User Profile

Christian B

citizensongbird@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 months, 3 weeks ago

No answers left unquestioned. Reader and collector. Interested in all things fiction, the weirder the better. (It just seems a better vehicle for truth than non-fiction, don't you think?) Pleased to meet new people, can talk books for days.

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Christian B's books

Currently Reading

Mark Z. Danielewski: House of Leaves (2000, Pantheon Books)

Years ago, when House of Leaves was first being passed around, it was nothing more …

Labyrinthine is the only fitting descriptor.

A story within a story within a story, not so much nested as intertwined like one of those theoretical geometric shapes you find in advanced mathematics. Not merely a book but a piece of art where the medium mirrors the story within, as the house's interiors change shape so does the book, and occasionally you'll find yourself turning it sideways and upside down while reading. Nothing short of a work of genius. The horror is not so much scary as deeply unsettling, as you follow the explorers attempting to map a structure that defies understanding. I wouldn't recommend the book to just anyone, it's better suited for people who like puzzles, riddles, and getting lost.

Robert R. McCammon: Boy's Life (Hardcover, 1999, Tandem Library)

All of childhood in one fateful summer...

Arguably McCammon's most popular novel (or one of them anyway), named after a popular magazine published throughout the 1900s, the book blends a variety of plot elements into a feast of adventure and mystery. The overarching story has to do with a grisly murder in a quaint southern American town in the early 1960s, but takes many side roads into other genres and subplots: the KKK and the American civil rights movement, ghost stories, baseball, monsters literal and figurative, childhood friendships, and much more. May be hard to relate to for some, but if you grew up reading adventure books like Treasure Island, Swiss Family Robinson, My Side Of The Mountain, and on and on, it'll feel very familiar.

Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings: The Yearling (1938)

The Yearling is a novel by American writer Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, published in March 1938. …

A story about growing up, and growing up...

A quintessential coming-of-age novel about a farm boy who adopts a baby deer, but must learn harsh truths about how the real world treats naivete. Really well-written, with local colloquialisms that expertly flesh out turn-of-the-century rural America. (On a personal note, this book came into my life at a time when I was really struggling with personal growth, and had a significant impact on that process, and for that it will always have a special place in my heart.)

Walter Wangerin, Jr.: The Book of Sorrows (1996, Zondervan)

Darker and darker...

You'll need to read The Book of the Dun Cow, a story about a war between Good and Evil fought by talking animals, before picking up this one. The sequel follows the aftermath of that battle, but it's not the rebuilding of the community readers might expect; darkness, death, and destruction feature throughout. If a book has never made you cry, this might be the one to change that. Never before has a book been so aptly titled, and it left me in a depressive funk for weeks. Still, beautifully written and worth reading. (Ignore the third book, it's nothing like the first two and was obviously written decades later as a cash grab.)

Walter Wangerin, Jr.: The Book of the Dun Cow (Paperback, 2003, Harper & Row)

The Book of the Dun Cow (1978) is a fantasy novel by Walter Wangerin, Jr. …

Lord of the Rings meets Animal Farm...

A classic tale of Good Vs Evil, with a deeply flawed but well-meaning protagonist and a literal menagerie of hilarious characters. But don't let the talking animals fool you, this is no lighthearted children's book. Dystopian themes, unflinching violence, and a sweeping darkness that may leave readers depressed for days. Beautifully written in a highly lyrical, saccharine style that belies the unfolding destruction. The sequel, The Book of Sorrows, is just as good but even darker, if you can believe it. (The third book can and should be ignored outright, written after three decades as a quick cash grab by an author who very obviously got swept up in the recent alt-rightening of the evangelical crowd. Gone is the allegory, gone is the beauty, leaving nothing more than a ham-fisted sermon.)

William Wharton: Birdy (Hardcover, 1978, Alfred A. Knopf)

Birdy is the debut novel of William Wharton, who was more than 50 years old …

Friendship and birdkind.

A young man visits his childhood friend in a mental asylum to try to convince him he's not actually a bird. Loyalty, isolation, the Vietnam war, bird erotica... You'd never believe they could all blend together so beautifully, and yet. Not a well-known book, but almost won the Pulitzer, and with good reason. Well-written and intriguing. (The film features Nicholas Cage in an early role. It was a sign of things to come.)

reviewed The Wasp Factory by Iain M. Banks

Iain M. Banks: The Wasp Factory (1998)

The Wasp Factory is the first novel by Scottish writer Iain Banks, published in 1984. …

One of those books that makes you say "What the h..."

A story about a deranged teenager in an isolated island community who uses a broken clock to decide how to mete out death. One of the most original, intriguing, and disturbing novels I've ever read, with twists and turns aplenty. So good I've deliberately avoided reading anything else by Banks because I don't believe he could ever again match the lightning he caught in this one.

Haruki Murakami: Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World (2011, Penguin Random House)

My vote for best Murakami novel, though not as well known as his other books.

The book that made me fall in love with Murakami's imagination. Surreal encounters, a parallel dimension... Though the rest of his work never quite achieves the same harmonics, I continue to read him hoping for another visit to the end of the world.

Louise Penny, Hillary Rodham Clinton: State of Terror (2021)

State of Terror is a political-mystery novel written by former United States Secretary of State …

Review from someone who actually read it...

The disclaimer heading the book reads "This is a work of fiction. All of the characters and events portrayed in this novel are fictional." Hmm, I'm sure. But I couldn't help enjoying the author's barely-disguised impressions of real political figures and the insider details of how the position of Secretary of State functions--with ample artistic license, of course. The story itself is your basic thriller and would probably make a decent action movie if the author was not such a controversial figure and the risk of terrorist violence on opening night not so real. The writing was basic and punchy in service to the plot, as were the occasional twists. This was my first Penny novel, despite living around the corner from her for many years and often visiting her favourite bookstore in the town on which Three Pines is based (though we never crossed paths). The book didn't turn …