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July Wrap Up

July Wrap Up

 
 

#JulyWrapUp Y’all I finally decided to learn how to overlap photos and when I tell you it took under two minutes, well, lets just say I am slightly embarrassed I didn’t try to learn sooner…hehe.

This was a great reading month for me but I can’t seem to find the energy to write a reflection since returning from my vacation. Which is fine, I know inspiration will strike eventually, but I’m just enjoying savoring the books. All of these were fantastic in their own way, the only one I wasn’t too jazzed on was Klara and the Sun, but I do understand why it appeals to others. Standouts are Popisho, Just Mercy, The Space Between Worlds, What We Carry, and Master of Djinn.

I’m currently working through Arsenic and Adobo, Equity-Centered Trauma Informed Education, and Go Ahead in the Rain (I’ve been savoring it) Have you read any of these? Or would you like to? Let me know. Onwards to August.

Pictured are ten books overlapped on a scenic background featuring green mountains and an old French castle in the background. The books pictures in order from top left to right are Klara and the Sun, What We Carry, Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up with Me, Just Mercy, Popisho, A Master of Djinn, Last Night at the Telegraph Club, Last Call, Displacement, The Space Between Worlds.
#JulyWrapUp #Bookstagram #LosAngelesReader #SummerReading #teacheronsummerbreak

amari and the night brothers by b.b. alston

MASTER OF DJINN

MASTER OF DJINN

I can already tell MASTER OF DJINN will be a new fantasy favorite. Only two days left in France with family and I’m going to miss them and this place so much. What’s your current read? [ID: Viv’s hand reading THE MASTER OF DJINN by a pool and a bookmark with a cat dressed at Marie Antoinette] #SummerReading #MasterOfDjinn #PoolTime

amari and the night brothers by b.b. alston

WHAT WE CARRY

What We Carry

Maya Shanbhag Lang

WHAT WE CARRY by Maya Shanbhag Lang is a memoir I will recommend to every mother/daughter/person. This memoir is filled with Lang’s deep reflections on growing up, becoming a mom, and eventually caring for her mother as she fell ill from Alzehimer’s. The chapters are short, the reflections powerful. I love the honesty of the author and how she gives us a look into how her opinions and feelings changed overtime. Being a mother can be such a lonely journey and this memoir made a big impact. I loved that I brought it with me on vacation because two other family members read it and loved it too. We were able to discuss this book and talk about the things that really resonated with us. I want to say more but honestly, this book really speaks for itself. I loved this one, very much.

#MayaShanbhagLang #WhatWeCarry #Memoir #Motherhood #AlwaysReading #Bookstagram #BookReflection #Bookstagrammer #summerreading

amari and the night brothers by b.b. alston

Popisho

Popisho

This book is extremely my jam. It was weird, original, uncanny, funny, sad, and magical.

Reading this book gave me the same feeling I had when I first read One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. I say that not to compare the two authors and those stories, but to showcase how the best authors know how to strike that balance between the fantastical and human. They’re able to create these beautifully imagined worlds and highlight something special about what it is to love and grieve. They have us ruminating on what success actually means and what it feels like to reflect on our failures.

Set on an island called Popisho, which is heavily influenced by Jamacain culture (where Ross grew up), you can tell there is such love for these characters and the community, I felt wrapped up in the island’s warmth throughout my whole read. But this is more than just a beautiful, magical island, of course. Wealthy men hold most of the political power, although women are largely in charge of helping people navigate their cors, or magical powers. The cors are as imaginative as you can get, from a woman with four hearts distributed throughout her body or the ability to know when someone is telling a lie. Xavier Redchoose, the protagonist, makes the best meal you will ever have in your life that is unique to you, and the chosen macaenus does not serve the Indigenous or poor population (please see author comment below: not Bc he doesn’t want to, but Bc of their own principles!!). He is grieving his wife who died by suicide and trying to overcome his addiction to moths that get you high in different ways depending on which kind you eat. This is definitely a book I hugged close to my chest when I was finished and immediately passed off for someone else to enjoy. Please note it is called ONE SKY DAY in the UK.

[ID: The book POPISHO by Leonne Ross resting on a wooden dock over dark green, blue water.]

#Popisho #ReadCarribean #LeonneRoss #Bookstagram #fiction

amari and the night brothers by b.b. alston

Last Night at the Telegraph Club

Last Night at the Telegraph Club

After seeing @theshriekingstack fantastic review of LAST NIGHT AT THE TELEGRAPH CLUB by Malindo Lo I was immediately interested in this book. It definitely lived up to my expectations. This is about a 17 year old Chinese American girl grappling with her sexuality in the 1950s when homosexuality was illegal (in 1962 that would change, but let’s not forget same-sex couples only gained the right to marry in 2016). Taking place in San Francisco when the country was gripped by fear of communism, Lily also lives in fear for her family’s safety because her father’s papers get taken away once he refuses to name a patient of his as a communist.

This was a very engrossing YA read and I hope to see more like it. I love the blend of romance and historical fiction. Malindo Lo also made San Francisco come to life. I lived there for a little bit after college and I could feel the fog roll in and rest on my skin. I can remember strolling through North Beach and seeing the plethora of Italian restaurants, walking through the bustle of Chinatown, and just this sensation of a city that felt so alive. San Francisco was one of the easiest places to make friends. I miss that city so much. I really enjoyed this book. I would’ve loved more perspective from her father and mother and their history, but that is just because I am greedy. If you have a young person in your life that loves realistic/historical fiction this is for them, and if you’re just looking for a fresh read about first love in a beautiful setting this might also be for you.

[ID: The book Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malindo Lo being held up by Viv’s hand with a red rose bush in the background]

#Bookstagram #TeacherOnSummerBreak #LastNightAtTheTelegraphClub #AlwaysReading #MalindoLo #SanFrancisco #HistoricalFiction #YA #YoungAdult #romance

amari and the night brothers by b.b. alston

Klara and the Sun

Klara and the Sun

This is my first time reading a book by Kazuo Ishiguro, and although this one left me unmoved I know I will read more of his works. This follows Klara, an Artificial Friend robot, or AF, as she keeps her friend Josie company as she grows into young adulthood. Klara’s musings on loneliness were interesting, but overall this was just an okay read for me.

I was more fascinated by the background of this world than I was in Josie and company. I also loved the beginning when Klara was at the front of the store taking in the Sun, observing the world around her with her robot friend, Rose. It started off really strong, before Josie’s story began to unravel. The things that took place after Klara was adopted as Josie’s AF were interesting, but I didn’t really get attached to any of the characters beyond Klara so I just couldn’t get invested. I understand that that wasn’t the point, but it was all very confusing. I really love sci-fi and reading books with AI characters. It brings up great questions about what makes us human, but this one missed the mark for me. I was probably expecting something more sci-fi but this definitely falls more into the literary fiction category. I probably came into this with my own expectations, and in the end I was left feeling what the heck did I just read and not in the good way. After talking to a friend that has read his other works, it seems this is one I probably shouldn’t have started with. I still appreciate this novel and its genre bending feel, and maybe I will come back to it when I have a greater understanding of Kazuo Ishiguro, but also maybe not.

[ID: Viv holding the book KLARA AND THE SUN by Kazuo Ishiguro up in the air over a dirt path lined with big trees in the background. It is sunset so the sun is glowing softly over the book]

#KlaraAndTheSun #SciFiBooks #LiteraryFiction #ArtificialIntelligence #KazuoIshiguro #Bookstagram #alwaysreading

amari and the night brothers by b.b. alston