Babel by R. F. Kuang

Babel is the type of book that people will write far more important essays and critiques on. So maybe read this more as a love letter. 

This is a fantasy novel with a historical fiction and alternative history touch. It takes a real place (Oxford) and tweaks with the reality to tell the story of Englands colonizing campaign. This novel is an instant classic because it tries (and succeeds) in explaining the mechanics of racism, appropriation, classism, inequality and disregard to humanity in a quest for dominance and control. It also does not ignore the many reasons people are driven to fight their oppressors and why those fights have an element of violence to it.

It is beyond pertinent to current events, even if it takes place during Queen Victorias reign and at the epicenter of the magical silver trade - the translator tower of Babel in Oxford. 

It is a book with a literary flair, it is thick, it makes use of footnotes, it explains the translations that makes the magic and the world and her story work. Speeches are made by both villains, heroes, and the people caught in between that help drive home all the points that the author has to make. 

The main character and voice is Robin, a boy taken from his home in Canton to join an elite group of intelligent translators needed to make them magic work. There are interludes that are placed throughout the book to give the perspective of his core group of friends and in their brevity the taste that you get is bittersweet and illuminating. 

I cried at the end. And I hope to re-read this book throughout my life because I think I will always cry at the end. 

After this and Yellowface, R. F. Kuang’s novel made me think that she is one of the voices of her generation (in the exact opposite meaning to what Lena Dunham proudly proclaim - as if Lena is in on the joke except for the fact that she really believes it and it really is not true no matter how many times she attempts to woo us over with her “self-deprecation”). I love her writing so much that I have transcended envy and have been in instant awe of her skill, her education, and her execution. This is very much an Waynes World “I am not worthy” gush of love for her work.

I cannot wait to read the Poppy Wars trilogy. I cannot wait til she graces us with another amazing novel that critiques where we are and what we have built. I cannot wait to see what ripples her words have amongst those who are starved of being seen and heard and represented.

Scythe, The Thunderhead, and The Toll by Neal Shusterman

I try to jot down notes throughout my reads on my phone, this is a new habit I am building as a mother and an aging person born in the nineteen hundreds. I was used to scribbling aggressively in cursive when a thought came to me, because back then I was able to stop what I was doing in order to transcribe my thoughts. But then I had a family. 

And also there was that one time I tried to write for a local blog and the much younger tech bro who was recruiting my free and desperate labor was like “Whoa pen and paper!” when I pulled out of my journal from my bag several years ago. I still have many journals and always carry my current one on me, I just hide it in my outdated carpet bag of shame, only those who know me best are aware of my lame habit (so you).

If this combined review for all three books seems disjointed - the above paragraphs are my attempt to explain that. I read all three within a couple of weeks, but also with other novels in between. Overall, I enjoyed them all and am regretting ignoring this recommendation for as long as I did. (Which is to say was at least a couple of years.)

Initial impression is that this is novel about a fucked up dystopian future society in which we have conquered death and have not been conquered by an all knowing AI. Two teens, male and female, are selected in an unusual apprenticeship to become one of the Scythes responsible for keeping the population within manageable means. You follow their journey and are introduce to a potential future - if aging and death were working the way we would want it to - within our control.

 In most trilogies the first book pulls you in, but fizzles out on the story and momentum as it moves on. It gets trapped in trying to get back to the same incredulous setup that was the premise of the first book, even if the characters had spent the entire first book escaping from said hellscape. This series does not fall into that trap.

As a series, it does a good job of setting up the events, how such an unbelievable premise would work, and integrating serious plots and motivations for the characters. All three books work, make sense, and overtime let you in on the scene. I would get lost in the worlds.

Even when I think I know where it is going, there is still a surprise to the set up and use of popular tropes seen in this genre by use of deflection and sleight of hand. This is a new world and future from a talented writer, Neal Shusterman can answer questions about how this works, while keeping the story moving along with his action sequences very well. 

The writing is built on conversations and following different characters POV, leading to this being a quick read. But do not be mistaken, the execution is astounding and come from an amazing imagination. It starts off dystopian but is a science fiction novel at heart. Speaks of AI, where technology could lead us potential, ethics, how power and people will always be corrupt no matter the utopia presented. It speaks to racism, borders, gender binaries, biases, religion, politics, and institutions. 

It is a good series because I feel it is optimistically realistic, for the most part. Which is a weird thing to say since it is about death, ethics and morality, amongst other serious and complex subjects. Plus when the death gets going in some of the books it gets going and is final. There is not a complete happy ending, but there is closure.

For readers who are willing to give young adult books a chance, this is the style book that you will be able to love and recognize for what it is. I believe this is one of those situations in which because the main characters are young adults, this is why it is grouped in science fiction and marketed to teens. This is not just a young adult novel, do let that limit you from reading it.

So in summation, one of my favorite young adult series in a long time. I loved and love it and think you might as well.

Our Share of Night by Mariana Enríquez

It is rare for me to not like a book. Especially one like this, Our Share of Night has elements that I love: a woman writer, represents the latinx community, is of another country and time period, uses historical events to tell the story of very complex issues, is spooky and could be seen as horror, and has a diverse group of characters that does not seem to be pandering. It is sad. It is told from different perspectives, meaning that everyone has their own truth. It is well written.

This is a book that I picked up from recommendations based off of TikTok, though from the title and cover I would have wanted found it appealing. I can not wait to read other works by Mariana Enríquez, it is clear from this and how her works are being lauded, she will be gracing us with amazing works to mull and learn and be transported to.

It is a story that takes place over several decades and focuses on a family high up in a darkness cult that resembles what old Europeans obsessed with the occult wished they were successfully doing - conjuring demons through the mediums to enact their wishes. This novel is about a family impacted and impacting the “Dirty War” in Argentina, but adds a fantastical element to discuss a real event in modern history. It does this well and the trigger warnings to give for this is that it can be grotesque and talks of child victims. Had the writer not used the occult and just told a fictional story of one of the colonizer families would it not be more truly terrifying to realize that people justified their destruction of life by saying those different from them were not human? 

This is not a heavy handed analogy but an apt way to educate readers on the real events of Argentina in the 1970s to 1980s. Our Share of Night manages to humanize some of the generational players while exposing the colonizers and their damaging tactics for the darkness that it is. Although I was ignorant of the historical context, the story and the realization of what it was about hit me hard, and I believe this was intentional so that way uninformed people like myself could be forced to learn and mourn something that we should have known about. Not knowing, even if we do not contribute to the decisions or regimes, is still some form of complicity.

There are themes of ableism, homosexuality, colonialism, and racism. These are sensitive topics, so even when calling out colonialism by talking about how resources and people were plundered, stolen, assaulted, it could be hard to read. This is a writer who I have faith to show nuance in her tone, she acknowledges rape and does not then use it as a way to go into depth the acts on her fictional characters - when discussed it is mean to horrify the reader not to tantalize.

There is also death, this book starts off with a parent having the opposite conclusion the father makes in Something Wicked This Way Comes. This book shows how ugly the fear of death and of aging is, how greedy and hungry colonizers and people become - how it consumes them in the end. While Ray Bradbury may have been holding back and thinking of his audience, Mariana Enríquez does not hold back because she is aware the audience will need this.

This seems to be a retelling of the message pushed with Elizabeth Báthory, there is something dark in society in which people panic and feel that they must live forever. If there is any type of other-worldly force in this world, it does seem to be darkness that feeds on this to begat more darkness. Through different periods of time, and amongst different groups of people, we can find countless examples of this story. The story with darkness (and dark magic) has always been that you can bargain and make plans, only to find it means nothing to the monsters in control.

There is a lot going on with novel. And it is a hardy book, for the majority of the book, the first 300 pages it is broken up in sections and not chapters. There is one paragraph that goes across a page or two. It is not until section IV that you have something within it, a few spaced out numbers to denote possible chapters. I do not mind this, I love and have read everything by Jose Saramago. I mention this, for those who may need a little more structure to their reading. Heavy subject and no chapters, I know that could be a deal breaker for some. But if you have it in you, try, this is a tale and writer worth stepping out of your comfort zone for.

Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury

I think of myself as a Matilda reader, anything and everything, methodical as I try to read whatever comes my way. I feel there are different types of books for different types of people, for the most part everything should be read for some reason or another. 

I tried to recall the books that were required reading for my high school experience. Since it was a conservative town, state, time, and war - the reading list seemed more intent on reprograming the students to associate it with torture. They were the classics, a lot of white male authors, and the picks seemed to be the driest of the writers’ catalogue. The topics were academic and removed from the reality we were in.

For the most part, any great must-read-because-it is-on-the-school-lists books that I have read, where the ones I found grouped together on the Barnes and Nobles table towards the front. I do not recall any units really touching on Fahrenheit 451. Texas doesn’t shy away from book bans, and this was when the parents were concerned that Harry Potter was satanic and not yet seeing the camaraderie they would be feeling over JK Rowlings shit views. I read it because I should and then found out that everyone should read it because it is good and meaningful (and not just because they should).

This is a round about way to say that Ray Bradbury is still too controversial of a writer to be in a schools, and that is why he stays on these lists year after year. A much better education for all would be more diverse units and ones that uses the best of the novels on the lists to reach different type of students and maybe expose them to the new things that they can love and grow and learn from. Those of us living in this state are having to educate ourselves, meaning we waste time or miss out entirely on words and beauty and life.

Yes, I am blaming Texas and conservative politics on why I did not realize that Ray Bradbury is not a one trick pony. Fahrenheit 451 was not the only timeless concept that he was the first to capture. He did it with other novels, embracing science fiction or fantastical elements as a means to show society’s emotional response and reaction, but he did it in a way that makes all other attempts seem like an imitation.

Why didn’t anyone tell me that after reading his one book, I need to read them all? Why didn’t we talk about Something Wicked This Way Comes in school? Banning books may not be a subject for Texas, but what about a book that discusses fear and aging, and time passing? We all know why this was also avoided, as a military town (Killeen/ Harker Heights Texas) we are not to acknowledge these things, especially the boys. Where else are the going to get their recruits then from the pool of under-education and emotionally stunted souls it churns out. 

Everything was a surprise to me, from learning how many writers are inspired by this story, being in awe of his mastery of phrases and his ability to create fear without using extreme body horror, to identifying with everyone in the story. Though it might be considered young adult fiction, I think that is the pitfalls of being on school lists and having two 13 year old boys as the main characters, it is a story that could be read at any age and still feel compelling. The story telling device of a dark carnival that has come to haunt this small town places it in the dark fantasy genre, though soft horror feels more apt. As a fan of Needful Things by Stephen King I am ashamed I professed my love for that novel before even reading this one. I was naive and not understanding what I was enamored with. 

This story is perfect for Halloween, this time period, and when moving through major life milestones. I hope I make time again to read this novel throughout the years. What else can I say, then I wish to read everything he wrote now. I wish I could re-read this for the first time. I wish we would do better by our kids and let them read things like this over the Grapes of Wrath. It wasn’t even John Steinbeck’s best work for Christ’s sake. This review is to say, don’t let the fallacies of our broken educational and political system win, there is more out there that was all deserve. Time has been working on us, but that is just the way of some people. We all still have time to fight our fears and the Republican party that is gutting Texas worse than any slasher novel could. Read this book, read all his books, read all the books.

The Terror by Dan Simmons

This is going to be a love letter to this novel. I cried five times while reading this book, yes I am an easier crier, but the story is just that good.

It has the elements that I like: it is long historical novel, based on real events, and is considered to be part of the horror/supernatural genre. It is full of evil men and their poor choices, yet it still humanizes the men to the point that you are devastated. This is not a happy ending.

I pick books based for the most part on their cover and title, I am okay with the briefest of synopsis, and I am chasing a random whim. If anyone recommends a title, and I have not read it, I will add it to my list.

I bought the book after I watched the first couple of episodes of the show and read the wikipedia page for the failed Franklin expedition, being snagged by book to show tie in. I decided to buy the book so I could compare it to what I had already watched. If you haven’t noticed already, I am a sucker for a book that is being made into a film or show.

I had already read the Hyperion Cantos series years back, based off a recommendation someone made when I said I wanted to read more sci-fiction. I did not connect the author as being the same until I was already a hundred pages into The Terror, when I decided then to look up his other works.

This is all to say I am not sure if Dan Simmons is problematic, please let me know so I can be informed. I hope the author is not though, because I am a fan and these books will always be something I will recommend. It is amazing to me when a writer can get their message, and complex ones at that, across varied genres. His imagination to build multiple worlds and tie in all the events to the very end, is something that many people struggle with in their singular genre. 

The Terror is the name for a ship that was part of a lost expedition led by Captain Sir John Franklin in 1945 that was meant to explore the Northwest passage. From what they found at several sites (there were still sites being discovered as of 2014 that might indicate what happened to the men) it is an incomplete accounting as to why they men did not survive. 

There are several major timeline points and educated conjectures based off the different contributing factors to their deaths. Over the course of three years, the men faced the same unexpected winter conditions that would trap and make cannibals out of the Donner party. A factoid pointed out in The Indifferent Stars Above: The Harrowing Saga of the Donner Party which at his point is the more optimistic story of the two. If you have not read this nonfiction novel add it to your list as well. 

 To tell this story, and scare the shit of you, there are elements of: medical and body horror, cannibalism, stalking and overwhelming prey, and random acts of cruelty. There is no reprieve between the factual details over what they men would face and the monster that is reaping the men in dire conditions. 

I think it is important to read the page first if you wish to read The Terror, since this is a narrative taken from history. What is documented is a series of error after error. 

It brings such life to it, that even though Dan Simmons is imagining what may have happened, he crafted so many distinct voices that it seems just as plausible as what did happen. I love The Crucible for the same reason, Arthur Miller has the same skill at taking history and molding it to his vision as a means to replace the story so that we cannot tell fact from fiction.

In between the action, that in such a clean matter pieces together the story all the way to the end and leaves no detailed unexplained or unexamined, the characters are so full it is almost impossible to believe that this did not happen. 

This is about a group of white explorers, so that colonizer attitude is not ignored. If you want to see a book where men mansplain to other men, only to ensure their deaths in a land that was not theirs to fuck around without proper esteem and resect, this is the comeuppance tale for you. This habit of allowing prejudice and judgement to rule when it comes to their choices, is not just cruel against women, it was something that en masse men will have to turn away from in order to same themselves from themselves. Even back then they were doing it, but to each other! 

I feel the moral is don’t do it, don’t be so obstinate, get your head out of our ass, and be ready to listen or else you are going to die. But also no one really deserves to die of scurvy, starvation, hopeless, and far from home. No one should have to carry the burden of such graceless and cruel deaths. 

Unlike some other recent stories I read (Shifts), there is a range of loves in this story. There is range of competence, malevolence, and deserving of their fate. But in the end, even for the worst of the men, I did not want them to succumb as I knew they would. 

One of the gay relationships described is soul crushing. I cried several times, and even now I can think about them without feeling sad. This is like anytime I have a conversation about the old man in Shawshank Redemption, I work myself up and feel it as much as the first time I sobbed at that scene. Listen, I cried so hard. 

Why do I like survival novels in which no one survives? Why put myself through the anxiety only to come out knowing it wouldn’t matter? I can only say that it is worth it with book to go on that journey even knowing that is will be impossible to survive. 

Read it, read it, read it. 

The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

I was in a reading slump. After the birth of my son, I had the ability to read a lot while he was breastfeeding. But then I had to learn how to navigate being a work from home mom with a year old, and it was hard to find any sort of routine. I lost myself and stopped reading. (I did fall in love with The Wire and Oz. I watched a lot of Law and Order SVU. It was easy to get the need for story from amazing tv.)

This book brought me back. I have read two of her other titles, this one by far is my favorite. I am a fan of Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s writing. 

Sometimes I judge other writers for the tropes they slip into, it doesn’t prevent me from buying their books - it just prevents me from being kind. This is not the case with her, she has a style and a distinct voice. I do not spend my time predicting what she will write next so I can congratulate myself of seeing that shit coming, I savor her choice of words and the story she decided to tell. I would say that I am patient, but I was not with this novel. Though I read it quickly, I have such a vivid mental impression of the world it was if I spent weeks in the Yucatán peninsula. 

I have not read the novel that this retelling is based off of, but now I want to. Will I be disappointed in the original now after hearing from the daughter? 

This novel is not explicit, not like some of the others I read since then. It is the only one recently that managed, even in the subject matter, to be sexy. Not steamy, but a honest and non-cringe inducing way to describe sexuality. And the reveal… with the nuance she weaves into the story, there are layers stacked to give depth to the characters that is admirable. 

The context changes as more secrets are revealed. This is a science fiction novel, it fits the genre well because it questions who are the monsters, why do humans believe that they are not animals and more closer to creators, and how much control does anyone really have within the roles of society. Even with the impossible elements, compared to the life I have lived and the stories that I have read, the women in the novel felt real. This was one of the more believable depiction of women’s place, how that leads to the roles that are chosen for us, and what we do and become when we fall into it. 

Read it, read it, read it.