looking forward to reading your thoughts on the book 😊 3mo
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Anna40
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Pickpick

It is a pick, yet, if von Schirach was not an established successful author, I don‘t think this would‘ve been published. Coffee and Cigarettes is a collection of thoughts on scenes from films von Schirach watched or thoughts on the death penalty, German politicians smoking (Helmut Schmidt) or lawyers who defended RAF terrorists but also flash fiction, perhaps even auto-fiction. It was a pleasant read but I‘m not sure I‘d recommend it.

Anna40 It‘s a bit like peeking into someone‘s notebook. 3mo
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Anna40
The Outrun | Amy Liptrot
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It‘s wonderful that Liptrot found a way to live her life without binge drinking self destruction&that her memoir/writing has garnered success.Yet,the first half of the book is heartbreaking&exhausting.The second half,set on the islands of Orkney,where she grew up but doesn‘t feel she really belongs&where she finds stability/some form of healing(for lack of a better word), are a fine blend of nature writing& introspection.But it was very heavy&sad.

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Anna40
A Fist Or a Heart | Kristn Eirksdttir
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Elín,makes props for theater&films,is “mother to no one”& has no family. She lives in an old house she remodeled,with a tenant,yet I‘m not sure if the tenant is real or imagined. Especially towards the end reality,memory& imagination seem to blur. On her latest job she works on a play written by Ellen, the illegitimate daughter of a famous Finnish author. The girl is as lonely as Elín& she starts stalking her. There‘s something that

Anna40 Connects the two women. There‘s no real story line,most of the narrative takes place in memories. We learn about Elín‘s trauma& inherited trauma & we learn more about Ellen but some of the things that happened to Elín seem so surreal or unbelievable that I‘m not sure if they really happened. A very, very strange book. I loved it but I‘m sure it‘s not for everyone 3mo
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Anna40
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I thought Hadley is not for me,then I listened to the most recent The New Yorker Fiction Podcast: Savaş reads& discusses Hadley‘s An Abduction & her thoughts on Hadley‘s writing, in particular what happens inside of her characters made me want to read her again. I picked up this short story collection & am still not getting the genius of After the funeral which I had first read in the New Yorker but I loved Old Friends, Mia & My mother‘s wedding.

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Anna40
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Bailedbailed

I tried, yes, I tried to hang in there but if I hear the name Jennifer & the words pineapple& ylang-ylang one more time I‘ll scream. Saul is a young historian with an artist girlfriend-Jennifer-living in 1980s London. He gets hit by a car,Jennifer breaks up with him, Saul goes to East Berlin to do some research, Saul talks about Stalin, falls in love with Walter, sleeps with his sister Luna which is short for lunatic, leaves east Berlin because

Anna40 Luna wants him to marry her then all of a sudden he‘s in hospital &j Jennifer is with him so is his dead father, is his father dead or not? Saul is middle aged, no longer 28. Bla bla bla weird weird ylang ylang but thankfully no more pineapple. I‘m perhaps too stupid for this book or just not the right audience 3mo
Jas16 I feel like I should apologize for being named Jennifer! Sorry that this was such a miss you. 3mo
Anna40 @Jas16 haha! Ok: If I hear the name Jennifer Moreau one more time … 3mo
27 likes4 comments
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Anna40
Loved and Missed | Susie Boyt
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The story of women-mothers,daughters, grandmothers,friends-is first told through the eyes of Ruth. Her daughter Eleanor is a drug addict and no matter how much Ruth tries,she cannot help her& her love is unrequited-love missed. Then Lily, Eleanor‘s daughter, comes into Ruth‘s life&the love these 2 feel for one another is beautiful, almost too idyllic. And there are also Ruth‘s many girlfriends&her female students.The writing is wonderful

Anna40 Yet, I loved the first half more than the rest and found myself drifting off towards the end. Also, it‘s difficult to believe that Lily had absolutely no issues or very few with a drug addict mom who abandoned her… anyway, overall a well writing emotionally resonant novel. Boyt is a fine writer. (edited) 3mo
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Anna40
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Ken Smith chronicles his 40 years living off the grid first in Canada&Alaska then in Scotland where he worked as a gillie&built his own wood cabin on his employer‘s land.Will Millard wrote the memoir but it‘s based on Ken‘s diary&conversations with Ken,often excerpts of the diary are interspersed.Millard deftly captures Ken‘s voice.He comes across as a man of the highest integrity,kind&brave&most of all with a deep love of the wild&wildlife.

Anna40 Ken is a man I‘d love to drink a pint with or one of his cups of tea (he‘ll give you instructions on how to make the best brew if you read the book ;) ). I‘ll miss reading about him and “hearing” his voice. Highly recommend 3mo
Lcsmcat This sounds interesting! Stacked. 3mo
Anna40 @Lcsmcat I enjoyed reading it. Hope you like it too :) 3mo
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Anna40
Grey Dog | Elliott Gish
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Mehso-so

1901-1902:Ada is an unmarried woman in her late 20s.She starts teaching in a small remote town after she was removed from her previous school because of an incident.The first half is about Ada settling in&finding a friend/love interest in Agatha.There‘s some back story-her sister,her father,the incident-before things start to get weird.This is marketed as feminist horror.I‘m not sure what it is&what to think which is why I rated it so-so:it‘s gory

Anna40 &disgusting but not really scary.I don‘t really see any feminist liberation from patriarchy in the story… it‘s just really gross. Having said that it is unusual&well written but I have NO clue what to make of the story … (edited) 3mo
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Anna40
Breath: Poems | Philip Levine
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Levine writes about working class people as in My Brother, Antonio, the baker,remembers family members as in Yenkl or a dead friend in Storms. But he also writes about the lyrical I in nature as in Gospel which to me is an outstanding poem.Its rhythm,the pauses,the clear,transparent diction.”I didn‘t come for answers to a place like this, I came to walk”-love the line.Not all poems were emotionally resonant,but overall a great collection.

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Anna40
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I knew only Tabula rasa by Pärt when I came across this graphic novel at the library and knew nothing about his life. The black and white drawings, lines and notes capture the sound of his minimalist techniques. I enjoyed learning about Pärt‘s background, beliefs and dissent and the composers and music that influenced his later compositions. It makes me want to listen to more music he wrote.

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Anna40
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We are f-d sums up what I think after reading personal accounts of believers or members of the movement and their families.According to those who have let themselves get sucked into QAnon madness, Trump is waging war against pedophile elite Satan worshippers(guess who they are)&while he might not have started the movement he also did nothing to stop it-au contraire.I have NO empathy for believers, it‘s like saying fascists and Nazis

Anna40 are just poor people who needed a purpose in life. And this is our president. We are f-d. 4mo
Leftcoastzen I am tempted to read it . We are f-d . Nice review! 4mo
Anna40 @Leftcoastzen warning: serious adverse effects, such as extreme fury and rage, may occur after reading. 4mo
TheBookHippie Big enclave of them here 😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫 4mo
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Anna40
You Are Here: A Novel | David Nicholls
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Pickpick

“You are here” could have been saccharine or cliched but it isn‘t.I loved Michael and Marnie,their flirty banter,jokes&conversations about love,life &death.So many passages were laugh out loud funny, especially the “Twisted Nights” orgy novel she copy-edits during the trip. It felt like reading Jane Austen or E.M. Forster if they decided to write romance& lived and wrote today. Loved the ending too.I hope they turn the novel into a Netflix series.

kspenmoll great review! 4mo
Anna40 @kspenmoll thank you 😊 4mo
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Anna40
Comedy in a Minor Key | Hans Keilson
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Pickpick

Set during Nazi occupation,a young Dutch couple,Wim and Marie,hide a Jewish man who calls himself Nico in their house.When Nico dies from natural causes & Marie makes a mistake,the couple fully understand what Nico experienced living like a prisoner waiting for the world to change.The novella focuses on the daily routines&inner lives of its 3 protagonists&despite not going into much depth¬ telling a thrilling story,it affects the reader bc it‘s

Anna40 the many simple acts of kindness&courage described in the book that sabotage and eventually dismantle the totalitarian regime. 4mo
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Anna40
Small Rain: A Novel | Garth Greenwell
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Pickpick

Set amidst the Covid pandemic, the narrator experiences sharp pain but waits 5 days to seek medical attention.He ends up hospitalised while the doctors are trying to figure out what caused the tear in his aorta.In less able hands this could have turned into a dull disaster but Greenwell is a poet, wonderful writer and his insights, memories, poetry analyses and observations are a pleasure to read. I didn‘t love all of it but it is a pick for me.

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Anna40
Devastation | B.C. Burgess
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There are no words. 😢

Leftcoastzen Tragic for us all. 4mo
Balibee146 💔💔💔 4mo
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Darklunarose Gentle hugs. I‘m so very sorry for you guys. 4mo
Librarybelle 😢 4mo
Suet624 The future is horrendous 4mo
Jas16 I just can‘t even speak… 4mo
Tamra I just can‘t understand how the Walmart dollar is more important. Feeling very cynical. 4mo
Lcsmcat 💔💔💔 4mo
Chelsea.Poole More chaos and division. More unhinged than before, I fear. 4mo
Anna40 @Chelsea.Poole yes and more hate 4mo
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Anna40
Reykjavk: A Crime Story | Ragnar Jonasson, Katrn Jakobsdttir
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Bailedbailed

Part 2: I bail. Too much backstory, too slow for me. I no longer care what happened, who did it and why. Moving on to another book.

review
Anna40
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Pickpick

While the main focus is on how to draw animals, plants and landscapes (step by step instructions), the first 100 pages introduce the reader to writing about nature. The goal of nature journaling is to see, to remember and to stimulate curiosity, to move through the world with joy. Pay attention not only to the happenings in the natural world, but also to the happenings within you. Write with the goal of knowing yourself and the world better. 🥰

Anna40 I love this chapter about diagramming birdsong: “Close your eyes to help you focus on sound. Raise your hand in the air and “conduct” the bird as it sings, lifting your hand at high notes, lowering it at low notes, wriggling your fingers for a trill… then start to mimic the sound as best you can. Try to whistle or hum it. Put words or nonsense syllables to what you hear and “sing” along with the birds. ❤️ (edited) 4mo
Dilara This is so out of my comfort zone, I am very impressed 🙂 4mo
Anna40 @Dilara I haven‘t tried diagramming birdsong and when I do I‘ll make sure no one sees me 😆 I also haven‘t done any nature drawings yet. He says not to focus on how good the drawing is at the beginning but to just draw. It‘s a skill that can be improved. I‘m certainly not going to do the scientific research he‘s conducting but I‘m looking forward to trying out some of the projects. 4mo
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Anna40
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Pickpick

Brilliant,cleverly written. But I‘m sure this is not for everyone. Especially the first story Other people‘s lives with its despicable characters and long conversations either amuses or annoys the reader or does both. All stories are heavily Jewish themed in particular Jews of NYC in the 1960s and 1970s. I enjoyed the stories, don‘t have a favourite. I do want to read more of what Kaplan wrote, I think she's best known for her novel…

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Anna40
Рок и поп: Историята | Flame Tree Publishing
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I bought a Flame Tree journal and now am ready for journaling. Any journaling prompt site recommendations?

Suet624 Check out @TheBookHippie ‘s journaling prompts. 4mo
TheBookHippie #journalingprompts You can look at all the months and some have helpful links ♥️✍🏼 4mo
TheBookHippie @Suet624 ♥️✍🏼♥️ 4mo
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Anna40 @TheBookHippie @Suet624 good morning! I got up before everyone else and started journaling. So lovely to start the day with writing. I had a journal from childhood to young adulthood and stopped in my twenties. Wonderful to come back to it now in middle age. I have the nice notebook, I now need the perfect pen 😊 (edited) 4mo
TheBookHippie @Anna40 ♥️♥️♥️♥️ yay!!!! I‘ve been hunting for the perfect pen for awhile 😂🤷🏻‍♀️ 4mo
Anna40 @TheBookHippie I let you know if I find the perfect pen 😊 4mo
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