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The Shattered Moon

TheShatteredMoon@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year ago

Avid reader and long-time outdoor writer and photographer now dedicated to fiction. Genre misfit (SF historical romance… ish). Three Kinds of North is Book One of a series, The Shattered Moon. Book Two, The Sundering Wall, was published in August 2023. Book Three, Vows and Watersheds, is out in February 2024.

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Laurie Frankel: This is how it always is (2017) 4 stars

"This is how a family keeps a secret...and how that secret ends up keeping them. …

Review of 'This is how it always is' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Passionate, tender, and funny, This Is How It Always Is is a roller-coaster read that carries you along at a a terrific pace. Maybe sometimes you'd like a little bit of a breather to gather your thoughts, but at the same time I couldn't wait to see how it worked out for the family, and especially for young Poppy/Claude. Laurie Frankel has given us a whole family of three-dimensional (if occasionally a bit too precocious) kids and two parents who are, like most of the rest of us, just trying to do their best as best they can figure it out. You're rooting for them all all the way through, but especially for Poppy.
I thought I knew a bit about trans kids and gender dysphoria, but this book gave me a deeper insight into the reality of it; how the experience is different for every child and every family. …

Review of 'The Unreal and the Real' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Ursula K Le Guin is my favourite author, and I'd read at least eighty percent of these stories before, but it's a joy to have so many of her best gathered in one volume. The Direction of the Road, The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas, Semley’s Necklace, The Rule of Names, and more than thirty more. I may not read it cover to cover every time, but I'll be dipping into this collection frequently for years to come.

Elizabeth Wein: Code Name Verity (2012, Electric Monkey) 4 stars

A Michael L. Printz Award Honor book that was called "a fiendishly-plotted mind game of …

Review of 'Code Name Verity' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This is a tremendous book.
It tells the story of two young women in World War 2, one a pilot and one who becomes an SOE agent. It's no real spoiler to say that the latter, the eponymous 'Verity', winds up in the hands of the Gestapo, as this is revealed on the first page anyway. This stands as a warning to all potential readers that there are some harrowing passages, and Wein's writing doesn't shrink from the awfulness but also doesn't overload us with it or overindulge in gory detail. However, there is also a great deal of joy in this book, which shines all the brighter against the dark background.
This is a war story, but it's certainly not just for the genre afficionados. Above all it's a story of friendship and love—not sexual or romantic love but the deep love of two people from very different backgrounds …

Review of 'Kangchenjunga' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Kangchenjunga is the third highest mountain in the world, but its prominence in views from places like Darjeeling gave it a renown in the West long before Everest or K2 were fully surveyed and known to be higher. Due to its position and exposure to monsoon weather, it is particularly prone to avalanches and remains one of the most challenging of the world's great mountains. According to Doug Scott, for one, it is also the grandest.
And Scott, who sadly died in 2020, was as well-qualified as anyone to voice such an opinion. He made the front pages when he and Dougal Haston became the first Britons to climb Everest, as part of Chris Bonington's South-West Face expedition, but he climbed all over the world, generally focusing on climbing challenging objectives in the best possible style. In 1977 he and Bonington made the first ascent of The Ogre (Baintha Brakk) …

Review of 'Born to Climb' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This book is an intriguing blend of two distinct strands: the history of climbing, and the author's own personal journey within the sport.
The subtitle, 'From rock climbing pioneers to Olympic athletes' suggests a particular focus on rock-climbing, and this is generally what we get, but the early stages do consider the wider impulse towards high places. I suspect this is inescapable; much of the genesis of pure rock-climbing is tied up with greater mountaineering, with early climbs in the Lakes and Wales often dismissed as mere 'mountain practice'.
The early part of the history is a familiar tale: Petrarch on Ventoux, Paccard and Balmat on Mont Blanc, Coleridge on Broad Stand (erroneously described as being on Scafell Pike; it's on Scafell). However, we soon get a wider picture, showing how Victorian attitudes, specifically British attitudes, sought to exclude women and working-class people from mountaineering and many other pursuits. The …

The Dictionary of Lost Words (Paperback, 2022) 4 stars

In 1901, the word ‘Bondmaid’ was discovered missing from the Oxford English Dictionary. This is …

Review of 'The Dictionary of Lost Words' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Just finished reading (well, listening to) this and I've been blown away. It highlights how much of the original Oxford dictionary was shaped by a white, male, and middle- to upper-class perspective. But it does it without battering you with polemic, instead drawing out the themes through the engaging and highly believable story of one young woman (a girl at the start).
I see one commentator on this site is complaining that their reading has been 'ruined' by the (few and deftly-placed) occurrences of 'obscene' words. As a way to demonstrate that you've completely missed the point of the whole book, that's hard to beat.
100% recommended.

Kate Atkinson: Life After Life (2013, Little, Brown and Company) 4 stars

What if you could live again and again, until you got it right? On a …

Review of 'Life After Life' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Just finished reading this for the second time and it's every bit as good as I thought first time around. There's something very clever going on here as Kate Atkinson plays with multiple timelines and widely different versions of a single life, but the book never falls into the 'literary fiction trap' of being so clever that you don't care about the people who inhabit it.
This goes on the list of books I'll read again and again.

Review of 'Kangchenjunga Adventure' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

There weren't many books in my grandparents' home. One of the few that I remember was The Kangchenjunga Adventure by Frank Smythe. Sadly they died while I was still quite young, before I discovered mountaineering for myself, and I never had the chance to ask how they came by it. Nor do I know what happened to the book. Given their age it could well have been an early edition (and might now be quite collectable).
I was too young to make a serious go at reading the book, but I certainly looked through it in search of pictures. Anyway, however it came to be there, it left some kind of mark on me and predisposed me to the impression that it was one of the classics of mountain literature, certainly of the prolific period between the wars, if not of all time. So I was both intrigued and delighted …

Review of 'Climbs and Ski Runs' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Frank Smythe (1900–1949) was one of the leading mountaineers of the inter-war period. He was also a pioneer of making a living through writing and lecturing about his climbing. And yet he is far less well-known today than, say, Tilman (an almost exact contemporary) or Shipton, who was just a few years younger. Perhaps he faded from memory because he died young. It can hardly be because he's a poor writer; he isn't (though perhaps not as outstanding as Tilman).
Smythe's achievements include a couple of records that should be better-known. In 1930 he was part of a German-led team that made the first ascent of Jongsong Peak (7462m), then the highest summit yet reached; he describes this in The Kangchenjunga Adventure. The very next year he led the team which climbed Kamet (7756m), related in Kamet Conquered. The scale of this feats is underlined by the fact that the …

Samantha Shannon: The bone season (2013) 3 stars

In the mid-21st century, major world cities are controlled by a formidable security force, and …

Review of 'The bone season' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

When you get a third of the way into a book, put it aside to do other things, and then realise you don't really care if you pick it up again, it's never a good sign.
Either I failed to engage with this book or it failed to engage with me.I'm not really drawn to stories about ghosts, spirits, or anything supernatural and this certainly failed to overcome my resistance. Above all I didn't care about any of the characters. I also found it (surprisingly) lacking in atmosphere. This volume went back to the library unfinished and I won't be bothering with any sequel(s).