Reviews and Comments

Fatu

Fatu@wyrms.de

Joined 2 years, 4 months ago

Reading account for @fatu on scholar [dot] social. Follow me on there for microblogging and all things academia

This link opens in a pop-up window

Trauma theater

The great style of writing doesn't save the fact that this book focuses its forward movement solely on trauma theater. Content warning for very graphic sexual assault and child abuse scenes. I had to put it down multiple times for my own mental health and barely made it through the end. Not quite redemptive at the end either, at least not in a way that felt satisfying.

reviewed Equal Rites by Terry Pratchett (Discworld (3))

Terry Pratchett: Equal Rites (Paperback, 2000, HarperTorch)

Equal Rites is a comic fantasy novel by Terry Pratchett. Published in 1987, it is …

Fantastic Writing

Pratchett has a great sense of wit and humor and it comes through in this piece. Great for a first foray into the DiscWorld. I appreciated the ending on this one more than I did on the other two I've read, and both my partner and I had plenty of laugh-out-loud moments while reading

Terry Pratchett: Mort (2001)

Death takes on an apprentice who's an individual thinker.

Great Writing, Cop-Out Ending

I appreciate Pratchett's commitment to the absurd, though I thought the Deus Ex ending was a bit heavy-handed and could've used more nuance and gravitas. Still, it's worth the read, even if you haven't delved too much into the Discworld series

reviewed The truth by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, part 25)

Terry Pratchett: The truth (Paperback, 2001, Corgi)

The denizens of Ankh-Morpork fancy they've seen just about everything. But then comes the Ankh-Morpork …

Relevant and Engaging

Great piece of work. The first one of Pratchett's I happen to read. The beginning was a little difficult for me given all the characters introduced but it picks up and was actually really engaging and incredibly relevant to issues of mis/disinformation today

Good Marker of a Historical Moment

I enjoyed the premise and context - intergenerational authors and advocates joining their voices to the creation of Bear Ears National Monument Park. It's nice to see Native voices included, though it still feels lacking given it was a Tribal Coalition-led endeavor. At times, particularly with the older authors, it's too liberal white-gazey for me to give it more than 3 stars. The few phenomenal pieces peppered in between, and the historical nature of the context make this worth a casual read.

Angie Cruz: How Not to Drown in a Glass of Water (2022, Flatiron Books)

From the beloved author of Dominicana, a GMA Book Club Pick and Women’s Prize Finalist, …

Decent Writing and Story, Unlikeable Narrator

The writing is good and engaging, especially if you have Latinx roots. On that note though, if you're queer, Latinx, or both, then the narrator can be pretty unlikeable and plenty of the things she says hit a bit too close to home. Spoiler alerts for familial physical abuse and homophobia