rocky41_7: (overwatch)
[personal profile] rocky41_72024-10-25 05:58 pm

Book Review: When Women Were Dragons

This week I finished When Women Were Dragons by Kelly Barnhill, a low-fantasy pseudo-historical novel where women occasionally and spontaneously become dragons.

Alex Green is a young girl in a world much like ours, except for its most seminal event: the Mass Dragoning of 1955, when hundreds of thousands of ordinary wives and mothers sprouted wings, scales, and talons; left a trail of fiery destruction in their path; and took to the skies. Was it their choice? What will become of those left behind? Why did Alex’s beloved aunt Marla transform but her mother did not? Alex doesn’t know. It’s taboo to speak of.

Forced into silence, Alex nevertheless must face the consequences of this astonishing event: a mother more protective than ever; an absentee father; the upsetting insistence that her aunt never even existed; and watching her beloved cousin Bea become dangerously obsessed with the forbidden.

 
I have mixed feelings on this book. On the one hand, I think the metaphor does work well and the theme of reclaiming power is rewarding. On the other, I think the book loses the plot partway through and I didn't find the author's prose particularly engaging.
 
Within the book, "dragoning" as it's called serves as an analogy for basically anything about women that society, historically, has not liked to discuss. This can be brutal things like domestic abuse, sexual assault, and harassment, but it can also be more seemingly mundane yet equally "uncomfortable" topics like ambition, lack of motherly sentiment, queerness, and menstruation/women's bodies generally. One woman dragons because she feels trapped in a marriage to an unpleasant and ungrateful husband. Another dragons because she realized she was in love with another woman. Thus, while dragoning can be analogous to female rage, it can also be analogous to female joy, expressed in a way that society finds unbecoming.

Some spoilers below.

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Ultimately, I agree with the conclusion that this book would have worked better as a concentrated short story focusing only on the Mass Dragoning of 1955. There's just not enough here to fill out the 340 pages in a satisfying way.

Crossposted from [personal profile] rocky41_7 

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Review: The Cookie Bible

The Cookie Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum

This is a guide to cookies, with very meticulous step-by-step directions. It has some good general tips on baking cookies, although it does not go into as much scientific detail as some of the previous volumes like The Bread Bible.

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Review: The Way Home

We finished reading the first cookbook of the year. \o/

The Way Home: A Celebration of Sea Islands Food and Family with over 100 Recipes by Kardea Brown. Amistad, October 25, 2022.

This is a Gullah Geechee cookbook, which is a branch of African diaspora soul food. We found many of the recipes heavier than our personal taste preferences, with a reliance on ultraprocessed ingredients; but some others use whole foods, so you can pick and choose along that spectrum. So far the biggest hit has been the Kelewele Dry Spice Mix, normally used to season plantains. We like plantains but they're hard to find around here. Instead I've used the spice mix in Kelewele Molasses Cookies (best molasses cookie I've had) and Spicy Butterscotch Sauce (also excellent). We've also made the Hoppin' John, which is more work than average and mixes the black-eyed peas and rice together during cooking, but the end result tastes better than others I have had. So we're still working on how to streamline that a bit, but we definitely plan to make it again. I consider these discoveries a validation of buying the book. :D

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
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Sinister Magic

Sinister Magic by Lindsay Buroker

Death Before Dragons book 1.

An urban fantasy series. With overt if much ignored magic.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
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Peace Talks

Peace Talks by Jim Butcher

Book 16. The story starts and comes to a point within this book, but it alludes to a lot that went before -- and points very sharply at what will happen after.

Spoilers ahead for earlier books.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
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Greek Religion

Greek Religion by Walter Burkert

An intensive look at the religion practice of the ancient Greeks, up to the time of Alexander. Not a beginning text, assuming a basic knowledge of Greek history and also of the study of religion.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

The Last Human

The Last Human by Lee Bacon

From the point of view of a young robot. . .
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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Utterly Dwarfed

Utterly Dwarfed by Rich Burlew

The Order of the Stick book 6. Serious spoilers for earlier works ahead, as this one makes little sense without them.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
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Latin American Folktales

Latin American Folktales by John Bierhorst

A large variety. On top of tales, also riddles and prayers, and the tales come in all sorts of forms. Legends right after the conquest. Anecdotes. Christian legends with varying degrees of Christianity to them. Tales of fools and clever tricksters. A woman who climbs her daughter's hair from Purgatory to Heaven. Many fairy tales in distinctive variants, with the Parrot Prince who is injured by the heroine's stepsister; a boy whose godfather was the Devil but whose guardian angel intervened; the tale of rescuing three princesses from the underworld, only it's not three men, but two men and a widow -- she has the youngest princess marry her son, instead; a kind and unkind girl tale; and more.
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Astro City, Vol. 14: Reflections

Astro City, Vol. 14: Reflections by Kurt Busiek

Stand-alone stories, though it benefits from knowing who these people are.

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the ghosts of happy valley by juliet barnes


no, it's not a horror story.

it's about the area in kenya that between world wars that was the home of rich, white mostly british expats who lived, loved, partied hard & died.
the author is a white woman who's family has leived near the area for at least 3 generations & she explores the history of the place though the old houses of the major & minor players in happy valley of the 1920s & 1930s. along the way she tries to solve the biggest mystery of that time; who killed the earl of erroll in 1941? the case exposed more than a few secrets and was covered in james fox's white mischief.

she is helped by a local man with a passion for the environment who's considered crazy by just about every kenyan for trying to protect the forests & local wildlife.

the book also touches on kenyan independence & the mau mau uprising.

i liked the book and the stories she uncovered.

marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

People of the Talisman

People of the Talisman by Leigh Brackett

Stark and a dying friend of his have made camp in the wilderness. The friend gives Stark a talisman to return to his native city, where he stole it.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

The Secret of Sinharat

The Secret of Sinharat by Leigh Brackett

Stark is on the run from the authorities -- gun-running -- when they catch up to him.  One, it turns out, is his foster father Ashton, who tells him of impending war, the trouble it will bring, and the possibility of escaping prison if he can foil it.  Stark agrees.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Ivory Vikings

Ivory Vikings: The Mystery of the Most Famous Chessmen in the World and the Woman Who Made Them by Nancy Marie Brown

A discussion on topics suggested by the famous Lewis chessmen: medieval chess figures carved from walrus ivory.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Feudal Society, Volume 1

Feudal Society, Volume 1 by Marc Bloch

An extensive and rather academic study of feudalism from the beginning.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
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I'd Rather Be Reading

I'd Rather Be Reading: The Delights and Dilemmas of the Reading Life by Anne Bogel

About reading itself, not the contents of the books. Like, the effect of living by a library; staying up too late; what book turned you into the voracious reader; the perils of recommending books, and more.
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

The Last Unicorn: The Lost Journey

The Last Unicorn: The Lost Journey by Peter S. Beagle

The original draft. Interesting for people who want to see how things can change. It's a dragon that tells her she's the last in the world, at that, and her interactions with the butterfly seem to convey more. (Hard to tell, it's incomplete.)

I think the plot and characters did not jell as well, partly because some elements in incongruous. But it has charming moments that had to go
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

A Pocketful of Stars

A Pocketful of Stars by Margaret Ball

Book 1 of Applied Topology. A stand-alone plot.
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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

The Reavers Of Skaith

The Reavers Of Skaith by Leigh Brackett

The Book of Skaith, volume 3. Serious spoilers ahead.

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marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

The Hounds of Skaith

The Hounds of Skaith by Leigh Brackett

Second volume of The Book of Skaith. Serious spoilers ahead.

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