What I Read, March 2024

March 2024 was a big month in our family: my daughter became a bat mitzvah on the 29th of Adar I. She worked hard for months beforehand to prepare, and even though the process wasn’t always easy, she did great. Like, better than great. Services were moving, lunch was a whirlwind (no time to eat much but we had delicious leftovers for days), and the party at our beloved local indie bookstore was a blast. (Including a Haftorah Smackdown, where guests who had ben bnai mitzvahed were encouraged to show off how much of their portion they could remember.) Celebrating with friends and family—including one of my oldest friends, who came all the way down from Ottawa, how about that??—was incredible. Suffice it to say, Marianne and I were kvelling big time. We were also very tired. For a couple of weeks afterward, the energy level in this house was low. Like, come home from work, lie down on the couch, wake up two hours later with a crease down your cheek kind of low. All the reading took place around the edges.

Henri Matisse, The Ballet Dancer, Harmony in Grey (1927)

Ann Leckie, Ancillary Justice (2013)

First volume in the already canonical space opera set in the Radch Empire (expansionist, like all empires). Breq is an ancillary, a human body that acts as an extension of the hive mind AI that controls the empire, or a bit of the consciousness of a starship (these amount to the same thing, I think: it’s confusing), and the only survivor of a starship destroyed twenty years earlier. The Wikipedia entry helpfully explains the plot; I found the reading experience pleasurably disorienting. Basically, the action moves between the present, in which Breq seeks revenge for the destruction of her ship, and the past, in which the treacherous circumstances of that destruction become clear.

James told me to read the next one right away so I didn’t forget everything, but I didn’t. Uh oh.

David Downing, Union Station (2024)

Downing knows his readers can’t get enough of his John Russell books, even though he wrote his way to the end of WWII. He first solved the problem by writing a prequel. Now he’s taken a page from Philip Kerr and continued the adventures of journalist and former reluctant spy Russell and his actress wife Effie Koenen into the postwar period. Union Station finds the couple in Los Angeles, where Effie is making a go in an American sitcom while Russell grits his teeth and interviews movie stars. One day he realizes he’s being tailed and life gets more interesting. (Downing has great fun taking Russell on routes all over the metropolis.) But who’s after him? The Soviets, reneging on the deal that released him from their services? The Americans, suspicious of his thinly-disguised hostility to McCarthyism? As in all spy novels, the answer can only be found by returning to Berlin. (The occasion is the third annual Berlin Film Festival, where Effie is honoured with a retrospective.) A bittersweet return for both husband and wife: a new war has spring up on what aren’t even the ashes of the old.

The John Russell books are often great and never less than serviceable. This isn’t the best of the bunch, but if Downing keeps writing them I’ll keep reading.

Tana French, The Hunter (2024)

As a helpless Tan French simp I had the release date for her latest circled on my calendar months ago. The Hunter came out the week of the bat mitzvah—perfect timing: I demolished it on my spring break the week after. A sequel to The Searcher, which I wrote about at length here, it offers more of that French good stuff. Pitch-perfect command of voice, slow burn, delicious uncertainty about who is playing what game and whether they know that others think they’re on to them. (Lotta pronouns there, I admit.) Honestly, the book could have been longer: the last 75 pages or so were too hurried for my taste. French is good with dogs. Gamboling across the fields after a scent, huffing the occasional dramatic sigh while lolling on the wood floor, barking at a strange car juddering down the drive. Gimme more!

Dan Stone, The Holocaust: An Unfinished History (2023)

I reviewed this for On the Seawall. What a terrific, impressive book. If you only have the appetite for one history of the Holocaust, this is the one. I especially loved how Stone shows the Holocaust to be an ongoing phenomenon, the meaning of which continues to be contested in the most unlikely ways.

Tessa Hadley, After the Funeral and Other Stories (2023)

Push comes to shove I prefer Hadley’s novels to her stories, but I like her stories a lot too. (I once wrote about one of my favourite early ones.) I read these in a rush, one after the other, which is a terrible way to read a collection. I’d read a couple before, in The New Yorker. They were still good on a second reading. Not quite Alice Munro-levels of shifting-narrative-times-to-narrate-striking-events-in-otherwise-ordinary-middle-class-lives, but close.

Louise Glück, The Wild Iris (1992)

Another book I wouldn’t have read were it not for One Bright Book. Huge thanks to Rebecca for choosing this terrific collection of poems addressed to and spoken by flowers and gardens and times of day. Listen to the pod for the details of our reactions, but I’ll just reiterate here that what delighted me most in these poems is their syntax. Glück’s punctuation is an arresting joy.

Turns out I’ll be teaching our intro to the English major course next year, and I’m thinking hard about assigning these.

Guy Gavriel Kay, Sailing to Sarantium (1998)

Kay is the homme moyen sensuel of fantasy writers, which makes him catnip to me.

Henri Matisse, Olga Merson (1911)

That’s it for now. See anything you like here?

11 thoughts on “What I Read, March 2024

    • You are the last person left who comments, E. It is so nice!!! Thank you.
      Sarantium was great (obviously it’s his riff on Byzantium under the Romans: if you know more about the period than I do you might get even more). It’s the first of the duology and I just read the second, which I liked even more.
      I will say that although he always has done his best with female characters, I think he has improved a lot in the past decade, so I might start with more recent books. All the Seas of the World was my first and I thought that was a great first one.
      He’s not easy to get in the US either! I pick them up when I’m in Canada….
      He’s had quite the life: picked by the Tolkien estate as a grad student to overseas the posthumous publications, knew Dorothy Dunnett, all kinds of stuff…

      • I do try to keep commenting on peoples’ blogs—the conversations that I see archived from the early days of book blogging all seem to have happened in the comments, and they were so rich! Otherwise it seems like it’s just shouting into a void, really.

        Thank you for the head’s up on Sarantium and on Kay’s general difficulty of purchase! All the Seas of the World does pop up here from time to time, so I’ll keep an eye out. (I read The Silmarillion for the first time in 2021 and couldn’t believe that he’d been lucky enough to have such a prominent role in bringing it to publication! Obviously a pretty amazing person.)

  1. I have the Dan Stone book lightly pencilled in for the summer. Thanks for the thoughtful review.

    The Glück book had a lot of plesant surprises. “Wait, is the flower saying this one?”

  2. A bad month for you is like one of my good ones! I loved the Tessa Hadley stories, the first of hers that I have read. I read the Glück because of you all, which was a delight. You’re not luring me into Zola, though! Also I just downloaded The Searcher for my long plane/train rides—you got me to finally commit to reading (listening to) more French. I was going to tweet this to you but you and Elle are so right about blog comments. I miss the good old days!

    • I really have to get better at commenting myself—maybe a summer resolution!
      Zola’s so fabulous though, Liz!
      I’m really happy you’re committing to French: be warned I am blind to her flaws, she’s just perfect in my book, YMMV…
      Did you read the Samantha Harvey? I had to give it back to the library…

      • I did! (I think I kept it a couple of extra days. My library doing away with overdue fines has made me a scofflaw). It was lovely and you should definitely check it out again.

  3. Pingback: What I Read, May 2024 | Eiger, Mönch & Jungfrau

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