Reviews and Comments

Megan

Megan@bookwyrm.social

Joined 3 years, 7 months ago

A dedicated if somewhat slow reader. Book lover. I am also at @Megan@toot.lgbt and @MeganMacSee@writing.exchange and @InBabel@wandering.shop

Libraries and used bookshops are my happy places. Newly Qualified Nurse #NHS - love my bicycle.

LGBTQ+ Trans rights are human rights. Abortion on demand is a human right.

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Janina Fisher: Healing the Fragmented Selves of Trauma Survivors (2017) 5 stars

Healing the Fragmented Selves of Trauma Survivors integrates a neurobiologically informed understanding of trauma, dissociation, …

A detailed and well researched book drawn from experience

5 stars

The author is a professional therapist, and she has formulated an approach to dealing with trauma based on her clinical experience and expertise, that draws on a wide evidence base.

Her approach is novel and probably as a result controversial, as it also involves critiques of other approaches to trauma therapy. It’s difficult to describe why this book is so good, the method described, called “parts therapy” makes a lot of sense. The goal is to help people understand how and why trauma influences their emotional state, and how to integrate trauma effects positively, without focusing on the trauma. There is a body of thought that suggests that approach, of focusing on trauma, only reactivates it and keeps people emotionally trapped. I love this book and have revisited key chapters frequently since first reading it. The book isn’t designed to be a self help course, it’s aimed at explaining the …

Michelle McNamara: I'll Be Gone in the Dark (EBook, 2018, HarperCollins) 4 stars

For more than ten years, a mysterious and violent predator committed fifty sexual assaults in …

Good Book About Terrible Events

4 stars

Content warning Discussion of Sexual Violence

HALLIE RUBENHOLD: The Five: (Paperback, Doubleday) 5 stars

Five devastating human stories and a dark and moving portrait of Victorian London - the …

The trouble with true crime books is the way they often focus on the worst of humanity, killers, men who usually assault and murder women. With victims often relegated to poorly described helpless silhouettes. In this book, Hallie Rubenhold doesn’t mention the killer. She has done an amazing research job, reconstructing the lives of the five women murdered by Jack the Ripper. Placing them in the social context of the time with so much skill, their lives are easy to imagine. I loved this book, it honours the women who are so often only remembered as a footnote to the killer.

reviewed Art of Falling by Kim Moore

Kim Moore: Art of Falling (2015, Seren Books) 3 stars

An Ode to Something Interesting.

3 stars

From the back of the book; “Kim Moore, in this lively debut, sets out her stall, firmly in the North amongst ‘My people:’ “who swear… without knowing they are swearing” A poetry collection rooted in the poet’s working class background. I wanted to like this book a lot, and I understand the impulse to write about her background. They are people often ignored, but there isn’t a whole lot of analysis of the context of class itself. The misogyny, racism and homophobia of white working class life is missing. I bought this book as part of my own effort to improve as a writer, and I’m glad I did, she has a nice eye for capturing feeling and moments, despite the absences mentioned.

"Global warming is arguably the defining scientific issue of modern times, but it is not …

This is a collection of science papers, that make the case solidly for man made global warming. I bought it in 2011 when the climate change denial movement seemed to kick into high gear, I naively thought that I could change deniers minds if I had a good grasp of the science. I learned wuite quickly that they aren’t interested in the science, or engaging in good faith. I did however gain a lot from reading this, and it helped me to be much more aware of the need for us to change if we want the planet to remain habitable.

Duncan Fallowell, Duncan Fallowell: April Ashley's odyssey (1982, J. Cape) 5 stars

This autobiography was written in the 1970s, and describes April Ashley's life to that point, …

Important Insight Into 20th Century Transgender Social History

5 stars

She had an amazing life and this book helped me as a teenager to contextualise my own gender dysphoria properly. I once lent it to cisgender friend who was incredibly snobby about her writing, I definitely took that personally. I would say this is a good book for trans girls and young trans femmes of any age to read, but also provides some fantastic historical insight into the lives of our trans elders. She deserves more recognition.

Sarah Helm: Ravensbrück: Life and Death in Hitler's Concentration Camp for Women 4 stars

Upsetting Detailed Account of Life and Death in Ravensbruck

4 stars

Content warning History of the Holocaust - Extremely Upsetting/Triggering