Reading Round-Up: July 2020

Reading Round-Up Header

Reading is my oldest and favorite hobby.  I literally can’t remember a time in my life when I didn’t love to curl up with a good book.  Here are my reads for July, 2020

Lumberjanes, Vol. 14: X Marks the Spot, Campfire Songs, and Bonus Tracks, by various authors – Finishing up my lumber-binge (at least until later this month, when Volume 15 comes out) I enjoyed X Marks the Spot – because everyone loves a good treasure hunt story, especially when it has a Greek myth component.  The ‘Janes embark on a treasure hunt and find a broken statue, which they reassemble (of course) and which immediately threatens to drain all of the magic from the camp (of course).  Diane makes an appearance, and hijinks ensue.  Good fun!  Campfire Songs and Bonus Tracks are two volumes of short “stories.”  As with all short story collections, there were some that I really enjoyed and some that didn’t speak to me quite as much – to be expected.  The contribution by Faith Erin Hicks (can’t remember which volume) was a highlight.  All in all – not as complex or fun as the standard ‘Janes material, but a nice way to spend more time in the world of Hardcore Lady-Types.

Sword of Bone, by Anthony Rhodes – After a month and a half of reading nothing but comics, I felt ready for some regular ol’ words on a page, and I turned to another tried-and-true slump-breaker – a memoir.  I’ve been meaning to get to Sword of Bone, one of the classic forgotten memoirs in the Slightly Foxed bibliography, for quite some time.  After all, who can resist a book described as an “amusing” book about Dunkirk?  Not me.  And it was amusing – if you’ve never chuckled at a description of the Maginot Line, go get this – and the Dunkirk chapters at the very end were absolutely gripping.  Slightly Foxed hits it out of the park every time, and this volume was a fabulous read.

Tory Heaven, or Thunder on the Right, by Marghanita Laski – As I meander through my own shelves, I’ve just been following whatever strikes me as a reading craving.  As I finished up the last few chapters of Sword of Bone, I got a hankering to read Tory Heaven, one of the newer Persephone releases.  It’s a sort-of-dystopian imagination of post-war England and I was here for all of it.  James Leigh-Smith, antihero, has been marooned on a desert island for several years.  Upon being rescued, he hears the distressing news that the Socialists have swept to nationwide power in England.  Oh noes!  Fortunately for James, that’s old news, and he arrives to find a Tory utopia in which classes are rigidly assigned to strata – A through E.  James – public school gentleman, son of landed gentry – is an A, naturally, and delighted with his new status.  But all is not as it seems, of course!  I don’t want to tell you any more and spoil it, but this was tense, dramatic, and good fun.

Wigs on the Green, by Nancy Mitford – Guess I was on something of a midcentury English right wing nutjob kick?  Wigs on the Green is Nancy Mitford’s irreverent send-up of British fascists in the 1930s.  Mitford herself suppressed the publication of the book for a long time, because her family – including sisters Unity and Diana – did not universally appreciate being mocked on the page.  The mocking was relatively gentle (Mitford could have been tougher on her Diana character, and the Unity character was straight-up lovable and funny – my 2020 reader’s eye, with its 20/20 hindsight, disapproved) but it was an interesting read for sure.

Only six books in July… that’s partly due to the fact that after Wigs on the Green, I picked up Mary Barton.  Elizabeth Gaskell novels are always something of a time commitment – although not as much so as, say, George Eliot.  August will probably be “light” for the same reason.  But it was a good month of reading, even if not a particularly packed one.  I enjoyed everything I picked up and it was a nice change to just follow my bliss, so to speak, and just read whatever happened to be calling to me in the moment.  I’ll definitely continue that trend into August, I think.

How was your July in books?

Classics Club Spin #24

Happy… Wednesday, whoops.  Sorry I missed you on Monday.  I had a big work thing that morning and I was completely consumed with it – to the point of stressing about it for days leading up, and dreaming about it all night.  Needless to say, everything else (other work and personal) flew out of my head until that was over.  And now it is, and obviously I’m behind on everything that I neglected while I was buried under that project.  I’ll have a regular Monday post for you next week, promise.

In the meantime, it recently occurred to me to check and see if there was another Classics Club spin coming up.  It’s been a long time – years? – since I participated in one.  As a reminder, The Classics Club periodically runs “spin” events in which participants list twenty unread books from their personal challenge lists on their blogs, and then the Club “spins” a (virtual) disk to come up with a number, and whatever number book that is on your list, you read within a prescribed period.  I’ve been struggling to pick up any book as the pandemic stretches on and life gets busier and busier, so the timing was just right – for me – for another spin, and as luck would have it there’s a new one posted.  The Classics Club will announce the spin number on August 9, and the reading period lasts until September 30 – plenty of time!

So without further preface, here’s my list for Classics Club Spin #24:

Five Chunksters

  • 1. The Greek Myths, by Robert Graves
  • 2. East of Eden, by John Steinbeck
  • 3. Framley Parsonage, by Anthony Trollope
  • 4. The Three Musketeers, by Alexandre Dumas
  • 5. Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens

Five by Women

  • 6. Delta Wedding, by Eudora Welty
  • 7. The House of Mirth, by Edith Wharton
  • 8. The Song of the Lark, by Willa Cather
  • 9. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, by Anne Bronte
  • 10. The Professor, by Charlotte Bronte

Five by BIPOC Authors

  • 11. Things Fall Apart, by Chinua Achebe
  • 12. Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison
  • 13. The Color Purple, by Alice Walker
  • 14. Beloved, by Toni Morrison
  • 15. Song of Solomon, by Toni Morrison

Five I Can’t Wait To Read

  • 16. The Worshipful Lucia, by E. F. Benson
  • 17. Sylvia’s Lovers, by Elizabeth Gaskell
  • 18. The Pickwick Papers, by Charles Dickens
  • 19. The Silmarillion, by J. R. R. Tolkien
  • 20. Agnes Grey, by Anne Bronte

There we have it!  It was actually a bit of a challenge even making this list, because I’ve been making surprisingly good progress on my list (currrent challenge scheduled for completion in July, 2023).  I’m down to not much more than twenty unread, total.  But this should be a good spark to knock off one of the books that’s lingered on the list – and if the spin choice ends up being one of the few I don’t own, it will also be a good spark to go get a library card at my new local library (still on the to-do list, post move).  The choice will be announced on August 9, and I’ll let you know next Wednesday which of these titles I will be picking up next.

Happy (classic) reading to all of us!