Listened to the audiobook, which worked well for me. It was very listenable while cooking, walking, etc. Since there will be no exam, I’m not worried about how many details I retain! I also cannot attest to the scholarship, since I’m not an expert in this field. The big takeaway for me was the depth and breadth of travel and exposure to many different cultures. This is not entirely new information to me, but reinforced again how mobile many Europeans and Middle Easterners were in the early Middle Ages. An interesting listen.
Reviews and Comments
Reader, writer, mostly literary fiction with brief forays into nonfiction and poetry
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Rachel Unkefer rated Transparency of Time: 3 stars

Transparency of Time by Leonardo Padura Fuentes, Anna Kushner (Mario Conde, #9)
Rachel Unkefer finished reading Children of ash and elm : a history of the Vikings by Neil Price
Rachel Unkefer rated Livewired: 5 stars
Rachel Unkefer rated The Art of Losing (book): 4 stars

The Art of Losing (book) by Alice Zeniter
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Rachel Unkefer reviewed Chéri and the End of Chéri by Colette
Millennial Angst from the Previous Millennium
4 stars
The best part of this book is the second half, which was a sequel to the first. The first half depicts a middle-aged Parisian woman's affair with a late-teenaged boy, and the second half focuses on that boy/man after coming back from serving in WWI to a world that no longer makes sense to him. The writing is evocative but not flowery, unsentimental and sometimes scathing.
The best part of this book is the second half, which was a sequel to the first. The first half depicts a middle-aged Parisian woman's affair with a late-teenaged boy, and the second half focuses on that boy/man after coming back from serving in WWI to a world that no longer makes sense to him. The writing is evocative but not flowery, unsentimental and sometimes scathing.
Rachel Unkefer reviewed Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
A lot of setup for not much payoff
3 stars
What even was this? A parable? A fairy tale? An allegory? Was it about religion? About artificial intelligence and how it can spawn its own superstition? This seemed to me a huge amount of world-building and excruciating detail just to say‚ what?
Rachel Unkefer rated The Actual Star: 2 stars

The Actual Star by Monica Byrne (duplicate)
The Actual Star takes readers on a journey over two millennia and six continents —telling three powerful tales a thousand …
Rachel Unkefer rated Waterland: 5 stars

Waterland by Graham Swift
Waterland is a 1983 novel by Graham Swift. It is considered to be the author's premier novel and was shortlisted …
Rachel Unkefer rated The Candy House: 3 stars

The Candy House by Jennifer Egan
The Candy House opens with the staggeringly brilliant Bix Bouton, whose company, Mandala, is so successful that he is “one …
Rachel Unkefer rated The Wrong End of the Telescope: 4 stars
Rachel Unkefer rated The Promise: 4 stars

The Promise by Damon Galgut
The Promise is the story of a family, but also of a country, over forty years. In four parts, each …
Rachel Unkefer reviewed A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers (Monk and Robot, #1)
Review of 'A Psalm for the Wild-Built' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
I wanted to read this because I had heard about this genre of “hope punk” or “cozy punk,” and I was curious. As I expected, there was no real conflict, or any jeopardy or much in the way of stakes. But this is what the genre is about, giving a break from the catastrophe that is our current world, so on that count, I would give it a high score, but I prefer novels with more at stake and more conflict. But I can see how many who are very stressed in everyday life and stressed about the planet and technology might take comfort in this sort of a book (not that I’m not stressed about these things, but I guess I’m used to higher level of stress). I don’t expect to continue with the series, but who knows?
Rachel Unkefer rated The Darling: 4 stars

The Darling by Russell Banks
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Rachel Unkefer rated Health Communism: 3 stars

Health Communism by Beatrice Adler-Bolton, Artie Vierkant
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