Skip to main content

#HunkerDown Reading

Resistant by Rachael Sparks
Spark Press 2018
Sci-fi surrealism

Is this author clairvoyant? Or as a scientist has she extrapolated a possible future based on current facts? In Resistant, it's 2041 and fifteen percent of the human population is dead from being infected by an antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Sound eerily relevant? Sure, COVID-19 is a virus, but the template for this imaginary manmade catastrophe bears striking similarities to the world's present-day reality.

Die-off survivor and microbiology student Aurora “Rory" Stevigson lives with her climatologist father Byron Stevigson on an apple farm in Massachusetts. Their grief over the loss of Dr. Persephone Tyler-Stevigson shadows their playful father-daughter rapport as they struggle to heal themselves while also helping others in their isolated community. When a mysterious man who introduces himself as Navy appears, everything Rory believed about her life becomes questionable, which puts her in danger. Her survival and the safety of everyone she loves send her on the run. Dodging assorted unscrupulous authorities, unethical scientists, and Mother Nature forces Rory and Navy to rely on each other. The push and pull of their suspicions and attraction combined with their humorous, often combative, exchanges create a multifaceted courtship that's believable even within its accelerated timeline.

Each character—primary and secondary—projects an authentic, distinctive complexity. Resistant is a Sci-fi mystery, thriller, romance, and more. Narrative pacing that gains momentum with each added puzzle piece makes this engaging story a one-sitting read.


How To Be An Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi
One World/Penguin Random House 2019
Non-fiction memoir

This unflinching, self-revelatory memoir challenges readers to declare themselves as racist or antiracist. There is no middle ground. The emotional intimacy and confessional tone of the author's revelations about his personal journey through racist ideology effectively provokes deep, uncomfortable thoughts, making it a more viscerally grueling read than Stamped From the Beginning because the consequences of dynamic versus passive action feel more immediate. Dismantling entrenched systemic, institutionalized, policy-driven inequity requires deliberate, intentional assertive strategy and execution. Success demands stamina combined with hope. 

Some passages convey the fervent zeal of a recent religious convert, where passionate discourse occasionally threatens to cross the border into haranguing territory. There are a few statements that seem dismissive of people's well-intentioned motives combined with definitions at the start of each chapter that include the words being described in the explanations that present minor distractions from the overall compelling intensity of this call to action. .

How To Be An Antiracist merits multiple readings. With an introduction, eighteen chapters, acknowledgments, notes, and index that individually and collectively challenge readers to dig deeper into the source and context of their personal biases, this material offers an ideological roadmap. The path is summarized on page 226 where the author encapsulates his experience in researching and writing his earlier book, Stamped From the Beginning:
A mission to uncover and critique America's life of racist ideas turned into a mission to uncover and critique my life of racist ideas, which turned into a lifelong mission to be antiracist.

Becoming An Antiracist would have been an equally accurate title.


The Polyamorists Next Door by Elisabeth Sheff
Rodman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. 2014
Non-fiction

First comes love/Then comes marriage/Then comes the baby in the baby carriage. The words to this ancient chant reflect numerous cultural assumptions and expectations. The Polyamorists Next Door deconstructs them, expands, reassembles, and debunks them. Respectful examination of polyfidelity, polysexuality, radical honesty, and other concepts push beyond the rigid boundaries of conventional monogamy to provide insights into the benefits, vulnerabilities, and risks of relationship configurations that don't conform to a cis-gendered template.

Dr. Sheff discreetly shares relevant details of her private life in measured proportion to the specifics of the lives of her study participants and the history of earlier fundamental scientific research on polyamory. The author’s writing style is very accessible for readers who aren't academics. The introduction and part one explain core principles, basic terms and ideas in addition to three major waves of polyamory in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. Some terms that seem pejorative such as “polluter" were coined by researchers who conducted earlier studies and are used by this author as referential context, not judgement.

Part two focuses on polyamorous families with children, which provides anecdotal and statistical data about the application of the theories discussed in part one. Bedrock tenets of self-growth and rejection of jealousy, and persistence and the ability to tolerate (as in successfully negotiate through) conflict are recurring themes. Also, expanding ideas in defining authentic intimacy as found on page 279:
A cultural component of polyaffectivity is removing sexuality as the hallmark of “real" intimacy… then nonsexual relationships can take on the degree of importance usually reserved for sexual or mated relationships… friends and chosen family members can be as or more important than a spouse or sexual mate. 

Acknowledgements, an introduction, two parts—“Understanding Polyamorous Relationships" and “Polyamorous Families with Children"—a conclusion, two appendices, notes, a bibliography, and an index provide multiple references and resources for further study. “Loving More" magazine, A Bouquet of Lovers by Morning Glory Zell-Ravenheart, numerous websites, and mention of a national poly conference are named throughout this provocative text that advocates for healthy relationships for all, no matter how they’re configured.
  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Hot Love in the Kitchen & Travelling Through Time

Redemption of the Heart by Moni Boyce contemporary romance Love Snacks Publishing  8 January 2019 Despite addressing heavy themes of domestic violence, incarceration, and grief, Redemption of the Heart is a charming and sweet spicy read in the tradition of a 21st-century interracial homage to Janet Dailey’s monthly romance era. Gemma’s open-hearted ingénue contrasts starkly with Alex’s jaded workaholic. They struggle with a variety of challenges, but ethnicity isn’t one of them—a spin that feels particularly modern. Once readers commit to their suspension of disbelief regarding the cascading impact of lacks in due diligence by several characters, it’s easy to settle in to enjoy this love story. The recent public debate about the pros and cons of Gillette’s “We believe the best man can be” campaign ties in with the contradictory messages in the story threads about toxic masculinity. There’s a scene in which Alex apologizes to someone who was openly bragging among coworkers

Authors Books Librarians Editors Agents Publishers... #USBookShow 2023

  4 days of all hits no misses of keynotes, interviews, panels, book recs, advice...   Highlights:  Day 1 Monday 5/22  an insightful and terrifying and motivational discussion of book banning as an attack on liberty with advice on combating it via local focus and the fact that 30,000 school board seats in the U.S. are opening up this fall  effective OverDrive/Libby strategies executed by savvy librarians  Day 2 Tuesday 5/23  memorable quote from Chuck D's lunch keynote conversation with Kelefa Sannen: "People listen with their eyes." Plus his STEWdio boxed set and naphic grovel play on words with graphic novel and so much more.  public relations, marketing, how not to get cancelled, redemption   Day 3 Wednesday 5/24  book recs!!!  Gloria Edim's (Well-Read Black Girl) conversation with Kim Coleman Foote about her fall release novel Coleman Hill from SJP Lit, including Sarah Jessica Parker Wade Hudson, Just Us Books co-founder, in conversation with Carolyn P. Yoder  Zib

Meeting Some Author Sheroes IRL at the Yale Pop Rom Fic Conference

  Flashback Friday to 2 weeks ago when my fandom for romance authors was rewarded while sitting in a Yale University auditorium in a How to Write a Romance Novel workshop taught by publishing phenoms Adriana Herrera & Sarah MacLean! With my sitting in the front row seated next to brilliant Dr. Margo Henderson (Elysabeth Grace*) and Legendary Shirley Hailstock on one side; TWWBF2023 participating author Briana Ellis on the other, who recognized me even with my face half-hidden by my mask! I THINK Nalini Singh was in the audience along with Ms. Bev and so many other super talented, successful authors and book industry professionals. 5th annual The Write Women Book Fest featured panelist Leslye Penelope and I crossed paths in a hallway while searching for the ladies room. WordLink literary agent Macey Howell and I had a lovely chat after a different session. The sister to the documentarian for "Love Between the Covers" was quite engaging as she snapped pics per her sibling&#