September 2024 Books

Books Reread

Disney Hyperion

The Tyrant’s Tomb by Rick Riordan
The Trials of Apollo book 4
Continuing on my big Percy Jackson reread, here is the 4th Trials of Apollo book. I have to admit, I didn’t remember this one very well. It’s a good one though. I love that we get to meet some more Roman campers and spend some more time with Reyna. I don’t remember if I thought this the first time I read this book, but Reyna strikes me as kinda ace, and I love that for her. Love the way Apollo develops each book as well. Uncle Rick is really a master of the character arc.
3.5/5 ravens

New Books Read

Feiwell & Friends

My Dear Henry by Kalynn Bayron***
Remixed Classics series
CW: racism, homophobia
Last month I read the original Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, so obviously immediately I had to read a retelling. This was fun. There’s a lot of homoerotic subtext in the original (there was in much of the literature of the time which was about men doing manly things and included almost no female characters or love plots. This was in response to literature from earlier in the century which was mostly written by women and featured romantic relationships as the main plot). But I digress. In this version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, our narrator Gabriel Utterson is in love with his classmate Henry Jekyll, but begins to worry about him when Jekyll breaks off their relationship and the mysterious Hyde appears. Nice to read a historical fiction that deals with queerness and race in history.
3.5/5 love letters

Random House

Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe by Fannie Flagg
CW: n-word, racism, domestic violence, misogyny
This was my binge book for September, and I had a delightful day doing nothing but reading this book. Weaving forward and backward in time, this book tells the story of two women running a cafe in a small town in Alabama. But it also tells the story of the whole community and all the lives they touched with love and good food and the life they might have ended? (Just a little casual murder that’s never been solved.) This one has more serious themes than the other Fannie Flagg book I’ve read, but it still has her signature humor. Kind of reminded me of a cross between To Kill a Mockingbird and a John Irving novel, which doesn’t seem like a combination that should work, but it does. I liked the structure of it, the way it had the frame of Ninny telling Evelyn the story of Idgie and Ruth and then the flashbacks to them mixed with the newspaper bulletins and the development of Evelyn’s story arc in the present. Certainly there are a few things that didn’t age super well, but overall still a relevant story. Nice to see casual LGBTQIA+ rep in older books like this one.
3.5/5 fried green tomatoes

Random House Worlds

Lady Macbeth by Ava Reid*
CW: marital rape
This one was very atmospheric. Foggy. Moorish. Very weird to listen to it at the same time I was reading The Pairing. Very different vibes. You know me, I love a feminist retelling. Reid reimagines the story of Macbeth through the Lady’s eyes. A young girl from a French court, Roscilla comes to uncivilized Scotland to wed the Thane, aware of the power of her unhooded gaze to hoodwink men. Macbeth has other profane secrets and ambitions though and Roscilla must learn to navigate this new court and hold onto whatever power she can find.
3/5 veils

Macmillan

The Pairing by Casey McQuiston
The polar opposite of Lady Macbeth. This one was fun. Kit and Theo broke each other’s hearts so when they accidentally end up on the same food and wine tour of Europe, three weeks together seems like it’s going to be unbearable. But they’re adults right? They can be friends again. They can start a friendly competition to see who can sleep with the most locals on the tour, right? What could go wrong? Unless they’re still in love with each other. This wasn’t my favorite of McQuiston’s books, but it was fun. I savored it one city at a time. I liked the way McQuiston positioned food and decadence and the beauty of Europe in summer and the pursuit of pleasure against sex to state the simple truth that we deserve to be happy and to be made to feel good and to enjoy this beautiful world that we live in and enjoy all the delights it has to offer. This book is very spicy, if you’re into that.
3.75/5 French pastries (I guess I’m doing .75s now? I do it on StoryGraph sometimes but I was only doing half points on the blog)

Flatiron Books

Hera by Jennifer Saint
CW: rape. There’s a lot of rape in Greek myths
Oh, look, another Greek myth retelling. This one is larger in scope than many retellings, tackling the whole life of Hera from her birth to when the influence of the gods began to wane. Hera is often cast as the villain of much of Greek mythology, but Saint does an amazing job of making her a well-rounded, sympathetic character whose motives we understand, even if we don’t agree with her actions. It wasn’t my favorite of Saint’s books, but it is a good one.
3.5/5 peacocks

Liveright Publishing

Swimming Pretty by Vicki Valosik***
This is a nonfiction book about the history of synchronized or artistic swimming which is of course wrapped up in the history of competitive swimming, but also, less well known, is its connection to the history of women’s rights. Valosik takes us all the way through the history of swimming in this fascinating study. The prose is at times a little textbook-y and hard to get through, but for the most part the subject is interesting enough for it not to matter. There are also lots of pictures, so that was nice.
3/5 ballet legs

*This book only includes straight, white, cis people. (Which is maybe historically accurate for Lady Macbeth.) Swimming Pretty focuses on straight, white, cis people, but Valosik acknowledges the history of segregation and racism and access that discouraged people of color from joining the sport.

***This book is part of my Books for a Social Conscience series! Read My Dear Henry for a story that deals with race and homosexuality in Victorian England. Read Swimming Pretty to learn about how access to sports like swimming advanced women’s rights.

Reads marked as part of the Books for a Social Conscience series will regularly address topics like race and racism, colonialism and post-colonialism, LGBTQIA+ experience, feminism, BIPOC experience, social and political issues, history, identity, class, disability experience, immigration, gun violence, poverty, colorism, environmentalism, and more! The goal of these books is to diversify the stories we’re reading, grow our empathy for those who are different from us, and amplify voices who are often silenced.

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