minsuni commented on sweetie's review of Beautyland
This book lovingly cracked me open til I was bleeding on the floor and it doesn't even have a PLOT
I mean, I guess it technically does. The entire main plot can be found in the blurb: Adina is an alien who spends her life faxing observations about humans back to her home planet for reporting purposes. Eventually she shares them with the world, but this doesn't happen until late in the book. The story really just follows her life, her thoughts as she tries to make sense of humanity and forms connections and navigates being an outsider on a foreign planet.
Despite the alien stuff, I wouldn't classify this as sci-fi. It's left pretty much up to the reader whether or not they want to take her being an alien literally. Part of the beauty of this book is that it doesn't really matter whether you take it literally or not. Either way, if you're someone who has ever felt othered from the world around you, Adina's story WILL hit like crazy.
I was obsessed with the writing pretty much immediately. Bertino has such a unique style and way with words, she did things with the English language that I've truly never seen before and it was one of the most engaging experiences I've had with someone's prose in a long time, possibly ever. She created such a strong narrative voice for Adina that the book's pacing flowed effortlessly despite not having much of a central plot structure. Some authors are just masters of the craft and it didn't take long for me to be convinced that Bertino is one of them.
Idk how to describe the effect of this book except by saying it's just so charming. Adina is such an endearing character and it was a delight to read about her interactions and reactions to the world. It also made my heart ache, because not everything about being human is delightful and Adina doesn't miss that fact. But it all culminates into something so beautiful that I can't fully describe, I just need more people to read it.
I also sobbed at the end and was on the verge of tears at MANY points throughout the book. Adina has my heart and so do the earthly creatures she forms bonds with; I'm lucky that I get to be one of them.
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Daphne du Maurier
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A.K. Blakemore
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Emmanuel Carrère
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Ahana Virdi
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The Isle in the Silver Sea
Tasha Suri
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hi everyone!! with the SimonBooks Quest on its way out on June 30th (we'll miss you!!) and everyone finishing up their final books for the badge, i've been curious about how everyone has been reading the books together. when i first saw the book list, i thought they might be a bit disjointed or grouped too broadly under "Women's Lit"
what i realized while finishing the Quest up is that "Women's Lit" can be much more than just a marketing term. these books offer womanhood not as a stable, universal identity but as a condition formed through lived experience which looks different for every single woman
womanhood is shown as a set of pressures, roles, inheritances, and survival strategies. the women in these books are formed by class, race, marriage, motherhood, work, grief, trauma, and desire. they navigate systems of power, family histories, and material conditions that pressure them into choices unique to their own lives
these books really challenged me to think about the lived experience of womanhood outside of my own perspective. as someone childfree/marriage-free, a lot of these books were not something i would have chosen on my own. but reading them together and finishing up the last books made me realize that it wasn't about whether or not i "related" to each woman's life, but more about how many different pressures get grouped under the single term "womanhood"
i think the most powerful perspective for me was thinking about the many layers of motherhood. not just motherhood as following the provided "correct" path of domesticity, but the complicated relationships between mothers and daughters, marriage as a survival tactic, and the inheritance of family roles. especially, many of these books explore the complex inheritance of daughters, who often become containers for the family's silences, projections, and grief
you also have books like Like This But Funnier or The Plans I Have For You which present a darker side of intimacy and ambition. showing how sometimes connection can become distorted and toxic when women are forced to navigate structures that diminish, sexualize, surveil, and devalue their lives and work
i'm still finishing up Artifacts and Livonia Chow Mein, but i think they will explore these themes in unique ways as well. overall, i really appreciate how these books expand upon the idea of womanhood without chalking it up to simply "being a woman is varied and beautiful". these books at times are saying something bleaker, that women are often forced to build meaning from roles they did not fully choose or consent to
i'm curious if any of you had similar feelings while reading these books as a cohesive set? were there any pairings that felt like they were in conversation with each other? any connecting themes that stuck out to you? which exploration of womanhood stuck with you most?
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Abbey Luck
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