Books read in January 2019

January tends to be a month of free-reading. There’s the tail end of the holidays which affords more time for reading, and in book group we’re mostly to the point of having read all the potential youth awards we are going to read.

This month I had time to squeeze in some Grownup Nonfiction and some Smart Smut. But there are also some really great children’s books that I read this month.

Recommended

Picture Books: Stop that Yawn
Middle Grade: The Season of Styx Malone
Young Adult: The Assassination of Bragwain Spurge
Grownup Nonfiction: Profit First
Smart Smut: Bitter Spirits

Picture Books

Stop That Yawn
Caron Levis & LeUyen Pham
Read for Librarian Book Group

I tend to like picture books with more things on the page, rather than fewer. All the better to look at during subsequent rereads. There’s also the challenge of stopping that yawn, which I failed at every single time.

Heartbeat
Evan Turk
Read for Librarian Book Group

Perhaps I wasn’t in the right frame of mind for this book. It struck me as something eight-year-olds would make fun of.

Carmela Full of Wishes
Matt de la Pena and Christian Robinson
Read for Librarian Book Group

Carmila is old enough to go to the laundromat with her big brother. She also learns about wishes. Good illustrations, sweet book.

In the Past: From Trilobites to Dinosaurs to Mammoths in More Than 500 Million Years
David Elliott and Matthew Truman
Read for Librarian Book Group

Dinosaurs! And things that came before them! The illustrations are great, and we learn about the subject matter via amusing short poems such as this:

Dunkleosteus
You weren’t picky
When it came to diet;
if it lived in the ocean,
you would try it.
Which leads me to raise
this delicate question:
Your face—
the unhappy result
of indigestion?

Middle Grade

Ivy Aberdeen’s Letter to the World
Ashley H. Blake
Read for Family Book Group

Ivy Aberdeen’s house blew away in a tornado and now her family lives in a room at a local B&B. Ivy’s got problems. Aside from the lack of a house, her parents are tired from taking care of her baby twin brothers. Sandwiched between them and her older sister, Ivy feels like no one notices her.

And she’s lost her notebook, which is a problem because it’s got drawings that make it obvious that Ivy likes girls. Not only that, but she knows someone has found her notebook because they keep leaving her drawings in her locker.

This book is full of feelings: loss, anger, sadness, hope, worry. Some things happen that seem really unfair. But Ivy’s got some champions: the owner of the B&B and a girl who might be a new friend. Even the person leaving her drawings is encouraging. But who is it?

The Season of Styx Malone
Kekla Magoon
Read for Librarian Book Group

This book delighted me from the early scene when Caleb and his brother trade a very specific item for a bag of fireworks. They know it’s wrong, and they know they are eventually going to get in trouble, but they just can’t help themselves. It’s a bag of fireworks! Illegal ones!

After getting in trouble with their parents, and being assigned the summer-long punishment of doing chores every day with a kid they don’t like, they meet a different kid: Styx Malone.

It’s interesting to have an age gap of six or so years between the brothers and Styx. When you’re ten years old, sixteen seems very far away. The book also sets up an interesting compare/contrast between Caleb’s home life and Styx’s. And there is a lot of adventuring, while keeping things from parents.

This is a book that manages to hit all the feelings, but it doesn’t feel like it is using a sledgehammer to do so.

Tiger vs. Nightmare
Emily Tetri
Read for librarian book group

This graphic novel not only includes a futuristic world populated by Tigers (awesome!) but also a monster under the bed with a twist.

Sweep
Auxier
Read for Librarian Book Group

One of my favorite childhood book is A Little Princess, the tale of Sara Crewe, the most beloved daughter of a wealthy man, reluctantly sent away to a London boarding school. When her father dies, Sara Crewe is plunged into poverty, becoming a servant at her own school.

That book was mentioned in the afterward as one that inspired Jonathan Auxier’s Sweep, along with the Water-babies, which I believe was a book the girls in A Little Princess were reading.

Sweep takes place in Sara Crewe’s London, and the main character is a chimney sweep named Nan Sparrow. The book is clear about the difficulties of her life. Since the man (called the Sweep) who was taking care of her disappeared, she’s been working for a harsh master. The Sweep didn’t leave her much, but he did leave her a tiny glowing bit of coal that keeps her warm.

When her life is in peril, the bit of coal grows into a monster, sent to protect her.

I’m a great fan of golem stories, and the relationship between Nan and the monster is a sweet one. But even with a monster to protect her, danger still lurks at every turn, making for tense, engrossing reading.

Young Adult

The Assassination of Bragwain Spurge
Anderson/Yelchin
Read for Librarian Book Group

As a reader who only likes fantasy if it is set in the present and could happen to me, I wasn’t eager to dive into this book. A goblin hosting an elf visitor after a great war? Ugh! No!

And then, the goblin was so eager to be an excellent host, so excited about trading goblin/elfin histories that when the elf showed up and was a terrible guest, I couldn’t help but love this book.

Not to mention that it has illustrations that are gorgeous and add a completely different dimension to the story.

If you’ve ever had an unpleasant visitor, or if you’ve ever been an unpleasant visitor, this is a book for you.

Grownup Nonfiction

The Soul of Money
Lynne Twist

The Soul of Money provides a different way of looking at money and a different way of looking at wealthy people. Frankly, the second thing is what I needed right now.

There is a big call to action in this book. Lynne Twist wants society to move away from accumulation of things and hording of money. It’s a sentiment I agree with, and I feel like it was something that we were moving toward when the book was published in 2003 but that it is something we’ve gone away from now.

Profit First
Mike Michalowicz

I’m starting my own business (Keen Eye Copyediting & Beta Reading, 3SMReviews.com) and there is so much to learn. Among the many things I have low-grade anxiety about: where should the money go?

How to ensure that I have enough put by for taxes, for expenses, and to allocate for my own pay for my work?

Mike Michalowicz has a plan. He wants all small business owners to put profit first. This book provides a solid framework for the financial architecture of your business. If you are starting a new business, it should be on your reading list. If you have a business, but feel like you never make any money, this book should be on your reading list. Or maybe you should start reading it. Today.

Also, if you already use YNAB, you will have a basic understanding of the Profit First system. And also probably enough skills that will let you skip opening all the bank accounts.

Smart Smut

Bitter Spirits
Jenn Bennett

Last year I discovered and read all three of Jenn Bennett’s YA novels. They were great! Even the one that had what I considered to be a major flaw, I read twice in a row because I liked the characters so much. (And also to decide if I was right about the major flaw.)

And now I see why she is so good a crafting interesting characters and situations combined with female-focused, sex-positive hankypanky. It’s because she cut her teeth writing what I refer to as Smart Smut.

Bitter Spirits is the first in a three-book series focused on a wealthy family living in 1920s San Francisco. This story focuses on Aida, a spirit medium who is in town performing her act at a speakeasy. She runs into Winter Magnusson, a wealthy crab fisherman and bootlegger. Sparks fly. And also, someone is trying to kill Winter.

While the characters seemed like modern people dropped into the 1920s, the plot–involving ghosts and murder–was interesting and Ms. Bennett knows her way around a variety of good sex scenes.

I’m liking the pivot Jenn Bennett has made to YA. And I’m also looking forward to reading the rest of this series, plus another four-book series she’s also written.

Grim Shadows
Jenn Bennett

We continue on with the family and setting established in Bitter Spirits: 1920s San Francisco and the Magnusson family. This book focuses on Winter’s younger brother Lowe Magnusson, headed home from an archaeological dig in Egypt. On the way he meets Hadly Bacall, the daughter of a San Francisco museum curator and a woman who would like to be an archaeologist and curator herself. If only men would stop getting in her way.

Lowe’s not just an archaeologist, he’s also a swindler. Hadly isn’t just a thwarted archaeologist and scholar, she’s also got this curse where if she gets too mad creatures destroy things. (It’s kind of cool, but would be a pain to live with.)

The two must solve a variety of clues left by Hadley’s dead mother to recover pieces of an object that were hidden around San Francisco. While doing that, things get complicated, relationship-wise, and there is much carnal knowledge in a variety of settings.

I found a few plot points to be predictable, but I was into the conundrum of the destroying creatures being tied to anger.

3SMReviews: Top Movies January 2019

(13 Total movies watched)

Synecdoche, New York. Charlie Kaufmann’s weird (in the best way) movie was my favorite home-viewing experience this month.

3SMReviews: Top Movies January 2019

The Squid and the Whale. Every unhappy family…

3SMReviews: The Squid and the Whale

The Disaster Artist. Funny and sad.

3SMReviews: Top Movies January 2019

If Beale Street Could Talk. Sad and pretty

3SMReviews: If Beale Street Could Talk
Stephan James as Fonny and KiKi Layne as Tish star in Barry Jenkins’ IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK, an Annapurna Pictures release.

Gossip Girl, Season 1. So bad it’s good.

3SMReviews: Gossip Girl Season 1

3SMReviews: You should totally watch this. Volume III

Movies I watched in 2018 that were just so good I think you should watch them too. Today’s (non) theme: Hodgepodge


Dads with Daughters

Movies with dad/daughter combinations seem to be more common than movies with moms/daughters. It’s easy to see why. The mom/daughter relationship is hard to get right. (Lady Bird did, though.)

3SMReviews: Hearts Beat Loud

Hearts Beat Loud—Nick Offerman and Kiersy Clemons together in a movie about endings of things. Music is the connection that keeps us together, no matter Kiersy Clemons’ reluctance.

3SMReviews: Leave No Trace

Leave No Trace—Sometimes a dad provides for his daughter the best he can, despite his demons. Ben Foster and Thomasin McKenzie are so very good in this so very good film by Debra Granik

3SMReviews: First Man

First Man—The daughter isn’t on the scene for long. But her death from cancer fuels Ryan Gosling’s Neil Armstrong portrayal.

Also a dad/daughter movie? My 2018 #1 film, Eighth Grade


Documentaries I Loved

I don’t see as many documentaries as I would like too. There are only so many hours in a day and I prefer fiction to nonfiction. I did see these two films, and they were worth my time.

Three Identical Strangers—Every person who has ever fantasized of having a long lost twin will love this movie. If you aren’t convinced, watch the preview.

3SMReviews: Won't You Be My Neighbor?
Fred Rogers appears in Won’t You Be My Neighbor? by Morgan Neville, an official selection of the Documentary Premieres program at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Jim Judkis.

Won’t You Be My Neighbor?—Fred Rogers. A movie theater full of crying people, and yet it’s so cathartic. In these hectic times, you know you want to spend 1.5 hours in Mr. Rogers’ calm presence.


Classics for a reason

Some classics that I watch are like taking medicine. And some have me sitting up saying, “Yes! This film! This is good!” These are those films.

3SMReviews: High Noon
Gary Cooper, Grace Kelly Directed by Fred Zinnemann

High Noon—The movie that had me wondering just what exactly was going on in 1952. (It was blacklisting.) Even if you don’t know about that subject, this is a tense film.

3SMReviews: Witness for the Prosecution

Witness for the Prosecution—Best viewed when you don’t know much about it, and there’s a fun disclaimer at the end where they ask you to avoid spoilers when talking about the movie, except they didn’t have the term spoiler. (I can recall when that term came into use, and boy was it a handy language innovation.)


Defying categorization. Still good.

Sometimes you get to the end of your categorization and you can’t find a common thread. Wait! The common thread is women as lesser beings. But that’s too much of a bummer to make a heading.

Battle of the Sexes—I initially avoided this film becuase I wasn’t up to the normalized sexist attitudes of the 1970s. But the movie was complex in a way I wasn’t expected and was well worth my time. My DVD copy had an interview with Billie Jean King that I suggest searching out.

3SMReviews: The Gift
(L-R) REBECCA HALL, JASON BATEMAN and JOEL EDGERTON star in THE GIFT FACEBOOK.COM/GIFTMOVIE TWITTER@GIFTMOVIE INSTAGRAM@GIFTMOVIE #GIFTMOVIE

The Gift—A psychological thriller that is nearly a perfect film. So. Incredibly. Creepy.

3SMReviews: Wind River

Wind River—I initially avoided this film because I was annoyed that a movie set on an Indian reservation was written by a white dude and stars white people. I eventually set those things aside and I found a taut thriller that calls attention to the many unsolved murders of Native American women.

Are you looking for the Volumes I and II?
Find Volume I here
And Volume II here