I read this book because a picture book call My Guncle and Me by Jonathan Merritt has been officially challenged at my library. I know this book is by a different author, but I thought the challenger might be uncomfortable about that book because she was familiar with this book. I had mixed feelings about this book. The writing is great and all the characters are really endearing. There are funny scenes and really heartwarming scenes where Patrick and the kids interact with each other. The book is successful in showing how having kids in your life changes your outlook in the world but also how children are real people who have real emotions that need to be acknowledged and understood. However, the book portrays the children in situations that the white-straight-conservative-mother in me cringes at. Patrick drinks alcohol incessantly throughout the book, swears frequently, and goes skinny dipping and has sexual encounters with a much younger TV star with the children in the house. This doesn't seem like an appropriate environment for kids to me. The author represents this opinion using a character in the book, Patrick's sister Clara. Clara is an active feminist who rants about white male privilege, but secretly is harboring a personal tragedy that is manifesting itself in her prudishness. I kind of resented the fact that the author seems to be suggesting that if you are worried about the kids being in the environment of profanity, alcohol, and sex, you are a deeply troubled man-hater. Still, if I am honest, I enjoyed the book overall, though it felt a little like a guilty pleasure. (2021, 336 p)
Deelibrarian Reading Log Blog
This is a record of all the books I read or listen to.
Sunday, January 12, 2025
The Guncle by Steven Rowley
Thursday, January 9, 2025
The Age of Resilience by Jeremy Rifkin
Ok, so that summary sounds flippant, but I was amazed at how lacking this book--by a really famous author and environmentalist--is in sound logic and objectivity. After reading it I looked up his bio and I wasn't surprised to learn that he has no formal scientific training, but instead only has a bachelor's degree in economics. As a result, the book represents he own personal views on a lot of loosely connected world problems which he promotes with great enthusiasm and confidence but not a lot of rigor. His language is very emotionally charged, and he seems to only speak in superlative. He also constantly makes logical errors in his writing. For example, he takes a few examples and presents them as irrefutable evidence of growing trends, when, in reality, they are only a few small examples. As an example, he talks about forest pre-schools where kids stay outside all day regardless of weather. He boasts that there are 600 such preschools in the US, a clear evidence of their growing popularity. 600? really. There are about 90,000 preschools in the US, so only about a half of one percent are forest preschools. He also compares things that are not comparable. He spends a whole chapter talking about the problems infants have when they are neglected and fail to bond with adults. Then he says that modern people suffer with the same kinds of problems because they fail to bond with their communities and with nature. I am not saying that everything in the book is wrong. I think he has some good ideas. It is just that the solutions he proposes are pipe dreams that would require a pretty drastic change in human nature to come to pass. Still it was interesting to me to see all the different ways he tries to influence readers. (2022, 336 p)
Friday, January 3, 2025
The Wordhord by Hana Videen
Thursday, January 2, 2025
Seams Deadly by Maggie Bailey
I have read several "baking" mysteries and this book seems to have the same vibe, but with sewing instead of baking. It was alright. It is in every way a "cozy" mystery, with a lot of the people being really nice to each other, except for the killer, of course. Bailey does a pretty good job introducing the reader to all the quirky people in the village. The author sets up plenty of suspects, with plenty of clues. I wondered if the book would have sewing projects at the end of each chapter instead of recipes like they have in the baking mysteries. It didn't, but it did describe some sewing projects in the book that would be interesting to try. (272, 273) p
Friday, December 27, 2024
Artie and the Wolf Moon by Olivia Stephens
This is a graphic novel but I only listened to it as an audio. There have been some graphic novels that have been adapted well enough to an audio format that you could hardly tell they are graphic novels. This is not one of them. It was difficult to follow the story without the pictures to look at and the readers makes no attempt to fill in the gaps. That being said, I can imagine it is a pretty good graphic novel. The story and characters are solid, and there are plenty of action scenes that I imagine work well in a graphic novel form. My library doesn't own this graphic novel but if we purchased it we would probably put it in the YA graphic novel sections because of some hints of LGBTQ relationships. They are not in your face, but they are there. (2021, 256 p.)
Wednesday, December 25, 2024
Cross Country Christmas by Laurie Lewis
I think this is the first time I have read anything from Laurie Lewis. It was pretty much romance cotton candy. It is by Covenant Book so it is PG rated, and there is a lot of Western style wish fulfillment going on here. Reese is not only handsome, he is also really kind and rich, plus his family is also really nice and incredibly supportive. CC is beautiful, effervescent and also really kind. There are moonlight rides on horses, and befriending a mother deer and her faun, lots of sweet, meaningful kissing scenes, and everything warm and fuzzy that you can think of. It is a Hallmark Christmas Special in print, so if you are in the mood for that, this is the holiday read for you. (2021, 256 p)
P.S. I promise this is the last of the sappy Christmas stories for this year.
The Hapless Milliner by Jessica Bull
It is an interesting idea to imagine Jane Austen as the hero of a mystery novel, but in this case, I think Ms Bull missed the mark. I was never convinced that the character Jane in the book was at all like the author Jane Austen. There were a few times that Bull incorporated phrases or ideas from the Austen's novels into the mystery, but to no real affect. I think I would have enjoyed the mystery more if the main character where just a random Victorian instead of the famous author. That being said, it isn't a bad mystery. The plot is fairly complex, and the resolution is well supported. I liked the way that the author set up several viable suspects, and then found ways to show their innocence one by one until she hit upon the true culprit. I know very little about Austen's real life, but a note at the end of the book explained which elements of the story were based on actual people and incidents. Now I want to find a good Jane Austen biography and read it (2024, 368 p)