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[personal profile] luzula
The advantages of traveling: long uninterrupted stretches of reading time. ♥

To the Chapel Perilous by Naomi Mitchison
I've loved the two previous Mitchison books I've read, but this one didn't work for me and I didn't finish it. The premise was interesting: it's the Arthurian mythos except told from the POV of journalists from rival newspapers who support different factions. But it felt like it sort of came at me sideways and I could just not grasp it or enjoy it. Ah well. Mitchison has written a wide variety of themes and styles; perhaps it's not surprising that it doesn't all work for me.

The Grey Horse by R. A. MacAvoy
Recced by [personal profile] sineala. This was charming! The cover made me suspicious (it has a romance novel vibe, and I'm usually not into romance novels) but then it started with 50 pages from the POV of a 70-year-old man, and I was reassured that it was not your typical romance novel. It's down-to-earth fantasy set in Ireland at the turn of the previous century, and I enjoyed the setting and characters. It's well written, too, and has a sort of comfort reading vibe.

Living Alone by Stella Benson
Recced by [personal profile] rushthatspeaks. Since this is a British book about witches and female emancipation written in the 1920's, I can't help but compare it to Lolly Willowes, which I loved. But this didn't work for me, possibly because it has a satirical edge towards its own time which felt too far away for me. Or maybe it's a style issue. May work better for someone else; I didn't finish it.

Tapirskrift by Rasmus Fleischer [Tapir Writings]
Oh, how wonderful! The author is a Swedish historian and political activist, and "tapir" is an anagram of "pirat"--he was involved in the circles that started the Pirate Bay in the early 00's. The book is about the internet, capitalism, crisis, and other interesting topics. I like his style a lot--he doesn't try to prove a point so much as explore topics and possible ways of understanding them. I also like his way of using history to show us the things about the present that we take for granted. Available as a free epub download here. But only in Swedish, alas.
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