June 28 2021

Pyramids, by Terry Pratchett

Pyramids

Pyramids, by Terry Pratchett

Title: Pyramids
Author: Terry Pratchett
Genre/ issues: Comedy. Fantasy. Discworld.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

“The kingdom reassemble[d] itself, like a smashed mirror that is put together again and reflects the same old light in new and unexpected ways.”
Book 7 in the #Discworld series is a standalone, and we meet Teppic as he completes his training with the Assassin’s Guild in Ankh-Morpork. Destiny has other plans for him, though, and shortly after passing his brutal final exams he inherits the throne of his desert kingdom Djelibeybi earlier than expected. Playing with notions of mythology, traditional, inheritance and mathematics, it’s incredibly funny, and one of the first books in the series I remember reading back when I was an undergrad. It’s been a joy to revisit it!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 99/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 27 2021

Thunderhead and The Toll, by Neal Shusterman

Scythe

The arc of the Scythe, by Neal Shusterman

Title: Thunderhead and The Toll
Author: Neal Shusterman
Genre/ issues: YA. Dystopian fiction. Sci-fi. Artificial intelligence.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

I read Scythe last year, but didn’t immediately move onto the rest of the series. I’m glad now, because the dystopian world Neal Shusterman created has kept me somewhat distracted from my own personal and pandemic-related woes over the past 2 days as Sydney has gone back into lockdown.
The Arc of the Scythe series is killer. Pun intended. Characters I cared deeply about, moral dilemmas that hurt my head and heart, and one of my favourite concepts in futuristic and/or sci-fi novels – when does an AI cease to be “artificial”? The series starts with Scythe, as we are plunged into a future Earth where death by natural causes has been eradicated, but population control is still required. So, Scythes now glean people, with honourable rules around how this process is carried out. Citra and Rowan are apprenticed as scythes, but soon discover corruption amongst the ranks. Book 2, Thunderhead, sees Rowan acting as a vigilante tracking down and gleaning dishonourable scythes, whilst Citra finds her own path as the compassionate Scythe Anastasia. And whilst a terrifying plot unfolds around them, the Thunderhead, global all-seeing AI who observes and controls everything that the scythes do not, watches on, but can’t intervene … or can/will it? The final book, The Toll, sees the Thunderhead go silent, leaving the world in turmoil and under the apparently relentless control of the vicious Scythe Goddard.
I often find trilogies variable in engagement and storytelling. Many readers have opinions on the second book slump. Scythe doesn’t suffer from that – in fact, I think Thunderhead is my favourite of the three volumes. The storytelling across the whole series is sustained and masterful, and I was immensely satisfied at the conclusion of this fascinating exploration of life when death is no longer a constraint. I’m glad I hadn’t read book 2 without being able to dive straight into the final sweep of the arc – the suspense may have killed me! Fab reads, both.
And whilst my tally says 97 and 98, that’s only because I have a couple of reviews I can’t quite post yet – these books see me hit 100 books read in 2021, which was my reading challenge goal for the year! I’ve loved tracking this on TheStorygraph this year.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 97-98/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 24 2021

Paper Girls and The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (vol 2)

comics

Paper Girls and The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl

Title: Paper Girls volume 2
Author: Brian K Vaughan
Illustrator: Cliff Chiang
Genre/ issues: Comics. Sci-fi. Time travel. Mystery.

Title: The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl volume 2
Author: Ryan North
Illustrator: Erica Henderson
Genre/ issues: Comics. Sci-fi. Superheroes.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

A couple more comics off my huge comic TBR shelf! I’ve read volume 2 of both Paper Girls and The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl over the past couple of days, and I think there are as many commonalities between them as there are differences.
📚Paper Girls by Brian K Vaughan and Cliff Chiang is a kick ass sci-fi mystery comic about a group of newspaper delivery girls from the 80s. Think punk, Stranger Things, Stand By Me and War of the Worlds with some time travel thrown in for good measure. I love the non-nonsense get shit done approach of these fab 12 year old girls, and I am OBSESSED with the colouring in this comic. It’s unapologetically saturated in shades of pink and purple, and manages to simultaneously evoke the atmosphere of the narrative whilst playing with the stereotypes of feminine colours – this is a girls story, but there’s nothing weak or princessy about it. Or rather, these princesses take no shit. Adding volumes 3 and 4 to my Kings Comics cart, stat!
📚I’ve had Squirrel Girl by Ryan North and Erica Henderson on my radar since I first met my awesome friend Penny, but I only started reading it last year, and as I sunk into volume 2 I remembered just why I love her. She’s kind, funny, unapologetically enthusiastic, and a fantastic friend. Plus, she’s STRONG. Infinity War would have been a different film if they’d just tweeted Doreen to pop on over to “eat nuts and kick butts”. But her real strength is her empathy, which runs through every panel of this fab collection of Unbeatable Squirrel Girl numbers 5-8. Adding more to my cart? Why yes, yes I am. How did you guess?

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 95-96/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 22 2021

A pile of picture books

 

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

Picture booksTitle: Eyes that kiss in the corners
Author: Joanna Ho
Illustrator: Dung Ho
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Asian representation. Diversity and acceptance.

Title: I am every good thing
Author: Derrick Barnes
Illustrator: Gordon C James
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Black excellence. 

Title: I am perfectly designed
Author: Karamo Brown
Illustrator:
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Family. Self esteem.

📚Eyes That Kiss in the Corners  a love story to family connections and to celebrating oneself. A young girl notices her eyes are different to her friends … but her eyes kiss in the corners and shine glow like warm tea, crinkle like crescent moons, and are filled with stories of the past and hope for the future. It’s a beautiful book, and one is highly recommend.

📚I Am Every Good Thing is a powerful celebration of Black boyhood, of all the amazing features that make each individual special and unique and wonderful. Stunning artwork, and a powerful emphasis on the importance of recognising your place in the community of strong men who have come before you.

📚And continuing the theme of “books which celebrate YOU”, I am Perfectly Designed. Super sweet illustrations with a diverse range of skin colours represented, it tells the story of a conversation between a father and son reminiscing on their past experiences together, and about how perfectly designed they are for each other and for the role they play in the world. So lovely, it’s be a wonderful text to read with someone you love to remind them how special they are.
Picture books setTitle: Oona
Author: Kelly DiPucchio
Illustrator:
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Fantasy. Exploration

Title: Ernest the Elephant
Author: Anthony Browne
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Exploration. Family. 

Title: Small in the city
Author: Sydney Smith
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Isolation. City life.

📚Oona is a fabulous mermaid with an appetite for adventure, by @kellydipucchio and @rizzyfig. She spends her time treasure hunting with her pal Otto, and she’s got her eye on a particularly sparkly treasure, but it lurks too far down in the deep for her to reach. Does she look like that’s going to stop her, though? I adore this book, and I’m always enthralled by illustrations that are obviously 2d but convey such a sense of movement and life. This is a gem!

📚The Shape Game by Anthony Browne is one of my favourite picture books to teach, so when I saw Ernest the Elephant I knew I’d be adding it to my pile. Ernest is on a trek with his family when he spots the forest, and despite warnings from his mother, he decides to go exploring … but of course he gets lost! Vibrant, engaging, and as full of life and hidden adventures as you would expect from this master artist.
📚Small in the City, by Sydney Smith. Wow. It’s hard to capture in a brief description what this book is about, because the deceptively simple narrative about being lost in the city is so multilayered and complex. It’s visually stunning, and lends itself to a number of rereadings as you get lost alongside our protagonist. This could definitely be a favourite for the year.
I didn’t select these three books to be posted together for any particular reason, but now I’m realising that they all have the overarching theme of finding your way in your world as someone small – in the ocean, forest or city, there’s always a place for the littlest of us. If you’re after a book for a little person in your life, you can’t go wrong with any of these, but I’d perhaps recommend Smith’s as suitable for older readers as well. It’s be a great text for visual analysis in an upper primary context I think!

Picture booksTitle: Where the heart is
Author: Irma Gold
Illustrator:
Genre/ issues: Picture books. True story. Environment.

Title: Hike
Author: Pete Oswald
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Worldless. Family. 

Title: Leilong the library bus
Author: Julia Liu
Illustrator: Bei Lynn
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Libraries. Stories.

Title: The art of words
Author: Robert Vescio
Illustrator: Joanna Bartel
Genre/ issues: Picture books. Words and language.

📚Where The Heart Is, by @irma.gold and @oh.susannah.illustration is the beautiful story of Bindim, a young penguin who washes up on the beach in Brazil and is rescued by Joao who nursed him back to health. Based on a true story, it’s a lovely celebration of the power of friendship, and it’s so beautifully illustrated!
📚Hike by @peteoswald follows a father and son on a hike. Almost completely wordless apart from some onomatopoeiaic words, it’s utterly lovely, displaying both the beauty of nature and of the bond between parent and child. Stunning.
📚I can’t resist a picture book about libraries. A dinosaur library book? Hell yes! Leilong the Library Bus by Julia Liu and Bei Lynn sees Leilong try to join his friends at Storytime – but he doesn’t have a library card and is too big to successfully follow the rules! A super cute book which emphasises that libraries are for everyone.
📚The Art of Words by Robert Vescio and Joanna Bartel is my favourite kind of book – one that celebrates the magic and power of words, with a nod to the important role that punctuation can play in how we engage with words. An absolute gem.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 85-94/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 21 2021

The Infinite Noise, by Lauren Shippen

The Infinite Noice

The Infinite Noise, by Luaren Shippen

Title: The Infinite Noise
Author: Lauren Shippen
Genre/ issues: YA. Superpowers. Queer fiction. Mental health.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

“If he’s blue and I’m yellow, being around him makes everything green … I guess I just really like being in that green place.”
The Infinite Noise by Lauren Shippen is a lovely dual perspective narrative based on The Bright Sessions podcast. Caleb is an Atypical, a human with the enhanced abilities to feel the emotions of everyone around them. He gets particularly caught up in the feelings of his classmate Adam, who struggles with his own mental health issues. Their lives come together in ways that neither of them could have predicted, but that feels somehow right to both of them.
This is very much a character driven book. There’s little in the way of over-arching plot, and I wasn’t at all bothered by that, because the journey of self-discovery I went on with these beautifully complex souls was really fascinating. I’ve just added the podcast this book is based on to my queue, and will be tracking down the next book in the series. A good solid 4/5 read for me – probably not going to crack my favourite books list for the year, but only because I’ve read so many 5⭐️ books already that I know it’s going to be hotly contested! Content warnings: mental health/ serious depression, including self harm.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 84/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 18 2021

Heavy Vinyl, volumes 1 and 2

Heavy Vinyl

Heavy Vinyl volumes 1 and 2

Title: Heavy Vinyl
Author:
Genre/ issues: Comics. Feminism. Queer Fiction.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

I knew that a queer 90’s record store comic would be my vibe – but then you throw in an underground teen girl vigilante fight club? Hell yes! I read volumes 1 and 2 of Heavy Vinyl tonight and thoroughly enjoyed them. Clever, quirky, and with a fantastically diverse group of characters ready to take on the world and make it a better place. With a strong message about the power of individuals when they join together with a common purpose, and an underlying theme of the importance of music to communicate important ideas, this comic rocks. Quite literally, too – there is a killer soundtrack, and the action throughout packs a punch. I wish I’d been friends with these girls when I was a teenager. Hell, I wish I was friends with them now. Highly recommended.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 82-83/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 17 2021

Pawcasso, by Remy Lai

Pawcasso

Pawcasso, by Remy Lai

Title: Pawcasso
Author: Remy Lai
Genre/ issues: Middle grade. Graphic novels. Pets. Family and relationships.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

Oh what a fluffy warm hug of a book this is! Pawcasso by Remy Lai is a middle grade graphic novel that ticked all the boxes for me this afternoon. A super-sweet story about Pawcasso, a grocery-shopping pooch who picks up a follower on his Saturday trip to the markets when Jo spots him out the window and follows him, intrigued. She runs into some kids from school who mistakenly assume this adorable pooch is hers, and she doesn’t correct them. No harm, right? Well, we know how these things go – and Jo needs to decide if she’ll risk her new friendships by admitting the truth. Funny, sweet, and beautifully illustrated – a highly recommended addition to your collection!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 81/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 14 2021

Deadpool volume 1: Dead Presidents

Deadpool

Deadpool volume 1: Dead Presidents

Title: Deadpool volume 1: Dead Presidents
Author:
Illustrator:
Genre/ issues: Comics. Sci-fi. Superheroes.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

Deadpool volume 1: Dead Presidents is as messed up and laugh-out-loud funny as you would expect! In this collection of volumes 1-6, Deadpool battles the zombies of all America’s dead presidents. I can’t read this without hearing Ryan Reynolds’ signature delivery of Wade Wilson’s smart-mouth, wise-cracking superhero. A great Monday afternoon read – partly because it helped me stave off the sads about heading back to NSW tonight, and partly because I could recruit Jacob’s Deadpool collection to stand in for a photo!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 80/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 14 2021

Radio Silence, by Alice Oseman

Radio Silence

Radio Silence, by Alice Oseman

Title: Radio Silence
Author: Alice Oseman
Genre/ issues: Contemporary fiction. Queer fiction. Family/ relationships.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

It somehow seems appropriate to share this book with the Curtin University English building in the background. Radio Silence by Alice Oseman tells the story of study machine Frances, whose entire life is aimed at getting into Cambridge. Then she meets Aled, her neighbour from across the street, and for the first time she feels comfortable being herself. But then, the trust between them is broken, and Frances finds herself caught between who she thought she was, and who she could be, and sets out to help her friend – and hopefully, herself too.
This is a slow, gentle book, filled with fragile characters finding their way in a world that tells them that academic success is the only important one. I love the way that parental, personal and school expectations and assumptions about excellence and opportunity are gently probed and critiqued, and I love the gentle strength that Frances shows as she comes to realise that there is another way to be happy. The Welcome to Nightvale references made me happy in my heart, and reminded me that I need to catch up on it. More than anything else, though, I loved Oseman’s signature depictions of gender and sexuality, both through their authentic representations on the page, and through characters’ engagement with and examination of their own sexual identity. A really wonderful read.

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 79/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara

 

 

June 13 2021

Perfect on Paper, by Sophie Gonzales

Perfect on Paper

Perfect on Paper, by Sophie Gonzales

Title: Perfect on Paper
Author: Sophie Gonzales
Genre/ issues: YA. Romance. Queer fiction.

Shop local where you can: For Australian readers, you can find this book on Booktopia, or support your local independent bookstore. US readers, check out Bookshop.org.

Perfect on Paper by Sophie Gonzales is a delightful YA queer rom-com. Darcy runs a relationship advice service out of an unused locker at her school. She’s protective of the anonymity, and proud of her success rate, promising refunds if it proves to be bad advice. All goes well until Braugham, the new kid from Australia, uncovers her secret, and she’s forced to help him win his ex-girlfriend back to stop her best friend and equally secret crush finding out.
This is a well-written and engaging novel full of heart. I loved the queer representation – Darcy’s sister is trans and was responsible for establishing the Queer and Questioning Club at the school that many of the characters are apart of, and the plot deals with openness and sensitivity about the importance of honest communication and enthusiastic consent in relationships. I especially appreciated the focus on biphobia, both in the queer community and internalised, and the impact of this on bi people. A wonderful weekend read!

#TamaraReads #2021readingchallenge 78/2021

Happy reading,

Tamara