Minnesota Reads
And it's another edition of Books Read in Airplanes and at Airports! This was a brief trip to go birding and have a meeting with a vendor in Minneapolis (complete with a pilgrimage to Birchbark Books to get Ian a signed copy of The Sentence.) And here is what I read:
The Book of Goose (by Yiyun Li)
This made it to the finals of the Tournament of Books and may or may not have won (no spoilers here) and I decided to read it once I realized it might just go all the way! I'm so glad I did; it's beautiful. There are so many Tournament judges who articulate its beauty better than I can - and some commenters who point out the lesbian erasure in the judgments - but the short version is, it's about a complicated but passionate female friendship (yes, Ferrante has come up in the discussions) and its impact on the life of our author, Agnes. A worthy ToB finalist and/or winner. But not my favorite read of the trip....
The Wrong Kind of Weird (by James Ramos)
Contemporary YA with a central love triangle that is, for a change, not queer at all. (Background characters bring the queer rep, though, no need to worry.) It's pretty predictable but I did enjoy the clear passion the character (and author) have for anime and anime culture, and I love reading about nerds, particularly nerds of color, and seeing them represented in YA books! Fun read.
A Pocket Full of Rye (by Agatha Christie)
I don't remember why I picked this one up but it's a Miss Marple and I realized at the end, once again, that I do not care for Miss Marple and her "oh dearie me, I'm just an old lady who loves to knit!" vibe. Give me the Thursday Murder Club anytime. The mystery was fun though and as always, the solution surprising. Not a must in the Christie ouvre but not bad either. And of course, as with all Agatha Christie, there's some throwaway racism.
It’s Not Like It’s a Secret (by Misa Sugiura)
A young adult novel from 2017, and the thing that struck me most is that it already feels very dated in how it talks about sexuality and race. Like, kids in 2020 young adult novels are way more woke than our main character, Sana, and pretty much all her friends. Of course I went to read the Goodreads reviews and this was called out in some of them back in 2017 so maybe it's not all YA books but this one in particular. (The thing that bugged me the most is that Sana (who is Japanese-American) says horrifically racist stuff to her Mexican-American girlfriend's Mexican-American friends and it's not really addressed? Her girlfriend is like "oh I know you didn't really mean it" and they move on? Like it's REAL RACIST, Y'ALL. The Goodreads reviewers are more up in arms that this book involves cheating but that kind of messiness seems authentically teenage to me and I can't be mad at that.
Life Ceremony (by Sakaya Murata)
A book of short stories by the author of the wonderful Convenience Store Woman and oh my god I loved this book. I'm not usually a short story reader but I love Murata's work and for the Read Harder Challenge, I needed to read "a book of short stories." These are somewhat indescribable, but I will try. For example, the first one is about a world in which turning human bodies into clothes and furniture are a custom. Many of the stories have body horror elements like this (especially the title story) but also leads us to ponder human culture and customs, how they can evolve both away from and towards different practices, and how society is in a way an agreement to be bizarre and horrifying in generally acceptable ways. I didn't love every story equally but I loved the collection as a whole and will definitely make sure I check out Earthlings next.
Labels: 2023 rhc, 2023 tob, kindle, LGBTQ+, library, litfic, mystery, short stories, translated, world literature, young adult
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