alexture's reviews
948 reviews

The Wren, The Wren by Anne Enright

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Did not finish book. Stopped at 8%.
did not vibe with the writing style or the fact that dialogue isn't marked (I really hate that!!!)
Yours for the Taking by Gabrielle Korn

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3.75

I find too many dystopias boring because of their focus on very normal people.

This one doesn't really fit the general model, if only because everyone's extremely queer. Even though the premise is extremely basic, and the plot twists are overdone, there are a couple of very interesting characters who breathe just enough life into this novel to make it worth reading, in my opinion.

What I liked:
  • Unlikeable characters, but also, I wouldn't do any better than them.
  • The setting: as I said, it's basic, but there's a reason why it's been done so much. It just works.
  • Lesbians.

What I liked less:
  • Sometimes the novel felt like a pamphlet when it came to the not all men are bad, not all women can have babies, trans women are women, etc. I think the story was enough on its own for all these themes and it didn't need the monologues to drive the point home.
  • It was a smooth read but also maybe a bit too smooth - what happened?
  • Uninteresting characters, and yet I wanted to know what would happen to them.

It's hard to know if it was a good book. I'm going to say it was nice to have something so conventional and yet so queer, because that's still rare, but that's about it.
Small Miracles by Olivia Atwater

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emotional funny hopeful fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.5

perfect. absolutely perfect.

short and sweet and adorable and this novel feels like a piece of chocolate.

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8 Lives of a Century-Old Trickster by Mirinae Lee

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4.0

a very smooth read. feels like I'll forget it quick, but it was really good.
Modern Albania: From Dictatorship to Democracy in Europe by Fred C. Abrahams

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3.5

Honestly not sure how I feel about this book. It was a great, instructive and well-written story... but it's a story in which the US do no harm, written by an American, and I tend to be very very suspicious of cold war / immediately post cold war stories that don't mention a US-backed anti-communist coup at some point. Maybe I'm worried for nothing, but I'm wary just on principle.

Excellent read with great insights, though. I just feel like I'm going to want to complement it with more stuff to make sure it's not just one account.
How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House by Cherie Jones

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3.75

A haunting, terrible tale.

Lala has a husband. He's not a good man. In fact, he killed a man, whose wife had a husband and doesn't anymore.

Lala has a child, for a week. Then she doesn't, and her husband blames her and she knows he'll kill her if she doesn't leave.

Lala doesn't leave.

There are no good characters in this novel, least of all the cop who only follows his prejudiced instincts and his horny thoughts - in another world, this could have been a crime novel with a great detective story. It's not, it's really not.

Awful and brilliant.
When the Ground Is Hard by Malla Nunn

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adventurous emotional
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

I really enjoyed When the ground is hard. The protagonist, Adele, has learned all the tricks to make the popular girls like her and to be one of them... until suddenly she isn't anymore, dethroned by a new rich girl.

In 1960s Swaziland, broken by Apartheid, a school for mixed-race girls (the richer the kid, the more lenient the teachers; the whiter the kid, the more helpful their "pet" classmates) has an empty room. When Adele is booted out of the Plastics (or their 1960s Swazi equivalent), she ends up in that room, sharing it with Lottie, the daughter of a woman who has boyfriends instead of a proper man, and a dark and fierce girl who fights for what's hers. 

A beautiful tale of a child who starts to understand privilege and to question the establishment - all this with the side story, and really it's terrible to call it a side story, of a young disabled kid who would do anything to get out of school, wherever that brings him.