Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Bout of Books 36 Jan 2-9

 This year's early Bout of Books is scheduled conveniently in the week BEFORE my classes start for the semester instead of during the week of classes. I don't know if this means that I'll be spending the whole week building course web-pages and not reading, or if it might be like the calm before the storm so that I'll have more time ot read. 

Either way, it will be a fun way to kick-off a new year of reading. I have plenty of goals, including working on research for my own book and putting a bit more energy into the Academic Reading Challenge. Here's the official sign-up info for Bout of Books:


The Bout of Books readathon is organized by Amanda Shofner and Kelly Rubidoux Apple. It’s a weeklong readathon that begins 12:01am Monday, January 2nd and runs through Sunday, January 8th in YOUR time zone. Bout of Books is low-pressure. There are reading sprints, Twitter chats, and exclusive Instagram challenges, but they’re all completely optional. For all Bout of Books 36 information and updates, be sure to visit the Bout of Books blog. - From the Bout of Books team


 

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Academic Reading Challenge 2023



Hello friends and strangers,

It's December, and that means it's time to start planning for next year's academic reading challenge.  For those who are unfamiliar with online reading challenges, this challenge gives you a list of categories and you find books to fit the categories based on your interests. This year, our Facebook group came up with a great list of categories after brainstorming about 22 proposed categories and then narrowing down to 18. To fill those categories, feel free to pick from what's already on your shelf, what you've long meant to read but haven't, what crosses your path, etc. In this case, one choice will literally be a book that crosses your path - "a book you saw someone reading in public." I have a feeling people in cities with robust rail transit are going to have an easier time finding things in that category than a lot of USians, but don't worry: if the end of the year is rolling around, you can count something you saw someone post about on social media (details below). This is the 9th year I've run this challenge, and we're still a small group, but every year a few more people join in. People who do it really enjoy it, and it is possible, if you're an academic and worried about research time, to incorporate books you actually need to read for work into your list. Think of the challenge as a little extra inspiration to pull something off your TBR that's been maturing there for too long. Sometimes a category may get you to read something for work that you wouldn't have thought was relevant otherwise. This isn't a competition, and no one is judging. We have 18 categories, but you can read as much or as little as you want. We also have a spreadsheet that you can fill out with what you've read as the year goes on, so you can see what others are reading and draw inspiration from there. We also have a facebook group
 In this group we talk about the challenge categories for the year and occasionally discuss what we've read and plan to read. There is also an academic article about this challenge that I wrote for a collection on the "slow movement" in academia. 

In honor of strangers reading books together, possibly seeing each other reading books "across a crowded room," or even just finding a wonderful book that once, strange to you, will later "sing in your dreams" here's Paul Robeson singing "Some Enchanted Evening" 



Who and What the Academic Reading Challenge is for: 

This is a challenge for academics who feel that their reading has become over-specialized and possibly joyless, who want to read more literature for pleasure, who want to broaden the way they approach their own research and teaching, who like to talk about reading with each other, who are interested in interdisciplinary reading, and who want to support their friends and colleagues by reading their books. You don’t have to be a professor to do the challenge. Maybe you graduated from school but you miss reading academic books. The challenge runs for a year and emphasizes reading across academic disciplines. If you are a professional academic or public intellectual outside the university, this challenge is meant to give you a structure for reading outside your area of specialization - including reading literature - and to provide a space to talk with others about the experience. If you are a general reader who likes reading serious works of non-fiction, this challenge is also for you. It's a structure that you can use to read works of the type that you might not have encountered since you were a student.


 Rules 

The challenge starts on January 1, 2023 at midnight and goes till Dec. 31, 2023. 
There are a total of 15 regular categories in the challenge, and three “extra credit” categories for over-achievers. 
 The academic books must be at least 175 pages long . 
Novels must be at least 200 pages long 
Books of poetry or special issues of journals must be at least 100 pp. long 
One book can be a children's or YA book. 
To decide whether a book is academic, look for something published by a university press, or check the acknowledgments for references to scholarly mentors and anonymous readers. 
 Any book on the list, except where specified otherwise, can be a novel or a complete journal issue as long as it fits the general category 
Books can only count for one category, but you can switch them from one category to the other before you’re done if you like. (In other words, you cannot count a book by your friend who wrote a book on grief for both the "academic book about grief" and the "by a friend" categories.) 
Only one book can be something you’ve read before 
Audiobooks are fine as long as they are unabridged and the print edition is at least 175 pages long. Books must be started no earlier than midnight 1/1/23 and finished no later midnight 12/31/2023

 Points: This isn't a competition, but if you're counting… 
Total possible points for 1-15 without any extra points: 200 
Total possible points for all extra-credit: 250 

This Year's Categories with points:

 1. Book by a friend, colleague, former teacher or former student 10 
 2. A literary classic 10 
 3. An adaptation of a literary classic  (double points if you read an adaptation of the same book you read for  category 2) 10,20
 4. A book about the natural environment that draws on academic research (can be fiction or non-fiction, academic or non-academic) 20 
 5. A book about care-giving for humans or non-human animals 10 
 6.A book that, when written, was set in the future, which is now a date in the past (for ex, Looking Backward, 1984) 10 
 7.  A book by someone who was a refugee, exile, or asylum seeker 10 
 8. An academic book originally written in a language other than English  20
 9. A book about fashion (any aspect, including hair and/or make-up, the garment industry, etc. Can include biographies) 20 
 10.  A book about anti-fascism or other opposition to the far-right 20 
 11.  A book about grief  10 
 12. A book about something considered “low brow” or “kitsch” 10 
 13. A book about anti-Semitism 10
 14. A book about sound, hearing and/or about hearing loss (could be sound studies, musicology, scientific analysis of hearing/deafness, about the deaf community)  20 
 15. A book about colonialism and/or empire 10 

 EXTRA CREDIT: 
16:  Extra-Credit: A book you saw someone reading in public (if it’s getting close to December 2023, and you still haven’t seen someone out reading in the world, this can be a book you saw on a social media post, but it should be by an ordinary person & preferably not someone you know) 20 
17.  Extra-Extra-Credit  :A play 10 
18.  Super-Duper Extra Credit:  A book about, or set in, Scandinavia 10

Saturday, October 22, 2022

dewey's 24 hour readathon Oct. 2022

Another Dewey's Readathon. I'm so looking forward to this one. As usual I have too many books to choose from. 
 

Monday, August 22, 2022

Bout of Books 35 Wrap-Up

 It was the first week of classes, and I have about 92 students, but I managed to finish 4 of the books I was halfway through. 

Stanislaw Lem's His Master's Voice was the best - prescient and witty.

I very much enjoyed the always clever Grady Hendrix's Final Girl Support Group

I finished re-reading Sandman v.1 and it holds up well

I finished Lisa Unger's Confessions on the 7:45 and my main thought about it was that I should really give up on a "fun" read when I don't think it's any good. The book had an interesting plot, and started off OK, but the characterization was weak. We hear one character tell another that she's a "woman of iron" but she gives zero evidence of this in her thoughts and actions. 





I still have reading to do for research, and I haven't made much progress on this year's academic reading challenge because I really have to prioritize writing my own book this year.

Thursday, August 18, 2022

Bout of Books Update - Days 3 and 4

So far, I'm doing OK in my goal of finishing some of the many books I'd started and stopped. 

Wednesday I did finish Stanislaw Lem's His Master's Voice which I thought was just excellent! We didn't have that much of a discussion of it in book-club, but it's such a fascinating and prescient commentary on so many different things. It's an interesting commentary on the Cold War, on the nature of science, on how language works, on relationships between different disciplines, even on human beings in general. The ending is also just really cool.  

During my walk yesterday, I listened to a bit of Alifair Burke's If You Were Here, which continues to be fine, if not gripping enough to get me to find more time to listen. 

This morning, I got back into Grady Hendrix's Final Girls' Support Group which I still like, and hope I can finish before the weekend. I have about 100 pages of that left, and since the first 100 pages when pretty fast, I'm guessing I'll be able to finish it soon.

I had a bunch of meetings and other work to do today, so I'm glad I was able to make some time for reading this morning. I'm hoping that tomorrow I'll have some time to read more of my work-related books before I go into a weekend of reading fiction to celebrate this readathon. 

In honor of reading unfinished books, here's some Massive Attack "You're a book that I have opened/and now I've got to know much more" 




Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Bout of Books 35 Days 1-2



 I did OK yesterday despite numerous work tasks and a few interruptions during the day. Finished one of my many in-progress pleasure reads by finishing volume 1 of the Sandman comic. I'm reading that for the second time since I'm watching the TV series. It's been more than 10 years since I read it the first time, and it definitely held up. It's always interesting to see how an adaptation differs from the original.

  I also finally made it past the preface in Stanislaw Lem's His Master's Voice and am on p.75 as of this morning. I need to read another 50 or so pages today if I want to finish the book in time for tomorrow's book club. I read a little bit of Lisa Unger's Confessions on the 7:45 last night before falling asleep, at least enough to learn about another character's sordid past.

Today's plan includes a lot of course prep, but hopefully I'll have some time to do other reading or at least listen to an audiobook for a while. 

For today's reading & listening theme, in honor of finally finishing something, and despite being really obvious, it's still good. I also just noticed that funny line about cutest boy having "wavy hair like Liberace." 





Monday, August 15, 2022

It's Bout of Books #35 - August 15-21

 It's bout of books week, so I'll sign up again. 

What is this "Bout of Books" you ask? Here's what the organziers have to say:
The Bout of Books readathon is organized by Amanda Shofner and Kelly Rubidoux Apple. It’s a weeklong readathon that begins 12:01am Monday, August 15th and runs through Sunday, August 21st in YOUR time zone. Bout of Books is low-pressure. There are reading sprints, Twitter chats, and exclusive Instagram challenges, but they’re all completely optional. For all Bout of Books 35 information and updates, be sure to visit the Bout of Books blog. - From the Bout of Books team

I usually sign up for this readathon, though I don't always wind up following through. The August readathon is especially bad timing for me, because it falls during the first week of classes at the university where I teach. These days are often taken up with meetings, student emails, and other business on top of the usual teaching stuff. However, I'll give it a go. My goal is pretty modest - I just need to finish some of the books I've started this summer. I've managed to start a bunch of books without finishing them and have gotten 4 books behind in my goal of reading 101 books by the end of the year. Looking at the list of "fun" books below, I'm guessing the problem is that none of these books are really thrilling me or I wouldn't have picked up a new one before finishing the one I'd already started, though I love Sandman and Paper Girls and started re-reading them while watching the new TV shows. I also have a book-club meeting on Wednesday night to discuss Stanislaw Lem's book His Master's Voice which I've been reading a couple of pages of every day in the morning before I start panicking about the on-coming semester. Now that all my syllabuses are complete, maybe I'll finally be able to immerse myself in it.
  
  So here's my current stack of partially-read books, and I'll see how far I get during the week 

for fun:
Stanislaw Lem, His Master's Voice 
Alifair Burke, If You Were Here (audio) 
Alex Robinson, Tricked 
re-reading, because of the TV series: Neil Gaiman, Sandman v. 1 
re-reading because of the TV series: Paper Girls comics (I have these as single issues and re-read through issue 12) 

for research: 
Jean Hardisty, Mobilizing Resentment 
Jean-Michel Palmier, Weimar in Exile 

 for teaching: 

In honor of Lem, theme music for this reading and listening post:


Friday, June 17, 2022

Tribeca Film Fest At Home 2022 - part two


 I watched two films that I had been looking forward to, but that I found disappointing. The first one was a star-studded political thriller called 88, about a Black candidate for president * SPOILER ALERT*  whose entire career has secretly been funded by a small group of German Nazis who fled to the U.S. in 1947. It's trying to be like the Odessa File, I guess, but as if such a group had enormous secret financial power inside the U.S. and were secretly behind every bad policy ever passed by US lawmakers, including  those leading to mass incarceration.  It's already bad that the film displaces already bad US racial capitalism with fictional Nazi conspirators from Germany. The worst part of this is that, while being anti-anti-Semitic, and seeming to want to educate audiences about economic and political power, including that Black people in political power can still reproduce white supremacy, the various explanatory lectures about capitalism dip into right-wing conspiracy theories about the Federal Reserve, and shady cabals of "global financial elites." Really unfortunate.

The next disappointing film was Good Girl Jane - which just won the Tribeca jury prizes for best U.S. narrative feature and best actress. Clearly, the Jury and I were not on the same page. I did like parts of this film, and agree that the lead actress, Rain Spencer gave an impressive performance. The film does capture how easily a naive young woman can be beguiled by an exploitative and charming young man, - showing him as glamorous and kind in her eyes.  However, in contrast with the other addiction movie entered in the US narrative competition, God's Time, this was much more cliched and exploitative. It was sort of like the TV series Euphoria (which I do like) - but grittier, less imaginative, and with less clear psychological motivations. It was like a mash-up of Kids and Go Ask Alice.

I hope I do a better job choosing films this weekend.


In honor of the classic, bad-boy - good-girl story, here's some music from DMX 






Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Tribeca Film Fest 2022 - First Weekend's Films: Assorted Shorts, La Vie En Rhodes, Employee of the Month, Rounding, The Lost Weekend, God's Time

 Once again, I decided to get a streaming pass for the Tribeca at Home streaming section of the Tribeca Film Festival. This year's entries look good, though they have been slower to make films available than they were last year. 

I watched quite a few short films on the first day, and of the first bunch I saw, the most memorable were Sparring Partners which I hadn't expected much from, but I thought was very effective and moving, Five-O, which started off as a kind of charming, feel-good story before it took a sharp turn, and Triggered which seemed to me to a very bleak sign of the point we have reached in the US. 

I also watched Erica Rhodes' stand-up from the Tribeca Drive-In La Vie En Rhodes which I'm guessing happened live a year ago at the Rose Bowl. It's also available on Amazon Prime now. I hadn't heard of her before, but the show was funny and her delivery is good.  I saw a negative review in Paste about her not having such great material, but I thought that her comments on dating and what it's like to be in your thirties were genuinely funny. She didn't go out of her way to be edgy or controversial, so I can both see why she'd be on something like a Prairie Home Companion, and why she might not be seen as an especially challenging comedian in the current moment. 

On Friday, I wound up watching the Belgian comedy, Employee of the Month. This is a very dark comedy that reminded me of Nine-To-Five or Thelma & Louise, but more slapstick and more violent, as in kind of slapstick violence that made you laugh and also made you feel guilty for laughing. This does seem like the perfect comedy for #metoo, though I can imagine it getting a lot of angry responses in the same way that Thelma and Louise initially did, for being too vengeful towards men. After spending too much time on Twitter last week, I really needed it. It was cathartic.

Saturday night, I watched Rounding, a dramatic thriller about a medical resident that was intriguiing and had some great performances, but still didn't quite work. I kind of agree with the comments of the reviewer I linked above; the different aspects of the film were all interesting, but they just didn't hang together that well. 


On Sunday, I saw The Lost Weekend, a documentary about John Lennon in the mid-1970s as narrated by May Pang. I've been a Lennon fan for a long time, and have never participated in the hatred of Yoko Ono, but Pang's representation of Lennon's and Ono's relationship is understandably negative. Probably the thing that supports Pang's side of the story most is Pang's close relationship with John's son from his first marriage, Julian. Pang helped John rebuild his relationship with Julian, and also maintained her own relationship with both Julian and his mother for many years. It's a very different version of John's life than what comes through the last interviews with him and Yoko. Regardless of Yoko's or Pang's role in John's life, it is striking that he was so productive musically during this period. After watching the Peter Jackson Get Back series last year, I had attributed that productivity to his needing to get free of the Beatles to try new things, and it's interesting to learn more about that time period as not entirely negative. Pang does address Lennon's violence - including that he had thrown her against a wall, and this is something that most representations of him as more saintly have tried to avoid. Here's #9 Dream, on which May Pang sings backing vocals. 



Also on Sunday, I saw Daniel Antebi's comedy-drama, God's Time. I really enjoyed this movie and hope that it gets a distributor. Despite depicting wild situations and using non-realistic narrative strategies, the representation of human beings feels very real in the movie. Two examples of that "realness" are the way it depicts the Covid pandemic and 12-step programs.  People in the movie wear masks and use hand-sanitzer without ever commenting on why they're doing that. They wear the masks the way people really do - taking them off when outside, having them under their chins, hanging on a cord, or hanging off one ear. They take them off to share at meetings - and that doesn't make sense, but OK.    The way it deals with addiction and recovery is more central to the story. The entire film is based on interpersonal drama within a 12-step group, and includes multiple scenes of meetings and talk about recovery outside the meetings among the friends in the group.  In the typical movie about addiction, you see the addicted person being increasingly self-destructive and finally getting to their first meeting as the conclusion of the arc. This story presents a much messier and more human, less linear understanding of recovery. There is talk of relapsing, lying,  betrayal, and all kinds of other complexities under the surface of the lives of the people in the group - and despite all this it is often very funny. Definitely worth seeing. 

Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Bout of Books 33: Wrap-Up

 I did OK on the Bout of Books readathon this time, though as I thought it would, prepping for a new semester took up more and more of my time by the weekend. 

I finished The Lincoln Highway in time for my Wednesday night book club, and since I had only started it on Jan 1 and it's almost 600 pages long, I count that as a win. I really enjoyed that book, and now plan to read the two other books by Amor Towles that have been on my TBR for a while. We had a long and involved conversation about this book, especially trying to understand the meaning of the ending.  If the ambition was to write "the Great American Novel," and throw in a lot of literary references, perhaps it's an allusion to the ending of the Great Gatsby with a particularly cruel twist: 

"So we beat on, boats against the current, borne ceaselessly back into the past." 

I started Alan Wald's Exiles from a Future Time, though I did not get very far into it, because I was prioritizing a book related to my teaching preparation, There Goes My Everything which, despite the bad review in the New York Times, is very good and has been helpful for my class prep in a number of ways - alerting me to collections of documents and oral histories that I can share with my students, for example.  At night, as I was falling asleep, I read about 80 pages in Peter Swanson's The Girl With a Clock for a Heart, which I'd bought ages ago when it was featured in a $1.99 ebook sale. It's off to a good start, though I keep reading it after such long days that I fall asleep after a few pages. I've been listening to podcasts while I work out, so I didn't make that much progress in S.A. Cosby's Blacktop Wasteland, but I will get back to it in my next bout of house cleaning. 

In honor of the freight-hopping section of the Lincoln Highway, here's Jimmy Forrest doing "Night Train" in 1951



Saturday, January 1, 2022

Bout of Books 33: Jan 3-9th 2022

Once again, I'm signing up for Bout of Books!

What is Bout of Books? From the creators:

 The Bout of Books readathon is organized by Amanda Shofner and Kelly Rubidoux Apple. It’s a weeklong readathon that begins 12:01am Monday, January 3rd and runs through Sunday, January 9th in YOUR time zone. Bout of Books is low-pressure. There are reading sprints, Twitter chats, and exclusive Instagram challenges, but they’re all completely optional. For all Bout of Books 33 information and updates, be sure to visit the Bout of Books blog. - From the Bout of Books team.

Bout of Books
I've signed up for this challenge multiple times. Sometimes I read some books and blog about them, but it often falls during the very first week of classes for me, a time when I'm usually too busy to read - much less blog about reading. This time, it falls in the last week of my winter break, just before classes start. That means I'll probably have some time to read, though a lot of the reading will be work-related. I've been planning to read a book about how to do family history, since the main assignment in my one of my classes is a family history, and I feel like the students need more support and structure than what the textbook materials I've been using provide. I also want to read at least some of the book There Goes My Everything by Jason Sokal, though I see it was panned by James Goodman in the NYT when it first came out. Mostly, though, I'll be reading The Lincoln Highway which is the next book for my book club, which meets during the week of the readatahon, so I'll be reading as much as I can per day before then, in between bouts of syllabus revision.