JAS posted an interesting Carrington work and I looked her up and now I want to read about her.
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Experimenting with this account as Bookwyrm-adjacent TBR with commentary. Main account is on Bookwyrm; both new as of mid-January 2024. #LearningCurve
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TaxideaDaisy2's books
2024 Reading Goal
2% complete! TaxideaDaisy2 has read 1 of 40 books.
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TaxideaDaisy2 wants to read Down Below by Leonora Carrington
TaxideaDaisy2 wants to read The seventh horse, and other tales by Leonora Carrington
TaxideaDaisy2 wants to read Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu
TaxideaDaisy2 set a goal to read 40 books in 2024
TaxideaDaisy2 reviewed The Arthurian Tarot by Caitlin Matthews
Review of 'The Arthurian Tarot' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
A charming little companion to the Matthews' deck of the same name, accessible whether you are new to their brand of Celtic/Arthurian scholarship or not, although a grounding in the Arthurian traditions as well of course as in Tarot is recommended. There are newer editions available, which might be better if you don't already have a copy (probably bought this one in the early 90s; it's a 1990 edition) as they are active scholars and always updating their vision.
TaxideaDaisy2 reviewed The Masque of The Red Death by Edgar Allan Poe
TaxideaDaisy2 reviewed The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton
Review of 'The Andromeda Strain' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Read this one a long time ago... in the 1980s I think, so can't really review now. I liked it. Good SF thriller, fast read. Would I like it today? How well has it aged? Couldn't tell you.
TaxideaDaisy2 rated The Wild Robot Protects: 3 stars
TaxideaDaisy2 reviewed League of Lady Poisoners by Lisa Perrin
Review of 'League of Lady Poisoners' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
So about this book ... mixed feelings. Three and a half stars, rounded down at first but maybe we'll round up, because it's still a well-crafted volume, with a fabulous bibliography.
On the one hand, a good bit of it, especially in the first few chapters, reads like a middle-school pop magazine, except instead of talking up cute musicians she's rationalizing why this or that serial murderer wasn't really a bad person, but rather a victim of circumstance. If this one had access to anti-depressants, or if that one were independently wealthy, perhaps they'd not have been so desperate. I think especially now, when public violence seems to pop up everywhere, excusing murder because the murderer may have had a rough life is a dangerous game.
Otherwise we found it a fun and informative read. Perrin obviously did a lot of preparation for this work, and her illustrations are often …
So about this book ... mixed feelings. Three and a half stars, rounded down at first but maybe we'll round up, because it's still a well-crafted volume, with a fabulous bibliography.
On the one hand, a good bit of it, especially in the first few chapters, reads like a middle-school pop magazine, except instead of talking up cute musicians she's rationalizing why this or that serial murderer wasn't really a bad person, but rather a victim of circumstance. If this one had access to anti-depressants, or if that one were independently wealthy, perhaps they'd not have been so desperate. I think especially now, when public violence seems to pop up everywhere, excusing murder because the murderer may have had a rough life is a dangerous game.
Otherwise we found it a fun and informative read. Perrin obviously did a lot of preparation for this work, and her illustrations are often poignant.
We read The League of Lady Poisoners as a library ebook, via hoopla. That had its pros and cons; for example the Index has handy hotlinks, and some of the Sources entries do as well. We find it harder to flip around in ebooks than in hard copies though -- someone once likened them to scrolls (ebooks) and codices (physical books) and that really stayed with us.
We'd recommend the book for its trippy bios and fab sources. There's not as much science (bioscience, toxicology, botany, etc.) as we'd have liked, but it makes up for it with edutainment value as well. Some of the historical entries were stronger than others, too. It's not a main reference volume so much as a hook, or a quick survey, or even a refresher. And, as mentioned, valuable for the Sources, and charming illustrations.
TaxideaDaisy2 reviewed Goddess for hire by Sonia Singh
Review of 'Minn of the Mississippi' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Excellent and fun book, if dated in places. That too is educational, and can be good for discussion.
It took us a surprising length of time to get through as we'd picked it up as part of a snapping turtle reading project, and misplaced it once or twice. Really really enjoyed the detailed illustrations, made lots of notes. We started out with a library copy and ended up purchasing our own.