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What I’ve Read:

Tender is the Flesh
-Agustina Bazterrica
This book is a very detailed story of a man who works in a meat factory for industrialized cannibalism. It’s not shy or a surprise – it’s a story very much about what deciding to eat people has done to this man and his society, in minute and careful detail. The flesh is tender because society has decided to raise human beings for meat, and he works in a slaughterhouse. It’s absolutely as graphic as any PETA ad, but with the significant addition of being much more grounded. The story is absolutely brutal and told from a third person perspective very focused on the main character as he moves thru this world where everyone has made their peace with the fact that they are using real human beings for food.

This is not a redemption story – this reality slowly destroys the soul. And the character’s perspective is a great element because you watch this character’s disgust and dis-ease in all of these situations where this way this violence against other people has been legitimized – I swear one character in this book is just Dracula with the serial numbers filed off – and you think, from his internal narration, that you’re in the mind of someone who will *do* something, who will push back, and the whole book makes so clear that it is so impossible to stop this. There is no way out. It is DEEPLY upsetting and extremely well done. A skillful book making a really good point in the most upsetting way possible.  I am glad it was as short as it was. 


We Have Always Lived in the Castle – Shirley Jackson – A great novel, I am glad I read it. I would say this book has an ‘untwist’ in that, yes, information is revealed to the reader that might well be a surprise, but it doesn’t actually change how the story or characters are going to act. In some ways, it feels like a wish fulfillment in comparison Jackson’s stories. In the one I have been reading, often, a character with an anxious disposition is maneuvered into an uncomfortable and unjust position and must quietly endure unkindness from people with more social power. In this book, the bully from those stories thinks that he has the upperhand – and oh sweet goodness, is he out of his league! Pleasure to read.

What I’m Reading:
The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York– Robert Caro – like 7% - I jumped on the 99% Invisible bandwagon where they are “Breaking Down the Power Broker” by reading Robert Caro’s book slowly over the course of a year. It’s really well written and the interview with the author for the first episode was a pleasure.

Reading schedule -
Episode 1 — January 19 — Introduction through Chapter 5
Episode 2 — February 16 — Chapters 6 through 10
Episode 3 — March 15 — Chapters 11 through 15
Episode 4 — April 19 — Chapters 16 through 20
Episode 5 — May 17 — Chapters 21 through 24
Episode 6 — June 21 — Chapters 25 through 26
Episode 7 — July 19 — Chapters 27 through 32
Episode 8 — August 16 — Chapters 33 through 34
Episode 9 — September 20 — Chapters 35 through 38
Episode 10 — October 18 — Chapters 39 through 41
Episode 11 — November 15 — Chapters 42 through 46
Episode 12 — December 20 — Chapters 47 through 50

Sabriel – Garth Nix – 27% - Necromancer book club – really good book to re-read, enjoying the technical skill that Nix brings to the book quite a lot.

Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation Vol 3 – 35% God, this part is a bit brutal. The books leaves out a lot of the details about the attack on Lotus Pier that end up getting a fuller treatment in The Untamed, so I have some images in my head about how to handle this. I feel a bit torn about Madame Yu - the narrative is so clearly taking a social position of, 'This woman is bad because she is aggressive and won't be secondary to her husband and resents her lack of power in this patriarchal situation' so I am deeply annoyed that Madam Yu doesn't get much respect from the narrative. But those traits of frustration at her own powerlessness do turn out to mean that she is deeply cruel to a child in her care. It's a very Catelyn Stark situation. 

The Game of Kings – Dorothy Dunnett – Dense – recommended by the Be the Serpent kids. I started this and I am honestly not sure I am going to continue because this is one of those dense reads that, I think, would be really fun to read with the Dunnett Companion, and I don't know I have the spare brain right now to wallow in it. 

It Came from the Closet: Queer Reflections in Horror - Joe Vallese (Editor) – SPN Seminar – 38% -On hold during Oscars season 

The Lottery and Other Stories by Shirley Jackson – 41%

What I’ll Read Next:

When Women Were Dragons - Xing Book Club
Lord of The Rings – in keeping with my vague sense that I should actually read the big books that everyone talks about!

Owned and need to read: Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology, California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon
kitewithfish: (Default)
Tiny Life Update - I've been sick all weekend and took three days off work to recover from what I hope is just an annoying cold. (PCR test taken and results coming in soon, tho, so hopefully I can rest assured about that.)

Since I was a bit too sick to focus on books, I binged watched few things - The Untamed (Netflix)  and A League of Their Own (Amazon) - it's hard to say which was more gay. I started Untamed back in 2020, of all times, and it's only been with some cultural handholding and fannish support that I finished it recently - but, man, did they NAIL an ending there.  A League of Their Own was wonderful as a period piece, and I think they did a fantastic job with the cast and chemistry and the complexity and joy of being a queer woman in America in 1943. I heartily recommend it. 

What I've Read
A Strange and Stubborn Endurance - Foz Meadows - I unabashedly loved this book. The marketing talks about the set up - a semi-medieval/semi-magical setting where with a surprise arranged marriage between two men. That's definitely there and I don't want to undersell it - but the thing that this book really excelled at was portraying a character recovering from multiple kinds of trauma who is hurt by those things in a lasting way, but also really intelligent and strong and smart and kind, who is absolutely adored by the man he's assigned to marry. I honestly love the dynamic between the two main characters, the writing gets the POV down great, and I read this in a day.   Absolutely captivating for me. 

I read some fanfic, too!

an act too often neglected by Ariaste (Untamed fanfic, 60K, Meng Yao/Lan XiChen modern au) This fic was an absolute delight to read just after finishing the Netflix series because these two characters spend literally the last five episodes of the series having an emotional breakdown of their complicated relationship, including attempted murder and tearful confessions of devotion while impaled on a sword. I really truly thought that fandom was overstating their whole deal and I was WRONG. This fic is about two much happier versions of these characters finding out what it's like to truly want someone for the first time, and how to translate that into some deeply amazing smut. Ariaste is a published author and I adored her last book (Alexandra Rowland, A Taste of Gold and Iron, 2022) and if you read that, this is a great next story. 

To Earthward by blackkat, gh0st_rose - (Star Wars Clone Wars cartoon au, Fox/Quinlan Vox) This is a horror story about an eldritch forest that mind controls people, and, also, a love story about a policeman who cannot take a vacation and a spy. Also really funny at times. 


 
What I'm Reading
Battles of the Linguist Mages - Scotto More - Still great, slightly slower now that we've met God and he's collaborating with aliens trying to stop the sovereign nation of California from enacting mind control on the world at large. It's kind of impossible to spoil this book in any way that matters. 

Heir to the Empire - Timothy Zahn - the first Thrawn novel, now out of Star Wars canon, but beloved as a historical artifact. 

Homeworld Elegy - Ashcroft_Writes - Clone wars cartoon Cad Bane centric AU - great Duros worldbuilding. 

What I'll Read Next

Two Old Women - Velma Wallis 
California Bones - Have put this one off too long

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kitewithfish

May 2025

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