I meant to post about this a few weeks ago, but BCC Press has published a print edition of In the Image of Our Heavenly Parents. (The ebook is still available as well.)
I haven’t done a great job at consistency in titling these reading posts, which isn’t the end of the world but I do want them to be titled henceforth, so we’re going to leave the unnumbered masses behind us and resurrect the Booknotes series, starting season 2. I’ll be using the #recent-reads tag as the throughline for all of these types of posts, though.
Nonfiction
- Chatter, by Ethan Kross. This was a useful read. I’ve been using the distanced self-talk idea since reading the book and it does seem like it works, for what it’s worth. Apparently we talk to ourselves at rates as high as 4,000 wpm. (If I could harness that and redirect its output to my laptop or phone, I could write a novel in…half an hour. Ha. Back in reality, answering what I imagine would be the next question: no, I have no interest in using AI to write fiction. Or in reading fiction written by AI for that matter.) the author says we spend a third to a half of our waking life mentally not in the present, which seemed startling at first but upon reflection made sense. Frequent time travelers, us lot.
- Red Famine, by Anne Applebaum, about the 1930s Holodomor in Ukraine. The last third is where it gets especially bleak and so, so tragic. Now I understand why doing genealogy in certain parts of Ukraine is basically impossible. The book is horrifying, too — especially the parts about adults cannibalizing their own children. It’s an important book and I’m glad I read it because I didn’t know anything about the famine beforehand, but goodness, make sure you read something happy after this.
Fiction
- The Player of Games, by Iain M. Banks. Interesting ideas (the post-scarcity culture, the games, the central conceit), good writing. One gross part. That twist at the very end, though!
- A Prayer for the Crown-Shy, by Becky Chambers. Cozy and philosophical. Some parts I could have done without (true of almost all contemporary novels I read), but overall I liked it.
My favorite reads last year, in the order I read them (and I won’t go into detail on these because I’ve already written about them in earlier posts):
Nonfiction
- The Golden Thread, by Kassia St. Clair
- The Cubans, by Anthony DePalma
- The Dawn of Everything, by David Graeber & David Wengrow
- Stretching the Heavens, by Terryl L. Givens
- This Changes Everything, by Naomi Klein
- The Invention of Nature, by Andrea Wulf
- The Sixth Extinction, by Elizabeth Kolbert
- The Plantagenets, by Dan Jones
- How the Word Is Passed, by Clint Smith
- Human Errors, by Nathan H. Lents
- I Wish I’d Been There, edited by Byron Hollinshead
- Extra Life, by Steven Johnson
Fiction
- Ring Shout, by P. Djèlí Clark
- Network Effect, by Martha Wells
- The Curse of Chalion, by Lois McMaster Bujold
- Binti, by Nnedi Okorafor
- The Hands of the Emperor, by Victoria Goddard
- Babel, by R. F. Kuang
- Ogres, by Adrian Tchaikovsky