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Showing posts with label #LitsyAtoZ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #LitsyAtoZ. Show all posts

Sunday, March 5, 2017

Viva La Geek Girl Revolution!

Morning All,

Today we're discussing The Geek Feminist Revolution by Kameron Hurley, a self dubbed Intellectual Badass who has truly earned the title. Known for her incredible Sci-Fi and Fantasy novels this collection of essays is something else and more and a wonderful stand alone to her other work.

I am a bad feminist, not in the same vein as Roxanne Gay, but still I don't find myself to be a good feminist. I believe in women having every single opportunity, I believe in women making equal wages, and I think that having a vagina doesn't mean you have to be separated from a person with a penis unless literally it is for a porno casting. Women are every bit as smart, as strong, as capable as our male counterparts. Yet we're valued as less because somehow, somewhere, that became okay; and women have spent centuries trying to stop that bullshit.

Kameron Hurley's collection of geekish essay's lets me be okay calling myself a feminist. She doesn't blame men for the current plight of the females of our species, and she doesn't rally females into violent assault either. What she does is spend plenty of time building the reader up, and reminding them that regardless of gender we have a world we need to create, a world we need to support and embrace, a world that we need to be held responsible for and for what we put into it. As writers, consumers, citizens we have the immense responsibility for what we pour out of ourselves and into this world.

My copy of The Geek Feminist Revolution is now struck through and looks as though it is bleeding with the portions I have underlined, the notes I have added, the questions I have asked it knowing I won't get the answers from the pages; but rather from what I do after I read this book. TGFR contains real world advice on writing, the importance of ownership, and the surprising look into how much of geek culture is made up of women who aren't accepted into it. Hurley also spends a portion of the book explaining the culture of geekdom, how mainstream media dissects and perpetuates certain tropes and archetypes, and what makes her brand of geeky feminism so personal to her.

I can't explain what it is exactly that makes me love this book, and honestly I don't think I loved it for any specific reason. Finding something that helps you explore and understand a part of your identity as a woman and a geek in 2017 isn't easy, and I wasn't really looking for it. When I decided to read this book I needed to fulfill my Litsy A to Z "G" challenge, and find something that wasn't fiction. A collection of non-fiction essays certainly fit that bill, but gave me something more. I'm more fueled now to keep reading everything, to pick books that I normally wouldn't, to accept the fact that I love to read books that make most people think I'm a psychopath. I found utter acceptance in Hurley's essays, and I can't be the only one who did.

Challenge Met:
#LitsyAtoZ

Publishing Info:
287 pages (including notes and annotations!)
Originally Published on 5/31/2016 by Tor Books in English
ISBN 13: 9780765386243

Amazon Link: https://www.amazon.com/Geek-Feminist-Revolution-Kameron-Hurley/dp/0765386240/

Author Page: http://www.kameronhurley.com/

TBR because of this book:

Geek Girls Unite: How Fangirls, Bookworms, Indie Chicks, and Other Misfits Are Taking Over the World by Leslie Simon


Sunday, February 26, 2017

February is a Fickle Month

Happy Sunday All,

February, month two of 2017, 28 days of wintery bliss that somehow always goes by far to fast. February, the month where I don't feel like I accomplished as much as I wanted to regarding my reading goals. February, the month that distracted me like no other this year! Oh February, by Tuesday you will end, March will begin, and I have a plan; yes I have a plan to March straight into these reading challenges with vigor and coffee. So much coffee.

To date I've completed the following challenges:


BOOK RIOT READ HARDER
Read a book about booksThe Book JumperMechthild Glaser384
Read a book published between 1900 and 1950The Great GatsbyF. Scott Fitzgerald156
Read a book that is set more than 5000 miles from your locationTulip Fever (Amsterdam)Deborah Moggach288
Read a book in which a character of color goes on a spiritual journeyNorwegian WoodHaruki Murakami296
Read a book published by a micro-pressMargaret The FirstDanielle Dutton176
POP SUGAR
A book of lettersThe Private Letters of Countess Erzesbet BathoryKimberly Craft142
An audio bookCaravalStephanie Garber416
A book that's a story within a storyThe Miniaturist Jessie Burton 416
An espionage thrillerBad MonkeyMatt Ruff241
A book by an author who uses a pseudonymThe Silent WifeA.S.A Harrison326
A bestseller from a genre you don't normally readHow to fight presidentsDaniel O'Brien272
A book involving travelPassenger/Wayfarer (Time travel)Alexandra Bracken1018
A book that's published in 2017The PossessionsSarah Flannery Murphy368
A book involving a mythical creatureThe Bear and the NightengaleKatherine Arden336
A book you've read before that never fails to make you smile
A book with career adviceGetting an Academic Job in HistoryDana Polanichka112
A book with picturesVlad the Impaler: The Real Count DraculaEnid A. Goldber & Norman Itzkowitz128
The first in a series you haven't read beforeUnder Different StarsAmy A Bartol297
A book with an eccentric characterThe Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and DisappearedJonas Jonasson & Rod Bradbury396
A book you got from a used book saleThe Last LectureRandy Pausch & Jeffrey Zaslow206
#LitsyAtoZ
Book AAll The Ugly and Wonderful ThingsBryn Greenwood352
Book ZZ: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald Therese Ann Fowler375

Moving on into March I'm realizing that I need to get focused again; books can be distracting, who would have known?

Since it seems that the area I'm lacking in the most at present is my #LitsyAtoZ books they're going to be my March focus. My plan is to read at least five books slated out for that challenge and one for each of the others. Seven challenge slated books, and then whatever else I want to read. Gotta love having that goal right? 

Until next time, 

XoXo 
BrainyHeroine

Monday, February 20, 2017

Catching Up and Checking In

Happy President's Day!

And on this celebratory day, (where it should be mandatory that the government give us free cake) I am thrilled to say I've completed my challenge list. No, I haven't completed my challenges, well not all of them at least, but I've finished the list for Popsugar and Read Harder so that I'll stop getting distracted with other books and then hope I can fit them in somewhere. Book distraction is a real thing, and it is a real issue for me. I'm a hopper, so at any given time I'm reading/listening to about four or five books. Truly, this is madness.

Since I've been off the last few days this has been my only goal. Now that I've reached said goal I can go through the process of crossing off the books I've read, updating my Goodreads page (which I suck at on a good day sometimes) and tallying up reading challenges. This will also let me move forward with written reviews of the book, more in-depth blog posts about reading, and hopefully I won't lose my damn mind along the way. February is almost over and I feel that in the shortest month of the year I've truly come up short on my reading goals, mainly due to life and reading distractions.

If you're interested, below is the master list I've come up with. I'm not posting what challenge they fit since I don't want complete and utter spoilers haha, but I think I've come up with a pretty impressive list. (NO REPEATS! That deserves a cake on merit alone!)

XoXo
BrainyHeroine


Title of BookAuthorPage Count
A Moment on the EdgeElizabeth George560
Accidental EmpressAlison Pataki512
All The Bright PlacesJennifer Niven378
All The Ugly and Wonderful ThingsBryn Greenwood352
Almost a WomanEsmeralda Santiago336
AmericanahChimamanda Mgozi Adichie477
AntarcticaClaire Keegan224
Bad MonkeyMatt Ruff241
Bear, Otter & The KidT.J Klune350
Behold the DreamersImbolo Mbue400
Bird BoxJosh Malerman262
Boy Meets BoyDavid Leviathan226
Bridge of Spies: A True Story of the Cold WarGiles Whittell303
Broken MonstersLauren Beukes464
CaravalStephanie Garber416
Catcher in the RyeJ.D. Salinger288
City of Light City of PoisonHolly Tucker336
Count of Monte Cristo (mentioned in Butterfly Garden)Alexander Dumas1276
Dark MatterBlake Crouch354
Eligible Curtis Sittenfeld 512
Fallen Founder: The Life of Aaron BurrNancy Isenberg560
FrankensteinMary Shelley 166
Getting an Academic Job in HistoryDana Polanichka112
Hard Luck: Harvey Haddix and the Greatest Game Ever LostLew Freedman210
Hidden FiguresMargot Lee Shetterly373
How the Garcia Girls Lost Their AccentsJulia Alvarez304
How to fight presidentsDaniel O'Brien272
I Let You Go Clare Mackintosh384
January 1973: Watergate, Roe v. Wade, Vietnam, and the Month that Changed America ForeverJames Robenalt420
Johnathan Strange & Mr. NorellSusannah Clarke1006
Julie & Julia Julie Powell310
KatherineAnya Seton500
Life After LifeKate Atkinson531
Lillian Boxfish Takes a WalkKathleen Rooney287
Margaret The FirstDanielle Dutton176
Matilda Roald Dahl240
Missing, PresumedSusie Steiner369
MonstressMarjorie M. Liu, Sana Takeda, Rus Wooton202
Moongirl and Devil Dinosaur #1Brandon Monclare, Amy Reeder, Natacha Bustos (illustrator)24
My Lady JaneCynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, & Jodi Meadows512
My Name is RedOrhan Pamuk & Erdag M. Goknar417
Norwegian WoodHaruki Murakami296
Orange is the New BlackPiper Kerman298
Passengar/Wayfarer Alexandra Bracken1018
Personal HistoryKatherine Grahm642
Pleasantville Attica Locke433
Queen of the NightAlexander Chee576
Ready Player OneErnest Cline374
RebeccaDaphne du Maurier393
Rise of the Rocket GirlsNathalia Holt352
Saffron SkiesLesley Loko 613
Seven Skeletons: The Evolution of the World's Most Famous Human FossilsLynda Pryne288
Sisi: Empress On Her OwnAlison Pataki464
Sisters In LawLinda Hirshman390
Swing TimeZadie Smith453
Tales of a Severed HeadRachida Madani, Marilyn Hacker176
The 19th Wife David Ebershoff530
The Bear and the NightegaleKatherine Arden336
The Book JumperMechthild Glaser384
The Case of Jack the Nipper H.L. Stephens328
The Couple Next DoorShari Lapena313
The Eyre Affair: Thursday Next #1Jasper Fforde374
The Geek Feminist RevolutionKameron Hurley288
The Ghost Bride Yangsze Choo368
The GirlsEmma Cline 368
The Great GatsbyF. Scott Fitzgerald156
The History of WolvesEmily Fridlund288
The Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and DisappearedJonas Jonasson & Rod Bradbury396
The Inheritance TrilogyN. K. Jemsin1453
The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses and Geeks Created the Digital RevolutionWalter Issacson528
The Invisible Man Ralph Ellison610
The Last LectureRandy Pausch & Jeffrey Zaslow206
The Lonely Hearts HotelHeather O'Neill400
The Lost SisterhoodAnne Fortier608
The Luckiest Girl AliveJessica Knoll352
The Mercer GirlsLibbie Hawker430
The Mermaids DaughterAnn Claycomb448
The Miniaturist Jessie Burton 416
The Mists of Avalon Marion Zimmer Bradley1737
The MuseJessie Burton416
The NestCynthia D'Aprix Sweeney368
The Ocean at the End of the LaneNeil Gaiman256
The PossessionsSarah Flannery Murphy368
The Private Letters of Countess Erzesbet BathoryKimberly Craft142
The RoomsLauren Oliver320
The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific J. Maarten Troost272
The Shining GirlsLauren Beukes375
The Silent WIfeA.S.A Harrison326
The Star Touched QueenRoshani Chokshi342
THe Thousand Autumns of Jacob de ZoetDavid Mitchell479
The TrespasserTana French449
The Unraveling of Mercy LouisKeija Parssinen336
The VerdictNick Stone512
The Virgin CureAmi McKay356
Tulip Fever Deborah Moggach288
Under Different StarsAmy A Bartol297
Underground RailroadColson Whitehead 306
Vlad the Impaler: The Real Count DraculaEnid A. Goldber & Norman Itzkowitz128
What She KnewGilly McMillian699
Xanadu John Man352
You Will Know MeMeg Abbot352
Z: A Novel of Zelda FitzgeraldTherese Anne Fowler384


Thursday, February 2, 2017

Failures, Feats, and February Goals

Afternoon All,

Sorry to have kept you waiting, but the last few weeks have been a bit challenging. For example, the weekend of the 24in48 Read-a-Thon I'd been so excited for? Yeah, my horrible brother in law came into town and it turned out to be grasping at the straws of time to get 24 hours of reading in. I was able to finish Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitsgerald by Therese Anne Fowler, which was wonderful as I've been watching Amazon's "Z:The Beginning of Everything", a truly magical show.

I'm not proud of how January ended, though my stats are pretty okay. 27 books consumed. 8 Audio books, 3 E-Books and 16 printed books. Of these books 2 were book club books, 2 were for LitsyAtoZ, with the rest filling the Book Riot and Pop Sugar reading challenges in various slots.

February will be a better month! On Litsy and Instagram I'm doing FeistyFeb and RiotGram pics, following the prompts and sharing them around! I'm also doubling down on my reading efforts. I need to do more of my LitsyAtoZ books, and zero in on the remaining challenge categories. Oh, and I still want to read some things for fun, and I kind of get side tracked when I just read for fun.

With February having just started my current listen is Caraval by Stephanie Garber, My current read is Vassa in the Night by Sarah Porter, Soonly I'll be starting Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly and The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. My current book club read is Tulip Fever by Deborah Moggach .

Until next time,

XOXO
-BrainyHeroine

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Just a Week of Books

Afternoon All,

This week we're going to keep things short and sweet. I've got a three day weekend, some great wine, and the time to just finish some books.

Completed for Challenges: 

  • All the Ugly and Wonderful Things by Bryn Greenwood
    • #LitsyAtoZ Book A
  • America's First Daughter by Stephanie Dray and Laura Kamoie
    • Read for my Historical Fiction Book Club
Books Read This Week

I can't quite decide whether or not these are for challenges or just for fun, but I'll list what categories they fall into anyway. 

  • A Study in Charlotte by Brittany Cavallaro 
    • The first in a series you've never read before
  • The Wedding Shroud by Elisabeth Storrs
    • Again, the first in a series you've never read before
  • The Immortal Circus Book 1 by A.R. Kahler
    • One last time, the first in a series you've never read before. 
Clearly this week I was in the mood for series/trilogies; I blame this on Kricket. 

In more exciting news I've got my books picked out selected for the 24in48 readathon next weekend, I'm so ready to just sit and consume and ignore the real world! I'll be reading the following books: 
  1. The Book Jumper by Mechthild Glaser
  2. History of Wolves by Emily Fridlund 
  3. The Bear and the Nightengale by Katherine Arden
  4. The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
These also fall into challenge requirements! Next week I'll post up a more detailed readathon worthy blog post. 

I'm also going to be continuing The Other Einstein by Marie Benadict (yay book club!) And speaking of book clubs, I got my first book for my #CoverToCover group too! Click HERE to get the Goodreads page for it. (I don't want to spoil anything for my friends.)

Until next time, 
-BrainyHeroine

Sunday, January 8, 2017

First Week Whirlwind

Happy Sunday Morning! (Settle in with a coffee, this is a long one!)

As the first week of the new year came to a close yesterday I took a breath, looked at my Goodreads book challenge page, and realized that I'd read 10 books and listened to three. All within the first week of the year. So what did I read? I read everything!

Since I had both January 1st and January 2nd off from work, didn't have any chores or responsibilities needing attention, I was really able to start off with a bang, and by bang I mean 8 books fulfilling different challenge requirements.

  • Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
    • PopSugar's "A book that never fails to make you smile."
      • I've been a fan of Frankenstein and his monster for ages; add in the amazing author that is Mary Shelley and I'll always fall for this book. 
  • Vlad the Impaler: The Real Count Dracula by Enid Goldberg
    • PopSugar's "A book with pictures" 
      • One of the "Wicked History" books, this is a great introduction to the real Dracula. Definitely a pick for any young and budding historians. 
  • Getting an Academic Job in History by Dana Polanichka 
    • PopSugar's "A book with career advice"
      • I'm a 25 year old graduate with a history degree, not only does this give out an excellent timeline of what to apply for when, it gives resources, interview questions, and a whole host of informative details. 
  • The Silent Wife by A.S.A. Harrison
    • PopSugar's "A book written by an author using a pseudonym" 
      • Ugh, so this book had actually been on TBR for a while, I'd picked it up from a bargain bin and just hadn't gotten to it yet. Kind of wished I'd passed on it, the style of writing as interesting, the story was good, but it didn't have any of the anticipated "WOW" I was hoping for. 
  • How to Fight Presidents: Defending Yourself Against the Badasses Who Ran This Country by Daniel O'Brien
    • PopSugar's "A book from a genre you don't normally read" 
      • I don't read comedy books! Okay, maybe a few pages in the bathroom but that is really about it. and as a historian I really hate funny books when it comes to history. O'Brien manages to keep historical accuracy while blending in the humor. 
  • The Private Letters of Countess Erzsebet Bathory by Kimberly Craft
    • PopSugar's "A book of letters" 
      • This was a repeat, I'd read this orignally during my research for my capstone paper on Countess Bathory. (Side note she is one of my all consuming obsessions) This is a great insight to her mind.
  • The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • Book Riot's Read Harder "A bestseller published between 1900 and 1950" 
      • Published in the roaring 1920's this timeless tale is one I often return to when I need to remember my humanity.
  • The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
    • #LitsyAtoZ Letter "O" 
      • Remember those haunting love story fairy tales you read when you were a kid? The kind where you didn't know what exactly you were reading but you knew they were special? Yeah, that's this. 

Also consumed this week: Victoria by Daisy Goldwin, The Kricket Series by Amy Bartol, and The Grownup by Gillian Flynn.

Currently Reading: All The Ugly and Wonderful Things by Bryn Greenwood, America's First Daughter by Stephanie Dray and Laura Kamoie, A Study in Charlotte: Charlotte Holmes #1 by Brittany Cavallaro and The Other Einstein by Marie Benedict.

Oh! Recently purchased: The Book Jumper by Mechthild Glaser (a book about books) and History of Wolves by Emily Fridlund (a debut novel).

I can't wait to keep listening and reading to all these amazing stories, but I'm giving myself the day off to just enjoy and relax. The pace and pressure of the last week was intense, but worth it! I'm also excited to start Litsty Goes Postal book club #CoverToCover book soon!

All the best and happy reading,
-BrainyHeroine