Monday, May 06, 2019

It's Monday 5/6! What Are You Reading?

Whew, I got back from another amazing Booktopia last night, so I am exhausted and achy today (very long travel day to get home)...but highly satisfied with my weekend of authors and book lovers all celebrating books and reading in lovely Manchester, VT, at the incredible Northshire Bookstore. As usual, every single author there said something like, "Wow, I am blown away by this event - I've never seen anything like it!" It is truly unique and nirvana for book lovers (like me). I'll share all the details in a post later this week (or next - we leave again Friday for my mom's house in CT for Mother's Day!), but if you are wondering what it is, you can check out my post on Booktopia 2018 in the meantime.

Mostly, last week was a flurry of getting ready for Booktopia, traveling to Vermont, and enjoying my bookish weekend with my mom and new and old friends - definitely not much writing time. But, of course, we all enjoyed some great books last week:
  • I finished reading Lives Laid Away by Stephen Mack Jones, one of the Booktopia authors and books. It's a thriller set in Detroit and book 2 in a series featuring ex-cop August Snow (though I had no problem starting with book 2). It was suspenseful, action-packed, and funny, too, with plenty of surprises, and I enjoyed meeting Stephen this weekend. I enjoyed this novel so much that I bought the first one, August Snow, while at Northshire Bookstore this weekend.
  • Next, I moved onto another Booktopia book, Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl by Andrea Lawlor. I know that's a strange title - and it's an unusual novel - but stay with me here. Paul, the main character, is a shape-shifter who can change from male to female and back again, also changing his physical traits, becoming taller or more muscular, etc. He's a college student struggling with identity and where he fits in the world. The author uses the unique premise of shape-shifting to explore gender fluidity, queer culture, and sexual exploration, giving the reader the perspectives of many different people, all through one main character. I am almost finished with it and have been totally hooked this weekend. It's warmer and sweeter than you might expect and completely immersive. I am rooting for Paul to figure things out!
  • I finished reading the YA graphic novel On a Sunbeam by Tillie Walden. I enjoyed her YA graphic memoir, Spinning. Here, she turns her talents to a fictional story about an all-female world out in space, featuring a team of young women who work on reconstructing crumbling places and go on a mission to find a missing person, with flashbacks to the main character's time in boarding school. It gets a little confusing sometimes because of the imaginary world, but it was interesting and engaging.
  • On audio, I am still listening to another Booktopia selection, The Guest Book by Sarah Blake. I really enjoyed her novel The Postmistress, and this new one is equally engaging. It's the story of multiple generations of a family, the Miltons, who own a small island in Maine and run a successful financial institution, from the 1930's, in the shadow of the rising Nazis, through the 1950's and the first inklings of civil rights to present-day, where one of the grandchildren, Evie, a history professor and now an older woman herself, digs into her own family history. I'm enjoying it so far and like novels that weave together stories from different characters and different times. 
  • My husband, Ken, is reading a book I just bought for myself, True Grit by Charles Portis, the classic western that the movies were based on. I got it for the Book Cougars podcast read-along, though I haven't had time to read it yet with all the Booktopia reading! He was excited to read a western, something a bit different for both of us.
  • Our son, Jamie, 24, has been reading the series A Pattern of Shadow and Light by Melissa McPhail, a favorite of his. He first re-read book 1, Cephrael's Hand, book 2, The Dagger of Adendigaeth, and book 3, Paths of Air. He is now reading book 4 (for the first time), Kingdom Blades, and he's really been enjoying it. He and I were talking during a long car ride last week, and he said he loves this series - he put it on a par with Game of Thrones and Wheel of Time - high praise and good company!
Blog posts from last week:
TV Tuesday: The Other Two - a warm, funny show about being fame-adjacent

Fiction Review: Lives Laid Away by Stephen Mack Jones - a fast, funny thriller set in Detroit

Fiction Review: Leading Men by Christopher Castellani - historical fiction about Tennessee Williams and his long-time partner, Frank Merlo, in Portofino in the summer of 1953

What Are You Reading Monday is hosted by Kathryn at Book Date, so head over and check out her blog and join the Monday fun! You can also participate in a kid/teen/YA version hosted by Unleashing Readers.

You can follow me on Twitter at @SueBookByBook or on Facebook on my blog's page.   

What are you and your family reading this week? 

Welcome, Booktopians! Authors signing books at Northshire Bookstore
 

11 comments:

  1. Anonymous10:18 PM

    I've been intrigued by On A Sunbeam for the longest time. I know of Tillie Walden - looking forward to finding more of her books.

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    1. This was a unique one, Myra, but I enjoyed it. Very different from her memoir.

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  2. I'm so glad you had a great time at Booktopia; I can't wait to read all about it.

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    1. Thanks, Helen! Just want to finish reviewing my Booktopia books, and then I'll post a summary of the event!

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  3. True Grit, one of the few westerns I've ever read, is an old favorite. It's fabulous writing and I re-read it once in a while. Your Booktopia certainly sounds wonderful!

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    1. Oh, good! I'm looking forward to reading it, Linda - thanks!

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  4. The Guest Book sounds like a really good listen. Good to hear your Booktopia weekend was all you wanted. The fact its in Vermont would even make me happy. I love the sound of that place. Hope you re coup some energy and are ready to travel again.

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    1. Me, too, Kathryn - I love Vermont! And this is a wonderful town with great restaurants and a fabulous book store!

      I think you'd like The Guest Book. I'm completely immersed in it now.

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  5. I've not yet read any Tillie Walden's books, so I'm going to take a looksy at her books. I'm thinking of waiting until Are You Listening? is released since it features West Texas. While I grew up in the Austin are, but hubby and I went to school in West Texas and lived out there for a few years after he finished his graduate work. And I'm totally envious of your Booktopia adventures. Sadly, we have nothing like that within a few hours drive of where I live. Have a wonderful trip to CT for Mother's Day, Sue!

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    1. I think Spinning is also set in texas, about growing up in figure skating and coming out (a memoir).

      Alas, Booktopia is NOT within a few hours' drive from here! It was a very long, full day's travel to get to VT from DE - took me a 3.5 hour train ride, a nap at my mom's house & then another 4 hour drive from CT to VT. But worth it - and I certainly wasn't coming from the furthest away. There were attendees from AZ and CA - it's THAT great :)

      You have a great Mother's Day, too, Shaye - we are ready to go and just waiting for my son but honestly, I just want to stay in bed and read...

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    2. Ah, I should clarify -- for me to attend anything like Booktopia it would have to be a very short distance from my home. Since leaving my teaching position in the K-12 public schools (and going to mostly online teaching at the college), I now have five home learners, one still being a toddler. So with all family living 1,000 miles away, I don't typically do the long trips away from home (without my children). I sure wish we had local options in the Midwest. :(

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