Sunday Post #83 – 03/19/2023

Sunday Post

The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by
Kimba @ Caffeinated Book Reviewer.
It’s a chance to share news.
A post to recap the past week on your blog,
showcase books and things we have received.
Share news about what is coming up
on your blog
for the week ahead.
See rules here: Sunday Post Meme

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Nothing really special this week, except I am happy I managed to find the time, in the midst of lots of hours of teaching (French, online), to finish the lecture I’ll be giving to the sisterhood at my church on March 25.
And one result of exhaustion is reading more manga and comics!

I only posted once since last Sunday:

📚JUST READ/LISTENED TO 🎧 

Arvo Pärt_Out of Silence

📚 Arvo Pärt: Out of Silence,
by Peter C. Bouteneff
Published in 2015
231 pages
Nonfiction / Biography / Music / Eastern Orthodoxy

This was really excellent, and I need some time to write a review.
I really enjoyed how the author closely connected Arvo’s art with Orthodox theology.
Though his section of tintinnabuli could have been a bit clearer.
I discovered so many layers in his music I didn’t know were there.
Definitely making me want to relisten to so many pieces.

Éclipses japonaises📚 Éclipses japonaises,
by Éric Faye
2016
240 pages
Historical fiction

I finished this one late Saturday night, so I haven’t had time to write a review.
This is an excellent and quite eye-opening historical novel focusing on (mostly Japanese) people kidnapped and taken to North Korea, to use them as teachers to teach Korean spies to speak and behave as real Japanese people.
And possibly to perform some “special missions.”
This is very good, and it confirms I need to read more books by the author of Nagasaki.

Department of Mind Blowing Theories

📚 Department of
Mind-blowing Theories,

by Tom Gauld
2020
160 pages
Comics / Humor/ Science

This author/illustrator is absolutely amazing!
This time, this is not about authors/books/editors, but about science, all kinds of sciences, and all kinds of invention.
It’s both so hilarious and so smartly done, plus the illustrations are fabulous.
Very neat and detailed, the type of art I really enjoy.

Baking With Kafka

 

📚 Baking With Kafka,
by Tom Gauld
2017
160 pages
Comics / Humor/ Book about books

Maybe I like this volume slightly less than the others, because it’s not on one particular theme. And I’m afraid there are a few pages I actually didn’t understand.
Still, it’s always great to open a book by Tom Gaud: I love his humor (here on books, pop culture, and various themes) and his beautiful art is totally on target for the messages he wants to convey.
This is the kind of books I would love to own and revisit often, but I’m fortunate that my public library is walking distance from my house!
If you want to give a beautiful and smart book, Tom’s books are gold, lol.

Astra lost in Space 5

 

📚 Astra Lost in Space, #5
by Kenta Shinohara
彼方のアストラ 5
was originally published in 2018
Translated from the Japanese by
Adrienne Beck
12/4/2018, by VIZ Media LLC
288 pages
Manga / Science-fiction

Oh wow, this was a fabulous series.
I really enjoy all the events, discoveries, revelations of the last volume, and how things turned out at the end.
This is a very positive series, illustrating the difficult stages of growing up, but how a group of friends can stick together to make it eaier and even enjoyable – even if some pain is involved.
It’s also about finding one’s own identity, and learning to think – which may imply not always taking for granted what adults have told us.
There are very few books these days inviting people to think, this was refreshing.
There’s also the hope that newer generations could find better solutions to major problems than what previous generations did.
I also loved all the scifi and scientific details.
My only regret: this is already the last book in the series.
Shinohara says it’s the first time he writes scifi manga, he should definitely keep going, plus the last pages make me hope more discoveries could be in store for at least a couple of the main characters.

What's Michael Fatcat collection 1📚  What’s Michael?:
Fatcat Collection Volume 1,
by Makoto Kobayashi
Volumes 1-6
originally published 1990-2000
Translated from the Japanese by
Alan Gleason &  Hisashi Kotobuki
2/25/2020, by Dark Horse Manga
528 pages
Manga / Cats / Humor

This is a great collection of the first 6 volumes of the What’s Michael? manga series – though this collection is not presented in the usual manga manner, in the sense that you read it as a Western book, from left to right.
It’s full of hilarious details on cats’ personalities and quirky behavior, and common scenes for cat owners.
There are really funny passages, like with these 2 tough Yakuza members: Yakuza K has a cat, but works hard to hide the fact from his rival Yakuza M, for fear of looking too weak or sentimental.
The drawings are so well done, very detailed and with clean lines.
Every cat owner should have this book!
I hope to be able to read volume 2 of the fatcat collection soon.

Not done yet with my long but fabulous current audio – see below.

📚  CURRENTLY READING/LISTENING TO 🎧 

Why Read the Classics📚 Why Read The Classics?
by Italo Calvino
Perché leggere i classici
was published in 1991
306 pages
Nonfiction / Book on Books

Hmm, I don’t think I have read any pages from this one this week, too tired I guess.
Though it’s really good
and I’ll definitely keep going.

I am currently reading the essay on Orlando furioso, an Italian epic poem by Ariosto (early 16th century).

L'Arabe du future #1📚 L’Arabe du futur :
Une jeunesse au Moyen-Orient, 1978–1984
(L’Arabe du futur, #1)
by Riad Sattouf
Published in 2014
158 pages
Available in English as
The Arab of the Future:
A Childhood in the Middle East, 1978-1984
French nonfiction / Graphic novel / Memoir / History
Reading with French student F.

Almost done with this one. Really fascinating to see the evolution of his father’s ideas, as he decides to take his young family back to Syria.
Some scenes of daily life are quite appaling!

The Arab of the Future, the #1 French best-seller, tells the unforgettable story of Riad Sattouf’s childhood, spent in the shadows of 3 dictators—Muammar Gaddafi, Hafez al-Assad, and his father.
In striking, virtuoso graphic style that captures both the immediacy of childhood and the fervor of political idealism, Riad Sattouf recounts his nomadic childhood growing up in rural France, Gaddafi’s Libya, and Assad’s Syria–but always under the roof of his father, a Syrian Pan-Arabist who drags his family along in his pursuit of grandiose dreams for the Arab nation.

 

Babel 🎧  Babel, Or the Necessity of Violence:
An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution,
by R. F. Kuang
8/23/2022
544 pages
22 hours
Narrated by Chris Lew Kum Hoi
Fantasy / Historical fiction

OMG, I can see now why all the hype on this one, and definitely well deserved!
I love linguistics, and I almost made it my career, so there’s so much to enjoy for me in this book.
I love all the explanations, examples between languages, and data on research.
The author did an awesome job at finding a fantasy element that would fit with languages and with world history – here the growth and decline of the Birtish Empire. A very brilliant idea.
And the characters are so well described, you can’t but feel with them.
I’m glad I decided to listen to it, the narrator Chris Lew Kum Hoi is excellent, plus other voices insert words pronounced correctly in various foreign languages. This is unusual in an audio production and so so refreshing!

📚  BOOK UP NEXT 📚 

Les trois mousquetaires📚 Les trois mousquetaires,
by Alexandre Dumas
1844
896 pages
Historical fiction
I’ll be reading it with French student E.
It counts for The Classics Club

I read this novel a few decades ago, and at this point, I was actually not considering rereading it.
But my French student E. thought it would be good for her to read it, as she bumped into so many references to this novel.
I’m actually delighted to revisit it with her!

“Alexandre Dumas’s most famous tale— and possibly the most famous historical novel of all time.
This swashbuckling epic of chivalry, honor, and derring-do, set in France during the 1620s, is richly populated with romantic heroes, unattainable heroines, kings, queens, cavaliers, and criminals in a whirl of adventure, espionage, conspiracy, murder, vengeance, love, scandal, and suspense.
Dumas transforms minor historical figures into larger- than-life characters: the Comte d’Artagnan, an impetuous young man in pursuit of glory; the beguilingly evil seductress “Milady”; the powerful and devious Cardinal Richelieu; the weak King Louis XIII and his unhappy queen—and, of course, the three musketeers themselves, Athos, Porthos, and Aramis, whose motto “all for one, one for all” has come to epitomize devoted friendship. With a plot that delivers stolen diamonds, masked balls, purloined letters, and, of course, great bouts of swordplay, The Three Musketeers is eternally entertaining.”

📚  LAST BOOK ADDED TO MY GOODREADS TBR 📚 

 

Fenêtres sur le Japon

📚 Fenêtres sur le Japon : ses écrivains et cinéastes, by Éric Faye
2021
330 pages
Nonfiction

I did mention above how I definitely wanted to read more books by Faye.
So I added this one to my TBR: a portrait of old and new Japan, through its famous authors and movies. Perfect for me.

📚 MAILBOX MONDAY 📚 

A History of the Island

📚 A History of the Island, by Eugene Vodolazkin
Оправдание Острова
was first published in 2020
Translated from the Russian by Lisa C. Hayden
To be published on May 23, 2023 by Plough Publishing
320 pages
Historical fiction

I enjoyed a lot Laurus, so when I discovered there was a type of sequel, to be soon published in English, and that it was available through Netgalley, I didn’t hesitate.
My thanks to the publisher!

“Monks devious and devout – and an age-defying royal pair – chronicle the history of their fictional island in this witty critique of Western civilization and history itself.
Eugene Vodolazkin, internationally acclaimed novelist and scholar of medieval literature, returns with a satirical parable about European and Russian history, the myth of progress, and the futility of war.
This ingenious novel, described by critics as a coda to his bestselling Laurus, is presented as a chronicle of an island from medieval to modern times. The island is not on the map, but it is real beyond doubt. It cannot be found in history books, yet the events are painfully recognizable. The monastic chroniclers dutifully narrate events they witness: quests for power, betrayals, civil wars, pandemics, droughts, invasions, innovations, and revolutions. The entries mostly seem objective, but at least one monk simultaneously drafts and hides a “true” history, to be discovered centuries later. And why has someone snipped out a key prophesy about the island’s fate?
These chronicles receive commentary today from an elderly couple who are the island’s former rulers. Prince Parfeny and Princess Ksenia are truly extraordinary: they are now 347 years old. Eyewitnesses to much of their island’s turbulent history, they offer sharp-eyed observations on the changing flow of time and their people’s persistent delusions. Why is the royal couple still alive? Is there a chance that an old prophecy comes to pass and two righteous persons save the island from catastrophe?
In the tradition of Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose, Julian Barnes’s A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters, and Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant, Vodolazkin is at his best recasting history, in all its hubris and horror, by finding the humor in its absurdity. For readers with an appetite for more than a dry, rational, scientific view of what motivates, divides, and unites people, A History of the Island conjures a world still suffused with mystical powers.

Please share what books you just received at Mailbox Monday

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HOW WAS YOUR WEEK?
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2022: July wrap-up

JULY 2022 WRAP-UP

I’m slowly going into reading more of my TBRs, and it pays with fabulous books. So I’m devouring more and faster.
I’m currently 11 books ahead of schedule (67% done) to read 120 books this year.
Also, looks like I’m almost done with my 3rd list of classics for The Classics Club, with 131/137 books – in less than two years, instead of the five years projected.

And I managed to publish as well as visit a good number of posts for Paris in July.

📚 Here is what I read in July:

12 books:
6 in print 
with 1,544 pages, a daily average of 49 pages/day
6 in audio
= 43H25
, a daily average of 1H24/ day

5 in mystery:

  1. Clouds of Witness, by Dorothy Sayers – audiobook, counts for The Classics Club
  2. A is For Alibi, by Sue Grafton – counts for my 2022 TBR Pile Reading Challenge
  3. L’Écluse n.1 (Maigret #18) – read with a French student,
    counts for The Classics Club
  4. Confessions, by Kanae Minato – audiobook
  5. Fer-de-Lance (Nero Wolfe #1), by Rex Stout – audiobook, counts for The Classics Club

2 in science-fiction:

  1. Upgrade, by Blake Crouch – received for review
  2. The First Men in the Moon, by H. G. Wells – counts for The Classics Club

2 in literary fiction:

  1. The Martins, by David Foenkinos – received for review
  2. Le Grand Meaulnes, by Alain-Fournier – read in French with a bunch of friends on Discord

1 in historical fiction:

  1. Laurus, by Eugene Vodolazkin

1 in play:

  1. Cyrano de Bergerac, by Edmond Rostand – audiobook + movie, in French

1 in nonfiction:

  1. Down and Out in Paris and London, by George Orwell – audiobook, counts for The Classics Club

This month, it was very very hard to pick 2 winners, as I read so many awesome books.

MY FAVORITE BOOKS THIS PAST MONTH

Confessions  Upgrade

READING CHALLENGES & RECAP

Classics Club: 131/137 (from November 2020-until November 2025)
Japanese Literature Challenge: 9/12 books – During the year: 11
2022 TBR Pile Reading Challenge: 6/12 books
2022 books in translation reading challenge
: 19/10+

Total of books read in 2022 = 80/120 (67%)
Number of books added to my TBR this past month = 20

 OTHER BOOK  REVIEWED THIS PAST MONTH

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow

NO BOOK RECEIVED FOR REVIEW

MOST POPULAR BOOK REVIEW THIS PAST MONTH

Talk to me

click on the cover to access my review

MOST POPULAR POST THIS PAST MONTH
– NON BOOK REVIEW –

Year 2022: Six in Six

BOOK BLOG THAT BROUGHT ME MOST TRAFFIC THIS PAST MONTH

Thyme for Tea
please go visit, there are a lot of good things there!

TOP COMMENTERS 

Marianne at Let’s Read
Deb at ReaderBuzz
Tammy at Books, Bones, & Buffy
please go and visit them,
they have great blogs

BLOG MILESTONES 

2,561 posts
over 5,650 followers
over 255,140 hits

📚 📚 📚

Come back tomorrow to see the titles I’ll be reading in August

How was YOUR month of July?

2022-Monthly-Wrap-Up-Round-Up400

Nicole at Feed Your Fiction Addiction
has created a Month In Review meme
where you can link your monthly recap posts
Thanks Nicole!

Sunday Post #63 – 7/24/2022

Sunday Post

The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by
Kimba @ Caffeinated Book Reviewer.
It’s a chance to share news.
A post to recap the past week on your blog,
showcase books and things we have received.
Share news about what is coming up
on your blog
for the week ahead.
See rules here: Sunday Post Meme

*** 

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Sunday Salon    Stacking the Shelves  Mailbox Monday2

 It's Monday! What Are You Reading2  IMWAYR  WWW Wednesdays 2

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#itsmonday #IMWAYR
#WWWWednesday #WWWWednesdays

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Here is what I posted this past week.

The advantage of reading many books at a time is when you manage to finish a bunch at the same time. So, here is what I finished this past week:

📚  JUST READ/LISTENED TO 🎧 

The First Men in the Moon

📚  The First Men in the Moon, by H. G. Wells
Science-fiction
Published in 1901

It counts for The Classics Club
and for the 2022 TBR Pile Reading Challenge

I got this classic at the book sale a few years ago!
I was very surprised when I started reading how funny it was, I was definitely not expecting that from this classic scifi. I learned then that it’s a satire on Jules Verne’s novel on the same topic – so now I’m rereading this one, that I read as a kid back in France, to see how Wells varies from Verne.
Keep in mind this was written in 1901, so it was extremely fascinating to see how we imagined the moon back then, what you could find there, on or in it.
There are awesome passages on the social description of the creatures there, and major criticism about human society, especially our love for war – a thing lunar people cannot fathom at all and find so absurd. And 13 years later, we were at it again…
And still in 2022…
This is really an excellent classic scifi.

Le Grand Meaulnes

📚  Le Grand Meaulnes, by Alain-Fournier
Literary fiction
Published in 1913

It counts for The Classics Club

When I reread it ten years ago, I said you could not see WWI looming.
Actually, it struck me this time how you could feel it! Mostly with all these teens and young people refusing to grow up.
So I guess this time I saw the mysterious and enchanting domain in a very different light, still romantic, but with lots of shadows.

Laurus

📚  Laurus, by Eugene Vodolazkin
Historical fiction
Published in 2014

I checked out this book at my library a few years ago, but didn’t take time to read it. So I was thrilled a group of people at church decided to read it together and gave me the real incentive to read it with them.

It is a fascinating historical novel set in the late Middle Ages. The author is a Medieval scholar, and it was fun finding all the commonly Medieval themes, like bestiaries for instance.

But it’s more deeply than that the inner journey of a young man, Arseny, whose life will be more and more Christ like.
The book also contains a remarkable reflection on time (chronos and kairos).
Bravo to the translator for using words looking like Old English but still understandable by all today (even by me, whose first language is not English), to imitate the author’s use of old Russian for most dialogs.
Very smart book.
A member of my own book club recently presented another book by the same author, so I’ll be definitely reading more by Vodolazkin.

Confessions

🎧 Confessions, by Kanae Minato
Thriller
Published in Japanese in 2008
Translated into English by Stephen Snyder in 2014
One of the Japanese books I didn’t have time to read this year during the Japanese Literature Challenge

I’m glad I found the audio version through my public library. The narrator Elaina Erika Davis is excellent, great tone with constant underlying threat, perfect for the story.
This is a very smart story about bullying and revenge, with many twists. Who is going to outsmart everyone else here? There’s a real battle of the minds, as I often find in Japanese thrillers. Brilliant!
Great psychological study!

By the way, I happened to meet someone this week who is studying Japanese. Even though deep down I believe I’m too old to get to the level I can read Japanese, I succumbed, so now I’m teaching myself Italian and Japanese on Duolingo.
I already know a few alphabets (Roman, Hebrew, Greek, Russian), so for now learning one more is easy. I’m probably just wasting my time, but I’m enjoying it a lot!!

Down and Out in Paris in London

🎧 Down and Out in Paris and London, by George Orwell
Nonfiction/Memoir
Published in 1933

It counts for The Classics Club

Wow, this is quite a portrait of Paris in the early 30s!
The level of poverty is shocking. George Orwell lived it for several years, there and then in London.
He describes everything in great detail, and also with humor. The first page shows two French women screaming and yelling at each other, with chosen swear words, for instance.
At the very end, Orwell proposes some ideas of social reform that would allow tramps to disappear. Apparently the great of this world never took time to read this excellent short classic.

📚  CURRENTLY READING/LISTENING TO 🎧 

Ensemble, c'est tout

📚 Ensemble, c’est tout, by Anna Gavalda
Literary fiction
Published in 2004

Reading it in French with one of my students.
And it happens to be on my 20 Books of Summer list!

It was translated as Hunting and Gathering.
“Camille is doing her best to disappear. She barely eats, works at night as a cleaner and lives in a tiny attic room. Downstairs in a beautiful, ornate apartment, lives Philibert Marquet de la Durbellière, a shy, erudite, upper-class man with an unlikely flatmate in the shape of the foul-mouthed but talented chef, Franck. One freezing evening Philibert overcomes his excruciating reticence to rescue Camille, unconscious, from her garret and bring her into his home.
As she recovers Camille learns more about Philibert; about Franck and his guilt for his beloved but fragile grandmother Paulette, who is all he has left in the world; and about herself. And slowly, this curious quartet of misfits all discover the importance of food, friendship and love.”

De la Terre à la lune

📚 De la Terre à la Lune, by Jules Verne
Science-fiction
Published in 1865

Reading it in French with another of my students
It counts for The Classics Club

As I said above, I just finished The First Men on the Moon, which is supposed to be a satire of this book by Verne.
So I was thrilled my student wanted to read something by Verne. I read it as a kid, it is fun revisiting it and see how Wells changed it.

It was translated as From the Earth to the Moon.
“Verne’s 1865 tale of a trip to the moon is (as you’d expect from Verne) great fun, even if bits of it now seem, in retrospect, a little strange. Our rocket ship gets shot out of a cannon? To the moon? Goodness! But in other ways it’s full of eerie bits of business that turned out to be very near reality: he had the cost, when you adjust for inflation, almost exactly right. There are other similarities, too. Verne’s cannon was named the Columbiad; the Apollo 11 command module was named Columbia. Apollo 11 had a three-person crew, just as Verne’s did; and both blasted off from the American state of Florida. Even the return to earth happened in more-or-less the same place. Coincidence — or fact!? We say you’ll have to read this story yourself to judge.”

Fer-de-Lance

🎧 Fer-de-Lance (Nero Wolfe #1), by Rex Stout
Mystery
Published in 1934
It counts for The Classics Club

As you can see, I’m working very actively on my Classics third list…
This is my first book by Stout, and so far, I’m really enjoying a lot the Nero-Archie tandem.
If Sherlock Holmes was a bit eccentric, his American equivalent is so much more!

“As any herpetologist will tell you, the fer-de-lance is among the most dreaded snakes known to man. When someone makes a present of one to Nero Wolfe, Archie Goodwin knows he’s getting dreadfully close to solving the devilishly clever murders of an immigrant and a college president.
As for Wolfe, he’s playing snake charmer in a case with more twists than an anaconda — whistling a seductive tune he hopes will catch a killer who’s still got poison in his heart.

📚  BOOK UP NEXT 📚 

Eventide

📚 Eventide, by Kent Haruf
Literary fiction
Published in 2004

I read Plainsong, the first book in this series in 2013, and really enjoyed the writing. So it’s high time to tackle this one that’s been collecting dust on my shelf.
This is part of my effort for the TBR Challenge.
Yes, still planning to begin this one soon!! Others keep creeping and take its place.

“Kent Haruf, award-winning, bestselling author of Plainsong returns to the high-plains town of Holt, Colorado, with a novel of masterful authority. The aging McPheron brothers are learning to live without Victoria Roubideaux, the single mother they took in and who has now left their ranch to start college. A lonely young boy stoically cares for his grandfather while a disabled couple tries to protect their violent relative. As these lives unfold and intersect, Eventide unveils the immemorial truths about human beings: their fragility and resilience, their selfishness and goodness, and their ability to find family in one another.”

📚  LAST BOOK ADDED TO MY GOODREADS TBR 📚 

The Winter Queen

📚The Winter Quuen (Erast Fandorin Mysteries #1), by Boris Akunin
Historical fiction
Published in 1998
Translated from the Russian by Andrew Bromfield in 2004

My library recommended it to me a few years ago, and this past week, another student of mine did too, so I guess it’s about time.

“Moscow, May 1876: What would cause a talented young student from a wealthy family to shoot himself in front of a promenading public in the Alexander Gardens? Decadence and boredom, most likely, is what the commander of the Criminal Investigation Division of the Moscow Police thinks, but still he finds it curious enough to send the newest member of the division, Erast Fandorin, a young man of irresistible charm, to the Alexander Gardens precinct for more information.
Fandorin is not satisfied with the conclusion that this is an open-and-shut case, nor with the preliminary detective work the precinct has done—and for good reason: The bizarre and tragic suicide is soon connected to a clear case of murder, witnessed firsthand by Fandorin. There are many unresolved questions. Why, for instance, have both victims left their fortunes to an orphanage run by the English Lady Astair? And who is the beautiful “A.B.,” whose signed photograph is found in the apparent suicide’s apartment? Relying on his keen intuition, the eager sleuth plunges into an investigation that leads him across Europe, landing him at the deadly center of a terrorist conspiracy of worldwide proportions.

📚  NO BOOK RECEIVED THIS PAST WEEK 📚 

📚📚📚

HAVE YOU READ ANY OF THESE BOOKS?
HOW WAS YOUR WEEK?
BE SURE TO LEAVE THE LINK TO YOUR POST