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Monthly Archive: December 2021

Saturday

18

December 2021

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COMMENTS

My Year In Books 2021

Written by , Posted in Reviews

I’ve ended my reading year for 2021. And what a year it was!

I love to read. For the last nine years I’ve participated in Cannonball Read, and read at least a book a week each of those years (one year I read 104 books – that’s never happening again). I also love to spend time in independent bookshops, finding treasures I might never have noticed by browsing online. The first big outing my partner and I went on when we felt safe enough to be out in the world during the pandemic was to a bookstore. When I got a promotion last month, my partner gave me a card and treated me to a visit to a bookstore for MORE BOOKS.

I love that some books must be read in one sitting, while others are so heavy they need to be spread out, perhaps with chapters broken up by reading some lighter fare. In my attempts to avoid Amazon for books where possible I ended up ordering a very expensive copy of Lindy West’s ‘Shit, Actually’ from a retailer in the US because it wasn’t available in the UK. Totally worth it. Sometimes I want to read Icelandic mysteries; other times I’m interested in abolitionist writing that tackles some of the most complex issues in society. And sometimes I just want to look at a lot of pictures of abandoned buildings.

I love books.

So, let’s see what I read in 2021:

I read 53 books across 15 genres, with Sociology, Memoir, and Literary fiction in my top three.

68% of the authors I read (where race is known) are white, 15% are Black, and 10% are Asian or Middle Eastern. I read books with authors from 11 countries across all six continents (sorry Antarctica). As usual, I read about twice as much non-fiction as fiction.

I didn’t read any 1-star books, though there were a couple 2-star books. Most were 4-star, and nearly 20% were five star books. My favorites for 2021 are:

Mediocre by Ijeoma Oluo

Say Nothing and Empire of Pain by Patrick Radden Keefe

What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat by Aubrey Gordon

The Seven Necessary Sins for Women and Girls by Mona Eltahawy

I also got to visit more bookstores this year during that beautiful time in the summer when we were vaccinated and cases were mostly down. Those stores were:

Mr. B.’s Emporium in Bath (where I had an amazing Book Spa experience)

Calton Books in Glasgow

Connolly Books in Dublin

Housmans Bookshop in London

I’ve got a lot of book in my to be read pile, and a lot of time to sit around as I try to keep Omicron away. Happy reading to all!

Saturday

18

December 2021

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COMMENTS

Going Dark by Julia Ebner

Written by , Posted in Reviews

Three Stars

Best for:
Anyone who wants to learn a little bit more about modern-day terrorism and extremism.

In a nutshell:
Author Ebner adopts different identities to explore – online and in person – different extremist groups, from neo-Nazis to ‘trad wives.’

Worth quoting:
“Almost everything is gamified today, and that includes terrorism.”

Why I chose it:
It just sounded interesting.

Review:
This book is interesting and deeply disturbing, but it also feels more like it should have been a multi-part investigative magazine series in something like The Atlantic. Ebner does attempt to create a lifecycle across the stories, starting with recruitment, then socialisation, communication, networking, mobilisation, and attack. And I appreciate that she explored many different extremist groups, but I think it would have been a stronger book if there had been aspects of different groups explored in each of the areas. Instead, she does a deeper dive into different groups (two per section, with their own standalone chapters), which doesn’t help much with seeing how the connections work across the same group.

The book ends with some predictions (some of which have more or less already come true) and some suggestions on how to counteract these extremist groups. But given that this book was published just last year, it feels almost sweetly naive in some ways. Not that Ebner herself is naive, but things have gone so bad so quickly – the 6 January insurrection in the US, the vile racist and xenophobic anti-immigrant laws passing in the UK – many of her suggestions seem like too little too late.

Recommend to a Friend / Donate it / Toss it:
Donate it

Saturday

4

December 2021

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COMMENTS

The Seven Necessary Sins for Women and Girls by Mona Eltahawy

Written by , Posted in Feminism, Reviews

Five Stars

Best for:
Women. People with women in their lives. Feminists.

In a nutshell:
Author and activist Eltahawy makes the case for the sins women should embrace as we seek to destroy the patriarch.

Worth quoting:
“I don’t want to be protected. I want to be free.”

“I refuse to be civil with someone who refuses to acknowledge my humanity fully.”

“But who indoctrinated those Republican white women? Who taught them to submit to patriarchy? Those are questions often reserved for Muslima women, but I demand we ask them now of white women – whose votes uphold the benefits of whiteness but hurt the rest of us.”

Why I chose it:
I was looking for a little motivation, and I wanted to read some quality, bad-ass writing.

Review:
What a perfect book to reach my Cannonball Read goal on: a call to action written by a queer woman of color. Fuck yeah.

Within the first ten pages of this book, Eltahawy shares two different experiences of sexual assault, and how she has changed as a person between them. The second one ends with her beating the shit out of her assailant.

Eltahawy frames this book around seven actions – sins – that she argues women are taught to stay away from but that indeed very necessary in overthrowing the patriarchy. The sins are Anger, Attention, Profanity, Ambition, Power, Violence, and Lust. In each exploration of sin, she offers examples of how that action was necessary in fighting back against the harm patriarchy inflicts on us all. Some, I have no problem embracing – anger, profanity, even ambition. Others I do have somewhat of a negative response to – attention, violence. But Eltahawy makes strong cases for each, with the constant refrain that we need to dismantle and overthrow the patriarchy, that it hurts women and girls, and being polite and asking to be respected hasn’t worked.

We have to demand it, and take the power back, by force if necessary.

I finished this with the backdrop of what’s been going on in the US this week, where a court that includes two men accused of sexual harassment / sexual assault (Thomas and Kavanaugh) along with a woman Eltahawy would definitely characterize as a foot soldier of the patriarchy (Coney Barrett, who probably wouldn’t have to do much acting to take on a Commander’s Wife role in The Handmaid’s Tale) will help to bastardize the US Constitution and take away one of the most fundamental human rights from people who can get pregnant. Its disgusting, it pisses me off, and having such an obvious marker of the patriarchy in the background as I read made this hit a little different than it might have if I’d read it at a different time.

There’s so much to unpack here, I wish I’d read this with other women, and could discuss each of the chapters separately. But it’s one of my favorite books of the year, and one I can see myself referring back to often.

Recommend to a Friend / Donate it / Toss it:
Recommend to a Friend