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[personal profile] rocky41_72025-07-15 05:35 pm

Recent Reading: The Once and Future Witches

On Monday I finished The Once and Future Witches by Alix Harrow, about a trio of sisters in the American city of "New Salem" in Massachusetts in 1893 who take it upon themselves to revive witches' magic.
 
The Once and Future Witches dovetails historically with the movement for women's suffrage, creating some parallels between seeking the right to the vote and seeking the right to practice magic. I would have liked to have seen this carried more through the latter half of the novel, but I suppose I can see why it wasn't, particularly given it would be another nearly thirty years before the passage of the 19th Amendment granting women the right to vote. The suffragettes played a long game. 
 
The core focus of the novel is sisterhood, both blood and otherwise. Harrow presents a beautifully wounded and layered portrait of siblinghood in the relationship between the three protagonists: Bella, the oldest; Agnes, the middle child; and Juniper, the youngest. Raised without a mother (she passed birthing Juniper) under the thumb of their abusive and alcoholic father in rural poverty, all three girls learned early on what they would do to ensure their own survival. And while there is great love between them, there is also great hurt, and by the start of the book, the three are not on speaking terms. Harrow did a great job with the complexity here, and watching their relationships develop and begin to heal was very enjoyable. 
 
 

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[personal profile] rocky41_72025-03-29 10:00 am
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Recent Reading: Anti-Intellectualism in American Life

Yesterday I wrapped up one of my few anticipated non-fiction reads of the year: Anti-Intellectualism in American Life by Richard Hofstadter. 
 
This book reaches back to America's foundation to trace its often hostile relationship with its own intelligentsia and the impact that's had on American society and development. This book was published the year my mom was born—1963—and was reflecting on the political attitudes of its day, yet much of it, particularly in the introductory chapters, feels like it could have been written yesterday. Plainly, America is still struggling with a recurrent animosity towards the very concept of an educated class.
 
Because it was written in 1963, parts of it are dated, in terms of attitudes and terminology. But on the whole, Hofstadter provides a thoughtful and comprehensive look at the influence of various individuals and groups, both the good and the bad (for instance, while he notes the well-documented shortcomings of Puritan society, he also notes they placed much more value on an educated populace than the Evangelical traditions which eventually overpowered them.)
 
The book is obviously well-researched, and Hofstadter does a thorough job of documenting his sources and influences, as well as recommending additional reading on a broad range of topics touched on in his own book. So much of what he establishes here makes perfect sense when looking at modern American society. He so neatly threads the needle between where we started and where we are now that at some moments, it felt like the fog was lifting on something I should have seen ages ago. 
 
While I would love to read a more modern, updated version of Hofstadter's exploration, even this dated one provides ample useful information for the current political state of the country. In short, there has always been a significant interest in this county not only in not glorifying education, but in resisting education (and Hofstadter elucidates the tension between these attitudes and the country's commitment to free childhood education when such a thing was not common).
 
It does make for heavy reading; Hofstadter's prose does not breeze by, but the points he's making feel important enough that it was more than worth it to take my time. Would not recommend reading right before bed though.
 
Highly recommend for fellow Americans and anyone seeking to understand the current climate of idiocy and rule by clowns to which we are subject. I'm not sure how we can definitively put down these attitudes of anti-intellectualism, but understanding their sources and history must be a start.

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[personal profile] rocky41_72024-05-09 08:34 am

Recent Reading: The Lost Girls

The cover bills it as a "vampire revenge story." The premise of The Lost Girls by Sonia Hartl is thus:

16-year-old Holly Liddell, in 1987, allowed the undead Elton to turn her into a vampire because he promised her an eternity together. Thirty years later he dumped her at a Quick Stop in Tulsa, Oklahoma and peeled out. Because Holly was turned at 16, she'll always be 16. While she's busy wallowing in this post-Elton, she's approached by two other girls with a similar story: Elton seduced them with promises of forever love, turned them into vampires, then dumped them when he got bored. And worse: he has his sights on a fourth girl. Reluctantly, Holly agrees to help Rose and Ida kill Elton--but developing feelings for Elton's new target wasn't part of the plan.


Honestly, I did not expect this book to be good, and it wasn't. It was entertaining enough. It will keep you busy if you have nothing else going on. Prose is mediocre, hamfisted where it tries to be poetic, and overexplains things to the reader. The plot moves so fast you rarely have time to take in where the characters are at before they're off to the next thing, and the characters themselves are very flat. Rose and Ida are basically interchangeable and I kept getting them mixed up because they really have no personality outside "the nice one" and "the bitchy one." Elton is comically awful with no redeeming or "human" side to him whatsoever, as are most of the protagonist's victims.

The novel feels very grounded in its publication year, down to a jarring and somewhat incorrect use of the term "gaslighting" by a teenager from 1987. I also cringed at the scene where the three main characters all explain their sexualities to each other. It felt very much like the author desperately grabbing for more representation points by saying "Look! Rose is bi too! Ida is asexual!" even though these things literally never matter within the story except for this one awkward scene.

There are some enjoyable things about it. I still like the idea of the plot even if it was poorly executed. The relationships formed within it and the focus on letting go of your past mistakes and forgiving yourself so you can move forward are nice. I did enjoy the subplot about Holly learning to let go of her anger at her neglectful mother, and the one where she confronts Mr. Stockard--who in her day, was an enthusiastic young high school teacher, but has become a burned out middle-aged man by the present time who's given up on his students.

Read more... )

Crossposted from my main
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Signs of Life

Signs of Life: 40 Catholic Customs and Their Biblical Roots by Scott Hahn

Covers everything from sacraments to  theological points with practical applications to various devotions.  Reasons for and history both.
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Julia's House Moves On

Julia's House Moves On by Ben Hatke

The second Julia picture book.

Julia decides that they need to move the house. Everyone's unhappy. So she makes plans. . . .

Plans meet reality. Adventure ensues.
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The Arabian Nights

The Arabian Nights translated by Husain Haddawy

Based on one of the older and more unified Syrian manuscripts.

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Destroyer of the Gods

Destroyer of the Gods: Early Christian Distinctiveness in the Roman World by Larry W. Hurtado

Discussing what Christians looked like from the outside at the time.

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Worlds of Wonder, Days of Judgment

Worlds of Wonder, Days of Judgment: Popular Religious Belief in Early New England by David D. Hall

Covering popular belief in New England. Much more the people in the congregation than those who left it. At least, figuratively. "Horse-shed" members would go out to the horse-shed between the two sermons and gossip instead of attending Sunday school. . .

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Undeading Bells

Undeading Bells by Drew Hayes

Fred, the Vampire Accountant book 6. Spoilers ahead for the earlier ones.

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Repercussions

Repercussions by Marion G. Harmon

Wearing the Cape book 8. Serious spoilers for the previous books.

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Fight Write

Fight Write: How to Write Believable Fight Scenes by Carla Hoch

A discussion of the nitty-gritty of fight scenes. For the writers who want to get down to the technical details of haymakers versus Superman punches, various kinds of swords, details of guns, and wounds. Going to the ground, self-defense laws, and differences between Japanese and Norse swords, based on the way Scandinavian is rich in bog iron, making good swords readily, and Japan in pig iron, much more difficult to use.
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The Dark Lord Clementine

The Dark Lord Clementine by Sarah Jean Horwitz

The Dark Lord's daughter finds that her father is under attack by a wicked witch, who is whittling him away. She has to cope.

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Come, Seeling Night

Come, Seeling Night by Daniel Humphreys

Paxton Locke book 3. Serious spoilers ahead for the earlier ones.

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Night's Black Agents

Night's Black Agents by Daniel Humphreys

Paxton Locke book 2. Serious spoilers for book 1 ahead.

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Mighty Jack and Zita the Spacegirl

Mighty Jack and Zita the Spacegirl by Ben Hatke

The sequel to both series! Best if you read those first, starting with Zita, to understand all that happens. Spoilers ahead for the earlier works.

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Understanding Conflict

Understanding Conflict: (and What It Really Means) by Janice Hardy

A how-to-write book.

What is conflict, how it relates to tension, how it differs from character arc (which you may not need), the importance of goal and motives for everyone, obstacles and whether they move the story forward -- and more.
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Fade

Fade by Daniel Humphreys

First book, but while it has obvious sequel hooks, it stands alone.

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Deadly Assessments

Deadly Assessments by Drew Hayes

Fred, the Vampire Accountant book 5. Spoilers ahead for the earlier books.
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Greg and Tim Hildebrandt: The Tolkien Years

Greg and Tim Hildebrandt: The Tolkien Years by Greg Hildebrandt Jr.

An account of the years of the Tolkien calendars, as told by the son who was five-years-old at the time. And frequently featured as a hobbit. Sketches, reference shots, final work, with commentary all along.
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Siege Tactics

Siege Tactics by Drew Hayes

Book 4 of Spells, Swords, & Stealth and not really a stand-alone. Spoilers for earlier volumes ahead.

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