Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Say Nothing Comes to TV, Read up on Reproductive Rights, Thunder Point on TV, PEN America Gives More Reasons to Vote, The Isles of the Gods by Amie Kaufman, Waking Romeo by Kathryn Barker, Empire of Shadows by Jacquelyn Benson and the Apology Project by Jeanette Escudero

Welcome my favorite fellow book lovers! It's election day, and I'm late in posting my latest reviews. I have some great new books that I'm reading, thanks to a shopping trip to Half Price Books yesterday, and today, though I'm struggling with a Crohns disease flare, I'm feeling fortunate to have new books awaiting me on my TBR piles. The weather has turned cold (though not yet freezing here in the PNW) and the days darker as we ride through rainstorms to December, my favorite month of the year. So cozy up and enjoy your hot cup of choice with some good books and a furry companion. Here's my long lost tidbits and reviews for your enjoyment.
 
This sounds fascinating. My late best friend RM Larson was a huge fan of all things Irish, and she would have loved this series about "the Troubles" Ireland experienced for decades, as the Irish people were striving for independence from Britain, just like we did over couple hundred years ago.
 
TV: Say Nothing

A trailer has been released for FX's Say Nothing,
based on the nonfiction bestselling book by Patrick Radden Keefe.
IndieWire  reported that the project "tells the true story of 'The
Troubles,' the decades-long conflict between the United Kingdom and
Northern Ireland, including the rise of the Irish Republican Army. As
part of that, the story delves into 'the Disappeared,' centering, like
the book, on the mystery of a missing mother of 10."

Adapted by Joshua Zetumer, the series cast includes Lola Petticrew,
Hazel Doupe, Anthony Boyle, and Josh Finan.

Keefe called the characters "complicated," saying, "How you feel about
them should shift. And I think that the challenge for us, this was true
for me with the book, very, very true with the series, is: How do you
capture the romance of those politics without romanticizing them
yourself? And I think part of the answer is that you show the costs not
just in the final episodes... but from the very first scene. The first
person you meet is Jean McConville [one of the Disappeared]. And the
hope is that the sense of those costs kind of hangs over the whole
series, even when it's kind of lark-y bank heists and so forth, that you
have a sense that there is this kind of Tell-Tale Heart beating in the
background."

Zetumer added: "I think one of the things we were trying to do from the
beginning was capture the energy of what it feels like to be in your
twenties or a teenager and really get caught up in a cause. That was the
sort of guiding principle that was driving us forward.... The challenge
is like, what not to include, because it's 40 years of history. It's
this vast swirl that's around the characters. You're getting the whole
history of the Troubles in the course of the book. And so the question
was: 'Okay, what do you cut out?' "

Reproductive rights are one hot button issue that I have a stake in as a woman, and as a mother and a rape survivor. Women need to have full control of their bodies and the decision whether or not to bring a pregnancy to term. Right now women are dying due to these draconian abortion bans. This has to end.
 
Read Up On Reproductive Rights
Virginia is the only state in the American south without a post-Dobbs abortion ban or mandatory waiting period. Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022, our reproductive healthcare resources have been stretched to a breaking point as women have had to travel from all over the region to access the care they need. Freedom and democracy are on the ballot this year, yes, but let me say it plainly: our lives are on the line. You need look no further than the 56% increase in deaths of pregnant women in Texas since its abortion ban was enacted to understand what’s at stake. Whether you want to deepen your own understanding of the history and context of reproductive rights or beef up your talking points, you’ll find great resources in LitHub‘s list of the 10 best books about reproductive rights. I would add Jessica Valenti’s recently released Abortion: Our Bodies, Their Lies, and the Truths We Use to Win.

I'm a huge fan of Virgin River (the streaming program, I've not read the books), so this new adaptation intrigues me. I will be keeping an eye out for its debut.
 
TV:Thunder Point
Virgin River and Sullivan's Crossing author Robyn Carr has partnered
again with creator/showrunner Roma Roth to adapt her nine-book Thunder
Point series into a dramatic scripted TV project, Deadline reported. 

This is the third Carr property that Roth has adapted through her
company, Reel World Management, which she runs with Christopher E.
Perry. Roth is the creator, showrunner, executive producer, and head
writer on Sullivan's Crossing, which she set up as a straight-to-series
order with CTV and Fremantle. She is also executive producer of
Netflix's Virgin River, which recently announced its seventh season.

"Thunder Point has drama, mystery, and romance, all the ingredients you
need to successfully build a global hit series," said Roth. "It is
certain to appeal to fans of both Sullivan's Crossing and Virgin River
but this time the story is told from a male perspective. We are beyond
excited to be continuing our incredibly successful run with bestselling
author Robyn Carr."


Book Bans are another draconian law that has been put into place by the new brand of Christian Conservative/Republican fascists who seem to forget that Hitler started his reign of terror by killing the intellectuals/scholars and banning/burning books and art that he didn't want people to see. The more people you keep in ignorance the easier they will be to control. Ugh. 
 
In Case You Needed One More Reason to Vote
A new report from PEN America covering the full 2023-2024 school year shows a 200% increase—that’s a tripling—in school book bans. The report analyzes 10,046 bans nationwide that sought to pull more than four thousand unique titles from school shelves. This data lands in sharp contrast to the ALA’s report in September that attempts to ban books in public, school, and academic libraries declined significantly in the first eight months of this year. Which is right? Let’s go with both and neither. The reports address different samples and different time frames, and it is possible for both narratives to be true.
The PEN America report captures data through the end of the 2023-2024 school year, so it maybe goes through June of this year at the latest, while the ALA report runs through August 31. If overall banning attempts decreased after the school year ended and/or decreased in the public sector enough to offset an increase in schools, these findings can exist side-by-side. There may also be some political strategy at work. Book banning is a wildly unpopular, losing issue for the right—most Americans oppose book bans —and if book banning attempts are actually declining so far in this school year, it is more likely because Republicans recognize that a bunch of high-profile book banning attempts will not help their electoral chances than because some sea change has already occurred. Don’t let up your efforts just yet.

The Isles of the Gods by Amie Kaufman is a YA seafaring romantasy that I felt had an odd start, but then ramped up fast and once it got going, the plot was unstoppable. Here's the blurb: Looking for a sweeping summer read? Magic, romance, and slumbering gods clash in this riveting romantasy about a seafaring girl and a playboy prince who band together in a precarious journey.

Selly has salt water in her veins. So when her father leaves her high and dry in the port of Kirkpool, she has no intention of riding out the winter at home while he sails off to adventure. But any plans to follow him are dashed when a handsome stranger with tell-tale magician's marks on his arm commandeers her ship. He is Prince Leander of Alinor and he needs to cross the Crescent Sea without detection so he can complete a ritual on the sacred Isles of the Gods. Selly has no desire to escort a spoiled prince anywhere, and no time for his entitled demands or his good looks. But what starts as a leisure cruise will lead to acts of treason and sheer terror on the high seas, bringing two countries to the brink of war, two strangers closer than they ever thought possible and stirring two dangerous gods from centuries of slumber.
 
I enjoyed the female protagonist being such a tough gal, but felt that, as usual, (in romance novels or romantasy, where its a trope that the female protagonist gives up on her dreams and career to follow the male lead into being a wife/mother/household slave with no life of her own) her romantic inclinations toward the spoiled prince weakened her character considerably. It was only when he made it clear that he wouldn't prevent her from being a sailor that I felt more comfortable with their romance, especially when he makes her an origami ship to remind her that she will be able to get back on the seas as soon as possible. The prose here was, like the sea, changeable yet flowing and storming and fascinating, as it moved the plot along at a clip. I'd give this eager YA novel a B, and recommend it to anyone who likes tales of the old gods, and pirate ships and the brave women who sailed the high seas.
 
Waking Romeo by Kathryn Barker is a dystopian science fiction romance novel melded to the classic Shakespeare play Romeo and Juliet. There were so many twists and turns in the plot that at one point I just gave up trying to predict what would happen next, and decided to "go with the flow" and just let the tale wash over me. Barker's prose is imaginative and bright, though the subject matter is often dark and depressing. Still, it was riveting reading what happens to this time-traveling Romeo and Jules, as she likes to be called, and how the author manages to break down the classic play so that its seams of misogyny and class warfare are laid bare, and readers can see the end result of the selfish monetary grabs of this century doom further centuries to a slow and painful death. Here's the blurb:
Kathryn Barker's Waking Romeo is a spectacularly genre-bending retelling of Romeo & Juliet asking the big questions about true love, fate, and time travel

Year: 2083. Location: London. Mission: Wake Romeo. It’s the end of the world. Literally. Time travel is possible, but only forward. And only a handful of families choose to remain in the “now,” living off of the scraps left behind.

Among them are eighteen-year-old Juliet and the love of her life, Romeo. But things are far from rosy for Jules. Romeo lies in a coma and Jules is estranged from her friends and family, dealing with the very real fallout of their wild romance. Then a mysterious time traveler, Ellis, impossibly arrives from the future with a mission that makes Juliet question everything she knows about life and love.

Can Jules wake Romeo―and rewrite her future?
If you're a fan of Shakespearean theater and Doctor Who, this is most definitely the book for you...you just have to trust that the author will eventually get you to that HFN ending you want.  While it's not an absolute necessity that those who read this book be familiar with R&J and Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte, it does help a great deal. The non-linear narrative is plotted into 5 acts, like a play, which I found fascinating, but if you're not an old theater major like myself, you might find it frustrating instead. The end pairing of characters from two different classics was refreshing, but again, if you've not read classic lit, you might find it bizarre. I'd give this unusual book a B+, and recommend it to theater fans who enjoy classic lit tropes re-imagined. 
 
Empire of Shadows by Jacquelyn Benson is a long but delightful Indiana Jones meets the Mummy meets Deanna Raybourn's Veronica Speedwell mysteries adventure novel that will have you on the edge of your seat by the third chapter. This historical fantasy never wavers and played out in my mind like a movie. Here's the blurb:
Nice Victorian ladies don’t run off to find legendary lost cities.
One trifling little arrest shouldn’t have cost Ellie Mallory her job, but it’s only the latest in a line of injustices facing any educated woman with archaeological ambitions. When Ellie stumbles across the map to a mysterious ancient city, she knows she’s holding her chance to revolutionize Pre-Colombian history. There’s just one teensy complication. A ruthless villain wants it, and Ellie is all that stands in his way.
To race him to the ruins—and avoid being violently disposed of—she needs the help of maverick surveyor Adam Bates, a snake-wrangling rogue who can’t seem to keep his dratted shirt on. But there’s more than Ellie’s scholarly reputation (and life) on the line. Her enemies aren’t just looters. They’re after an arcane secret rumored to lie in the heart of the ruins, a mythical artifact with a power that could shake the world.
Between stealing trousers, plummeting over waterfalls, and trying not to fall in love with her machete-wielding partner, will Ellie be able to stop the oracle of a lost empire from falling into the wrong hands?Empire of Shadows is the first book in the Raiders of the Arcana series, rip-roaring historical fantasy adventures perfect for fans of Romancing the Stone and The Mummy.
"Sassy banter and sizzling romantic tension sparkle throughout the fast-paced action ... Fans of Indiana Jones-style historical fantasies will be eager for the next adventure." - Booklist of the ALA
 
Thankfully good prevails over the evil greed of the bad guys, and all is restored to order in the end, however, that ending is sloppy and overly "romantic" in a "love conquers all" way, though Ellie was supposed to be a Suffragette who never wanted to be chained to a marriage and children. Ellie proclaims several times that she wanted to travel the world as an archeologist ala Indiana Jones, but better, because she wanted to save all the artifacts from being bought and sold and used by evil people for their own nefarious ends. But in the end, when she's asked what she really wants, she caves completely to the stereotypical female in need of romance and says "you" to Bates, who, to his credit, did help save her from ruin. Insert eye roll here. There's a lot of good banter that goes on between the two of them, which is fun, and Benson's prose is fresh and zingy, while her plot zooms along like a freight train. I did enjoy this story, though it was a bit too long at nearly 450 pages. Where are the good book editors out there? I'm serious that no book really needs to be longer than 350 pages at best. Someone has got to teach these authors to tighten their prose up so the manuscript sings all the way through. Still, I'd give this hefty adventure an A, and recommend it to anyone who is a fan of Lara Croft or Indiana Jones or the Mummy.
 
The Apology Project by Jeanette Escudero is a humorous rom-com with a redemption story arc that is oddly satisfying as the main character grows up in the end. Here's the blurb:
Dear (almost) everyone: Can we be friends again?
Life is about to get complicated for Amelia Montgomery, a prominent litigator in Chicago. She’s been fired for not compromising her principles in a high-profile case and then punching her partner in the nose for the misogynistic comment he made in retort (not her finest moment). Leaving a career that gave her purpose, Amelia can only ask, What next?
Let it be better than her epic failure of a fortieth birthday party: an open bar full of no-shows except for John Ellis, a total stranger and the new associate at her ex-firm. As it turns out, though, he’s very good company―and a wake-up call. With the help of John and a lot of champagne, Amelia considers the people she’s wronged, from old besties to former boyfriends to coworkers. Amelia resolves to make amends―to those who really deserve it.
One apology at a time, Amelia’s looking at the choices she’s made in the past, the new ones she’s making with John, and those she’s making for herself. What next? Maybe a second chance she never expected.
 
Millie (as Amelia calls herself) is a huge mess of a person, cold and distant and intent on climbing the ladder at her law firm, and ignoring the misogyny around her in service to that rise up the career ladder. Fortunately, this behavior comes to bite her in the butt, and she embarks on an apology tour to many of the people she's wronged, though she comes to realize that some of them have actually wronged her. Millie gets petulant and is often immature and passive aggressive at the start of the book, but gradually she begins to see the error of her ways, and the causes (from her childhood, of course) of her cruelty and disregard for the feelings of other women, especially. It bothered me as a feminist that most of her revelations about herself came at the hands of the handsome male protagonist, with whom she has exciting sexual encounters, but who is keeping a large and terrible secret from her (and who acts smugly superior to her throughout the book...I felt that he was too much of an asshat to be a good match for her, but apparently the author feels that toxic masculinity is irresistible in a partner) and whom she forgives nearly instantly for his heinous actions! Boo, hiss! But, having made mistakes in my own past for the promise of continued great sex with a man, I can almost forgive Millie her stupidity (the problem there is that Millie is 40 years old, while I was only an idiot in my 20s when I fell for the wrong guy...and John is 50, so both of them should know better by now). Still, I'd give this middle-aged woman grows up tale a B+ and recommend it to anyone who tries to address their past regrets head on.
 

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