I'm trying to copy a nice trend on Danish Mastodon, where we talk a bit about our reading with a language appropriate hashtag.

Lately I’ve been really good at reading instead of collapsing in front of the TV. It does something for my mental calm, even if it’s still “just” entertainment.

My #FridayBook was "Travel by Bullet" by John Scalzi, the third installment in the Dispatcher series. Scalzi is quite good at stories where he tweaks one wild detail about the world and then follows the tangent. E.g. a fundamental premise like the moon suddenly being made of cheese, or, in this case, that anyone who is murdered magically vanishes into thin air and reappears somewhere they feel safe. Naked and confused, but alive, reset to an earlier point in time and in perfect health. For example, most hospitals have a “Dispatcher” on duty if a surgery is heading in the wrong direction. Because if the patient is murdered, or "Dispatched" as the insurance term would say, by a Dispatcher, the patient is saved. It’s light entertainment, well written, and so on. Plenty of weird shenanigans, ethical questions.

In the meantime I also devoured Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. It’s been well covered in the media lately, so I’ll just say that yes, it's a light and quirky meal, but it’s also a really good, positive, and almost touching story. I’m very much looking forward to the film.

I had a bit more trouble with Halcyon Years by Alastair Reynolds. It’s about life aboard a generation ship carrying settlers to another star system, framed as a more classic noir detective story. The main character was sympathetic, but why he had to be the resurrected cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was hard for me to understand and felt like an unnecessary gimmick that dragged a trail of confusion across the whole narrative. Being Reynolds, of course something quite different was going on beneath the surface, which ultimately justified the device—and the big reveal can also be read as a biting commentary on today’s structures of power and influence in the world.

I absolutely adore everything that man writes and was well entertained, but the story felt a bit “off.” Maybe because the main characters, despite the circumstances, were uncharacteristically positive and trusting. I kept waiting for a betrayal that never came. Not sure whether I just wasn’t in the mood for that kind of unmotivated optimism, or whether it simply wasn’t Reynolds at his best.

More classic Reynolds was Sleepover. A dark little piece, maybe 60–70 pages, playing with a variation on the end of the world, the ultimate consequences of artificial intelligence (perhaps), and the nature and character of reality itself. As far as I know, the story originates from Reynolds’ notes for a novel that never came to be. Unfortunately, because there’s huge potential in the universe it sketches.

As it stands, an enormous idea told in too short a span, the story inevitably feels a bit truncated. But for $2 as an ePub? Definitely worth a couple of hours.

I also read "Time Out" by Michael Marshall Smith - a long novella of about 140 pages. The protagonist wakes up to a world where, at first, all other people have disappeared, and things only grow stranger from there. As the backstory evolves it becomes increasingly hard to see the protagonist as such, and story mainly explores his somewhat navel-gazing loneliness and the iron grip of habit.

At one point, for example, he has nothing better to do, so he works for a couple of hours. It sounds absurd, and it is.

Smith never felt obligated to write happy endings for his characters and you'll have to see for yourself how it all resolves. Smith absolutely manages to write his way out of it.

I think I need Elliott Hay’s “A Bit of Murder Between Friends” for my #FridayBook. Nothing like a cosy noirish queer murder mystery to make the week better. #lgbtqiaplus #bookstodon #MurderMystery #CosyMystery #queer
#WhiteHartFiction @clacksee
Reading “Mislaid in Parts Half-Known”, book 9 in the excellent #WaywardChildren series by Seanan McGuire. I love this series so much!! #fantasy #queer #lgbtqia #bookstodon #FridayBook #SeananMcGuire
Finally starting my bookclub book. Thank goodness the bookclub is an online forum so it's not so glaringly obvious how behind I am. "The Berry Pickers" by Amanda Peters.The main characters are Mi’kmaq (like the author) from Nova Scotia who come to pick berries in Maine every year. The blurb says "A four-year-old girl goes missing from the blueberry fields of Maine, sparking a tragic mystery that remains unsolved for nearly fifty years." #Bookstodon #Indigenous #FredagsBog #FridayBook
Just finished Pari Thomson's Greenwild - The World Beyond the Door. 5 stars from me for this excellent middle-grade book. 12-year-old me would have adored it. There is adventure and magic here - green magic! It has an overarching theme of caring for nature/the environment, which is an excellent and necessary theme kids should read about. Friendship is another underlying and strong theme, and the cast of characters is diverse. When Daisy is learning to practice plant magic, the teachers says something I am taking to heart when spring planting time comes! ""Planting a seed is an act of hope. [...] It means you have faith in the future. Think of that hope, and don’t let go.” Love it! #FredagsBog #FridayBook #Bookstodon #fantasy #YA
Reading Colombian author Laura Restrepo for my #FridayBook: “El Leopardo al Sol”, or “Leopard in the Sun”. I found it for the Colombia prompt in The StoryGraph’s read the world reading challenge. When you search for authors in countries whose literature you are not familiar with, Google serves up lots of men-only lists. I’m glad I found #LauraRestrepo. Library didn’t have it in English, so I’m reading it in Danish: “Leoparden i solen”. #fredagsbog #bookstodon #AmReading
My #FridayBook is from the Murderbot Diaries series by @marthawells - Rogue Protocol, number 3 in the series. I am a huge, huge fan. Happy my #LibbyApp can deliver quickly when I need a fix. #Bookstodon #AmReading

One of my favourite poems, and perhaps a kind of hinge in the collection, is "No Lament", which Jackson wrote as a rebuke to Judith Beveridge's cruelly ableist poem Quasimodo's Lament (if you want to find Beveridge's, it's online in Meanjin). A rebuke in part because it's by far the finer poem of the two.

#FridayBook #Poetry #Books

Today's #FridayBook is one of my favourite poetry collections of 2021, Andy Jackson's Human Looking, which this week won the Prime Minister's poetry prize. Prizes can be dodgy markers of quality, but this is a deserving winner.

Jackson is a formidable poet - this is a delicately fierce collection that gives no quarter to the human society that labels some people as "other" and therefore inferior or non-human. Some of the finest lyric poetry being written anywhere right now, imo.

#Poetry #Books

Also I was able to spend much more time than I would with a trad publisher fiddling with every detail to get it absolutely how I wanted it. Maybe there's a couple of poems I left out of those 314 pages that I should have included but basically this is my definitive cut: the poems up to 2017 that I like best, as right as I can get them.

#Poetry #Books #FridayBook
https://alisoncroggon.com/poetry/