what I’ve been reading lately:
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When Watched: Stories by Leopoldine CorePenguin Books, 2016
Despite it coming highly recommended from a close friend, I found myself feeling sort of resistant to this book of 19 short stories at first. I think partly it was that I’d just read another collection of stories (Public Library and Other Stories by Ali Smith) and had very much enjoyed their mostly-first-person narratives, and
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Public Library and Other Stories by Ali SmithAnchor Books, 2016 (Originally Hamish Hamilton, 2015)
When I finished reading Public Library and Other Stories by Ali Smith, I immediately went back to the beginning and started it again, which is something I’ve done before with books of poems but not so much with collections of short stories, but for some reason with this one I felt like I should, and
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Crosstalk by Connie WillisDel Rey, 2016 (Originally Gollancz, 2016)
When I was about thirty pages into this book, I told my boyfriend I felt like it was going to be an unsubtle comedy, and I think it pretty much was, but that was totally what I was in the mood for. I wanted a fast-paced and plot-driven book that I was going to be
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The Bone People by Keri HulmePenguin, 2010 (Originally Spiral/Hodder & Stoughton, 1984)
The Bone People is another book that was recommended to me as pre-New-Zealand reading, and I spent the past week finding it pretty hard to put down, to the point (well, actually, this isn’t so unusual for me) where I was reading it while walking down the hallway between the elevator and the door to
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Hicksville by Dylan HorrocksDrawn & Quarterly, 2010 (Originally Black Eye Books, 1998)
Two things that are relevant to my reading of this book: 1) I’m going on vacation to New Zealand at the start of April! I’m very excited. One of my favorite people has lived in Auckland for several years now and has kept telling me I should come visit and I finally am going to.
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Sprig Muslin by Georgette HeyerSourcebooks Casablanca, 2011 (Originally William Heinemann Ltd., 1956)
I don’t generally read romance novels (semi-exception: I did have fun with Gail Carriger’s Parasol Protectorate books, though after the first one they didn’t feel that romance-y) and when I started this one I wasn’t sure I was going to be into it. And I do sort of think that if I were to want
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Empty Streets by Michal Ajvaz, translated by Andrew OaklandDalkey Archive Press, 2016
Empty Streets, which was originally published in Czech in 2004, is the third of Michal Ajvaz’s novels to be published in English translation by Dalkey Archive Press, and the third that I’ve read and enjoyed. This one is set in Prague in the summer of 1999: when it opens we meet our unnamed narrator, a
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The Luck Uglies by Paul DurhamHarperCollins, 2014
The Luck Uglies is a pleasing middle-grade fantasy novel, the kind that starts with a charmingly-drawn map of the place where the book is set, which in this case is a village called Drowning, though really it’s “more of a sprawling town than a village, one built on a foundation of secrets, rules, and lies,
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Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Parts 1 & 2 by Jack ThorneArthur A. Levine Books (Scholastic), 2016
I wasn’t necessarily planning to read Harry Potter and the Cursed Child—I mean, I like the Harry Potter universe and I’ve read all the books but, eh, a play written by someone other than J.K. Rowling, based on a story that she co-wrote with him and another guy? I don’t know; I wasn’t convinced I’d