Books

Why I Can’t Read Right Now

I intentionally don’t address my personal life on this blog. I suppose I intend for this to be a site where I share my interests, but not myself. However, my current self is finding it hard to feel engaged by my interests.

I doubt the global spread of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus (specifically the COVID-19 disease) is news for you. Like almost everyone I know, I’m experiencing a lot of fear and uncertainty about the unknown. I so badly want to rely on the things that bring me the most comfort, like restful sleep and great stories, but they are the exact activities I’m finding it most challenging to tune into.

In the past month I’ve learned that I need a quiet mind to read. I often experience anxious thoughts, but, previously, whatever I read would usually help me tone them down (and that’s my personal indicator of a great book). Because my mind has been the opposite of quiet lately, I either avoid picking up my current book or quickly toss it aside. 

In early March I decided to abandon the just-released Too Much: How Victorian Constraints Still Bind Women Today, which I was graciously gifted by Grand Central Publishing. I didn’t dislike anything about it, but I observed I was having a difficult time focusing when paging through it. I almost put away an advanced copy of The House of Deep Water (sent to me by G.P. Putnam’s Sons) for good after taking more than a week to scrape through the first eight pages. I’ve only kept up with it because I realized it’s not the book, it’s my mind.

I’m not sure how or when I can look forward to relief. Reading is my comfort, and the absence of it leaves me feeling insecure when uncertainty and fear are already weighing on my mind. However, I am confident that, once this phase passes, I will dive back into some truly great books.

[My review was not solicited or expected in exchange for the books gifted to me as mentioned. No links are affiliate.]

 

Books

Reading List: February 2020

February is a crappy month. I did not have much to look forward to (no travel plans, holidays, or even a friend’s birthday to celebrate) and spring still seems far off. A few good books, however, can more than compensate for the dreariness. I was fortunate to have some new releases that fit the bill: a sweet YA fiction, a really incredible memoir, and an evocative genre-bender.

  1. Yes No Maybe So (Becky Albertalli and Aisha Saeed)
  2. My Autobiography of Carson McCullers (Jenn Shapland)
  3. Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning (Cathy Park Hong)

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Books

2019 Book and Podcast Recommendations

Like clockwork, the anticipation of the New Year encourages me to reflect on the past year’s accomplishments as they influence the next year’s intentions. When I review what I read in 2019, it’s easy to recognize there were a few novels I truly loved, while the rest I have already forgotten. I made a dedicated effort to experiment with first-time authors and focused a lot more attention on nonfiction picks than I typically would. It was refreshing to mix things up this year, but this likely factored into my lukewarm feelings about most of what I read. As for my intentions for 2020 books, I still plan to get exposure to new (or, new to me) authors, but hope to take pleasure in their works more than I did this year.

I really enjoy scrolling through “the best of 2019” book lists at this time of year and building my future reading list from it, so I’ve selected my own favorites to help you discover material you might have never tried otherwise. And, because I’m also an avid podcast fan and discovered some really inspiring new content this year, I’ve listed some podcasts as a bonus!

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Books

Book: Inconspicuous Consumption

There are plenty of thoroughly researched books about the dismal fate of our environment. Many focus on a certain topic (changing weather patterns, melting ice, ocean acidification, global reliance on oil, etc).

These books can be intimidating: I care about protecting the Earth, but I don’t know all that much about how climate influences weather, or what impact different kinds of fuel and energy have on my daily life, or why, exactly, food waste is bad. Sometimes these books can be too didactic, not sharing the elementary science behind these forces, or have a motive warped by politics.

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Books

Book: The Seven or Eight Deaths of Stella Fortuna

Some of the best books I’ve read I can actually barely remember. I can more readily recall how they made me feel.

The Seven or Eight Deaths of Stella Fortuna (2019, Ecco Press), a debut novel by Juliet Grimes,  fits in that category. Easily the best book I’ve read so far this year, it has stayed on my mind since I read it in March. It was the kind of novel that left me sad when I reached the last page, because I had no more of the story to enjoy.

Continue reading “Book: The Seven or Eight Deaths of Stella Fortuna”