My new Le Guin book arrived today, the LoA edition of Annals of the Western Shore, and it is very much an example of "Right action is rewarded - not immediately, not necessarily to the actor's personal benefit, not without changing the actor, but the world is affected for the better by it". Which is certainly something I need to be reminded of in the present moment.
(Plus the cover photo is from the documentary about her, walking along the shore at Cannon Beach, which is one of my favorite places in the world. The voiceover for that segment is her reciting a bit from Always Coming Home that made me ugly cry - it wasn't that long after she'd died.)
YA novelist, Jacqueline Woodson, also won a MacArthur.
And Tressie McMillan Cottom, who you have certainly seen around the internets. It's a great selection of people.
My new Le Guin book arrived today, the LoA edition of Annals of the Western Shore,
I really love Annals of the Western Shore, might be worth rereading them soon. Recently I've been rereading a bunch of Rosemary Sutcliff.
Comfort reading? I can go along with that. I'm having problems reading anything new.
I'm having problems reading anything new.
Me, too. Two new books by auto-buy authors dropped yesterday, and I'm working my way through rereading an 8-book series instead.
My coping strategy has been mysteries, preferably not too gruesome. Currently I'm reading Kerry Greenwood's Corinna Chapman series, but I'm also slowing working my way through Ann Cleeves' Vera books, Laurie King's Kate Martinelli books, Martin Walker's Bruno books, etc. I'm focusing on long series that are available from my public library via Overdrive which unfortunately sometimes means a long wait between the first volume in a series and the second.
I've also been looking for mysteries set in different locations or historical times, but my library frequently fails me.
I'm also keeping a list of SF/F books to try when I'm in the mood, but not at the moment - dystopias depress me but at the same time, I can't believe much in a shiny, happy future.
I've been reading far more since the pandemic, I started with mysteries and fantasy stories with a mystery component, and I go back to them whenever I have trouble concentrating on anything else. However, my current problem is that about 5 new books were just released and I want to read them all right now!
I decided to re-read the Toby Daye series and that was, I have to say, pretty rewarding. Just finished and am trying to decide if I am ready to start any of the new books that showed up on my kindle this week - big publishing day, I guess!
I went through a bunch of old Dick Francis books. Rereads and comforting.
I do like mysteries as comfort reading in general. That whole order out of chaos thing they have going on really does help.