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Sunday, 24 April 2022

[New post] Sunday Sum-Up: April 24, 2022

Site logo image Kim @ Traveling in Books posted: " Another windy week around here. The winds were gusting enough that a few days ago, while I was walking down the street, I was almost blown over. It was kind of weird, and I'd rather not do it again. If someone would like some windy days, please feel f"

Sunday Sum-Up: April 24, 2022

Kim @ Traveling in Books

Apr 24

Another windy week around here. The winds were gusting enough that a few days ago, while I was walking down the street, I was almost blown over. It was kind of weird, and I'd rather not do it again.

If someone would like some windy days, please feel free to come by and take them.


Obligatory Mina Photo:

There's been a bit of sibling rivalry going on these days. Mina has been bothering her older brother more often, and as usual, he wants nothing to do with her. Take last night for example: I was scratching Sidney's ears, and Mina came along and tried to butt in to take the attention. I scooped her up and set her in my lap, scratched her ears with one hand and Sidney's ears with the other. Still, Mina was not content. She wanted all the scritchies and acted like she was jealous because her big brother was getting attention, too.

Needless to say, I did not stop scratching Sidney's ears just because Mina was being a brat. She gets plenty of attention. Sidney needs his share, too.


What I Finished Reading Last Week:

  • Learwife by J.R. Thorp, audiobook narrated by Juliet Stevenson

I finished Learwife on Friday night. It's going to be one of my favorite books of the whole year. It's such an amazing book. Thorp's writing is amazing, the characters are so believable, and it mirrors the story of King Lear so perfectly without being exactly the same. As with Lear, there are truths in front of the queen's eyes that she simply can't see, and while a canny reader will likely know, from the outset, what this truth is, it doesn't make the queen less intelligent or less observant or anything of the kind. She simply knows the truth of her story and assumes everyone else will know it, too. This is such a beautifully rendered story of power, a mother's love for her children, and the effects that grief can have on the mind. I cannot recommend this book enough, and I am sorely disappointed that it didn't make the shortlist for this year's Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction.


What I'm Currently Reading:

  • The Grace of Kings (The Dandelion Dynasty #1) by Ken Liu (466/640)
  • The City We Became (The Great Cities #1) by N.K. Jemisin, audiobook narrated by Robin Miles (26%)

I have a little under 200 pages left in The Grace of Kings, and I'm not sure what I think of it. I like the characters and all and the plot is interesting, but the narrative keeps its distance from the reader so much that it's been hard for me to really feel invested in the story. I've heard that this first book in the Dandelion Dynasty is rather like a very long prologue for the rest of the series and that it gets better from here, but the next book is more than 800 pages long. Am I so interested in what happens that I'm willing to dive into an 800-page book if it retains the same sort of narrative distance? I'm not sure. I guess I'll finish it out and see what I think at the end.

I didn't intend to start The City We Became this week, but I needed an audiobook, and of the books on my Libby wishlist, this was the one that seemed the most interesting at the time. So far, I'm hooked. In this world, the great cities develop a sort of genius loci, spirits that inhabit mortal bodies living in whatever great city has developed enough to form one. In New York City's case, it's birthed five spirits at once. Unfortunately for them, they haven't had a chance to figure out what's going on before they're plunged into deadly peril thanks to a monster from another world that seeks to devour the spirits and wreck their cities. Like I said, I'm hooked and I want to know what happens next. Jemisin's writing is always so captivating, and her characters feel so real and fully formed. And Robin Miles' narration is fantastic.


Did Not Finish:

  • London's Shadows: The Dark Side of the Victorian City by Drew Gray

I had no real issue with this book, except that it discussed the Victorian underworld of London in terms of the Ripper murders in Whitechapel in 1888. As I have no great interest in Jack the Ripper, I didn't want to read an entire book that constantly referred back to it. But if you're interested in that particular case, you might give this book a try.


What I Plan to Start Reading This Week:

  • The Green Knight by Anonymous, translated by Bernard O'Donoghue
  • Time Song: Journeys in Search of a Submerged Land by Julia Blackburn

I've been meaning to get to The Green Knight, but The Grace of Kings and Learwife are quite dense books, so my reading time was spent on them. I've been meaning to start both of these books all this month perhaps I will finish both of them before the end of the month.


About That Writing Thing:

I think I've hit the mid-point of the big fantasy fic I've been working on since the beginning of the year, which is great. I initially thought I'd only made it a third of the way through, but I got to thinking about what's going to be happening in the rest of the story, and I realized that I'm farther along than I thought I was. And I'm making good time through it, as I'm not skipping writing days like I was this time last year with the last big story. So, perhaps, I'll be finished with the whole thing by July, and then can write the series' epilogue and then be done with the whole darned thing after having it in my head for the past eight years.

But first, I have to finish the second half, which involves two battles, a much smaller but very important fight between two people, and several character deaths, so the job ahead is not an easy one. With every word, though, I get closer to that ending.

I've still been working on some smaller stories, thought I largely took this week off from writing them, as I wanted to devote the majority of my writing time to the big story, and ended up using some of my writing time to finish up Learwife. I don't regret this decision at all, as Learwife is amazing, and my deadlines are all squishy anyway.

Though I'm sure my readers would prefer it if I kept my nose to the grindstone so they can find out what happens sooner.

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