Reviews and Comments

elisabeth nicula

elisabeth@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 1 month ago

luv 2 read

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How to Be a Good Girl (2020, Grieveland) 4 stars

Poetry

"i have always been the sort of girl who would do anything / to have one more day even only another hour / on this wondrous earth"

4 stars

literary + full of cum.... part diary entries through the pandemic and part long poem.... I knew some of what to expect but didn't know about her beautiful descriptions of birds and plants in brooklyn's parks... good girl/bad girl..... really powerful and readable I loved it

Cascadia (2001, Wesleyan University Press) 3 stars

Named for the ancient landform that preceded present-day California, Brenda Hillman's Cascadia creates from geological …

"If you are Persephone you think in terms of dirt."

3 stars

I think her topics might be a little too close to mine (geology, nature, california) that I kinda prefer how I would say it ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha

But I did find pleasure in many phrases and shapes.

Pirates of the Chesapeake Bay (2020, The History Press) 2 stars

The story of Chesapeake pirates and patriots begins with a land dispute and ends with …

"Before they could even reach them, the Victoria J. Peed temporarily ran aground..."

2 stars

Not really that great ha ha but worth a read if you're really into knowing everything about the Chesapeake Bay. I was hoping for a contextualized, history-from-below approach and it is more of a straight account of various pirate activities with detailed lists of the value of various booty and so on. The Oyster Wars part is pretty decent—perhaps being the most recent it has the most context.

Pure America (2021, Belt Publishing) 4 stars

Between 1927 and 1979, more than 8,000 people were involuntarily sterilized in five hospitals across …

"$700,000. This is how much the regret for fifty-five years of eugenics costs in the state of Virginia."

4 stars

I found this one both terribly eye-opening and slightly unfocused. Still, would recommend, and it's a quick read. Catte covers a lot of ground, beginning with Carrie Buck of Charlottesville and the grotesque events (including SCOTUS show trial) that led to her forced sterilization at the Lynchburg Colony. There is a brief history of eugenicist thought in the U.S.; a revisitation of the Shenandoah National Park section of What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia; a pretty pleasurable skewering of UVa; and an inquiry into the mixed up architectural and eugenic history of Western State Hospital in Staunton, as viewed through its current rehabilitation by real estate developers. Pure America really zings when Catte makes obvious the underlying truths about labor—like that the fundamental point of sterilizing women like Carrie Buck was to send them to work in the homes of rich Virginians without the possibility of their being embarrassingly …

WOMEN (Paperback, 1998, Farrar, Straus and Giroux) 5 stars

A New York Times Notable Book

Daring and fiercely original, The Women is at once …

"I have not catapulted myself past my mother's emotional existence."

5 stars

Feel pretty devastated!! Feel unable to "review!" Als has an uncommon ability to know (or guess at) the interiority of others, and his own, and to describe it. Weirdly light moment for me was when some of the characters from Please Kill Me came back through in the essay about Dorothy Dean.

Baby, I Don't Care (2018, Wave Books) 4 stars

Chelsey Minnis's new collection of poems follows the struggle of a flawed character in a …

"Look, it's been very hard to puppeteer myself / all these years!"

4 stars

Extravagant, funny, disturbed poetry, forming a narrative in one voice and one repeating structure through the book. Kinda like if a dissolute young 50s housewife was going out of her mind today? A love story but most often not very loving? Idk I thought it was pretty pleasurable and surprising.