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#readingnow — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #readingnow, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Just finished "My Perfectly Imperfect Body" by Debbie Tung, a graphic memoir about dealing with disordered eating as a teenage girl. Similar themes to Hungry Ghost, except without as much of a family factor, and it's more direct. We get to hear the author's perspective as an adult at the end, including some good body-positive messages and thought patterns, even as she acknowledges the struggle necessary to climb out of body despair.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  2. Just finished "Fustuk" by Robert Mgrdich Apelian. Without exaggeration, it is a true masterpiece, an absolutely stunning graphic novel about food, family, and magical contracts that reminds me of both Witch Hat Atelier and Young Bride's Stories. The truly impressive part is that Apelian is every bit as good an illustrator and storyteller as both Kamome Shirahama and Kaoru Mori.

    In the author's note, Apelian says "So I asked to make the story I always craved growing up: a tale of Middle Eastern joy and magic that speaks to diasporic culture and how those of us within it relate to our two worlds." He succeeded at that goal abundantly, as far as I can tell, and has produced a truly impressive work.

    Images are rough pictures of a few example pages showing very cool panel construction, lots of detail, and both dynamic action and expressive faces. I'm not going to spoil anything, but the second image here is one of the most powerful pages I've read in a while and the way it uses gutters demonstrates a beautiful mastery of the comics medium.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  3. Just finished "The First Rule of Punk" by Celia C. Pérez. A great book about adolescent identity, complicated (but benign) parental relationships, punk rock, and zines. A really nice cozy book, with some low-stakes drama and a lot of heart.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  4. Just finished "The First Rule of Punk" by Celia C. Pérez. A great book about adolescent identity, complicated (but benign) parental relationships, punk rock, and zines. A really nice cozy book, with some low-stakes drama and a lot of heart.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  5. Just finished "The First Rule of Punk" by Celia C. Pérez. A great book about adolescent identity, complicated (but benign) parental relationships, punk rock, and zines. A really nice cozy book, with some low-stakes drama and a lot of heart.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  6. Just finished "The First Rule of Punk" by Celia C. Pérez. A great book about adolescent identity, complicated (but benign) parental relationships, punk rock, and zines. A really nice cozy book, with some low-stakes drama and a lot of heart.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  7. Just finished "The First Rule of Punk" by Celia C. Pérez. A great book about adolescent identity, complicated (but benign) parental relationships, punk rock, and zines. A really nice cozy book, with some low-stakes drama and a lot of heart.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  8. Just finished "The Bodyguard Unit" written by Clément Xavier, illustrated by Lisa Lugrin, with colors by Albertine Ralenti and translated from French to English by Edward Gauvin. An excellent and fascinating history of Edith Garrud, a Jiu-Jutsu instructor who helped train suffragettes in Britain to fight the police, and who fought alongside them at speeches and political rallies. It also of course has a lot of details of the suffragette movement, many of which I theoretically knew but never actually thought about, and others which I was totally unaware of, especially the degree of violence and the connections to other radical movements of the time.

    An excellent graphic novel, both educational and funny.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  9. Just finished "The Bodyguard Unit" written by Clément Xavier, illustrated by Lisa Lugrin, with colors by Albertine Ralenti and translated from French to English by Edward Gauvin. An excellent and fascinating history of Edith Garrud, a Jiu-Jutsu instructor who helped train suffragettes in Britain to fight the police, and who fought alongside them at speeches and political rallies. It also of course has a lot of details of the suffragette movement, many of which I theoretically knew but never actually thought about, and others which I was totally unaware of, especially the degree of violence and the connections to other radical movements of the time.

    An excellent graphic novel, both educational and funny.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  10. Just finished "The Bodyguard Unit" written by Clément Xavier, illustrated by Lisa Lugrin, with colors by Albertine Ralenti and translated from French to English by Edward Gauvin. An excellent and fascinating history of Edith Garrud, a Jiu-Jutsu instructor who helped train suffragettes in Britain to fight the police, and who fought alongside them at speeches and political rallies. It also of course has a lot of details of the suffragette movement, many of which I theoretically knew but never actually thought about, and others which I was totally unaware of, especially the degree of violence and the connections to other radical movements of the time.

    An excellent graphic novel, both educational and funny.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  11. Just finished "The Bodyguard Unit" written by Clément Xavier, illustrated by Lisa Lugrin, with colors by Albertine Ralenti and translated from French to English by Edward Gauvin. An excellent and fascinating history of Edith Garrud, a Jiu-Jutsu instructor who helped train suffragettes in Britain to fight the police, and who fought alongside them at speeches and political rallies. It also of course has a lot of details of the suffragette movement, many of which I theoretically knew but never actually thought about, and others which I was totally unaware of, especially the degree of violence and the connections to other radical movements of the time.

    An excellent graphic novel, both educational and funny.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  12. Just finished "The Bodyguard Unit" written by Clément Xavier, illustrated by Lisa Lugrin, with colors by Albertine Ralenti and translated from French to English by Edward Gauvin. An excellent and fascinating history of Edith Garrud, a Jiu-Jutsu instructor who helped train suffragettes in Britain to fight the police, and who fought alongside them at speeches and political rallies. It also of course has a lot of details of the suffragette movement, many of which I theoretically knew but never actually thought about, and others which I was totally unaware of, especially the degree of violence and the connections to other radical movements of the time.

    An excellent graphic novel, both educational and funny.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  13. Just finished "Future Home of the Living God" by Louise Erdrich. It's a beautiful and entrancing novel in many ways, but I couldn't bring myself to like the ending. I think in one of my most recent book posts I complained about a deus ex machina, so it's ironic that in this case as the pages dwindled I was fully prepared to accept and even welcome one, especially with all of the deus-related stuff going on already. I am left profoundly unsure as to whether Erdrich imagines a positive future beyond our current oppressions, or just futility, when for most of the book it seemed like the former, which is something I seek out in earnest these days. It is of course impressive that a book about innocents being hunted through the streets of Minneapolis & Saint Paul, while a volunteer citizens network organizes to keep them safe, could be published in 2017. There are strong echoes of Octavia Butler here, and in both cases I think it's a marginalized position which allows authors to see with clarity that most mainstream authors miss or don't even attempt.

    I think I will seek out more of Erdrich's writing, but only after a bit of a break.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  14. Just finished "Future Home of the Living God" by Louise Erdrich. It's a beautiful and entrancing novel in many ways, but I couldn't bring myself to like the ending. I think in one of my most recent book posts I complained about a deus ex machina, so it's ironic that in this case as the pages dwindled I was fully prepared to accept and even welcome one, especially with all of the deus-related stuff going on already. I am left profoundly unsure as to whether Erdrich imagines a positive future beyond our current oppressions, or just futility, when for most of the book it seemed like the former, which is something I seek out in earnest these days. It is of course impressive that a book about innocents being hunted through the streets of Minneapolis & Saint Paul, while a volunteer citizens network organizes to keep them safe, could be published in 2017. There are strong echoes of Octavia Butler here, and in both cases I think it's a marginalized position which allows authors to see with clarity that most mainstream authors miss or don't even attempt.

    I think I will seek out more of Erdrich's writing, but only after a bit of a break.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  15. Just finished "Future Home of the Living God" by Louise Erdrich. It's a beautiful and entrancing novel in many ways, but I couldn't bring myself to like the ending. I think in one of my most recent book posts I complained about a deus ex machina, so it's ironic that in this case as the pages dwindled I was fully prepared to accept and even welcome one, especially with all of the deus-related stuff going on already. I am left profoundly unsure as to whether Erdrich imagines a positive future beyond our current oppressions, or just futility, when for most of the book it seemed like the former, which is something I seek out in earnest these days. It is of course impressive that a book about innocents being hunted through the streets of Minneapolis & Saint Paul, while a volunteer citizens network organizes to keep them safe, could be published in 2017. There are strong echoes of Octavia Butler here, and in both cases I think it's a marginalized position which allows authors to see with clarity that most mainstream authors miss or don't even attempt.

    I think I will seek out more of Erdrich's writing, but only after a bit of a break.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  16. Just finished "Future Home of the Living God" by Louise Erdrich. It's a beautiful and entrancing novel in many ways, but I couldn't bring myself to like the ending. I think in one of my most recent book posts I complained about a deus ex machina, so it's ironic that in this case as the pages dwindled I was fully prepared to accept and even welcome one, especially with all of the deus-related stuff going on already. I am left profoundly unsure as to whether Erdrich imagines a positive future beyond our current oppressions, or just futility, when for most of the book it seemed like the former, which is something I seek out in earnest these days. It is of course impressive that a book about innocents being hunted through the streets of Minneapolis & Saint Paul, while a volunteer citizens network organizes to keep them safe, could be published in 2017. There are strong echoes of Octavia Butler here, and in both cases I think it's a marginalized position which allows authors to see with clarity that most mainstream authors miss or don't even attempt.

    I think I will seek out more of Erdrich's writing, but only after a bit of a break.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  17. Just finished "Future Home of the Living God" by Louise Erdrich. It's a beautiful and entrancing novel in many ways, but I couldn't bring myself to like the ending. I think in one of my most recent book posts I complained about a deus ex machina, so it's ironic that in this case as the pages dwindled I was fully prepared to accept and even welcome one, especially with all of the deus-related stuff going on already. I am left profoundly unsure as to whether Erdrich imagines a positive future beyond our current oppressions, or just futility, when for most of the book it seemed like the former, which is something I seek out in earnest these days. It is of course impressive that a book about innocents being hunted through the streets of Minneapolis & Saint Paul, while a volunteer citizens network organizes to keep them safe, could be published in 2017. There are strong echoes of Octavia Butler here, and in both cases I think it's a marginalized position which allows authors to see with clarity that most mainstream authors miss or don't even attempt.

    I think I will seek out more of Erdrich's writing, but only after a bit of a break.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  18. Just finished "Starfish" by Akemi Dawn Bowman. It was gripping (I basically barely put it down and finished in in a single day) but also feels flawed in some ways.

    Things I liked: a protagonist that I really strongly rooted for, and a resolution that landed with a bit of complexity.

    Things I'm feeling a way about: complete lack of depth in interrogating heritage, despite that being a huge theme, some tinges of deus ex machina in how the central conflicts are resolved, and a real lack of good messaging around consent.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  19. Just finished "Starfish" by Akemi Dawn Bowman. It was gripping (I basically barely put it down and finished in in a single day) but also feels flawed in some ways.

    Things I liked: a protagonist that I really strongly rooted for, and a resolution that landed with a bit of complexity.

    Things I'm feeling a way about: complete lack of depth in interrogating heritage, despite that being a huge theme, some tinges of deus ex machina in how the central conflicts are resolved, and a real lack of good messaging around consent.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  20. Just finished "Starfish" by Akemi Dawn Bowman. It was gripping (I basically barely put it down and finished in in a single day) but also feels flawed in some ways.

    Things I liked: a protagonist that I really strongly rooted for, and a resolution that landed with a bit of complexity.

    Things I'm feeling a way about: complete lack of depth in interrogating heritage, despite that being a huge theme, some tinges of deus ex machina in how the central conflicts are resolved, and a real lack of good messaging around consent.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  21. Just finished "Starfish" by Akemi Dawn Bowman. It was gripping (I basically barely put it down and finished in in a single day) but also feels flawed in some ways.

    Things I liked: a protagonist that I really strongly rooted for, and a resolution that landed with a bit of complexity.

    Things I'm feeling a way about: complete lack of depth in interrogating heritage, despite that being a huge theme, some tinges of deus ex machina in how the central conflicts are resolved, and a real lack of good messaging around consent.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  22. Just finished "Starfish" by Akemi Dawn Bowman. It was gripping (I basically barely put it down and finished in in a single day) but also feels flawed in some ways.

    Things I liked: a protagonist that I really strongly rooted for, and a resolution that landed with a bit of complexity.

    Things I'm feeling a way about: complete lack of depth in interrogating heritage, despite that being a huge theme, some tinges of deus ex machina in how the central conflicts are resolved, and a real lack of good messaging around consent.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  23. Just finished "Skating Wilder" written by Brandon Dumais and illustrated by AJ Dungo. It's a really amazing graphic novel history of skateboarding, from the 1960s through to the present. It's got multiple threads from the commercial angle, to the magazines and music, to the individual tricks.

    I've never skated myself (never taught myself to balance properly) but I loved Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 as a kid and I still like watching skate videos. I learned a lot of details from this book that I never knew growing up and the way it talks about skating surviving multiple waves of commercialization is inspiring.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  24. Just finished "Skating Wilder" written by Brandon Dumais and illustrated by AJ Dungo. It's a really amazing graphic novel history of skateboarding, from the 1960s through to the present. It's got multiple threads from the commercial angle, to the magazines and music, to the individual tricks.

    I've never skated myself (never taught myself to balance properly) but I loved Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 as a kid and I still like watching skate videos. I learned a lot of details from this book that I never knew growing up and the way it talks about skating surviving multiple waves of commercialization is inspiring.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  25. Just finished "Skating Wilder" written by Brandon Dumais and illustrated by AJ Dungo. It's a really amazing graphic novel history of skateboarding, from the 1960s through to the present. It's got multiple threads from the commercial angle, to the magazines and music, to the individual tricks.

    I've never skated myself (never taught myself to balance properly) but I loved Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 as a kid and I still like watching skate videos. I learned a lot of details from this book that I never knew growing up and the way it talks about skating surviving multiple waves of commercialization is inspiring.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  26. Just finished "Skating Wilder" written by Brandon Dumais and illustrated by AJ Dungo. It's a really amazing graphic novel history of skateboarding, from the 1960s through to the present. It's got multiple threads from the commercial angle, to the magazines and music, to the individual tricks.

    I've never skated myself (never taught myself to balance properly) but I loved Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 as a kid and I still like watching skate videos. I learned a lot of details from this book that I never knew growing up and the way it talks about skating surviving multiple waves of commercialization is inspiring.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  27. Just finished "Skating Wilder" written by Brandon Dumais and illustrated by AJ Dungo. It's a really amazing graphic novel history of skateboarding, from the 1960s through to the present. It's got multiple threads from the commercial angle, to the magazines and music, to the individual tricks.

    I've never skated myself (never taught myself to balance properly) but I loved Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 as a kid and I still like watching skate videos. I learned a lot of details from this book that I never knew growing up and the way it talks about skating surviving multiple waves of commercialization is inspiring.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  28. Just finished "Quiet Crossings" by Vivi Partridge. A wonderfully cozy short graphic novel about hanging on and letting go, full of cute mushroom sprites.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  29. Just finished "Quiet Crossings" by Vivi Partridge. A wonderfully cozy short graphic novel about hanging on and letting go, full of cute mushroom sprites.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  30. Just finished "Quiet Crossings" by Vivi Partridge. A wonderfully cozy short graphic novel about hanging on and letting go, full of cute mushroom sprites.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  31. Just finished "Quiet Crossings" by Vivi Partridge. A wonderfully cozy short graphic novel about hanging on and letting go, full of cute mushroom sprites.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  32. Just finished "Quiet Crossings" by Vivi Partridge. A wonderfully cozy short graphic novel about hanging on and letting go, full of cute mushroom sprites.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow #Bookstodon

  33. @riley ah that's probably a good one for me to add. I first saw someone else using #AmReading which is why I used that, then later added #ReadingNow after I saw someone else using it.

    Thanks for the tip.

  34. @riley ah that's probably a good one for me to add. I first saw someone else using #AmReading which is why I used that, then later added #ReadingNow after I saw someone else using it.

    Thanks for the tip.

  35. @riley ah that's probably a good one for me to add. I first saw someone else using #AmReading which is why I used that, then later added #ReadingNow after I saw someone else using it.

    Thanks for the tip.

  36. @riley ah that's probably a good one for me to add. I first saw someone else using #AmReading which is why I used that, then later added #ReadingNow after I saw someone else using it.

    Thanks for the tip.

  37. @riley ah that's probably a good one for me to add. I first saw someone else using #AmReading which is why I used that, then later added #ReadingNow after I saw someone else using it.

    Thanks for the tip.

  38. Just finished Kageki Shoujo volume 3 by Kumiko Saiki, and figured I might as well post about it even though I'll be reading it for a while more.

    My library has a great selection of manga, so sometimes I check one out at random when I'm waiting for next volumes of the series I really love (With Hat Atelier by Kamome Shirahama is top of my list right now). I was expecting Kageki to be more of a classic shoujo manga, but it's actually hardly focused on romance at all, and the deep background on Japanese theater traditions is a lot of fun to learn about along with the drama of the different characters.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  39. Just finished Kageki Shoujo volume 3 by Kumiko Saiki, and figured I might as well post about it even though I'll be reading it for a while more.

    My library has a great selection of manga, so sometimes I check one out at random when I'm waiting for next volumes of the series I really love (With Hat Atelier by Kamome Shirahama is top of my list right now). I was expecting Kageki to be more of a classic shoujo manga, but it's actually hardly focused on romance at all, and the deep background on Japanese theater traditions is a lot of fun to learn about along with the drama of the different characters.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  40. Just finished Kageki Shoujo volume 3 by Kumiko Saiki, and figured I might as well post about it even though I'll be reading it for a while more.

    My library has a great selection of manga, so sometimes I check one out at random when I'm waiting for next volumes of the series I really love (With Hat Atelier by Kamome Shirahama is top of my list right now). I was expecting Kageki to be more of a classic shoujo manga, but it's actually hardly focused on romance at all, and the deep background on Japanese theater traditions is a lot of fun to learn about along with the drama of the different characters.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  41. Just finished Kageki Shoujo volume 3 by Kumiko Saiki, and figured I might as well post about it even though I'll be reading it for a while more.

    My library has a great selection of manga, so sometimes I check one out at random when I'm waiting for next volumes of the series I really love (With Hat Atelier by Kamome Shirahama is top of my list right now). I was expecting Kageki to be more of a classic shoujo manga, but it's actually hardly focused on romance at all, and the deep background on Japanese theater traditions is a lot of fun to learn about along with the drama of the different characters.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  42. Just finished Kageki Shoujo volume 3 by Kumiko Saiki, and figured I might as well post about it even though I'll be reading it for a while more.

    My library has a great selection of manga, so sometimes I check one out at random when I'm waiting for next volumes of the series I really love (With Hat Atelier by Kamome Shirahama is top of my list right now). I was expecting Kageki to be more of a classic shoujo manga, but it's actually hardly focused on romance at all, and the deep background on Japanese theater traditions is a lot of fun to learn about along with the drama of the different characters.

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  43. Just finished "You Made A Fool of Death with Your Beauty" by Akwaeke Emezi. I liked a ton of things about it but a few other things bothered me a bit, and I kinda feel like I need to read more of Emezi's work to figure out how I feel. There's a lot of grief and a lot of joy in this book, as well as some nice deep truths about relationships and grief, but maybe also some deep-feeling not-quite truths?

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  44. Just finished "You Made A Fool of Death with Your Beauty" by Akwaeke Emezi. I liked a ton of things about it but a few other things bothered me a bit, and I kinda feel like I need to read more of Emezi's work to figure out how I feel. There's a lot of grief and a lot of joy in this book, as well as some nice deep truths about relationships and grief, but maybe also some deep-feeling not-quite truths?

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  45. Just finished "You Made A Fool of Death with Your Beauty" by Akwaeke Emezi. I liked a ton of things about it but a few other things bothered me a bit, and I kinda feel like I need to read more of Emezi's work to figure out how I feel. There's a lot of grief and a lot of joy in this book, as well as some nice deep truths about relationships and grief, but maybe also some deep-feeling not-quite truths?

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  46. Just finished "You Made A Fool of Death with Your Beauty" by Akwaeke Emezi. I liked a ton of things about it but a few other things bothered me a bit, and I kinda feel like I need to read more of Emezi's work to figure out how I feel. There's a lot of grief and a lot of joy in this book, as well as some nice deep truths about relationships and grief, but maybe also some deep-feeling not-quite truths?

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  47. Just finished "You Made A Fool of Death with Your Beauty" by Akwaeke Emezi. I liked a ton of things about it but a few other things bothered me a bit, and I kinda feel like I need to read more of Emezi's work to figure out how I feel. There's a lot of grief and a lot of joy in this book, as well as some nice deep truths about relationships and grief, but maybe also some deep-feeling not-quite truths?

    #AmReading #ReadingNow

  48. #ReadingNow "The Essential Book of Black Holes: Master the Mysteries of Black Holes in 12 Short Chapters (Sirius Concepts)" by Sten Odenwald

    mitpressbookstore.mit.edu/book

    #Astrophysics #BlackHoles

  49. #ReadingNow "The Essential Book of Black Holes: Master the Mysteries of Black Holes in 12 Short Chapters (Sirius Concepts)" by Sten Odenwald

    mitpressbookstore.mit.edu/book

    #Astrophysics #BlackHoles

  50. "The Essential Book of Black Holes: Master the Mysteries of Black Holes in 12 Short Chapters (Sirius Concepts)" by Sten Odenwald

    mitpressbookstore.mit.edu/book