Skip to main content

Weekly Wrap-Up

Since I've enjoyed doing monthly wrap-ups for a couple of years now, and I have more free time this summer, I'm going to try out weekly wrap-ups. The format may change or I may stop if they get too repetitive. Let me know what you think!

What I'm Reading This Week


  1. I'm still reading Middlemarch by George Eliot. I'm a little more than halfway through. It's been a while since I read a nineteenth century novel, so it's a bit slow-going, but I'm loving it! It's got the omniscient, occasionally snarky narrator that I love from classic nineteenth century novels. While most of her characters are landed gentry like in Jane Austen novels, she's also got some characters in more precarious or lower class financial situations (ugh, trade!). There's also some discussion of agricultural labor reform that reminds me of Elizabeth Gaskell's focus on industrial labor reform, though at least so far, it's not as central. What I love the most about Eliot's writing is her brilliant extended metaphors, some of which read incredibly relevant today:
"Prejudices, like odorous bodies, have a double existence both solid and subtle--solid as the pyramids, subtle as the twentieth echo of an echo, or as the memory of hyacinths which once scented the darkness."
2. I've been reading and rereading some poetry as a comfort. I reread Mary Oliver's Blue Horses, which I own, twice. There's something so comforting in her writings, primarily about nature. I've also read a sample of her collection Devotions and read Blue Iris out of the library in the past. I wish I had more of her books. I'm also reading and rereading my former co-worker's poetry collection, My People, My People, My G-d, on his spiritual journey as a Black man in America. In addition to being a professor, he's also a minister.


What I Watched This Week

1. This week, my husband and I watched the documentary 13th on Netflix, about the broken and racist prison system in America. It wasn't my idea, as I'm not typically a huge fan of documentaries, but I foresee a lot more of them in my future. Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, was interviewed prominently, and I definitely intend to read her book.

2. I also watched The Hate U Give, based on the book by Angie Thomas. It was streaming free on multiple platforms this week. I highly recommend it, even though it was hard to watch, because it so clearly shows the human toll of what is and has been happening to Black and other people as a result of police brutality in our country.

Other Things That Happened This Week

1. We refinanced our mortgage

I'd been meaning to do this since rates started going down with the pandemic and now that I am (unplanned) out of work for the summer, since my summer job didn't end up happening, and I'm not getting any bites on online summer jobs that are legit or worth the money (SmarThinking offers $11/hour for master's degrees, $12 for PhDs. No, I'm not joking). I did some research, and we ended up getting 3.373%, which is much better than our current 4.5%, so we're taking it. There are better rates out there, but because of our (my) current financial situation, they wouldn't offer them to us because of the debt-to-income ratio, and everyone said the situation is really volatile right now, so I decided to take what we can get. If you have a mortgage, I do really recommend refinancing now and shopping around. There seem to be a lot of good options and most of the mortgage loan officers I talked to seemed pretty conscientious and told me to take the best rate I could get anywhere; I even had at least one outright tell me to take someone else's rate.

2. We lost our dog in a closet

We had some fun yesterday when we couldn't find one of our dogs. I seriously wondered if he had escaped into a pocket dimension! We checked outside, every room in the house, calling his name, I even went around shaking a bag of treats--nothing. Finally, we thought we heard a noise, so I opened one of our closets (that my husband had already checked) and out he came! Just having a chill nap under the shoe rack, I guess.

3. I had a book club meeting on Dani Shapiro's Inheritance

One of my two book clubs met on Zoom this week to discuss Inheritance by Dani Shapiro. All of us (I think) really liked it, and I would be interested in reading her other memoirs and novels. She's a really lyrical, introspective writer, and as somebody put it, it's not just about her; her personal concerns about identity and belonging have universal themes. I thought Shapiro was really brave in confronting her unexpected genetic heritage and reckoning with what she felt as the loss or change of her Jewish identity--and it did change how she related to some members of her family and not others. She gained a new family as well, albeit with fraught ethical considerations.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Books with Single-Word Titles

Happy Top Ten Tuesday over at That Artsy Reader Girl! Books with Single-Word Titles These are all my favorite books that I could think of with one-word titles. A lot of fantasy, a few nonfiction (minus subtitles) and Kindred , whether you consider it scifi or historical fiction. Also two portmanteaus using the word "bitter." I suppose it's a word that lends itself to amelioration. 1. Sweetbitter by Stephanie Danler 2. Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore 3. Fire by Kristin Cashore 4. Heartless by Marissa Meyer 5. Inheritance by Christopher Paolini 6. Meditations by Marcus Aurelius 7. Stoned by Aja Raden (has a subtitle) 8. Educated by Tara Westover 9. Fledgling by Octavia Butler 10. Kindred by Octavia Butler

Book Review: The Speed of Clouds by Miriam Seidel

Book Review: The Speed of Clouds by Miriam Seidel *To Be Released from New Door Books on April 10, 2018* Mindy Vogel is haunted by the future. In frequent daydreams, she toggles between her real, wheelchair-bound life and the adventurous life of her fanfic alter ego, SkyLog officer Kat Wanderer. She's haunted by all that Kat can do which she cannot---belong to an organization of comrades, walk, and fall in love---yet. Because at twenty-four, Mindy's future is very much ahead of her, wheelchair notwithstanding. Through Mindy's "SkyLog" fanzine and related emails, Seidel evokes Star Trek fandom around the turn of the millenium, but also creates a new and compelling science fictional universe, similar to what Rainbow Rowell's Fangirl  does for the Harry Potter fandom with "Simon Snow." Mindy is among the pioneers transitioning fandom from print to digital, boldly encountering like-minded individuals from the comfort of her chair behind the monito

Books On My Summer 2024 TBR

 I've been fairly successful with my reading goals so far this year (40 out of 42 read!), but I still have some goals to catch up on or exceed (books by authors of color and women in translation). I've also got my book club books, and I'll throw a few new and/or summery titles into the mix for inspiration. Hoping to read many of these outside, basking in beautiful weather! Happy Top Ten Tuesday! Books On My Summer 2024 TBR She's Up to No Good by Sara Goodman Confino--This is technically for a book club, although I probably won't be able to attend the meeting.  I've heard so many good things about this one, and it looks like a good summer read, so I'm planning to read it anyway. Midnight in Siberia: A Train Journey into the Heart of Russia by David Greene (Book club read)--I already have it out of the library, but have to get on this one! It sounds very interesting but nonfiction usually takes me a little longer. The Edge of Lost by Kristina McMorris (Book cl