meganbmoore: (labyrinth: reading)
What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng. I actually read very little of this. Less than a chapter, actually. I feel sad about it.

Tales of the Otherworld by Kelley Armstrong. Short stories and a couple of novellas set at various times and about various characters in the Women of the Otherworld series. About 1/3 of the book of devoted to the terribly romantic backstory about how Clay decided he'd rather his girlfriend be dead than someone he couldn't have, and so decided to try to turn her into a werewolf even though there were literally no female werewoves because olny a few women over a period of centuries survived transitioning into a werewolf. Unsurprisingly, I skipped that once I realized what it was. Other than that, though, i've been enjoying it a lot, and am almost finished. (Pretty much, I enjoy the stories about the characters I enjoyed in their own books, and didn't care about the werewolf short stories in it. So about my feelings for the rest of the series.)


What did you recently finish reading?

Call the Midwife: Shadows of the Workhouse by Jennifer Worth. originally published as Shadows of the Workhouse but repackaged to go with the TV show. Unlike Worth's first memoir, this focuses very little on Worth's personal experiences and instead focuses on several older people she knew while working as a midwife: Frank, Peggy and Jane, who grew up in a workhouse, Sister Monica Joan, and elderly nun who may or may not be somewhat senile, and was born an aristocrat, and Joseph Collett, a former soldier. Almost everything in here was adapted in the last few episodes of the first season (the Sister Monica Joan plot in the series 1 finale is probably the most direct adaptation of events recorded in Worth's memoirs to the show) but unlike the show, Worth focuses primarily on their life stories, based on what they told her and what others related to her, though I'm sure she took more creative license than usual in some parts. (Worth has changed the name of both the church she worked out of and the names of all the people she writes about, and altering details enough so that while people can presumably still recognize themselves and people in events they were around for, their identities wouldn't be obvious to others.) For better or worse, it lacks a lot of the nostalgia of Call the Midwife and Worth has a bleaker worldview in this book, though that's pretty natural given the subject matter. it's very good and very interesting, but also (to no one's surprise) thoroughly depressing in various areas.

I read a lot of the Mistresses book, but then got to the Eva Braun entry where the writer decided to compare Elizabeth Tudor and Hitler. The comparison was in the context of "married to their countries," but nope, you don't compare to Hitler unless there actual attempted genocide involved. Also, it helped click for me what had been bugging me but that I couldn't put my finger on, which was that, while the author liked her subject matter, and didn't seem to like women she interpreted as ambitious and/or seeking personal power.

What do you think you'll read next?

Hopefully more of Legend of the White-Haired Demoness, and I have a couple memiors and YA from the library, along with the latest Miss Fisher book.
meganbmoore: (bwwh: music)
What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 2-4.

spoilers )

Mistresses: A History of the Other Woman by Elizabeth Abbott. Nonfiction about famous (and less so) mistresses throughout history and in literature. I'm on page 77 out of 500, and it's a bit of a "cliffnotes: version: in addition to various cultural and historical notes for each of her categories, Abbott looks to have at least 70-80 entries, each with a minibiography of 3-7~ pages, so there isn't room to get into a lot of depth with most of them. Pretty good so far, though.


What did you recently finish reading?

A Train in Winter by Caroline Moorehead. WWII nonfiction about 230 women in the French Resistance who were captured and sent to Auschwitz, only 49 of whom survived. The first half of the book focused on the women's work and how they were captured, and the second half on their experiences while imprisoned. Moorehead interviewed the 7 survivors she was able to locate who were still living when she began work on the book, and so there's considerably more detail about their experiences than in other book about captured spies in WWII that I've read (the others were also about SOE agents, and so also spent quite a bit of time focusing on homefront operations which, if you're familiar with the SOE, can inspire a whole different kind of rage.) It's good and fascinating in the most awful way, and I feel I need to consume about 5000 hours of fluff and love and joy to recover from some of it.


I read a bit of Kelley Armstrong's Men of the Otherworld collection, but then realized that it was all about the werewolf dudes, and decided there were much better ways to spend my time.

What do you think you'll read next?

More Legend of the White-Haired Demoness and Mistresses, library books

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July 2020

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