Posts

All in Her Head

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  All in Her Head: The Truth and Lies Early Medicine Taught Us About Women's Bodies and Why It Matters Today, by Elizabeth Comen Elizabeth Comen is an oncologist specializing in breast cancer, and as she worked with her patients, she came to realize just how badly our medical system is set up -- for everyone, but particularly for women.  Looking back into history, she collected evidence and traced stories illustrating how attitudes and beliefs have come down to us and are still hanging around. Dr. Comen works through chapters dedicated to systems of the human body, starting with skin, bones, and muscles, right through to nerves, hormones, and reproduction.    (While the entire book is enraging, this guarantees that the intensity will ramp up and the  most enraging material will probably be at the end.)  Readers will probably be familiar with quite a few of the stories already -- Ignaz Semmelweis' failed attempts to get doctors to wash their hands, the horri...

Three children's stories

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 I have quite a pile of random children's books on my TBR shelf, and I've been going through them, so here are three at once! The Children of Noisy Village, by Astrid Lindgren : This qualifies as a minor classic, not as popular as the Pippi Longstocking stories, but a lovely book describing a Swedish country childhood in about the 1950s.  Lisa lives in the middle farmhouse of three, and since there are six lively children in those three farmhouses, it's known as Noisy Village.  Lisa and her two brothers, the two sisters on one side, and a boy (plus infant sister) on the other -- they all get up to mischief and fun every day.  Lindgren takes her children through most of a year, describing summer, Christmas, birthdays, and spring.  This would be a great read-aloud for a child 5 and up. Nicobobinus, by Terry Jones : It was the Terry Jones on the spine that caught my eye.  What kind of children's book would he write? It would be guaranteed to be silly and all o...

Wild

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 Wild: Tales From Early Medieval Britain, by Amy Jeffs    After I read Storyland , I wanted to read Wild ; I really wondered what kind of stories Jeffs would collect into this book.  This one is shorter, and also I think takes more liberties with the material, and the result is intriguing.   Jeffs takes some of the more obscure poems from things like the Book of Exeter, or panels of the Franks Casket, often melds a couple of them together, and turns them into short tales.  So we read of the Sorrow of Hos -- Hos is named in a real manuscript, and Jeffs gives her a story fitting the existing clues.  "The Wanderer" is adapted a bit and told from the perspective of Grendel. I enjoyed these short tales and the explanations Jeffs provided of how she came to write them.  The illustrations, again linocuts, and this time not so plentiful, were also very good.

The Mythmakers

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 The Mythmakers: The Remarkable Fellowship of C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien, by John Hendrix I recently read Hendrix' Faithful Spy , and now I've got his latest -- a chronicle of one of the most world-influencing friendships of the 20th century.  And I'm here to tell you, it's great stuff, a lovely biography/tribute to both men.  This is a graphic novel suitable for age 10 and up, but is equally absorbing for adults.  Give it to the Middle-Earth and Narnia fan in your life! Hendrix gives short biographies of each before they meet, and then he gets detailed, providing lovely illustrations in teal, lavender, and gold.  But there's just one problem; what they mostly did was talk, and that doesn't make for exciting reading.  So Hendrix introduces two metanarrating avatars: a wizard and a lion, who explain myth and epic, provide commentary upon the relationship, and generally facilitate the reader's experience, like a Greek chorus in a play.  The two s...

Impossible Creatures

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Hello to 2025!  Guess what, I've been reading up a storm!  It's been lovely!  Impossible Creatures, by Katherine Runnell I heard this middle-grade story, from the UK, described as comparable to Diana Wynne Jones, so I tracked down a copy to see.  While, naturally, it cannot compare in my mind, I do have to say that this is an excellent, primo-grade fantasy story, with as imaginative and intense an ending as anyone could hope for.  Highly recommended! Christopher, whom all critters love, is reluctantly headed to Scotland to stay with his grandfather for a while, as his dad has to travel for work.  But he finds that his grandfather is another animal-attractor, and it's because they're hereditary guardians of a portal... Mal loves to fly in her flying coat, which was given to her (along with her name) at birth by a seer.  Flying makes her easy to spot, and a murderer is after her.... The two meet as Mal escapes through the portal, begs for Christopher's h...

Wrapup for 2024

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 Usually I would sum up all the challenges I finished and the best books of the year, and so on, but this year I didn't finish any challenges and in fact I hid in the familiar and in children's literature for months on end.  And that is just fine!  2024 was an extremely difficult year, with the exception of the fantastic adventure of the Ridgeway hike , and I lost almost all my reading energy. I took refuge in Diana Wynne Jones, Joan Aiken, and other children's literature or Ridgeway books (not enough of those, I have quite a few now).  I'm only slightly disappointed in myself for not reading the many, many heavy-duty books on my library and TBR shelves.  This was not the year.   So what's my plan for 2025?   I hope to regain my reading energy, but I'm not taking on any challenges.  I do want to keep posting here, even though I'm so bad at it these days and so few people are book-blogging at all; it's really valuable to me to be able to ...

The rest of the Wolves Chronicles

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 ...and wow, there are a lot of them!  Since Witch Week, I've been indulging in reading the entirety of the Wolves Chronicles, for a total of 12 (13?) titles (nine for this post).  I tried to read them pretty much chronologically, that is, in some sort of publishing order.  I didn't totally succeed and almost missed one (Midwinter Nightingale ) so that happened nearly at the end.  Aiken sometimes went back and slotted a story into a previous storyline, so for example, Dido eventually has two adventures on her way back from Nantucket to England, but those were written later. I've been highly entertained by how Aiken gets more and more fanciful the further she goes.  By the end, England is divided into several small countries(?), Jamie Three's father was named Angus the Silent, and genealogy goes absolutely wild, as does world geography.  I would love to see a map! The Stolen Lake :  Dido takes a detour to Hy Brasil, where Queen Guinevere has been w...