Tag Archives: WGOM featured

First Monday Book Day: New Year

Books DG Read in 2024 - An exhaustive list:

Essays, Poetry and Memoirs 

  • Happily by Sabrina Orah Mark *****
  • Monsters: A Fan's Dilemma by Claire Dederer *****
  • All Things Are Too Small by Becca Rothfeld *****
  • Whose Story Is This? by Rebecca Solnit *****
  • The Position of Spoons by Deborah Levy *****

 

  • Sure, I'll Join Your Cult by Maria Bamford
  • Hope in the Dark by Rebecca Solnit
  • Call Them by Their True Names by Rebecca Solnit
  • The Diary of a Bookseller by Shaun Blythell
  • Wolfish by Erica Berry
  • The Sound of Being Human by Jude Rogers
  • Sparrow Envy by J. Drew Lanham
  • The Burnout Society by Byung-Chul Han
  • Doppelganger by Naomi Klein
  • Waiting For the End of the World by Stephanie Valente
  • Steep in the Boil by Meagan McShea

Science, History, Education

  • Charge by Frank Close *****
  • Superheavy by Kit Chapman *****
  • Sex Talks by Vanessa Marin *****
  • Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs by Kerry Howley *****
  • How Humans Learn by Joshua Eyler *****

 

  • Whatever It is, I'm Against It by Brian Rosenberg
  • Infusing Critical Thinking into Your Course by Linda Nilsson
  • Pedagogy of Kindness by Catherine Denial
  • The Emotional Lives of Teenagers by Lisa Damour
  • Everything in its Place by Judith Flanders
  • The Fifth Sun by Camilla Townsend
  • The Last Week by Marcus Borg
  • If This is the Age We End Discovery by Rosebud Ben-Oni

Novels and Short Fiction

  • The End of Drum-Time by Hanna Pylväinen *****
  • Either/Or by Elif Batuman *****
  • Same Bed Different Dreams by Ed Park *****
  • Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar *****
  • The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk (translated by Antonia Lloyd-Jones) *****
  • The Remembered Part by Rodrigo Fresán (translated by Will Vanderhyden) *****
  • Melvill by Rodrigo Fresán (translated by Will Vanderhyden) *****
  • The Biography of X by Catherine Lacey *****
  • Ædnan by Linnea Axelsson (translated by Saskia Vogel) *****
  • Clear by Carys Davies *****

 

  • Blackouts by Justin Torres
  • A Void by Georges Perec (translated by Gilbert Adair)
  • The Murmuration by Carlos Labbé (translated by Will Vanderhyden)
  • Wednesday's Child by Yiyun Li
  • The Confidence-Man by Herman Melville
  • The Netanyahus by Joshua Cohen
  • Pnin by Vladimir Nabokov
  • Real Life by Brandon Taylor
  • It Lasts Forever and Then It's Over by Anne De Marcken
  • The English Experience by Julie Schumacher
  • The Complete Stories of Leonara Carrington by Leonara Carrington
  • The Book of X by Sarah Rose Etter
  • The Topeka School by Ben Lerner
  • Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol (translated by Donald Rayfield)
  • Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon
  • The Employees by Olga Ravn (translated by Martin Aitken)
  • Paradise Rot by Jenny Hval (translated by Marjam Idriss)

Science Fiction and Fantasy

  • A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine *****
  • Perhaps the Stars by Ada Palmer *****
  • Monstress, Volumes 6 & 7 by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda ****
  • My Favorite Thing is Monsters Part 2 by Emil Ferris *****
  • Lone Women by Victor LaValle *****

 

  • The City Of Saints and Madmen by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Shriek by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Finch by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Annihilation by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Authority by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Acceptance by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Absolution by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Hummingbird Salamander by Jeff Vandermeer
  • Monstress, Volumes 1-9 by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda
  • Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer
  • Seven Surrenders by Ada Palmer
  • The Will to Battle by Ada Palmer
  • All Systems Red by Martha Wells
  • Artificial Condition by Martha Wells
  • Rogue Protocol by Martha Wells
  • Exit Strategy by Martha Wells
  • Network Effect by Martha Wells
  • Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells
  • System Collapse by Martha Wells
  • Invisible Kingdom, Volumes 1-3 by G. Willow Wilson and Christian Ward
  • Malarkoi by Alex Pheby
  • The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Naylor
  • The House of Sundering Flames by Aliette de Bodard
  • Saint Death's Daughter by C.S.E. Cooney
  • Even Though I Knew the End by C.L. Polk
  • The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins
  • Nettle and Bone by T. Kingfisher
  • Rakesfall by Vajra Chandrasekera
  • The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera
  • Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson

How was your reading in '24? What's on your list for '25?

Summer Mix 2024

What, you thought we wouldn't put out a Summer Mix in 2024? Oh, ye of little faith...

You guys certainly like to nominate the longer songs, but I think we've got a good mix here. Kept it a little more concise than usual, actually. Come bask in the warm vibes on these cold nights!

ArtistSong
Shannon & The ClamsBean Fields
KalaxCrystal Waves
Lou Johnson(There's) Always Something There To Remind Me
Lo MoonWater
La LuzStrange World
Yard ActWe Make Hits
The Three DegreesCollage
Steely DanTime Out of Mind
Jason IsbellMiles
Coach PartyAll I Wanna Do Is Hate
Sam & DaveHold On, I'm Coming
Preservation Hall Jazz Band (feat. Pell)Keep Your Head Up
VR SEXJenny Killer Glue
feeble little horseSteamroller
Dwight Twiley BandI'm On Fire
Les Savy FavLegendary Tippers
Meat LoafParadise By The Dashboard Light
Nothing MoreHouse On Sand
Clams Casino And Imogen HeapI'm God
English TeacherR&B
Cory HansonMotion Sickness

A Christmas Story

Several years ago, there was a woman who was part of my Gettysburg congregation whom I'll call Jane.  Jane was in the nursing home, and she wanted to die.

Now, don't misunderstand that.  She was not suicidal, or even particularly depressed.  But she could no longer see, she could not hear very well, and she could not get out of her chair.  She simply felt that, as she could no longer do anything for anyone, and as she could no longer get much enjoyment out of life here, it was time for her her life on earth to end.  It was time to move on and find out what comes next.

I would visit Jane from time to time, and I always enjoyed our visits.  One day, shortly before Christmas, she told me that her wish had been granted.  On December 27, the doctor was going to come and shut off her pacemaker, and she would be allowed to die.

Now, I was skeptical of that then, and I'm skeptical of it now.  I don't know that a doctor could turn off someone's pacemaker, and I'm not even sure it's possible without surgery.  But none of that is the point.  The point is that Jane believed this was going to happen, and so did her family.  It was not my job to offer medical advice.  It was my job to provide pastoral support and encouragement and any spiritual guidance that I could.

So came Christmas Eve, the last Christmas Eve Jane would spend on earth.  I had my usual round of Christmas Eve worship services, and when they were over, around 8:45, Mrs. A and I decided to stop and see Jane for a few minutes before we went home.  We got there, and Jane's daughter Sandra was there.  We visited for a while, and Mrs. A got tired.  And the thing about Mrs. A is that she can go for a long time, but when she hits the wall, she hits the wall.  She needed to go home, but I could see Jane did not want us to leave yet.  So Sandra told Mrs. A to go home, and that she would give me a ride home later.

More time passed.  It was 11:00 or so.  Sandra had a really bad back, and she needed to go home and rest.  But I could tell that Jane was not ready to be alone yet.  So I told Sandra to go home.  I could walk home.  It was a nice night for Christmas Eve, and it was only about nine blocks.  I'd be fine.

So, it was just Jane and me.  We talked for a while.  We were silent for a while.  We sang some Christmas songs.  We talked some more.  Finally, around 12:30, Jane said that she'd be all right, and I should go home.  We wished each other a Merry Christmas, and I left.

The temperature was in the high 20s, and a light snow was falling.  The town of Gettysburg was totally silent.  There were no cars moving.  There were no lights in any of the houses.  There was not even a dog barking.  If not for the street lights, you'd have thought it was a ghost town.  As it was, it was almost like the rapture had come and I'd been left behind.  The only sound was of the snow hitting my overcoat and my feet crunching the snow on the ground.  It was really something.

Well, December 27 came.  Jane's family was gathered around her, as she prepared to die.  And in fact, while she was sad to leave her family, she was looking forward to it.  Mrs. A and I were there, too.  The doctor came in.  He said, Jane, I don't know how to tell you this, but your pacemaker stopped working some time ago.  Your heart is beating on its own, and there's nothing I can do about it.

Jane was incredibly disappointed.  She had been looking forward to this day, when she would be released from her earthly body, and now she was going to have to remain for a while longer.  She was not happy about that at all.

Jane lived for a few more months.  I was not there for this last bit, but Sandra told me about it later.  One day, when Sandra was visiting, Jane looked up at a corner of the ceiling and said, "God, you and I are going to have a talk."  And the next day, she was gone.  Apparently, she and God had that talk, and God granted her request.

Just as an epilogue, Jane had a clock.  Every hour, a bear would come out from each corner of the clock, and they'd play a tune.  Well, some of you know about me and bears.  I often expressed how much I loved that clock.  When Jane passed, Sandra gave me that clock.  It's in my office now.  It still works, and I still love it.  And I still think of Jane once in a while, and I hope that whatever came next for her was everything she hoped it would be and more.

Merry Christmas, everyone.

First Monday Book Day: Gift

I ordered two books, but got three because the publisher lost my order, then realized that they never sent it, and sent a third book as an apology.

As we enter gift-giving season, what's the book you're giving your friends/ family?   Alternatively, what's the book you're dropping hints about wanting someone else to buy for you?

For my mom's birthday (this past weekend), I got her Ædnan by Linnea Axelsson, because she loves winter and Scandinavia and indigenous stories, so this seemed like a slam dunk.

I'm excited to read the fifth Stormlight book that comes out this week, and I'd like to get to the new James S. A. Corey series at some point as well (The Mercy of Gods came out in August, but I haven't got to it yet), so those would probably make good gifts for me.

 

First Monday Book Day: Vandermeer Appreciation Month

In October I read almost all of Jeff Vandermeer's novels.

I read the Ambergris trilogy:

  • The City Of Saints and Madmen (re-read) - still an incredibly good evocation of place and environment. The city Vandermeer creates in these loosely connected stories is such a full on experience.  You can feel the menacing dampness and the uneasy sense that the mushrooms have more control than anyone realizes.
  • Shriek (first read) - probably my least favorite of his novels, this felt like an extended character introduction that wasn't really needed for the series. Non of the characters really had a goal other than revealing more information about the city.
  • Finch (first read) - now we get a detective story in the fungus-city. Duncan Shriek (from the second book) gets a role that makes sense here, so I guess that made the second book worth it, but this was still a much better book. Finch (the detective) actually has a goal that's not "look at this weird city!" A good finish to the series.

I read the Southern Reach trilogy (and the newly published fourth book) and enjoyed this more than I remembered, these are better books than I had previously given them credit for.

  • Annihilation (re-read)
  • Authority (re-read)
  • Acceptance (re-read)
  • Absolution (first read) - still in the middle of this.

I didn't re-read the Borne series, but I think those books are still my favorite Vandermeer.

Lastly, I read his stand alone book from 2021 that I bought but never actually read before

  • Hummingbird Salamander (first read) - more detective, less fungus. I feel like this book was missing Vandermeer's strength, which is overwhelming the reader with environment (the city in Ambergris, Area X in the Southern Reach novels, the Lab in the Borne series...) and that just wasn't here.  He still writes a good thriller with environmental themes, but this didn't get me as much as the others.

It's always fun to just plow through a bunch of novels on a theme, and I've found a particular joy in re-reading a bunch of novels and series this year.

What did you read this month?

First Monday Book Day – ZZZZZZZZZ

The theme of my book purchases this month was apparently translated authors from eastern Europe.  I bought two new books:

  • Herscht 07769 by Lazlo Krasznahorkai - After Satantango and Seiobo There Below, I will read any Krasznahorkai that I come across.  I wasn't aware of this book, but came across it in the bookstore, and now it's mine!
  • The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk - I really enjoyed Flights and Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead, so here's another case where I bought this based on the author without much sense of what this book is about.  Kind of cool to have a signed edition from a Nobel Prize winner, though.

My reading slowed down a bit in September, as classes kicked into high gear, but I did read Pnin and it rated very high on the "quiet chuckles to myself per chapter" metric.  Thoroughly enjoyed it, even though reading Nabokov always gives me trust issues with every one of his narrators.

I also read The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera, which won a couple of sci-fi/fantasy awards this year for debut novel.  It was an interesting story, set in south Asia (but an alternate world overlaid on top of it).  Having read this and Rakesfall from Chandrasekera, I find his projects interesting, and I could see him writing something in the future that really puts it all together and blows me away.  These two books didn't quite get there for me, but still worth a look if like this kind of cultural sci-fi/fantasy hybrid genre.

How many z's are in the last name of the authors of the books you read or bought in the last month?

Rings in the Sky: A Twins Cautionary Hymn

With apologies to Joe Hill.

Oh the Pohlads come out every year,
Tell Twins fans they've got something to cheer;
But when asked to shell out for their team
They won't tell you they sell a pipe dream:

(Chorus:)
Twins will win, bye and bye,
In that glorious land above the sky;
Shorthanded play, most everyday,
You'll get rings in the sky when you die.
(That’s a lie!)

A nepo baby holds the club's purse strings,
Dave St. Peter counts up their earnings,
Once they've raked your coin into the bank,
That's when they tell you the payroll has shrank.

(chorus)

The Twins needed a new TV deal,
Waves of greenbacks to steady the keel.
"Give your money to Bally," they say,
"They might televise a ballgame today."

(chorus)

There was some talent down on the farm,
Young Brooks Lee and a number of arms;
Big wheels fell off all season, you know:
Carlos, Paddack, Royce, Buxton, Max, and Joe.

(chorus)

Help was needed for several key roles,
To patch a roster with quite a few holes,
The front office was mostly clear-eyed:
Can't sign free agents — their hands were tied.

(chorus)

Private equity holds all the cards,
Socialized losses with private rewards,
Never trust their inherited wealth,
"Caveat emptor" for your mental health.

It’s a numbers game

Prior to my upcoming G.I. visit, I got lab work done and just got the results.  Across the board, all indicators were in the green (normal range).  Numerous key indicators were out of the range a year ago.

Reflecting on a year ago, I started with a trainer (Donovan) at my club to do strength/flexibility workouts.   I was well into the Walk With Bo program, which started in a walker, and got up to 108 different guest-stars (including a deaf-dog, CT Speaker of the House, the Mayor of Cagliari, and representation from This Nation).

I've been able to swim all along, even right away after the Big Surgery (after the first 1/2 lap I was so happy I cried) .

I started hockey-skating and running in November, ran a 5K (Mitten Run) on 12/3, two 10Ks (Hartford HMF 3/17, Collinsville 5/5), finished running all Hartford Streets 5/26, Reykjavik Half Marathon 8/24, and Von Trapp Trail 5K 9/23.  And 54% complete running Windsor streets as of this morning.

So I'm back in the saddle again, planning my next Half (probably Nordic/Baltic).  Feels good.

So Nation, how/what are you doing for your health?

 

First Monday Book Day: Inconsistency

At the end of 2017, I read Autumn by Ali Smith and really enjoyed it.  It was the first book of a planned quartet named after each season, and I made a mental note to keep an eye out for the other books in the series.

A few years later, I was in a bookshop in White Bear Lake and I saw they had multiples of the other books in the series - I hadn't gotten around to keeping up with the books, so I had still only read one book and bought another, so I picked up two books from the store and then eventually realized that at this point I had two copies of Winter and no copies of Spring. Understandably, this did not inspire me to finish reading this set of books.

So now it's 2024, and I'm trying to read the books on my shelf, but I still have an incomplete mish-mash of books from this series.  But!  I was in Half-Price Books and Spring was on the shelves, but it was the hardcover, and my other three books were paperback.  The header image gives away my decision, but I did have to take a moment and think about whether the matching set was important, or was a complete set enough for me?

So far, this set hasn't been too off-putting, so I'm happy with my decision.  Now I just have to get around to reading these.


I read one of the books that I bought last month, and bought two more books this month:

Spring by Ali Smith - see above
Pnin by Vladmir Nabokov - see below

I also read two books that have been on my shelves for a while, so it's another month where small progress is being made toward having read most books in my house.


One of those books was The Remembered Part by Rodrigo Fresan.  See the picture above and explain to me why the publisher didn't keep books 2 and 3 of this trilogy consistent in design?  It's fine. I'm trying not to be bothered by it.

Reading this book was an experience.  800 pages that all take place in the mind of the character as they think about literature and life and culture.  It's not an exciting read, and it takes some time to accept the fact that although there are recurring events, there is no plot and there are no answers coming.  Fresan is incredible at keeping countless plates spinning as we cartwheel through the mental carnival of the narrator, and as I got closer and closer to the end I realized that I was going to miss sitting down and spending 30 or 40 pages in the head of the narrator every day.

The book is nominally about memory, but it's also about Dracula and 2001: A Space Odyssey and about fatherhood.  I really enjoyed it, but I am positive that this is a book that is impossible to recommend.  Read the whole trilogy if you want almost 2000 pages of rumination.

For about 200 pages in the middle of the book Fresan goes on a digression about Nabokov, the narrator's favorite writer.  I remember reading an excerpt of Pnin in an issue of The New Yorker that was in my landlady's house way back in grad school and liking it, so inspired a little bit by Fresan, I bought that book as well, and since I'm missing that dense, fully crafted style of The Remembered Part, maybe I can get a shorter shot of it from Nabokov.


What have you read?  What are you about to read?  What book series do you have that don't quite make up a matched set of consistent design or format?

First Monday Book Day: Progress?

I recently re-discovered my abandoned StoryGraph account, which has been dormant for about two and a half years.  Out of curiosity, I went through the 84 books that I had on my "to-read" list in January of 2021 to see how many I ended up reading since then.  Of the 120 books I have read in the last 30 months, 21 were on that list.  And that feels about right, for every 4 books that I make note of thinking "hey, I might enjoy reading that" I read one of them.  For every 6 books that I actually pick up to read, one of them is something that I've thought about reading before. Most of my reads end up being me grabbing something off a shelf at the library or bookstore that catches my eye in the moment.

Speaking of bookstores, I bought two novels this month at our local bookshop (it was my wife's birthday, so she got a gift card, and that meant that we both ended up in the bookstore and one thing led to another ... and then it turned out that her card only worked for online purchases, so we had to come back later to pick up her book and one thing led to another again ...)

  • Either/Or by Elif Batuman - I really liked The Idiot, so I'm hoping this is also good.
  • It Lasts Forever, and Then It's Over by Anne de Marcken - I saw this book somewhere and it seemed like it was made for me.

I also read three books that had previously been languishing unread on the bookshelves of my house.  I say "on the bookshelves" but most of my recent book purchases are stacked very neatly on our dresser in the bedroom, only books already read get the privilege of being shelved. Anyway, all told, I came out of the month with a net of one less book in my house that I haven't read.  At this rate, I'll have read everything in the house in just a couple of decades or so.

What are you reading?