Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Mudhouse Sabbath (Lauren Winner)

Winner is a committed Christian who converted from Judaism, and offers in this short book a series of meditations on what the practices of Judaism can offer to Christians. Not in the realm of theology, but in how to bring faith into one's everyday life. For example, she doesn't advocate literally keeping kosher, but does argue that such a practice helps us think about what and how we eat as part of our relationship with the world and with God. The strict observances of the Sabbath, forcing one to disengage from the busy world and direct one's thoughts to the life of the mind, can bring mindfulness and calm to our frantic lives. I was particularly moved by the chapter on mourning and grief, with the detailed pattern imposed on the grief-stricken that allow for a gradual reclaiming over the span of a full year of the life one has lost with the loved one, supported at every step by the entire community. There is a lot of truth here that i was happy to learn about.

Sunday, April 19, 2015

The Suicide Index (Joan Wickersham)

The author circles through the thoughts, feelings, actions, and images relating to her father's death decades ago from suicide. The book is truly structured as an index (the chapter titles are in outline form, alphabetized), which fits with her overall theme of trying to make sense of her father's action, to give it some kind of rational form. Wickersham doesn't try to dodge the unpleasant responses of everyone involved, looking squarely at how her image of her father shifted, how her mother struggled to regain her balance, how hard it was to talk with her young son, how survivors of suicide connected to share their silent grief. The book confidently finds the line between honesty and bitterness, between love and sentiment, as the author acknowledges the ambiguity of her situation and the lack of real answers. Highly recommended.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Hounded (Kevin Hearne)

I enjoyed this contemporary fantasy story, with an ancient druid living in Arizona as a 20-something dealer in arcane books and tea, fending off the attention of Celtic gods with the help of other gods, witches, werewolves, and his own earth magic. The hip, pop-culture attitude contrasts nicely with the old legends and dire swords. This is the beginning of a series that I expect to follow, at least for a while.

Sunday, April 5, 2015

The Girl With All the Gifts (M. R. Carey)

If I'm not careful, I'll develop a theme of reading zombie stories where the protagonist is a good zombie, bent on protecting the humans from the bad zombies. That was the theme in Raising Stony Mayhall (Daryl Gregory), and it's the theme here. It has all the usual zombie tropes (relentless, mindless creatures hunting human flesh, humans huddling in enclaves, fleeing across a world of decay and ruin) even though it never actually uses the word zombie. The main character is a child who, despite being infected with the zombie parasite, still has a mind and a strong sense of morality. How can she live with the humans who increasingly learn to care about her? How can she learn to live with herself? Is there any future for humanity, and what could that look like? This book doesn't have the depth of Stony, but it was engaging, thrilling, and moving. I completely enjoyed it.