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“The Language of the Night” by Ursula K. Le Guin

The Language of the Night: Essays on Writing, Science Fiction, and Fantasy by Ursula K. Le Guin My rating: 4 of 5 stars I have said before that I love Ursula K. LeGuin’s nonfiction as much, and sometimes even more, than her fiction works. People who have known this remarkable woman in real life must have been incredibly lucky since…

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“The Ocean Speaks” by Matt Porteous and Tamsin Raine

The Ocean Speaks: A photographic journey of discovery and hope by Matt Porteous My rating: 4 of 5 stars The Ocean Speaks is full of reverence and concern for the oceans and marine life. It has so many absolutely gorgeous photos – sharks, whales, seahorses, turtles, coral reefs, seagrass and even icebergs – with accompanying short essays focusing on the…

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“Qualityland” by Marc-Uwe Kling

Qualityland by Marc-Uwe Kling My rating: 1 of 5 stars I have a lukewarm relationship with satire in general. But in the case of this book I think its not me at fault but actually the book itself. Qualityland is a bit of an absurdist satire on the world of social media and overpowering consumerism and late-stage capitalism, with not-even-slightly-veiled…

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“The Forgotten Beasts of Eld” by Patricia McKillip

The Forgotten Beasts of Eld by Patricia A. McKillip My rating: 4 of 5 stars This book ended up being nothing like I expected — which is great since my expectations would not have done it justice. “You can weave your life so long—only so long, and then a thing in the world out of your control will tug at…

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“In Suspect Terrain” by John McPhee

In Suspect Terrain by John McPhee My rating: 4 of 5 stars “Rocks are records of events that took place at the time they formed. They are books. They have a different vocabulary, a different alphabet, but you learn how to read them.” And so this wraps up my unexpectedly lovely experience with John McPhee’s a Pulitzer-winning geologically-themed Annals of…

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“Assembling California” by John McPhee

Assembling California by John McPhee My rating: 5 of 5 stars “The two time scales—the one human and emotional, the other geologic—are so disparate. But a sense of geologic time is the most important thing to get across to the non-geologist: the slow rate of geologic processes—centimetres per year—with huge effects if continued for enough years. A million years is…

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“The Brides of High Hill” by Nghi Vo

The Brides of High Hill by Nghi Vo My rating: 3 of 5 stars Nghi Vo’s The Singing Hills novellas from the beginning have centered on the stories as they are remembered and retold and lived out. Their framework at the start has been a story within a story; a traveling cleric Chih being the recipient of a story or…

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“Death in the Spires” by K.J. Charles

Death in the Spires by K.J. Charles My rating: 4 of 5 stars “That was a foul thought, planning to trap his friends into admissions, but they weren’t his friends any more, and one of them had murdered Toby.” Apparently this is being referred to as “dark academia” by quite a few people, but not knowing much about that subgenre…

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“The Menopause Manifesto” by Jen Gunter

The Menopause Manifesto: Own Your Health with Facts and Feminism by Jen Gunter My rating: 4 of 5 stars “Women are so much more than just their ovaries, so it’s important to sit back and look at the whole picture for perspective.” Menopause inexplicably seems like a firmly-kept secret. It will happen to most of that half of the population…

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“Breath” by Tim Winton

Breath by Tim Winton My rating: 3 of 5 stars I’ve never been an adrenaline junkie. No, thanks. Facing my own mortality just makes me feel dread and not that rush that gets others addicted. I never needed to face dangers and thrills in order to feel alive — I like calm and have seen too many people end up…

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“James” by Percival Everett

James by Percival Everett My rating: 2 of 5 stars I am very cautious with book reimaginings since, honestly, most of the time they are quite unneeded — but here the idea of it indeed seemed necessary. I understand why Jim of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn needed his own story not filtered through the perspective of a…

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“City of Miracles” by Robert Jackson Bennett

City of Miracles by Robert Jackson Bennett My rating: 5 of 5 stars “To live with hatred,” says Sigrud, “is like grabbing hot embers to throw them at someone you think an enemy. Who gets burned the worst?” Surfacing from under the absolute immersion into the world of this series feels almost unreal. I don’t want to say goodbye to…

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“Basin and Range” by John McPhee

Basin and Range by John McPhee My rating: 5 of 5 stars If you had told me that I’d absolutely adore a nonfiction book about geology, a book now over 40 years old, I would have seriously doubted your sanity. But that was before I discovered (thanks, Justin!) the works of John McPhee. And now, in the nerdiest pun ever,…

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“Nineteen Ways of Looking at Consciousness” by Patrick House

Nineteen Ways of Looking at Consciousness by Patrick House My rating: 2 of 5 stars “The brain is messy and venous and dense and soaking wet, all the time, and is about as heavy as a hardback copy of Infinite Jest. It is not designed, perfected, or neat. It is a thrift-store bin of evolutionary hacks Russian-dolled into a watery,…

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“Abandoned Towns” by Chris McNab

Abandoned Towns by Chris McNab My rating: 3 of 5 stars It’s hard to resist a book titled Abandoned Towns. The introduction explains the appeal very well: “Abandoned towns have an undeniably haunted aura, the sense that the hollow rooms, wind-swinging doors and silent roads still bear the imprint of those who once lived there, sometimes with unnerving immediacy.” I’ve…

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“Chernobyl: The Fall of Atomgrad” by Matyáš Namai

Chernobyl: The Fall of Atomgrad by Matyáš Namai My rating: 4 of 5 stars This may be the first nonfiction graphic novel I’ve read, and it was absolutely worth it. I’ve always been interested in the Chernobyl disaster, being a Soviet-born kid of the 1980s, knowing a few kids whose parents were Chernobyl liquidators, having to do school assignments on…

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“Space Oddities” by Harry Cliff

Space Oddities: The Mysterious Anomalies Challenging Our Understanding of the Universe by Harry Cliff My rating: 3 of 5 stars It may be time to accept that particle physics may be just a bit over my head. By the time we get to “strange quarks” and “beauty quarks” I may be justified in thinking that those physicists are just messing…

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3 thoughts on “Blog

  1. Hi! I’m Dania Khan, a book reviewer on Instagram and would like to quote a line from your ‘Piranesi’ review. It’s the line – ‘This is like a dream, slow, strange and intensely atmospheric, unbelievably immersive and engrossing.’ I would not be plagiarising your work, but instead, I will be using it to prove or further a point I will be trying to make in my review. My account is @bookomaniacal if you want to DM there about your response as I wasn’t sure as to how to contact you.

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