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Gail's Feb 2024 Reads
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I see I need to remember to get to the Becky Chambers book. I have enjoyed other series by her thanks to Dan’s recommendations.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Teacher (other topics)The Teacher (other topics)
A Council of Dolls (other topics)
A Council of Dolls (other topics)
Seeing People Off (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Matthew Costello (other topics)Neil Richardson (other topics)
Mona Susan Power (other topics)
Jana Beňová (other topics)
Agatha Christie (other topics)
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* Bad Neighbours by Matthew Costello and Neil Richardson -4 (audio)
Another installment in the Cherringham series.
* A Council of Dolls by Mona Susan Power-5
The book covers three generations of Yanktonai Dakota women from 1888 until current time, the impact of Indian boarding schools, and the dolls the girls carried as children. Told in 4 parts (the last being a bit fantastical), this story hit me hard. I grew up just two hours away from the Carlisle boarding school and had never heard of it...
* Seeing People Off by Jana Beňová -2
Translated from Slovakian, a book I had nominated for my reading the world group and man, what a weeeirrd book! The writing is experimental in nature and centers around a group of four friends, all artists of a sort, who survive by one member at a time of the group working while the others are "free to create". The book was so odd, that I took a break to research the city of Bratislava and the Petržalka neighborhood, that was once known as the Bratislava Bronx.
* The Mystery of the Blue Train by Agatha Christie -4 (audio)
Ah. A great respite. Experienced Agatha Christie for the first time in audio with this one. I have never been a fan of Hercule Poirot (pompous little ...), but listening to someone else's voice instead of my own prejudiced voice may have changed my mind. Thoroughly enjoyed this one.
* The Teacher by Michal Ben-Naftali -5
Translated from the Hebrew, this one blew me away. You know immediately that the Teacher, at age 65, has ended her life by jumping from her apartment building in Tel Aviv. The rest is a story that will invade your soul. A teenager with everything to live for. Becomes educated. Marries. A train ride to a "relocation camp", that not long afterwards becomes a concentration camp. A rescue. A "new" life in a new location. A bully (imagine calling a concentration camp survivor a "Nazi" because you don't like her). A trial and a murder. A story of survivor guilt. The writing is beautiful. The story is gut-wrenching and should never be forgotten. Learned about the Kastner Train from this one through additional research.
* A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers -5
Decided to finish the month with this calming bit of sci-fi. A young "tea monk" is searching for his place in the world when he meets a robot who has been tasked with "checking in" on the humans his ancestors had walked away from 200 years before. His task is to get an answer to the question "what do people need ?". The book is dedicated to "...anybody who could use a break."