


We’re a little late with this one, but year-end posts are still fair game anytime before February (right?). As is tradition for, well, all book blogs ever, we compiled a list of the best books we each read in 2023.
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We’re a little late with this one, but year-end posts are still fair game anytime before February (right?). As is tradition for, well, all book blogs ever, we compiled a list of the best books we each read in 2023.
Continue reading →This rec is a deep cut: Fail-Safe, a novel written in 1962 and set in a futuristic 1967… in which unquestioning faith in a complicated technical system turns out to be tragically misguided.
Continue reading →“I don’t know how other people endure the violence and cruelty they encounter throughout their lives,” remarks the narrator of Notes of a Crocodile (by Qiu Miaojin, translated by Bonnie Huie), a young college student named Lazi. She is mourning the end of a relationship with her troubled ex-girlfriend, Shui Ling—only she, Lazi, is the one who ended it. In part this book is about that very question–how its characters (young gay women and men living in Taiwan in the 1980s) hurt each other, acting out their own traumas on each other, and sometimes becoming cruel out of pain and confusion.
Continue reading →In the middle of reading Checkout 19, Claire-Louise Bennett’s coming-of-age novel about a girl who really really loves to read, I rhapsodized to Keets that this book had put into words something that had always been true of my reading experience but that I had never noticed, let alone described.
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