Saturday, December 28, 2024

The Year of the Runaways

The Year of the RunawaysThe Year of the Runaways by Sunjeev Sahota
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A very rich portrayal of Indians coming to England in search of employment and a better life. Three boys and one girl experience the hardships of immigration and try to balance their beliefs and traditions with their new surroundings. Some come in legally and others are not and one is already a citizen and works to help the others. We see how hard it is to get employment when they don't know the language very well and people are unwilling to help them out. Others are happy to help but can't do much besides have good intentions. Surprisingly, some of the greatest discrimination comes from among the Indian people themselves according to their caste. Each of the characters is fully drawn and the inclusion of a fair amount of vocabulary that is unique to India actually immersed me more fully instead of being distracting. It was interesting and eye-opening and I was drawn into their hardships and dreams fully. It ends rather abruptly, but there is an epilogue. The only problem is that the author didn't connect the way they ended up to that year. How did they get from there to here? Rather than resolving anything it left me with more questions.

View all my reviews

Friday, December 27, 2024

A Visit From the Goon Squad

 

A Visit from the Goon SquadA Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Another novel of connected stories that hit perfectly. Each chapter had its own voice that was unique and even some of the structure and development of the stories changed (loved the power point). Moving through time and space with the characters created a whole universe. Egan does a good job of reminding the reader who reoccurring characters are, too, so you're not lost. It was a fun, satisfying read.

View all my reviews

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

The Color Purple

The Color PurpleThe Color Purple by Alice Walker
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

When a book is a classic, I always feel a little unenlightened when I think they are just ok. The ladies in this novel go through some really hard things (mostly because of their fathers and husbands and lovers) and in the end assert what they need and want and everything turns out ok. Even the men become somewhat more in touch with themselves. I did enjoy the letters from Nettie who became a missionary in Africa and experienced a different point of view of race, family and God. While it was nice to see the progression of these women becoming fully themselves, I just didn't connect with them.

View all my reviews

Tell the Machine Goodnight

 

Tell the Machine GoodnightTell the Machine Goodnight by Katie Williams
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What if a machine could tell you what you needed to do to be happy? Would you consult it? Would you do anything it said, even if you had to cut off a finger? Each chapter is a character's point of view and wraps up in its own story but the larger story also progresses. But it is ultimately a musing on what makes us happy and what we would do be happy. There are some characters that actually make themselves miserable for fame and money. Some mistake the suggestions given by the machine for the machine itself. Some find that it only takes one person to believe in you to change your trajectory. The stories are unique but carry something universal and meaningful in each. I loved the universe of characters created by Williams and loved this quirky, hopeful story.

View all my reviews

What they don't understand is that my condition is a symptom of me.

Because I know that when people comfort you, they're really just comforting themselves.

Cruelest are the punishments we visit upon ourselves.

There is no organ for the word love.  It is one of the first words and has meant only itself.

Apple is another word that has always meant itself.  In fact, it used to apply to any fruit, vegetable, or even nut.  All fruits were apples.  The potato was the apple of the earth (and still is in French: pommel de Terre).  Dates were finger apples.  The banana was, in Middle English, the apple of paradise.

Tongues of flame, this is something we say, as if the fire can speak, as if it taunts us, as if it scents the air like a snake.

It's What I Do

It's What I Do: A Photographer's Life of Love and WarIt's What I Do: A Photographer's Life of Love and War by Lynsey Addario
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

For some reason I read memoirs even though I usually conclude the memoir is written for the author to process something or for their family. But this one knocked it out of the park. It was straightforward, engaging, entertaining, and insightful. I loved learning about her life as a photojournalist in war-torn areas and she balanced it well with relationships and how they worked and didn't with her work. She doesn't hold back on the good, bad or ugly and I felt like I was having a deep conversation with an interesting, thoughtful friend. Pervading it all is the sacrifice that women make to do the same jobs as men, and their constant need to show that they are just as tough, physically and emotionally. Addario succeeds by showing when she is tough, but also sharing when she was vulnerable. And I think her experiences show that it is her strength along with her vulnerabilities that made her such a good photojournalist. There are several pictures included too which added immensely to the story.

View all my reviews

I didn't want to be the cowardly photographer or the terrified girl who prevented the men from doing their work.

I believed that if my intentions were for a good cause, nothing bad would happen to me.

You had to say yes.

I worked every waking hour so that I could be at the right place at the right time.

I didn't want my gender to determine whether or not I could cover breaking news, so I continued photographing, ignoring the sweeping of hands on my butt, the occasional grab.

I found my male colleagues, lounging, all of them smitten with their afternoon's work, checking the backs of their digital cameras for their prizewinning photographs, completely oblivious to what I had gone through to compose even one frame.

I preempted their suspicion that we, the chicks, might hold them up in the field by being overly prepared, physically and mentally.  I trained religiously for assignments, I made sure I had all the gadgets I'd need in my kit to be as self-sufficient as possible, and I tried not to show fear.

Crossing to Safety

Crossing to SafetyCrossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The story of an author and his wife just starting out in their marriage and forming a friendship with another young couple. It is a story of their marriages, especially their friends, whom they see as lopsided with the wife being controlling, the husband not validated enough. Our protagonists' marriage on the other hand is portrayed as loving and supportive, though it is only seen through the husband's eyes (and I sort of wonder if his wife's support and "gamely" enduring all the hardships wouldn't have been seen differently through her eyes). There is sickness, arguments, birthing stories, promotions, demotions, publishings, kids, etc. But it is a pretty ordinary story. The protagonist tells his friends he can't write a story about themselves because a happy story is a boring story. And I have to agree. It is a nice story but nice didn't really captivate me this time.

View all my reviews

Monday, December 16, 2024

What Is Yours is Not Yours

 

What Is Not Yours Is Not YoursWhat Is Not Yours Is Not Yours by Helen Oyeyemi
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is a book of short stories, but the characters repeat throughout, so you have to keep track of who is who. Which is difficult because some of them are real people, and some of them are conscious puppets and the whole thing is rather confusing, trying to keep which parallel world is which. I gave it two stars because I really did like "presence"--a haunting and beautiful story of regret and love. But I lost my grip on the rest of it--there are some pieces that were good, but it was just too much to keep track of for me in the end.

View all my reviews

Get in Trouble

Get in TroubleGet in Trouble by Kelly Link
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Kelly Link is very imaginative. And it was entertaining to read some of the things she thinks up. However, there is something I don't understand about the art of the short story some authors use, which is to keep the reader wondering what really happened. Link employs that a lot. Like "The Summer People" reads like a novel that has the middle taken out, so you wonder how the ending came about. Other stories read like a puzzle jumping through space and time, and some are just cryptic. Despite wishing some of the stories were more clear, other stories were enchanting and I appreciated the art that went in to all of them. If I wanted to know more, it was just that the stories were that good.

View all my reviews

I'm the human equivalent of one of those baby birds that falls out of a nest and then some nice person picks the baby bird up and puts it back.  Except that now the baby bird smells all wrong.  I think I smell wrong.

Her chest feels very tight, as if she's suddenly full of poison.  You have to keep it all inside.  Like throwing yourself on a. bomb to save everybody else.   Except youre the bomb.

"I thought they were more like a memory," Gwenda said.  "Not really there at all. Just an echo recorded somehow and played back, what they did, what happened to them."

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Shame

Shame: The Exposed SelfShame: The Exposed Self by Michael Lewis
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read this as a companion to Brené Brown's I Thought It Was Just Me since it popped up on Bookbub for less than $2. It was surprisingly helpful. It was much more academic and covered aspects of shame research as well as experiments the author performed. By being clear with the history of shame research and theorizing about the cause and effect of shame, I was much better able to see how to overcome shame (or as Brown puts it, to have shame resilience). It is quite in-depth and I now know everything I ever wanted to know about shame but did a great job of explaining it.

View all my reviews

I Thought It Was Just Me

I Thought It Was Just Me: Women Reclaiming Power and Courage in a Culture of ShameI Thought It Was Just Me: Women Reclaiming Power and Courage in a Culture of Shame by Brené Brown
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This was my first Brene Brown book and I am assured that others are better. I think she dies a good job of defining what shame is and how it harms us but I don't feel like she was clear enough on what to do to combat it. The whole book was circular and used too many drawn out "episodes" of shame especially in her life, which just seemed like she was trying to shame the people that shamed her. Best take away from the book: be nicer to people.

View all my reviews

The Picture of Dorian Gray

The Picture of Dorian GrayThe Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

What can you say about a novel that has such far-reaching influence? It starts out in almost melodramatic drama, then morphs into a rather boring catalogue of excess, then into gothic horror. It definitely gives some thinking points--what would we do for eternal beauty and youth? Is beauty and youth that important? Are our misdeeds recorded in our countenance? What would we do if we could get away with it? And of course, Lord Henry's quips are timeless. Definitely worth the read.

View all my reviews

Taft

 

TaftTaft by Ann Patchett
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This story fell a little flat for me. It is a story of a black man who owns a bar. Perhaps that was part of the problem--I was nervous the whole time that Patchett would misstep in her portrayal of another race, another gender. I can't be entirely sure she doesn't (being neither myself) and maybe it's unfair to not allow an author to become whomever they want. Aside from that, the main character wants things and thinks about things, but he rarely does anything of his own volition--just sort of lets things happen to him, or tries to stay out of the way. Things turn out ok in the end, but if there's a character arch, it's tiny. Not one of my favorite Patchett novels but still some great passages.

View all my reviews

Monday, November 25, 2024

At Weddings and Wakes

At Weddings and WakesAt Weddings and Wakes by Alice McDermott
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A quiet book about childhood memories and the romance of an aunt who used to be a nun. It is layered with memories, the exceptions standing out to create the narrative. It is a story about the ordinary challenges of families, marriage, religion. McDermott is a genius in highlighting the small stories and giving meaning and beauty to them.

View all my reviews

Unfortunate.  The word alone could elicit a knowing sigh whenever her name was mentioned, although it seemed to the youngest child, who had given her her loyalty, that it implied something the other sisters lacked, and that was a fortune that might have been found.

An antidote of green.

The city, it sometimes seemed to the children, was full of ancient, buried things struggling to resurface.

And then she suddenly stood, the three children now dizzy enough to be the crumbs tumbling from her apron.

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Golden Age

Golden Age (Last Hundred Years: A Family Saga #3)Golden Age by Jane Smiley
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I enjoyed this installment the least of the Last Hundred Years Saga. Perhaps the family sprawl was just too big to really connect with any one character. But also there seemed to be less family loyalty and support and more backbiting, sniping, secrets, and manipulating. The background of politics and climate change that has been present throughout becomes part of the central issues, and none of it is encouraging--the fruitlessness of trying to right wrongs seems to pervade. I also thought it was interesting (weird?) that Smiley would have this novel of history morph into speculative fiction at the end, and write about years that haven't happened when the novel was written. The good news is the future is not quite as bleak as she fortold, but it did make the novel seem gloomy.

View all my reviews

Early Warning

 

Early Warning (Last Hundred Years: A Family Saga, #2)Early Warning by Jane Smiley
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

We continue with the Langdon saga. The original Langdon children have all married and start having children of their own. The expanding family requires a bit more brain power to keep track of since it may be several years before we revisit some characters. Frank turns out to be a terrible father and his wife is actually worse. Lillian and Arthur seem like the dream family but no one escapes tragedy, though each experiences good things too. Don't expect any great drama--this is a story about the small dramedys of daily life. There is a nice twist at the end which keeps the story from being too monotonous.

View all my reviews

Some Luck

 

Some Luck (Last Hundred Years: A Family Saga, #1)Some Luck by Jane Smiley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The story of the Langdons through time--each chapter is another year. Each year has vignettes from various members of the family--not all members represented each year. This snapshot setting works for the most part and I felt like I got a good sense of most of the characters. Frank was surely my favorite, as I think he is supposed to be--the eldest son with a charismatic personality who doesn't have an easy life but regardless has things go his way. You also get a sense of the roots of the farming culture, which a large portion of Americans come from. Entertaining enough that I wanted to continue the series.

View all my reviews

There were so many things Rosanna could have been besides a farm wife, she thought.  But it was not a source of regret--it was a source of pride.

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Great Circle

Great CircleGreat Circle by Maggie Shipstead
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

We follow the history of Marian Graves, a fictional air pilot, from her conception to her daring trip to circle the globe. We also get some insight into Hadley who is cast to play the part of Marian in a film based on a novel, based on a journal. Perhaps this was the best part of the novel--seeing how iterations of a person's life condensed, picked apart, seen through artist's lenses can make the result an actual fiction. Shipstead did a great job of making the characters come alive--not only Marian and Hadley but Marian's twin Jaimie and her friend Caleb as well. I bought into their circumstances and choices, regardless of how unconventional, or cliche. Almost. The only reason this wasn't 5 stars is that I never grasped why Marian decided to circle the globe--that decision just didn't track. Still a great read.

View all my reviews

The world unfurls and unfurls, and there is always more.  A line, a circle, is insufficient.  I look forward, and there is the horizon.  I look back.  Horizon.  What is past is lost.  I am already lost to my future.

I thought about how the medium of music is time, how if time stopped, a painting would exist unchanged but music would vanish, like a wave without an ocean.

The best you can hope for is that time will have hardened around someone's memory, preserving a void in their shape. 

One thing I learned is that you don't just love a person, you love a vision of your life with them.

To Jamie, the war so far had been like the sun, relentless and undeniable but not to be looked at directly.

Even in this most hostile place, the sun and sky must return.

They rub at their cheeks and noses and toes, endure the pain of returning to life.

A return to the world as it was is impossible; the only choice to make a new world.  But making a new world seems dreary and exhausting.

Monday, November 4, 2024

The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Who

 

The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar WaoThe Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot DĂ­az
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I'd heard so many great things about this novel that I think it would be a little surprising if I wasn't a little underwhelmed. I appreciate the writing style--even if the Spanglish made it tough to completely understand--it worked better if I just let the words wash over me instead of trying to parse the words out. The footnotes were also well-used to tell us the actual history of the DR and Trujillo. It's an everyday story with fantastic elements and while I didn't connect with any of the characters, and it was a sad story full of violence and cruelty, it did have enough hopefulness and compassion to make it worth it. If I didn't connect with the characters, it helped me have an appreciation for the history of the DR.

View all my reviews

Tress of the Emerald Sea

Tress of the Emerald SeaTress of the Emerald Sea by Brandon Sanderson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I am of the opinion that fantasy books are great because they can represent things in slightly different ways than how our world works, and thus lets us identify and learn from the strange. To a large extent this book does that--learning how to overcome difficulties, teamwork, loyalty, how trials change us (hopefully for the better). The narration, was cute, if a little too twee at times and it was obviously in homage to The Princess Bride (although if you are going to imitate, it better be as good or better than the original, and it wasn't). But my main problem was the randomness of some of the elements of the story. Why did Tress collect cups? Why was the ocean spores? (And how did the water cycle even work then?) I feel like these are significant elements of the story, but they didn't contribute to the larger story; they weren't symbolic; they were just seemed randomly put in there for wierdness factors. Overall, it was an entertaining story with some unexpected and welcome twists.

View all my reviews

Heroism is often the seemingly spontaneous result of a lifetime of preparation.

people are as fluid as time is.

In the land where everyone screams, everyone is also slightly deaf.

The very journey she'd taken to find what she wanted had transformed her into a person who could no longer enjoy that victory.

Thursday, October 17, 2024

The Book of Unknown Americans

The Book of Unknown AmericansThe Book of Unknown Americans by Cristina HenrĂ­quez
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is probably 3 stars but gave it 2 because there are just so much better stories of families immigrating to America. I did like the chapters that were about the families living in the neighborhood of the Rivera's and how it showed that there are so many stories of immigrants, of their hopes and dreams and how they got here. I also liked that it highlighted the plight of those coming to America for medical/educational purposes and not just economical. There are some endearing scenes like when Alma tries to economize and they end up eating oatmeal for every meal. I also liked the message that forgiving ourselves, while the most difficult, is the only way to move forward. But I felt like so many story lines were not fully pursued. And I just couldn't get behind the main storyline of Mayor and Maribel. Mayor comes across just as creepy as the skateboarder. Maribel still can't communicate her true feelings and desires when Mayor makes his moves. Maybe a nice addition would be some of Maribel's diary entries? So the main storyline kinda made me ick and there wasn't enough development of the other characters (with the exception of Alma) to feel like it was a worthwhile story.

View all my reviews

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

The Sun Also Rises

 

The Sun Also Rises: The Original 1926 Unabridged And Complete Edition (Ernest Hemingway Classics)The Sun Also Rises: The Original 1926 Unabridged And Complete Edition by Ernest Hemingway
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A journalist in France goes on a vacation with friends in Spain. They fish and watch the bull runs and bullfights. They drink a lot. Everyone is in love with Brett. She ruins a bull fighter. She ruins everyone really. But everyone still loves her. Having read Joyce and Stein, I can see where Hemingway diverges and defines a more modern style. There isn't much inner monologue and so the motivations are for the reader to interpret for the most part. (Not as satisfying, but not bad either). Nothing is too florid or overwrought. A rather interesting illustration of the lost generation and the escapades of foreign travelers behaving badly. Still, even without a lot of metaphors, Hemingway puts you in the front seat for the show.

View all my reviews

Monday, September 30, 2024

The Secret History of Wonder Woman

 

The Secret History of Wonder WomanThe Secret History of Wonder Woman by Jill Lepore
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Jill Lepore does a more than decent job of gleaning what she can about the man who created Wonder Woman, but by her own admission there is a lot that was lost (purposefully by the women in his life). This history mainly delves into Marston, the creator of Wonder Woman, who is full of complexities. He is a psychiatrist and lawyer, but not very successful at either. He pushes his invention, the lie detector, but doesn't seem to get the credit for it. He lobbies for women's rights but thinks women like submission. He has three women in his life, but isn't particularly successful or attractive or even all that charismatic (based on his inability to hold down a job). Wonder Woman too seems rather conflicted--a woman with other worldly powers but who gets bound up by men and whose weakness is a man named Steve. There is a lot about women suffrage because one of his "wives" was related Margaret Sanger. But I was surprised that there wasn't more history of the spin-off show or what Wonder Woman has come to mean in today's world (though there is a little of this). It surely was interesting, even if the limited information Lepore was working with leaves lots of questions. Lots of illustrations in this too means you'll want to read instead of listen.

View all my reviews

in 1911, an “Amazon” meant any woman rebel—which, to a lot of people, meant any girl who left home and went to college.

“Professor Hugo Munsterberg says that women are not fit for jury duty because they are unwilling to listen to argument and cannot be brought to change their opinion on any subject.”

experiments MĂ¼nsterberg and Marston conducted together in the Psychological Laboratory in Emerson Hall and on their students at Radcliffe were designed to detect deception.

MĂ¼nsterberg visited Orchard in the state penitentiary in Boise.

For seven hours, over two days, he subjected Orchard to nearly one hundred deception tests.

Before MĂ¼nsterberg began his tests, he was sure Orchard was lying. By the time he was done, he’d become convinced that Orchard was telling the truth.

To write movies, he had to turn lies into truths: he had to learn how to tell a story that wasn’t true but that, on film, would seem to be.

He invented the lie detector test.

Hardly a magazine was sold, in 1925 and 1926, that didn’t feature an article that asked, “Can a Woman Run a Home and a Job, Too?”

The Equal Rights Amendment—“ Men and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States”—had been introduced into Congress in 1923, but Tyson found it woefully naĂ¯ve; it failed to offer any remedy for, or even any illumination of, the structural challenges of combining motherhood and work.

Hays Code. It prohibited films from depicting anything that would “lower the moral standards of those who see it,” including nudity, childbirth, and homosexuality.

Most heartache Marston diagnosed as the product of deceit. “In a majority of cases which are brought to me as a consulting psychologist for love or marital adjustment, there are self-deceptions to be uncovered as well as attempts to deceive other people,” he explained. “Beneath such love conflicts there is almost always a festering psychological core of dishonesty.”

not even girls want to be girls so long as our feminine archetype lacks force, strength, power. Not wanting to be girls they don’t want to be tender, submissive, peaceloving as good women are. Women’s strong qualities have become despised because of their weak ones. The obvious remedy is to create a feminine character with all the strength of Superman plus all the allure of a good and beautiful woman. 14

“Comic books can probably be best understood if they are looked upon as an expression of the folklore of this age,” they explained.

She wasn’t meant to be a superwoman; she was meant to be an everywoman.

This is, of course, not a healthy sex directed toward marriage and family life, but an anti-social sex, sex made as alluring as possible while its normal term in marriage is barred by the ground rules from the start.”

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

A Moveable Feast

A Moveable FeastA Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

My review for this didn't really change, I still think it doesn't really give a good idea about Paris, but I did add a star because I realized what Hemingway is really talking about is hunger. The hunger he had to be an important writer, the hunger he had to learn all he could from everyone and every experience. (That being said, I still think he is probably an INTJ who thinks he is the smartest guy in the room). Also, nostalgia for the time he was poor and things seemed simpler. He blames the rich on the corruption of his marriage and his life, but maybe it was just his hunger turned to envy and he lost sight of what was really important. It's a nostalgic book for sure, but it does have great writing.

When we booked our trip to Europe, I started reading books that were known to capture the essence of places we were visiting. This book is touted as Hemingway's lovesong to Paris. I have to say it didn't really take me there (nor was I reminded of it while I was in Paris). But I did love the vivid snippets from his life. It made me want to get to know more about Hemingway, and the artists and authors he associated with there. Watching Midnight in Paris before reading this helped me visualize the characters more. It is interesting how time and life plays with memory and it would be interesting to see if he felt so romantic about his first wife if he had written this in the present tense, rather than at the end of his life in Idaho. He also described his writing process, which was very interesting.

View all my reviews

There are so many sorts of hunger.  In the spring there are more.  But that's gone now.  Memory is hunger.

Friday, September 20, 2024

Our Town

Our TownOur Town by Thornton Wilder
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Read this to brush up on it after reading Tom Lake . It's a shorter play than I thought. Some of it hasn't aged well and I'm curious how modern directors and audiences deal with this. But the vision behind the play is timeless- the idea that you can't really appreciate life as you are living it but that we know life is precious and we regret not valuing it in the moment. The edition I read also gave a history of Wilde writing the play along with notes he gave of certain productions, which was very interesting and insightful. The book also claims that it is being preformed somewhere around the world every night, so I guess I'll have to seek out a production. ;).

View all my reviews

Thursday, September 19, 2024

True Biz

True BizTrue Biz by Sara Nović
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I like that this was written about the deaf community by someone in that community. I learned a lot about cochlear implants, pros and (mostly) cons. NovĂ­c also included some informational pages at the end of chapters that explained more about sign language and how it's spoken. I was intrigued by subjects such as the difference between white and black sign language and the history of a (mostly) deaf community in Maine. The informational pages had exercises that made it seem like NovĂ­c would expect this book to be taught in schools, which I think there should be more literature taught about other-abled individuals. But her characters have sex, take drugs, and are involved in terrorist like activities (thieving, blowing things up, making bombs--she even includes a recipe to make a bomb in one of her "informational" bits). There is no repercussions for these activities and even commendation for it. Not something we need in schools right now (or ever) no matter how "noble" the cause. Also the book ends at a weird spot with almost no resolutions for any of the problems she introduces. No relationships changed, no plans for the future mapped out, etc. This would be a one star book if it didn't also give good information about the deaf community.

View all my reviews

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

I'll Give You the Sun

 

I'll Give You the SunI'll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I really enjoyed this YA selection. The character development is so strong. The characters are all quirky, but I totally believed in them and the changes that took place. It's about secrets we keep to protect others and ourselves, and how that can hurt everybody. It's about the complexity of desire--how do we go about fulfilling our desires without obliterating others along our way. Are there desires that should go unfulfilled? How forgiveness doesn't necessarily start with understanding, but forgiveness always leads to understanding. There is a gay character, and incidences of sex, so probably best for older YA readers--but it is one of the most developed and compassionate characterizations of a gay character I have read. Also, I thought the repercussions of sexual encounters that the characters were not ready for were again realistic, compassionate, and hopeful. Overall, I loved the emphasis of the brother/sister relationship and their love for each other despite their estrangement. Very neat ending, but who doesn't love that.

View all my reviews

People die, I think, but your relationship with them doesn't.  It continues and is ever-changing.

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Tom Lake

Tom LakeTom Lake by Ann Patchett
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I have a girl-author-crush on Ann Patchett. I fell in love with Bel Canto and it has only gotten stronger with each novel I've read of hers. Until I read her memoir earlier this year and thought it was aimless and she was a little smug. My girl-author crush was over. And so I went into Tom Lake ready to really be objective.
My thoughts as I started: this is a little quaint, and sentimental. This woman's life seems so perfect. Where is the drama and angst? She was an actor too? But she gave it up to be a cherry farmer and has no regrets? Really, no regrets? Her kids are normal and have no issues. What?! is going on? Ok well the writing is ok. And it's not wholly boring.
But then, ah, I see what you did, Anne. There is a little darkness to throw the whole thing into relief.
And taken as a whole, with. Our Town as model and inspiration, it is brilliant. The names that echo each other. The looking back and living it but observing it too (like Emily in the play). The moment of realization that we can never go back (realized in a new and relatable way). And really, set in the pandemic, it is beautiful. While the pandemic was horrible, there were moments of beauty, when the busyness was stripped away and we could see the joy of living day by day, some of us not unhappy that we were cocooned with the ones we loved in our own little island of a home. So then, yes, I fell in love with Anne all over again and she deserves to be a little smug because she is brilliant and I will never waver again.

View all my reviews

These were the things I used to think about, how with a slight shift in circumstance the outcome might have gone another way.

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

The Arm of the Starfish

 

The Arm of the Starfish (O'Keefe Family, #1)The Arm of the Starfish by Madeleine L'Engle
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

L'Engle does not make it a secret that her books have moral values written in them. This one is about the choices you make, how you determine whose truth you listen to. Do you listen to the alluring, attractive truth that will get you what you desire or do you listen to your inner voice? When a person betrays you once, should you trust them again? Besides the obviousness of what she names her characters (Joshua=Jesus; Molec=Caananite god that required child sacrifice, etc.), L'Engle does a good job of putting a young person in a situation where the right path is not always obvious. On the side, there is the science of using star fish to engineer a way to regrow limbs which is still fascinating. A wholesome novel for young people, if a bit dated and corny.

View all my reviews

The Bone Clocks

 

The Bone ClocksThe Bone Clocks by David Mitchell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I would give this 3 stars but the writing is really good so it gets 4. Each section is about a different character, and we are thrown nilly willy into their world so it takes a couple of pages to get your bearing. Mitchell does a good job of giving each character their own flair, so much so that at times it felt like a different book entirely. Its premise is that there are beings who can inhabit different bodies, thus living forever. Some are just this way and others use nefarious means to exercise this power. It takes most of the book to really understand what is going on, so it's good that Mitchell gives a good ride along the way. I am still trying to understand the point of the author's chapters but all in all it is an interesting and entertaining read.

View all my reviews

Love's pure free joy when it works, but when it goes bad you pay for the good hours at loan shark prices.

if an atrocity isn't written about, it stops existing when the last witnesses die. 

Monday, September 2, 2024

The Poppy War

 

The Poppy War (The Poppy War, #1)The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I don't know a lot about the history of China, and so maybe I don't appreciate the parallelisms that exist. and miss a layer of this novel. On the surface it is about an orphaned student who excels at school in order to avoid being sold into marriage and motherhood. She discovers the power of the gods accessed through drugs (poppy) and the god of fire calls to her. Their generation experiences war including a siege, betrayal, and the witnessing of (pretty graphic) atrocities of war. Experiencing all this and losing someone close to her has her breaking all the rules her mentor cautioned her with as she seeks revenge in an explosive way. But what are the consequences and can she live with it? Will she continue to demand justice from those who abandoned her people? What sacrifice is acceptable for the greater good? Who decides what the greater good is? This is all set up I'm sure for the following installments, which I will get to eventually but between some of the graphic violence and not completely compelling characters I think I will take a break.

View all my reviews

This misery she reveled in because she had chosen it for herself.

Now, with the introduction of psychedelic plants, Jiang drew these threads into one unified theory, a theory of spiritual connection through psychedelics to the dream world where the gods might reside.

"Do you know what the word entheogen means?" She shook her head.  "It means the generation of the god within," he said.  He reached out and tapped her forehead in the same place.  "The merging of god and person."

The Dog Stars

 

The Dog StarsThe Dog Stars by Peter Heller
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A novel set in the period after the cataclysmic event that ushers in the dystopia but before society has time to establish a new order. It reads a lot like a western--with machine guns and airplanes. Two men team up to withstand the looters and marauders. Bangley asserts that everyone is out to kill you and acts accordingly, almost seeming to like the hunt and kill. Hig wants to give people the benefit of the doubt. Almost always Bangley is right, but Hig is a romantic and seeks connection. Luckily, Heller lets Hig score a few points. It is the study in how to balance the practicalities of staying alive while still trying to believe in good, love, and compassion.  It is an interesting book with well developed characters and the plot meanders in ways that aren't predictable. Enjoyable.

View all my reviews
Meaning that in fishing I had always all my life brought the best of myself.  My attention and carefulness, my willingness to risk, and my love.  Patience.

life was inside death, virulent and insistent as a strain of flu.

Whatever is left of whatever they distill is more concentrated in there complete and dangerous freedom.

Grief is an element.  It has its own cycle like the carbon cycle, the nitrogen.  It never diminishes not ever.  It passes in and out of everything.

Amazing how not having to kill someone frees up a relationship generally.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

The Paris Wife

 

The Paris WifeThe Paris Wife by Paula McLain
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I grew up in Idaho and Hemingway was The Author for our state because he died there. Not a lot of literature idols to look up to in Idaho. Weirdly, I've read very little by him. This look into Hemingway's life via his wife Hadley was interesting. I think I learned more about Hemingway than Hadley (even the few Hemingway chapters teemed with more life than the Hadley ones). I saw an author trying to muscle his way into importance and relevance, and get caught up in the chaos of the lifestyles of the artists around him, not realizing that their art had nothing to do with their unconventional relationships and substance abuse (but that these were distractions). Hadley seemed to totally support Hemingway, even to her detriment but I couldn't sympathize with her. She seemed too willing to give up everything, from her comfort to her ambition. McLain tries hard to stick to source material and so doesn't get much beyond the surface of what Hadley must have thought and the anguish she must have felt.

View all my reviews

Ernest once told me that the word paradise was a Persian word that meant "walled garden".  I knew then that he understood how necessary the promises we made to each other were to our happiness.  You couldn't have real freedom unless you knew where the walls were and tended them.

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

The Count of Monte Cristo

 

The Count of Monte CristoThe Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I needed a big book to pass the time on a long plane ride. It was a big book. And it did pass the time in that I promptly fell asleep whenever I attempted to read it, which was actually almost better than reading on a plane ride. I have no idea why this book dragged so for me. There are intricate plans, lover's trysts, betrayal, revenge. Surprisingly little sword play. But the Count was just so-so for me and I never really could get invested. This classic seems to be referred to as a favorite with young men, so I thought it would be more intriguing than I found it to be.

View all my reviews

“We are always in a hurry to be happy, M. Danglars; for when we have suffered a long time, we have great difficulty in believing in good fortune.

was not over the downfall of the man, but over the defeat of the Napoleonic idea, that they rejoiced, and in this they foresaw for themselves the bright and cheering prospect of a revivified political existence.

The only difference consists in the opposite character of the equality advocated by these two men; one is the equality that elevates, the other is the equality that degrades; one brings a king within reach of the guillotine, the other elevates the people to a level with the throne.

You who are in power have only the means that money produces—we who are in expectation, have those which devotion prompts.”

But Fernand was mistaken; a man of his disposition never kills himself, for he constantly hopes.

Plaints made in common are almost prayers, and prayers where two or three are gathered together invoke the mercy of heaven.

misfortune is needed to bring to light the treasures of the human intellect. Compression is needed to explode gunpowder. Captivity has brought my mental faculties to a focus;

the tree forsakes not the flower—the flower falls from the tree.”

If one’s lot is cast among fools, it is necessary to study folly.

“the friends that we have lost do not repose in the bosom of the earth, but are buried deep in our hearts, and it has been thus ordained that we may always be accompanied by them.


Mercury Pictures Presents

Mercury Pictures PresentsMercury Pictures Presents by Anthony Marra
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Marra's Constellation of Vital Phenomena was a revelation for me. It was amazing. This is a good book--it has well developed characters and it plumbs the idea of what it is to be free, the constructs that keep us imprisoned, whether internal or external, and explores some lesser known history--of Italy, Hollywood, and xenophobia in America. What surprised me is how funny this was. So many subtle and not so subtle comedic situations. Also a few touching scenes. It wasn't phenomenal but it was presentable ;). As enjoyable as an old movie...

View all my reviews

That’s what intimacy is—not a threshold of knowledge but a capitulation to ignorance, an acceptance that another person is made as bewildered and ungovernable by her life as you are by yours.

Every totalitarian knows you cannot change the future, only the past.

The camera conducts history on the bridge. Party members jostle into its frame. More than a witness or participant, it is a choreographer. The lens absorbs light but also emits its own kind of radiance.

Taking a life is murder, the most mortal sin, this much is clear. But taking a death? For that is what Nino would do: steal Vincenzo’s death from his mother. What is the name of this trespass, both murder’s opposite and its equal? Not even Giuseppe, once among the great lawyers of Rome, can name the crime.

it seems to him the allure of photography is the medium’s faith, despite all contrary evidence, that people can see one another at all.

“In my limited experience, mercy is what we choose not to do.”

What troubled Maria—as much as anything else—was the spectacle of a filmmaker pressing her undeniably singular vision into the service of a picture that denied the singularity of individual experience.

Adhering to stereotype is the only way a screen actor makes himself intelligible to an unintelligent audience.”

I know when they offer you a part, what they’re really doing is telling you what you are.”


Friday, August 23, 2024

Queen Anne

Queen Anne: The Politics of PassionQueen Anne: The Politics of Passion by Anne Somerset
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

If you want to know absolutely everything there is to know about Queen Anne, I think it is in here. Somerset even somewhat deftly includes inventory and shopping lists. I did end up skimming most of it, but still feel like I garnered a good amount of knowledge about Anne and the politics of that era. She was regarded as unhealthy, fat, and ignorant and easily manipulated. But Somerset does a good job of countering several of these criticisms. Queen Anne is often shown as having a determination that was not easily swayed in several instances and stood up for what she believed was right, regardless of the politics surrounding her. Somerset also gives modern health theories about her health (possibly lupus?) and why she lost all of her children (so sad!). Queen Anne was obviously a person who loved deeply and as a result those around her often took advantage of her, but once they crossed a line the queen was also just as firm about cutting them off. I'll admit these little dramas were the most interesting parts.

View all my reviews

Mary Coin

 

Mary CoinMary Coin by Marisa Silver
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a good historical novelization of the depression. Mary Coin is the subject of an iconic photograph by Vera Dare who documented immigrant workers. These are the stand-in names of Florence Owens Thompson and Dorothea Lange. Silver does a good job of painting a picture who Mary is, and the circumstances of immigrant workers during the depression. I also enjoyed the story of Vera who was the photographer. Both of these women were strong in different ways. Silver also throws in Walker Dodge in the present day who has a connection with one of these women that slowly reveals itself. Silver can give herself free reign since she has used pseudonyms and I think she accurately portrayed the conditions of that era, but there is enough similarities to the real-life counterparts (both photographers were married to painters, both subjects had some American-Indian lineage), that it was hard to know what was based on the real characters and what was made up.

View all my reviews

Engineering Eden

 

Engineering Eden: The True Story of a Violent Death, a Trial, and the Fight over Controlling NatureEngineering Eden: The True Story of a Violent Death, a Trial, and the Fight over Controlling Nature by Jordan Fisher Smith
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is an interesting look into the two different schools of thought in managing wildlife areas--should we try to maintain nature the way we found it when colonists arrived or should we manage it based on what makes it safe and manageable for the uses which civilization has evolved (including tourism). It's a complicated subject and obviously has good and bad points with each school of thought. Smith covers these arguments while also narrating a trial about a bear attack. Should the national park be held responsible for the bear's actions? Or is this part of the danger of interacting with nature? Unfortunately, Smith gets bogged down in a lot of distracting minutiae that doesn't clarify what he is talking about. In an effort to have us get to know the victim, he gets way too involved in who he is and his life before he entered the park. He also gets brings in fire control, deer and elk maintenance, and personnel squabbles which could strengthen his thesis but he doesn't quite tie things together and the back and forth with the trial just doesn't work. However, the question of how we manage wildlife and nature in general is a subject that can be looked at from a lot of different angles and despite Smith's haphazard approach (or maybe because of it?) the complexities and difficulties in trying to do what's best for the natural areas AND for the tourists who enjoy it are revealed.

View all my reviews

For the next half century, the perception that each ecosystem has some preordained ideal state, to which it always seeks to return, informed both ecology and attempts to restore nature in national parks.

because human hands were always unintentionally doing something to nature, they ought to do something carefully planned as well.

Saturday, June 8, 2024

Build Your House Around My Body

 

Build Your House Around My BodyBuild Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This just ticked all the boxes for me. It was delightfully imaginative and weird while not coming too much off the rails. It had bits and pieces that fit in other narratives and clicked satisfyingly into place. It explored issues that days later still make me ponder--I'm still not sure what it all means, but I like trying to think it out. What does it mean to have a body? How do spirit and body affect each other? How do we see others and how are we seen? Plus, karma. Also the location of Vietnam played a significant role which I enjoyed learning about. This was another book I had a hard time not just reading all day.

View all my reviews

Men We Reaped

Men We Reaped: A MemoirMen We Reaped: A Memoir by Jesmyn Ward
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Memoirs are hard to review and I say I don't really like them but I read a lot of them. I do think I learn a lot about how different people think and what they learn from experiences that are so different from mine and then not so different. Witnessing them work through their traumas and relationships can kind of feel like voyeurism and sometimes I don't come to the same conclusions they do and how do I judge that? This memoir of Jesmyn's early life and tribute to five young men who died young is tragic and sad. But it is so well written. You can see Ward's talent jumping off the page. My one purely editorial criticism is that I wish she would have woven in some more of the young men's lives with her own narrative a little bit better. We often only meet these persons in the pages of their tribute chapter The death of her brother which she memorializes last and does show up in her narrative passages made his death really hit you. Again,it's not a happy book but she writes with such candor and beauty that it transcends the sadness of the material.

View all my reviews

If energy is neither created nor destroyed, and if your brother was here with his, his humor, his kindness, his hopes, doesn't this mean that what he was still exists somewhere, even if it's not here?  Doesn't it?

We crawled through time like roaches through the linings of walls, the neglected spaces and hours, foolishly happy that we were alive even as we did everything to die.

How the privilege of my education, my eventual ascent into another class, was born in the inexorable push of my mother's hands.  How unfair it all seemed. 

The Portrait of a Lady

The Portrait of a LadyThe Portrait of a Lady by Henry James
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read this in graduate school but couldn't remember how it ended so I read it again. The ending is ambiguous and supremely unsatisfying so no wonder I didn't recall it. But even with careful reading the first time, the second time around uncovers so much of James' genius in writing the inner life of his characters. His extended metaphors and sly foreshadowing are delightful. His characters shine--Ralph is so witty and sardonic, Henrietta so forcible and opinionated but a true friend, Lord Warburton so gallant, Caspar so laughably hopeful and earnest, and Osmond so snakily smooth and cruel. How does an American girl, educated, open, and now even unfettered by material wants, and who longs for experiences and freedom so much get herself so thoroughly and fixedly trapped? The fact that we don't really know what Isobel decides to do in the final act makes it harder to conclude the point James was making. But the compassion and depth of understanding for his protagonist makes this not just a great psychological thriller but a feminist exploration as well. I did not like the ending, but I could re-read this again, I'm sure and be stimulated by James' writing.

View all my reviews

Thursday, June 6, 2024

The Beast

 

The Beast: Riding the Rails and Dodging Narcos on the Migrant TrailThe Beast: Riding the Rails and Dodging Narcos on the Migrant Trail by Óscar Martínez
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Martinez follows migrants from Central America through Mexico as they try to cross the border into America. In the afterword, he points out that this treacherous journey may not even yield a better life--there will still be economic hardships coupled with violence and the fear of discovery will always haunt them and yet they still come in droves. He says he hopes his book will at least give Americans a sense of respect for what these migrants have been through. But while obviously being sympathetic to migrants, this book also helped me to understand why some people would want to tighten the borders. I don't think I realized the prevalence of gangs, violence, and drugs that permeate the whole of this migration. Migrants don't stick around, or are too scared to make a difference in the court systems and so justice does not exist. They are vulnerable and desperate and those wishing to make a profit at the expense of their fellowman is rampant. Without tighter borders those drugs, gangs, and ensuing violence will follow because migrants are in the same situation: unable to report or to prosecute. Riding the trains was surely a new aspect about migration that I didn't know about, but it was the unending violence and fear that really opened my eyes. Yes, I have respect for those who make the trip, but I also see that the problem we need to address comes way before the border.

View all my reviews

Warlight

 

WarlightWarlight by Michael Ondaatje
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The coming of age story of a young man whose mother was a spy during and after WWII, only he didn't really realize it at the time. His mother left him and his sister in the care of some unorthodox and unusual guardians who introduced them to some interesting lifestyles and philosophies. His mother returns when "the enemies" try to abduct him and sister, and she leaves the spy service. The second half of the book seems to be him trying to put the pieces of new knowledge with what happened back then--why his mother left, who the guardians were both during the war, and after, and what happened to everyone. It was an interesting and unusual book although I can't say I really liked any of the characters or sympathized much with them which is why it is a lower rating.

View all my reviews

The Moth was often away, but his absence, like his presence, rarely mattered.

Is this how we discover the truth, evolve? By gathering together such unconfirmed fragments?

When you attempt a memoir, I am told, you need to be in an orphan state. So what is missing in you, and the things you have grown cautious and hesitant about, will come almost casually towards you. “A memoir is the lost inheritance,” you realize, so that during this time you must learn how and where to look. In the resulting self-portrait everything will rhyme, because everything has been reflected. If a gesture was flung away in the past, you now see it in the possession of another. So I believed something in my mother must rhyme in me. She in her small hall of mirrors and I in mine.

I felt I too had disappeared. I had lost my youth.

Only a thin line of light under the door I had just closed behind me.

I retreated from arguments as if I had those epicanthic eyelids that birds and some fish have, that allow them to separate themselves silently, almost courteously, from present company.

speaking of the mystery of chalk hills, where “whole faunas come and go, while the layers of the chalk are built from the efforts of infinitesimal creatures working in almost limitless time.”

She was once more back in a small repeating universe that included few outsiders

We never know more than the surface of any relationship after a certain stage, just as those layers of chalk, built from the efforts of infinitesimal creatures, work in almost limitless time.


Without Children

Without Children: The Long History of Not Being a MotherWithout Children: The Long History of Not Being a Mother by Peggy O'Donnell Heffington
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I thought this was a thoughtful, well-researched inquiry into why women don't have children, by choice, and not. She points out that the desire not to have children for various reasons have always existed, there have always been means and ways women have tried to take control of their bodies, their roles, and their desires. What I thought was fascinating was the social policies that seem to support the traditional family but actually work against it, especially in regards to America. We have become increasingly isolated from each other, meaning there is less support for mothers, and fewer roles for women without children (including single and those unable to have their own children) to help in the nurture of children. Policies like affordable day care and long (or any) maternity leave have been discouraged in order to entice mothers to stay home and raise children but actually make it economically difficult to raise a family. I thought Heffington did a remarkable job of being sensitive to women on both sides of this issue, validating both choices to have or not have children and encouraging us all to be kinder to each other and more supportive of those with children.

View all my reviews

Heti suggests the term “not not a mother”: For women without children, it could be a rejection of the negative identity, “not ‘not a mother.’” For mothers, the double negative cancels itself out and they become, simply, a mother. This, Heti writes, is a “term we can share.”

We need an elaborated vocabulary for making kin and caring beyond the ‘pro-and anti-and non-natalist,’ and that does not use the binary-implying word ‘choice.’”

Women I got graduate degrees with, drank too much whiskey in bars with, ran marathons with, have been transformed, literally overnight, into Adults, with Real Responsibilities and Meaning in Their Lives. Meanwhile, I have remained a child, failing to feed myself properly on a regular basis, killing houseplants, and indulging in wild, hedonic pleasures like going for a run every morning and having a clean living room.

But a man who produces no children is not usually identified with that lack.

Today, we benefit from the wisdom of Black, queer, and Indigenous feminist thinkers who have taught us that “mother” is best used as a verb, not a noun: mother is something that you do, not something that you are.

New York Times survey in 2021 concluded that reproductive decisions were closely tied to jobs, money, and the desperate struggle many millennials have faced to gain even a tenuous foothold in the rapidly eroding middle class.

For the rest of us, the majority without kids, our non-motherhood was arrived at slowly, indirectly, through a series of decisions that sometimes had nothing, and yet everything, to do with reproduction:

there was far more space for motherhood to be a social role, not just a biological one, more space for women who did not birth children to fully participate in loving and raising them.

Many of us have mourned the passage of what Cheryl Strayed has called “the ghost ship that didn’t carry us,” the shadowy, silent version of the life we did not choose that glides parallel to us, barely visible through the mist.

The activist and writer Jenny Brown has argued that we should understand falling births in America as a work slowdown or a strike: the people who do the labor of birthing and raising children are increasingly refusing to do it under the poor conditions they’ve been provided.

the reasons women aren’t having children look and feel less like a strike than like individual decisions to opt out, less like a shared experience and more like a personal failure to overcome modern-day stresses, real and imagined.

That the isolation of the American family would correspond to its shrinking makes sense.

“grandmother hypothesis”: the idea that older women might stop reproducing because they can do more good by caring for their communities and extended families than by having additional children of their own.

The modern nuclear family was not just a biological unit, but also, in the public imagination, a social unit bonded by a kind of love and loyalty that was both natural and unique. 55

“Assimilation” to white American culture and society demanded nothing less than the destruction of communal support networks and the isolation of nuclear families from each other.

As long as work remained in the home, it was more or less genderless; and as long as work remained genderless, women maintained a partial hold on equal household power.

The family, he writes, “was roughly torn apart each morning by the factory bell.” 42 Dad went to work, leaving Mom behind to oversee a family whose importance had been hollowed out. No longer the site of economic productivity or industrious familial labor, the family was reduced to just two functions: raising children and creating a soft, loving, comfortable environment to do it in, a “haven in a heartless world.” 43 Along the way, women lost the ability to contribute economically to their families, and the household power that comes with that contribution. 44

If a woman’s highest calling was to be a mother, then carrying out motherhood’s attendant duties should be anything but work. 47

In the context of a history that features mothers making economic contributions to their families far more often than it does not, the problem isn’t that motherhood is incompatible with work. The problem is that the way we work today is increasingly incompatible with motherhood.

Two decades later, fertility exploded during the baby boom, which also happened to coincide with the most generous social welfare programs in American history. 63

“The birth rate,” he writes, “is a barometer of despair.”

Infertility, then, may be the only medical condition that is a medical condition only if the person who has it thinks it is.

The sociologist Sally Macintyre has pointed out that there are “two visions of reality” for women. For unmarried women, “pregnancy and childbearing are abnormal and undesirable and conversely the desire to have a baby is aberrant, selfish, and in need of explanation.” For married women, the opposite has long been true: “Pregnancy and childbearing are normal and desirable, and conversely a desire not to have children”—and, I would add, the simple fact of not having them—“ is aberrant and in need of explanation.”

Though both procedures can involve the destruction of fertilized human embryos, in a 2013 Pew survey about half of Americans said they believed abortion to be morally wrong, and only 12 percent believed the same of IVF. 71

motherhood was the source of their power. “The woman’s body, which receives, hosts, and gives forth the future of the species, is inherently powerful,” they wrote.

The problem is not the children. The problem is the society parents have to parent in.