Month: June 2018

Review of Bettie Page Volume 1 by David Avallone

So part way through my reading of the first story in this collection I was like Wait…was Bettie Page actually a secret agent? Obviously, as the story devolves into giant occult lasers I’m guessing the answer was no, but still, for a second, I really considered the possibility, so in that Bettie Page Volume 1 by David Avallone succeeds. Where it maybe doesn’t succeed as well is in pacing — sometimes I felt lost. Sometimes it seemed like new characters were abruptly introduced or taken away. Sometimes I didn’t really know what was going on. I’ll chalk up my confusion to a combination of maybe there’s something missing here and the low-res file I got for reviewing — low res implies pixelation implies sometimes I have to squint and when I squint I get a headache and then I end up scanning quickly rather than reading.

It’s fun. It’s pulpy. But it isn’t necessarily enough to keep you satisfied.

Bettie Page Volume 1 by David Avallone went on sale May 22, 2018.

I received a copy free from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

Are you in Toronto? Then buy my book!

Hey Toronto!

Sorry I’m sometimes rude about you and all (but to be fair, every non-Torontonian Canadian is rude about you sometimes) and that I haven’t visited you in like five years, but ignoring all that, look at the number of my books that are in stock at a variety of Toronto Chapters/Indigo locations:

So, Torontonians, descend en masse to these Chapters/Indigo locations and please buy Enid Strange by Meghan Rose Allen.

I promise I’ll be nicer to you Toronto. I swear.

Sincerely,

meghan

Review of To The Promised Land by Michael K. Honey

I hate it when I read a book and I then struggle to say much about it. So let me try and force a bunch of words out for no other reason than I got this book for free in exchange for a review, and so I will keep my promise and review it.

So I read To The Promised Land, spurred on by a comment from a university course I took many years ago: Most people know Martin Luther King Jr. from his anti-segregation work and his I Have A Dream speech (and looky looky — I reviewed a book about that speech a few years ago) from 1963. He was assassinated in 1968. So there’s five years where, for the most part, the popular narrative stops. Why? Because he spent a lot of those five years advocating not just for civil-rights for African Americans, but also advocating for the poor, against classicism, and working with unions. And while voting rights and desegregation was one thing, working for economic equality was a whole other kettle of fish.

And so, I got To The Promised Land because of that university professor many years ago and because To The Promised Land has a sub (under?) title: Martin Luther King and the Fight for Economic Justice. Okay. So I was going to learn about those missing five years.

So I did. I read To The Promised Land (in April, and now it’s June). I made precisely zero notes on my kobo. I highlighted nothing. I read it and I remember basically nothing. My fault for being disengaged with the process or the book’s fault for informing without captivating me with language or story-telling or whatever it was that didn’t have the words worm their way deep into my brain? But this is the second book in a row about someone working to make the world better that I’ve read to which my response has been a precisely mid-range, not-even-angry-about-it, meh.

Martin Luther King Jr. tried to make the world better for all Americans, then they shot him, and that makes me sad. Later I read a book about him. There was a sanitation strike in the book. He still got shot. I am still sad, but I do know that my being sad is not really what this is all about. Still sad though. Still a big blank space in my brain where this book should have gone. Sorry.

To The Promised Land by Michael K. Honey went on sale April 3, 2018.

I received a copy free from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

radio silence lifted!

I am done teaching my course, so once again, I have this thing called time which I can waste on reading books and writing about books and writing books themselves and sewing and crocheting and oh yeah, it’s also summer so all my dreams of actual hard work will be eaten up by child care, but I got to the end of my teaching and that is always a good thing!

So stay tuned — there will be book reviews coming. There will be what-I-reads coming (since I haven’t had one of those since March I think). There will be Enid give-aways. All this exciting stuff as I ease my way back into the social media world.

See you soon!