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What I'm Reading - Nov.- Dec. 2020
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Mary Anne
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Nov 01, 2020 08:30AM

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Regarding Benghazi, the blunder that got hung around her neck: Rice really "took one for the team". She was the first person from the administration to go on the Sunday news shows, read the CIA's talking points about what was known at the time, and was blamed because she was the messenger with the bad news.
I gave this book 4****

The tragic Benghazi incident was something that Congressional Republicans just wouldn't let die. You would have thought the Democrats organized the attack!

Men AND women; men VS women? This 25th anniversary edition includes other writings about Garner and the lively controversy over the indecent assault scandal.








I’m also reading The Honourable Schoolboy, the sequel to Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. All I can say so far is that it’s not hard to see why people keep reading and recommending the latter but not the former. I’m pretty sure Smiley’s People will restore my faith, and frankly even a mediocre spy novel is still a bit of fun to read.
The one thing I’m reading right now that I’m really enjoying is Showdown: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court Nomination That Changed America. Recommended by my daughter, who reads biographies voraciously. She’s right about this one; it’s a great read.

I enjoyed Michelle Obama's book, but I did start listening to the audio that she reads herself before I switched back and forth to reading, depending what I was doing. I think her tone and her obvious passion for some issues would have been clearer with the audio perhaps than with the words on the page, although I thought the writing was fine. It was very much her story, not his, and only partly theirs.






Thirteen Moons – Charles Frazier – 5*****
Frazier’s sophomore effort returns to the rural Carolina landscape, covering nearly a century from the 1820s to the very beginning of the 20th century. The tale is told by Will Cooper, who as a twelve-year-old orphan was sent into the wilderness as a “bound boy.” It’s a marvelous story, and beautifully told. Will’s life is full of adventure and opportunities, as well as peril and mistakes. Frazier puts the reader into an America that is long gone but vividly portrayed. On finishing, I find that I want to start again at the beginning, savoring every word.
My full review HERE

I’ve only been listening to the audiobook. I am normally a bit hesitant about writers reading their own books (the scars from Jill Lepore’s These Truths are going to take a long time to heal, for instance). But Obama has a nice voice and is a solid reader, and you’re right—she’s able to add tone & color in just the right places, since it’s her story.
PattyMacDotComma wrote: “It was very much her story, not his, and only partly theirs.”
Here I have to disagree, and I think this is one of the things that really bothers me about the book. The beginning is her story, to be sure, and it’s interesting. But from the moment Barack walked into the narrative, it seems to me it has mostly become a book about what it’s like to live in Barack Obama’s shadow.
I’m sure that’s difficult to avoid—he’s a once-in-a-generation personality, and anyone who’s spent any time in his orbit has definitely spent some time in his shadow. But that aspect of the book is just not so compelling. It does have its moments (the scene of her & Malea desperately trying to sneak out of the White House, for just a momentary glimpse of the lights, is one that will stick with me). But it’s not enough to really sustain the book, for me.
I will probably finish the book today or tomorrow, and I haven’t actively disliked it. But a couple of years from now, when I stumble across it in my reading history, I’m certain I will have forgotten that I ever read it.


I'm looking forward to reading it.



I recently bought a red/NIR panel to promote anti-aging of the skin, retention of hair thickness (the red light prevents miniaturization of the hair follicles), and the beginning of joint pain. Red/NIR light has many other uses, and this book tells you all about those uses, the best panels, and the dosages, etc.
I have to travel a lot, when there's not a pandemic going on, and, in my profession, we are encouraged to do all we can to keep our appearance up as well as our voice. I find red/NIR light therapy is helping me a lot, along with other things. I also am greatly relieved it's curing the beginning of joint pain in my knees. I like to hike and cycle and don't want to be inhibited by pain.
I don't usually read books like this; I am more of a fiction reader. I did feel this book was necessary, though, because misuse of a red/NIR panel can make a problem worse rather than better.
I hope to return to fiction reading in a day or two. :)

I’ve just started reading A Long Long Way by a favorite Irish author, Sebastian Barry. The time period is WWI and the narrative follows a young Dubliner, Willie Dunne, into the trenches. Willie is a very sympathetic character but I have to say I haven’t yet settled into the rhythm of Barry’s writing in this one.

Red light therapy isn't just for the young or middle-aged. If anyone is suffering any degree of joint pain, red light therapy will help ease the pain. It can also aid in heart and brain health and cure hypothyroidism, though I've not tried it for that yet. (I have no financial interest in this! LOL)
If anyone wants to learn more, you can do so here: https://www.theenergyblueprint.com/re...
If links aren't allowed, please excuse me and let me know. I don't want to break any rules, and this is not meant to be marketing in any way. Just information. Please don't take it as marketing. As I said, I have nothing to do with the industry or even the book beyond reading it. I apologize if anyone finds it offensive.
Although I'm not sure when we'll read it, I'm reading HAMNET. (I need to get a jump on the books anyway. I'm not the fastest reader.) I love Shakespeare and anything to do with him and his family. So far, the book is beautiful, but sad. I'll save any further comments for our discussion.



Mary, so much on the same page re your comments about the quality of N K Jemisin, inventive, unique world builder. Must get round to reading another of her series soon.

That's terrific news, Sheila! Half of a Yellow Sun was a great book. I added your Guardian link to my review, and I'll add a link here to the actual review since I included some maps and other info if anyone is interested.
Link to my "Half of a Yellow Sun" review





Sheila, it always amuses and amazes me that so many people (usually Americans, in my experience) refer to Africa as if it were a single, homogenous country. I think since the EU was formed, there are those who think the same way about Europe.
They would probably be the same people who if they lived in the United States would identify their state or their part of the country as 'special'. Texas is not New York is not California is not Montana! Just as Germany is not Spain and -- well, you get the idea.
I know the English are proud of their own counties, but at least they are aware of the others!

Mary, I thought you might be interested in reading our old discussion of The Optimist's Daughter from several years ago. http://www.constantreader.com/discuss...

People who think of Europe as one country have never traveled in Europe before the Euro. LOL It's a real job figuring out how many Italian lira you will need, how many Spanish pesos, how many French francs, etc., and then knowing enough of all the languages to get by, what customs are prevalent in each country and on and on. In the past, I made some real mistakes traveling in Europe. I can laugh about them now, but then, they were upsetting.
Your review is intriguing. I have not read the book, but I love books set in Africa. I love Africa, though I know more about East Africa than West Africa, and one of my best times was spent in South Africa. Such a sad history, though.
I'm going to check out the book. Thank you again.




Ha! The "English" reference wasn't aimed at you, Sheila! I was thinking more along the lines of novels and television programs where regional accents (Yorkshire, Cornwall) can be so strong that people may have difficulty understanding some of the 'local language'. American regional accents can be quite pronounced too (New York vs the deep southern drawl). We are all so tribal, really, aren't we? Incidentally, I'm from a Scots background, too - among a couple of other things. :) We won't get into the Highland-Lowland thing, though, eh?



The book is aptly titled, though, because the author seemed to want to cover just about every social and family issue in existence. Consequently, I found the book to have no focus. It just roamed. The characters are very sketchily drawn, and the plot comes down to a series of improbable events that ultimately encapsulate an "us" versus "them" theme.
If you like Joyce Carol Oates (I can't stand her books), you might like this, but it really is poorly written. It is very clear the author wants the reader to like one character and her lifestyle and dislike another and her lifestyle. Too much authorial intrusion. I wish she'd let us make up our own minds.
There is also the matter of the constantly changing viewpoints. I actually prefer multiple viewpoints in a book, and it's fine with me if they change chapter by chapter. Ng, however, changes viewpoints within a paragraph. It made the book very difficult to follow and the shallow characters even more difficult to get to know (a hopeless task anyway).
Ultimately, this is a very silly book about some very serious subjects. It's written in such a juvenile style that I thought it could pass for a YA book, though it is aimed at adults.
If you value your time, avoid this nonsense. (The many, many problems presented weren't nonsense; the way the author presented them was.)


I was actually an inconsistent CR participant in those days, but I wasn't part of that discussion. This would certainly be good in combination with Mark Twain, though; I imagine that was an interesting pairing.

Finished My Year of Meats for another book club, a book that was well done, but would have been better to have been read when it was published many years ago, and before I read Ozeki's later work, A Tale for the Time Being, which I kind of loved for its clever inclusion of quantum physics and pacific northwest environment into an interesting story.


A Discovery Of Witches – Deborah Harkness – 4****
Book one of the All Souls Trilogy introduces the reader to Diana Bishop, descended from a long line of powerful witches, but uninterested in learning to use her magic skills, and Matthew Clairmont, who is a renowned vampire. It’s a combination of fantasy, romance, suspense, mystery, and historical fiction. I was engaged from page one and look forward to reading the next book in the series.
My full review HERE
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