One of Seanan's is on Bookbub as well
'Trash'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
That's where I got this one from (invaluable resource, that Bookbub).
Jo Walton reading from My Real Children last night. Was excellent. A lot of discussion about the research she did into memory care and Alzheimer's to write the book. Along with particle theory. And the Cuban missile crisis.
I picked up I No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency (no, I've never read it, there are a lot of books in the world) and I'm wondering if it's an accurate portrayal of Botswana? I'm fascinated by the language usage, Motswana for an individual (maybe man) of the country, Batswana for a group of people, Tswana apparently for the tribe(?) that occupies the land. I know so little of Africa.
The grammar is similar in Lesotho -- that's the country, the people are Basotho, the language is Sesotho. I have no idea how accurate the portrayal of Botswana is.
McCall Smith was born and raised (through high school) in Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) and lived in Botswana from 1981-1984 (helping found the University of Botswana). While I think a black African would write a very different book (and many have, obviously), I think the basic cultural stuff can be taken as pretty accurate.
A thing in Lesotho that reminded me of those books is that the honorific for women is Mme, pronounced like may. In emails, I always thought it was Madame, but no.
The scale of life is fascinating. People are happy with the basics. I'll avoid the obvious comparisons with American culture.
And the frequency of statements that life in Botswana is so much better, no internal fighting, no political prisons and never had any. It's an interesting take on the typical detective story, where there are bodies everywhere. Here, people just need some help checking things out, it makes consulting a detective very reasonable.
I imagine some of that is the Scotsman's perspective. I mean, for one thing, a quarter of adults have HIV. Although maybe it wasn't that bad when the books were written?
No, HIV comes up later in the series.