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4thace

4thace@books.theunseen.city

Joined 1 year, 1 month ago

I try to review every book I finish. On Mastodon: noc.social/@Zerofactorial

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Lisa Cron: Wired for story (2012, Ten Speed Press) 4 stars

"This guide reveals how writers can take advantage of the brain's hard-wired responses to story …

An overview of what works in writing a novel

4 stars

This book had its origin in a TED talk where the author presented her insights on mind patterns writers get into. The identification of patterns that aspiring authors commonly hear or get into on their own is useful and clear. Some of the examples she gives to illustrate the points are jokey and silly but the idea is to make them stick in mind better. this book came out over ten years ago and I had already heard a lot of the points it made before back when I was more actively writing fiction, but there were others that hit me in a new way. A lot of the issues brought up aren't currently at the front of my mind right now so they were welcome. There is an emphasis throughout on what works emotionally in a story rather than what gets included as part of rote practice, which I …

reviewed Normal People by Sally Rooney

Sally Rooney, Sally Rooney: Normal People (Paperback, 2018, Faber & Faber) 3 stars

Connell and Marianne grow up in the same small town in rural Ireland. The similarities …

A story of two young people's trouble with recognizing their bond

4 stars

This book came out not long after Conversations with Friends but it seemed to have a quite different structure, concentrating on the two main characters, Marianne and Connell. At the beginning they are in their secondary school days and first come together, they leave their small town to go to Dublin to attend the same college where they drift apart a few times, achieve their successes, get into trouble, and by the end come to a new understanding of their situation. Like the earlier book and the book Beautiful World, Where Are You? a few years later, this book wove in ideas about economics and politics to make one think about how these affected the ways the characters behave. But I think it was more psychological considerations such as childhood trauma, depression, and a will to self-harm that played even greater roles in shaping them. The other characters appearing, the …

Italo Calvino: Invisible cities. (1974, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich) 4 stars

"Kublai Khan does not necessarily believe everything Marco Polo says when he describes the cities …

Capsule descriptions of dozens of bizarre cities

5 stars

This little book takes the form of very short sections a page or two long describing either the frame story of a meeting between Kublai Khan and explorer Marco Polo who describes his travels through Central asia, or the fanciful cities he claims to have found there. These are titled with enigmatic tags such as "Cities and memory," "Cities and signs," "Thin cities," "Continuous cities" and the like. Each place is dominated by a single dream-like feature governing its citizens. Some come off as fantasy, others so dark as to constitute horror, while still others concern themselves with some odd philosophical point. There is no plot, not even in the frame story sections, no single theme, and the two named characters are given only the slightest of personal qualities. I would say that this is less a novel or series of short stories than a literary construction with fabulistic features. …

After his early work, it all took a turn

4 stars

I received this biography of a living person as an Advanced Reader's Copy from Netgalley in exchange for my honest review.

The author is a science communicator working primarily in television, but with some non-fiction books to his credit. He reports spending six years working on this biography based on his interviews with the subject and written and verbal communications from those who knew in the course of his life. It is interesting to see how Roger Penrose was raised by parents who had unusual emotional relations which happened to coincide with a kind of mental gift at an early age. He came across his love of geometry and a talent for visualization that stayed with him as his greatest strength over his career. There were also rivalries among his siblings and schoolmates that spurred him to apply himself to abstract thought in ways he might not have pursued all …

Lewis Hyde: The Gift (Paperback, 1999, Trafalgar Square) 4 stars

Starting with the premise that the work of art is a gift and not a …

The tension between creativity and capitalism

4 stars

This book had been on my To Be Read list for many years waiting for me to devote some time to the artistic mindset. It pits artistic creativity against the demands of the capitalist market and looks at what accommodations art needs to continue being lively. In past societies organized around gift exchange as a marker of prestige, those who produced art were often seen as channeling a gift to the entire community, not judged by how much price they could command. The gift economy connected people and affirmed relationships. The book takes an in depth look at the thoughts of two American poets, Walt Whitman and Ezra Pound, to see how they fared in the 19th and 20th centuries as our present day economy was being set in place. What is pretty clear is how neither one really did well by market standards, even while they were lauded by …

Robert Asprin: Thieves' World (Thieves World) (1984, Ace Books) 3 stars

They all play the part of hero, they are all-powerful on a stage that is …

A vintage volume of urban swords and sorcery stories

3 stars

This anthology dates back to 1979. It is a shared-world fantasy, one of the first, set in the city of Sanctuary where swordplay and sorcery are not unknown. this first book in the series has stories written by eight prominent fantasy writers with overlapping settings and characters, though quite different styles. There was no attempt to construct a single narrative arc from these, so it reads as an anthology of related short stories. The conflict is interpersonal, not human vs. nature or human vs. monster.

Like many tales from the 1970s, there are alements that take a modern reader aback because of changes in societal norms. There is a lot of violence, but not as much as a person raised on rough videogames might expect. There are allusions to gender roles which were acceptable then that many might find offensive or demeaning now. In particular the last story in the …