Welcome! It's #IMWAYR time again, when bloggers share what they have been reading and find out what others have been up to. Kathryn hosts the adult version of this meme at Book Date. Jen at Teach Mentor Texts and Kellee and Ricki at Unleashing Readers host the kidlit rendition. These are fabulous places to start your search for what to read next.
Becker brilliantly shows the environmental devastation that accompanies human progress.
In the first few pages I thought to myself, "Look at this winding river - what dunces these people are for building here - for sure this river will flood sometime in the year." It took much longer than I expected for this to happen.
This disturbing, dystopian picture book has much to show us about our selves. Will we ever learn?
4 stars |
The City We Became (Great Cities, #1) by N.K. Jemisin & Robin Miles (Narrator) March 24, 2020
Right from the get go, Jemisin gobsmacked me with her world building. I shouldn't have been so wowed, because in large part, it's what sucked me in and kept me reading her Broken Earth Trilogy.
So there is fabulous world building - but it also seems like a love letter to the city of New York. The premise it that once a city gets to a certain age and size, it evolves into a living being. Most of the time one human avatar represents it, but in New York's case, the city has a main avatar, and each borough has it's own representative. I loved each and everyone of these characters. Not only does Jemisin do magnificent world building, she creates realistic characters you can't help but either love, or at the very least, empathize with.
I thought this would be fiction since that is what I associate Steinbeck with. Instead, it's a semi fictionalized travelogue. The author set out on a 10,000 mile expedition across the USA with his dog Charlie. He muses on the countryside, the people he sees, and the state of country. The last section written about New Orleans was horrific. I know my audiobook will expire soon, but no sooner did I finish this, than I started listening all over again.
The Anthropocene Reviewed by John Green