Cathryn’s
Comments
(group member since Dec 12, 2017)
Cathryn’s
comments
from the 2022 ONTD Reading Challenge group.
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I'm going to be reading Pachinko this month. I read the first few chapters last year and then got distracted, so I'm starting over. I'm going to check out the books in the post as well and see what I can add to my tbr.

Loved Song for a New Day. It was fun and almost prophetic. I can see why it won the Nebula and was shortlisted for the Hugo.
Jan 01, 2020 03:06AM


Cress is a loose retelling of Rapunzel and Winter is a loose retelling of Snow White.
If I have time, I might also read Song of Achilles and Circe, but we'll see!



I also finished The Knife's daughter, a novella I randomly picked up at the library. It was also okay, written in second person perspective which was very interesting.
I started Pachinko but I think I may be working on that for awhile.

I also plan to finish up The Knife's Daughter, which I picked up randomly at the library recently. It takes place in Korea.
I also have Pachinko and A Tale for the Time Being, which I may try to get to, but we'll see. I'm reading Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn series and I might wind up just sticking with that for now.

I read 11/22/63 this month. I was going to try and read Kindred as well, but I think I need a break from time travel.
I enjoyed 11/22/63, but imo it was a little too long. The middle section dragged a lot and I had a tough time getting through that part. This really lessened my enjoyment of the whole book because even though I liked the ending, I was kinda over it by the end and I just wanted to be finished.


Life Itself: I have a lot of mixed feelings about this book. Roger Ebert is a phenomenal writer and the audiobook is read by Edward Hermann, so it's great to listen to. It's super long, however, and Ebert writes quite glowingly about several of his problematic faves (John Wayne, Woody Allen). I think, if you're interested in film criticism and journalism, it's good, but I definitely did a lot of eye rolling throughout. Despite all that, it's wonderfully sincere and honest.
Astrophysics for People in a Hurry: I liked this a lot. Great information presented in a way that I enjoyed and Neil Degrasse Tyson has a voice that is wonderful to listen to. Then I found out about the sexual assault accusations against him and aaaaaauuuugggggghhhhhhh.
Emotional First Aid: Practical Strategies for Treating Failure, Rejection, Guilt, and Other Everyday Psychological Injuries: I read the first two chapters of this last year and decided to finish it up for this month's challenge. This book is recommended a lot in Buzzfeed articles recently. It's okay, I guess, but I didn't think it was significantly helpful.
A Room of One's Own: I loved this. It's definitely a heavy slog, but Virginia Woolf was brilliant and I heartily enjoyed her criticism of men and women and fiction.
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing: I've been on a decluttering journey for a long time now and so actually applying the KonMari method isn't something I'm planning on doing, but I loved the show on Netflix and figured I would check out the book. The content was fine, but the audio book narration was monotone and awful and lessened my enjoyment considerably.
We Should All Be Feminists: This is an amazing primer on feminism and I will be recommending this to nearly everyone I know.
Inheritance: A Memoir of Genealogy, Paternity, and Love: This audio book is great. Narration by the author can be hit or miss with me, but Dani Shapiro has a beautiful voice and this book deals a lot with her upbringing in orthodox Judaism. Hearing her delivery of Hebrew phrases was beautiful and touching to me. I work as a genealogist and it was very interesting and idk, I just loved this. Heartily recommended.
haha, omg, tl;dr



Right now I'm listening to Roger Ebert's memoir, Life Itself. It's very long and a very traditional memoir, but I like it well enough. It's read by Edward Hermann, which helps a lot.
I'll probably also listen to (because something shorter might be nice):
Astrophysics for People in a Hurry
A Room of One's Own
In the Company of Women: Inspiration and Advice from over 100 Makers, Artists, and Entrepreneurs
Jan 29, 2019 07:43PM


I had a lot of trouble deciding what to read this month bc none of the options particularly appealed to me. Was going to read Little Women because I hadn't read it since childhood, but I started and it was super slow, so I decided to pick a different book. I chose The Sun is Also a Star because it was available at my public library and I loved it. Kinda Scott Pilgrim + Before Sunrise vibes.
Jan 03, 2019 03:47PM

Dec 28, 2018 03:50PM
