- Видео 267
- Просмотров 39 203
Sluggish Reader
Малайзия
Добавлен 10 янв 2020
Welcome to my channel! My name is Freddie (he/they) and I document my thoughts about what I read here ☺️
Recent Reads 241216: Nadia Khan, Xiaolu Guo, Hassan Ibrahim
0:00 Hello ... and a bit of life updates!!
5:31 Children We Never Had
13:54 Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China
23:01 Blessed Mouse
35:43 other stuff I already read (will talk about them in a future video!) and currently reading
== Books mentioned ==
Children We Never Had - Nadia Khan
www.goodreads.com/book/show/130911857-children-we-never-had
Bone Weight and Other Stories - Shih-Li Kow
www.goodreads.com/book/show/199289096-bone-weight-and-other-stories
Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China - Xiaolu Guo
www.goodreads.com/book/show/34496930-nine-continents
buddy read with @PageTurnersWithKatja
A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers - Xiaolu Guo
www.goodreads.com/book/show/665...
5:31 Children We Never Had
13:54 Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China
23:01 Blessed Mouse
35:43 other stuff I already read (will talk about them in a future video!) and currently reading
== Books mentioned ==
Children We Never Had - Nadia Khan
www.goodreads.com/book/show/130911857-children-we-never-had
Bone Weight and Other Stories - Shih-Li Kow
www.goodreads.com/book/show/199289096-bone-weight-and-other-stories
Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China - Xiaolu Guo
www.goodreads.com/book/show/34496930-nine-continents
buddy read with @PageTurnersWithKatja
A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers - Xiaolu Guo
www.goodreads.com/book/show/665...
Просмотров: 47
Видео
Recent Reads 241130: Tayeb Salih, Amélie Nothomb, Mariko Koike
Просмотров 4628 дней назад
0:00 Hello 0:53 Season of Migration to the North 13:51 Strike Your Heart 21:35 The Cat in the Coffin 33:55 some books I have finished, plus a bunch of stuff I'm currently reading Season of Migration to the North - Tayeb Salih (transl. Denys Johnson-Davies) www.goodreads.com/book/show/6145869-season-of-migration-to-the-north Strike Your Heart - Amélie Nothomb (transl. Alison Anderson) www.goodre...
Recent Reads 241129: Amélie Nothomb, Elizabeth Smart, Yoko Ogawa
Просмотров 38Месяц назад
0:00 Hello! 0:20 The Life of Hunger 8:10 By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept 17:01 Hotel Iris Books mentioned The Life of Hunger - Amélie Nothomb (transl. Shaun Whiteside) www.goodreads.com/book/show/112456.The_Life_of_Hunger By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept - Elizabeth Smart www.goodreads.com/book/show/63540673-by-grand-central-station-i-sat-down-and-wept Hotel Iris - Yoko...
Recent Reads 241128: Chun Sue, Brooke Bolander, Fernanda Melchor
Просмотров 26Месяц назад
0:00 Hi!! 0:59 Beijing Doll 11:37 The Only Harmless Great Thing 22:05 Hurricane Season Books mentioned Beijing Doll - Chun Sue (transl. Howard Goldblatt) www.goodreads.com/book/show/420258.Beijing_Doll Shanghai Baby - Wei Hui (transl. Bruce Humes) www.goodreads.com/book/show/261479.Shanghai_Baby The Only Harmless Great Thing - Brooke Bolander www.goodreads.com/book/show/34659272-the-only-harmle...
Recent Reads 241127: Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, Fumiko Enchi, Arto Paasilinna
Просмотров 57Месяц назад
Catch-up Recent Reads by Sluggish Booktuber Part 1 0:00 Hello! 4:03 The Leopard 14:55 The Waiting Years 26:07 The Year of the Hare Books mentioned The Leopard - Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa (transl. Archibald Colquhoun) www.goodreads.com/book/show/1320341.The_Leopard The Waiting Years - Fumiko Enchi (transl. John Bester) www.goodreads.com/book/show/18803631-the-waiting-years The Year of the Har...
Recent Reads 241014: Ali Smith, John Knowles, Vanessa Chan
Просмотров 622 месяца назад
0:00 Hello... Plus a trip to the book store - @booksnbobs 1:51 Artful 11:44 A Separate Peace 20:46 The Storm We Made 33:06 What am I reading now?? Books mentioned Artful - Ali Smith www.goodreads.com/book/show/15811569-artful Hotel World - Ali Smith www.goodreads.com/book/show/123036.Hotel_World How to be both - Ali Smith www.goodreads.com/book/show/20439328-how-to-be-both A Separate Peace - Jo...
Random rambling about some current reads (Friday, 27th September 2024)
Просмотров 433 месяца назад
Books mentioned The Leopard - Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa (transl. Archibald Colquhoun) www.goodreads.com/book/show/1320341.The_Leopard The Storm We Made - Vanessa Chan www.goodreads.com/book/show/60211228 The Year of the Hare - Arto Paasilinna (transl. Herbert Lomas) www.goodreads.com/book/show/8856774 Find me here 🧂 Instagram: freddie.reads.slowly 🧂 Goodreads: www.goodreads.co...
Recent Reads 240927: Eve Babitz, Calixthe Beyala, Dewi Anggraeni
Просмотров 503 месяца назад
0:00 Hi! 0:39 L.A. Woman 11:31 Your Name Shall Be Tanga 19:13 Journeys Through Shadows 30:55 What I'm currently reading now Books mentioned L.A. Woman - Eve Babitz www.goodreads.com/book/show/25987030-l-a-woman Your Name Shall Be Tanga - Calixthe Beyala (transl. Marjolijn de Jager) www.goodreads.com/book/show/443718.Your_Name_Shall_Be_Tanga Journeys Through Shadows - Dewi Anggraeni www.goodread...
Booktube About Me Tag!
Просмотров 763 месяца назад
#tagtuesday Tag created by @HarrietRosie13 I was tagged by @JessBookgirlTV Prompts: 1. What do you study/what is your job? 2. What is your favorite social media? 3. If you had another channel what would it be about? 4. Do you play an instrument? 5. What hobbies do you have other than reading? 6. Favorite TV shows 7. What got you into reading? 8. What are your favorite and least favorite genres?...
A book haul video with ULTERIOR MOTIVE!! 😱😈🙊🫢 | (spoiler: it's a call for BUDDY READS!! 😮🥰🫂)
Просмотров 1113 месяца назад
I acquired some books recently and I just want to share my post-book buying joy with everyone. Books mentioned Charlotte Temple - Susanna Rowson www.goodreads.com/book/show/597694.Charlotte_Temple Faggots - Larry Kramer www.goodreads.com/book/show/109395.Faggots Aurora Leigh - Elizabeth Barrett Browning www.goodreads.com/book/show/817993.Aurora_Leigh The Pursuit of Love - Nancy Mitford www.good...
Recent Reads 240912: Jason Mott, Jane Smiley
Просмотров 743 месяца назад
0:00 Hello 1:12 Hell of a Book 13:19 Moo 27:14 My book haul from Dokusho 33:07 What I'm currently reading now Books mentioned Hell of a Book - Jason Mott www.goodreads.com/book/show/56020518-hell-of-a-book Moo - Jane Smiley www.goodreads.com/book/show/1141856.Moo Some Luck - Jane Smiley www.goodreads.com/book/show/20587777-some-luck Fatelessness - Imre Kertész (transl. Tim Wilkinson) www.goodre...
Recent Reads 240909: Richard Yates, Jean-Dominique Bauby
Просмотров 493 месяца назад
0:00 Non-bookish - small town excursion... 4:51 Eleven Kinds of Loneliness 13:04 The Diving Bell and the Butterfly 19:32 What I'm currently reading... Books mentioned Eleven Kinds of Loneliness - Richard Yates www.goodreads.com/book/show/3361110-eleven-kinds-of-loneliness The Diving Bell and the Butterfly - Jean-Dominique Bauby (transl. Jeremy Leggatt) goodreads.com/book/show/1878692.The_Diving...
Recent Reads 240905: Sofi Oksanen, Jean Cocteau, Xinran
Просмотров 713 месяца назад
#womenintranslation #wit 0:00 Intro 0:49 Purge 12:08 Les Enfants Terribles 20:00 Miss Chopsticks 33:13 What I'm currently reading... Books mentioned Purge - Sofi Oksanen (transl. Lola Rogers) www.goodreads.com/book/show/40966544-purge Les Enfants Terribles - Jean Cocteau (transl. Rosamond Lehmann) www.goodreads.com/book/show/11819160-les-enfants-terribles Miss Chopsticks - Xinran (transl. Esthe...
Reader's Profile Tag
Просмотров 683 месяца назад
Tag created by @HilaryBGreen I was tagged by @davidnovakreadspoetry ruclips.net/video/NsUPu_WTGkY/видео.html #tagtuesday 1. What for you makes a good book? 2. What are you currently reading? 3. What's the last book you didn't finish and why? 4. What obscure book do you wish other people would read? 5. What's the longest book you've ever read? 6. If you could have a dinner party with five fictio...
Recent Reads 240828: Ahmed Saadawi, Philippe Djian, Elif Batuman
Просмотров 554 месяца назад
0:00 Hi!! 0:41 Frankenstein in Baghdad 7:08 Elle 16:48 The Idiot 31:38 Other books I'm currently reading... Books mentioned Frankenstein in Baghdad - Ahmed Saadawi (transl. Jonathan Wright) www.goodreads.com/book/show/41434809-frankenstein-in-baghdad Elle - Philippe Djian (transl. Michael Katims) www.goodreads.com/book/show/34723004-elle The Idiot - Elif Batuman www.goodreads.com/book/show/3096...
Recent Reads 240816: Karina Robles Bahrin, An Yu, Jack Finney
Просмотров 534 месяца назад
Recent Reads 240816: Karina Robles Bahrin, An Yu, Jack Finney
Recent Reads 240813: Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, Emilia Pardo Bazán, Katie Kitamura
Просмотров 634 месяца назад
Recent Reads 240813: Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, Emilia Pardo Bazán, Katie Kitamura
Recent Reads 240804: Sang Young Park, Rin Usami, Kaye Gibbons
Просмотров 454 месяца назад
Recent Reads 240804: Sang Young Park, Rin Usami, Kaye Gibbons
Recent Reads 240718: Tash Aw, Jokha Alharthi, Jacqueline Susann
Просмотров 474 месяца назад
Recent Reads 240718: Tash Aw, Jokha Alharthi, Jacqueline Susann
Recent Reads 240227: Sandro Veronesi, Fay Weldon, Albert Camus
Просмотров 9010 месяцев назад
Recent Reads 240227: Sandro Veronesi, Fay Weldon, Albert Camus
Recent Reads 240220: Rachel Donohue, Tove Ditlevsen, Meg Rosoff
Просмотров 7210 месяцев назад
Recent Reads 240220: Rachel Donohue, Tove Ditlevsen, Meg Rosoff
Recent Reads 240115: Leonora Carrington, Amina Cain, Barbara Pym
Просмотров 11811 месяцев назад
Recent Reads 240115: Leonora Carrington, Amina Cain, Barbara Pym
Recent Reads 231224: Laurie Halse Anderson, Jeffrey Eugenides
Просмотров 57Год назад
Recent Reads 231224: Laurie Halse Anderson, Jeffrey Eugenides
Quickie Chat: a Barbara Pym-heavy book haul
Просмотров 70Год назад
Quickie Chat: a Barbara Pym-heavy book haul
Quickie Chat: a tragic bookish event, Aiskrim Malaysia
Просмотров 71Год назад
Quickie Chat: a tragic bookish event, Aiskrim Malaysia
Recent Reads 231202: Edwidge Danticat, Pajtim Statovci, Mikhail Bulgakov
Просмотров 86Год назад
Recent Reads 231202: Edwidge Danticat, Pajtim Statovci, Mikhail Bulgakov
Recent Reads 231127: Elspeth Barker, Shih-Li Kow
Просмотров 87Год назад
Recent Reads 231127: Elspeth Barker, Shih-Li Kow
Recent Reads 231113: Shamim Sarif, Chloe Gong, Joyce Carol Oates
Просмотров 75Год назад
Recent Reads 231113: Shamim Sarif, Chloe Gong, Joyce Carol Oates
How fun that you got to present at your first professional conference! Neat that reading Xiaolu Guo's memoir gave you insights into her novels. Very curious about how cyclical political topics in Malaysia have been given that 60s novel. And hope you have recovered fully from your cold!
@@ThatsSoPoe Hi Shannon! I'm very much recovered by now, haha. Thanks! I thought it's eerie that that 60s book feels so relevant, maybe even a bit prescient. You are familiar with May 13, and I think a portion of that book seems to foreshadow that real life event.
I was very happy to find even one review of Les Enfants Terribles. I understand why you came away feeling disappointed. Cocteau is a brilliant writer but a bad novelist. If something necessary for the narrative doesn’t interest him, he just skips it to go on to the next dramatic scene (and those are fantastic). I did find its treatment of themes very insightful and satisfying, but I read the book first in French, and thought the English translation quite a poor one. A good literary translator could show the book for the little gem that it truly is.
Congratulations on the conference! Well, you have me very intrigued by Kiss of the Spider Woman. I have not read it. In the Beginning sounds good too.
@@ariannefowler455 I hope you will enjoy Kiss of the Spider Woman if you get to it later. I'm also enjoying In the Beginning - for some reason, I'm expecting something sombre, considering the time and place setting, but Ratushinskaya got such a sense of humor!
Congrats on the conference. And hope you enjoy The Hearing Trumpet. Hope I get it for christmas lol.
@@Gagging4Lit Thank you!! So did u get the book?
@@SluggishReader Yes I did :D
Yaaay baby's first scientific conference (congrats!!!) I'm inspired by your frank take on Malaysian lit (I struggle with this when it comes to Kenyan writing ngl!) The only one of Xiaolu Guo's books I've read is A Lover's Discourse; now I want to pick up Nine Continents. Just borrowed THE HEARING TRUMPET --- sounds like fun!
@@100onBooks Thank you Nyambura! Honestly, sometimes I feel like I'm too critical on Malaysian books I read (maybe I haven't read a lot of Malaysian lit)... And there's a bit of self-censorship on my part too, like with Blessed Mouse in this vid. I'm curious, what holds you back from being frank when talking about Kenyan lit? I hope you will enjoy Nine Continents! And yay for The Hearing Trumpet!! 🥰🥰
@@SluggishReader Re: Kenyan books. There's *so little* being published in English (the main language I read in, my Kiswahili reading fell off after I left high school) that I don't want to be the person who "pulls a Kenyan down" 😭😭😭 so I'll hold off on speaking on it or pad my review. This is complicated by the fact that so many of those books are published outside the country (continent, even) and it's often *painfully obvious* we (Kenyans in Kenya who have only lived in Kenya ie. not "Afropolitans") are not the intended audience. As my friend Don Handa says, we're a "collateral audience" BUT I want my sisters (it's often women!) to succeed and I don't want to be one of the 3 African voices speaking about a book and being a hater. Rambling answer (sorry!) but I'd like to hear about what informs your self-censorship. [Unrelated: Your sister knows you so well!!!]
Came by way of David Novak when I saw your comment. The moniker alone deserves a sub. Well, hello from a fellow sluggard... Best, Mark.
@@book-ramble Hi Mark! Thank you so much for stopping by!! 😁😁
Diplomacy 101 on the front desk 😉 Second your thoughts on Nine Continents. Thanks for a brilliant buddyread.
@@PageTurnersWithKatja Front desk jobs are scary! I respect those who can do it full time. I look forward to our upcoming buddy read! (Though that will be months in the future.. maybe we can have something else before that too 🤔)
Season of Migration to the North is one I have had in the back of my head for years. You have convinced me I must read it in 2025. Glad your reading is proving so rewarding at the moment.
@@scallydandlingaboutthebooks I encountered a 1-star book recently (which I will talk about in an upcoming video) but I thought the streak has indeed been rewarding! I feel like Season of Migration to the North deserves a re-read. There's something that feels close to home with the scene when the narrator discovers Mustafa's secret room. I'm considering re-reads for 2025 but I don't know yet. Things are very uncertain and I'm not even sure where I will be in 2025. 😂
@@SluggishReader life is full of adventures ✨️
Hope you enjoy The Whole Story once you get to it. Some of the stories were so gorgeous! I just finished a Truman Capote biography which was very depressing for the last probably 80 pages. I am now rereading Wicked by Gregory Maguire as I remember it from over 10 years ago as once of my fave novels. So far it is holding up and I am loving it, especially after seeing the movie adaption and musical in theatre. I am also about too start Orbital, the Booker winner, as I can fit that in before the year is out.
@@Gagging4Lit I kinda paused with The Whole Story (mainly because it is a short story collection, and I'm usually kinda flaky with short story collections lol).. but I will get to it hopefully sometime close to Christmas (I don't know why but Ali Smith's books usually have a bit of Christmassy vibes).. I'm totally unfamiliar with Wicked's story and I just read the play's synopsis earlier this month on Wikipedia. I thought it was intriguing 😂 I heard the new movie is good, but I have not seen it, though I have been enjoying the memes lol (the memes being Floptok-adjacent doesn't help). I'm curious to hear your thoughts on Orbital. I'm broke now so no Booker spree for me like I had years ago (not that it was much of a spree). Maybe one day if I'm rich I can try buying the whole longlist of the year.
The Waiting Years and The Leopard both sound excellent!
@@Gagging4Lit go for it!!!
I dnf'd Salih a couple of years ago. You're making me think that might have been a mistake and I should try again.
@@sarah-roadworthy I think I could see some aspects of the book that might discourage some readers. I'm curious, do you remember why you DNF it?
@@SluggishReader I just wasn't engaging with the story. I found I wasn't very interested when Mustafah started to tell his tell. It could be the case of wrong time/wrong book.
Hotel Iris sounds interesting. I've read The Housekeeper and the Professor, but I think that's a much gentler novel.
I am loving the bright shirts on you the past couple videos. Life of Hunger sounds so good! I didn't realize Nothomb was so prolific, but I very much liked the one of hers I read, so seems I will need to read more.
@@ReadBecca hi Becca! I think most of my wardrobe is brightly colored 🤣 Colors are great!! I find it difficult to find Nothomb's books here. I only learned recently that she's very prolific and there are still books of hers not translated yet.
I've heard really good things about Hurricane Season as well - but also that it was violent, so I haven't picked it up myself. Glad you enjoyed it so much!
@@ThatsSoPoe Some parts of Hurricane Season are quite graphic and violent, so a bit of heads-up there! I thought the rawness makes the writing beautiful, but I can see how it might not be for everyone.
I'm looking forward to reading season of migration to the north next year, and even more so now 😊. Just filmed a recent reads covering Nine Continents, meed to edit it today 😊
@@PageTurnersWithKatja I'm excited that you will be reading it soon! I hope you'll like it. Looking forward to hearing your thoughts on Nine Continents, Katja! I have not had the time to make a video as I've been super busy this week, but hopefully I could do it some time.
I’ve read _Unknown Soldiers._ Liked it, but I may have forsworn war novels after that. Freddie, you’re not Sluggish at all! Between you and that Mandarin-speaking bumiputra kid I feel a bit slow myself. 😅
@@davidnovakreadspoetry Hi David.. I guess I felt a bit more motivated than usual lately. Having the luck of reading a string of good books definitely helped! Curious, what made you give up war novels after Unknown Soldiers?
@ I was finding too much similarity among them - not that I’ve read a million.
The French title _Biographie de la faim_ has an interesting nuance that the English doesn’t quite catch. (I just looked it up.) Yoko Ogawa sounds interesting. Did you talk about another book recently that connected sex and violence? Either I heard or read that somewhere and it was intriguing. Now I’m wracking my memory to no avail.
@@davidnovakreadspoetry Hey David! Ooh that is delightful - do enlighten me in case I missed it...! I thought it sounds a bit like Biographie de la femme which is what it sorta is. Recently.. Perhaps it was the Fernando Melchor book Hurricane Season which I talked about in the recent reads video with Chun Sue. Actually, the next catch-up recent read will also have a book - Tayeb Salih's - Season of Migration to the North - that sorta connects sex and violence, this time in postcolonialism context, although sex plays smaller part. (but interesting and slightly spoilery, so I didn't mention it too much when recording)
@ Ooh I just don’t know - I know I’ve been hearing about _Season of Migration_ all over the place - I’ve even put it on my list (not that that means anything) so that might be the answer. 🙂
@@davidnovakreadspoetry I will upload the video with _Season of Migration_ probably this evening (Malaysian time). 😉
I didn't enjoy hotel iris, but you're right, it's thought-provoking
@@PageTurnersWithKatja Have you read other Yoko Ogawa and if yes, what did you think about them? Do you have any favorite?
@SluggishReader very different from one another I think, The Housekkeper and The Professor is such a cosy found family book. The short story collection The Diving Pool is kind of surreal, and I have The Memory Police and Mina's Matchbox on my owned TBR list.
@PageTurnersWithKatja The Housekeeper + the Professor has quite a presence in pastel instagram, I'm not surprised to hear that it's a cosy book. I'm intrigued to hear that her books are quite different from one another so I look forward to trying The Housekeeper + the Professor next (just bought it!)
You've convinced me I need to read Amelie Northomb
@@PageTurnersWithKatja Hahah Katja I'm glad to hear that! 😆
Great video! I will hope my library has the last book. At the moment i am really interested in stories about romantic/sexual relationships that are a bit different. And your video sparked my interest.
@@NurChaos Thank you!! 😁 I hope you'll be able to find it.
Chun Sue (the author) seems to have quite an online presence; I found tons of photos of her everywhere. But I couldn’t get much of a sense of her as a personality.
Hi David! I didn't really google her much when I was reading so I didn't notice her online presence. But I just did after reading your comment, and I think I agree with you.
Yes, the Japanese translated fiction sounds up my street. I must have it.😊
Oh yes Marilyn, I think you'll have an interesting point of view on that book since I believe you have more knowledge on Japanese culture and sensibilities than I do!
Hi Freddie, isn’t it wonderful when you hit a reading streak where all the books are great. If I’m really interested in a book, I could read really fast but if it’s a complicated book, I go very slowly especially if the book is a big one. I get intimidated. I look forward to all of your videos.. Aloha friend.
Hi Marilyn! Encountering a series of good books does so much wonder to my reading as a whole - it is so motivating and feels so wonderful indeed!
Glad you've been having such a great reading streak even if you haven't been filming. Really interesting set of books as always. Neat that the ending of the Year of the Hare reframed things in a way you enjoyed.
@@ThatsSoPoe Hi Shannon - thank you! I'm planning to upload more in the coming days. I think this 5/4-star reading streak is probably one of the best ones I had so far.
Hi Freddie, my daughter just subscribed to your channel. She’s here for the wedding. You cut your hair.!!! I miss it.❤
Hi Marilyn! Please send her my gratitude!! ❤ I cut my hair because I experienced heavy hair loss two months ago... I miss my hair too, haha. Hope you are doing well!
I DNF'd Storm we Made earlier today! I listened to the audiobook for an hour and gave up. I agree with many of your points. I just wasn't engaged with the characters and I wasn't feeling anything. I didn't "feel" why Cecily started to work for the Japanese. You are right. The author spelled it all out, but never showed me. It just all fell flat for me. I'm sorry you persevered through that. Every since reading Singapore Grip, I've wanted to read more about this time period in Malay. I was so disappointed this was not helping me appreciate what people were going through.
@@sarah-roadworthy I thought Cecily's motivation in collaborating with the Japanese is very interesting because it stems from her racism - her thinking herself better due to her being part white. Sadly it isn't further explored in the book, focusing instead on her bad romance. Not sure if you have read it - I would suggest The Garden of Evening Mists by Tan Twan Eng for a good portrayal of the Japanese occupation period. It even has a romance subplot but it works well with the rest of the book.
@@SluggishReader I LOVED the Garden of Evening Mists and intend to read any book Eng publishes as a result. I agree the rascism/colorism piece was interesting, but it felt so obvious and in your face. I thought Pramoedya Ananta Toer's series starting with This Earth of Mankind does a much better job of illustrating the complexities and racial hierarchy in Indonesia.
@@sarah-roadworthy I have wanted to read This Earth of Mankind for a very long time now, but it is such a well-regarded modern classic that every time I see it is listed on a used book website, someone snatched it before I could click "checkout" 😂 Your endorsement of the series further cements my interest towards the books. By the way, have you read Beauty Is a Wound by Eka Kurniawan? I thought that is a great historical fiction set in colonial Indonesia, although it is heavy with magical realism. I enjoyed Tan Twan Eng's The Gift of Rain which is also set during the Japanese occupation of Malaya. It also has a very homoerotic relationship story which I thought was... fascinating. I have not read The House of Doors but definitely am quite interested.
@@SluggishReader I'm listening to Gift of Rain right now based on this exchange. I forgot I had yet to read it. I had not heard of Beauty is a Wound, but will look into it. I met an Indonesian woman at work and mentioned I had read Toer's series. She got weepy! She was so touched that someone outside of her country had read such a beloved book.
@sarah-roadworthy That is a lovely story Sarah 🧡 I hope you're enjoying The Gift of Rain!
I'm always amused by how much you love drama in books. I think I take the opposite approach to authors I love - I tend to devour all of their works at once and then just live in the nostalgia of their books for years afterwards. I can totally see wanting to just portion them out and make the last instead, though.
@@ThatsSoPoe For living authors I don't mind devouring their body of work a bit faster since they are likely to produce more work in the future (more likely than dead authors, at least). I find myself really taking my time with Ursula K Le Guin which I've been enjoying a lot... Then again she has written *plenty* so I think I might not need to be _that_ slow 😬🤭😆 I wonder (or, worry about) what my inclination towards drama says about me.
Loved how you talked about your approach to reading Ali Smith ♥️
@@BookishAdventuresInWellbeing Thank you!! 😁💙
Thank you for taking part in Framed in September! I've added your video to our list of the 100 videos created for the art readathon, "Framed! 2024 art readathon". So if you're interested in more books on art, that's one place you will definitely find recommendations - and vlog visits to art galleries.
@@heathergregg9975 Thank you for organising this and sharing the list! 😁🥰
Currently reading The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides and loving it, aside from the subject matter. Artful sounds great. Curious to see how the lectures work alongside a loose bereavement plot.
@@Gagging4Lit I didn't expect so much 70s American cultural studies content in The Virgin Suicides because I thought it was just gonna be something gossipy 😆 But I liked it for that. Some parts of the lectures do feel like lectures being dropped whole onto the page, but there are attempts to interweave them organically with the story. Btw, I hope to start The Whole Story soon 😘🤩
I read A Separate Peace as a teen and really loved it.
@@alldbooks9165 That book is lovely isn't it? 🥰 Do you think you will feel differently about it today?
High five from another Ali Smith fan! And thanks for the warning about The Storm We Made-doesn’t sound like I would enjoy it either.
@@lindysmagpiereads 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽 I just got a short story collection by Ali Smith recently! Normally something like The Storm We Made would be a DNF for me, but since it was borrowed from a friend, I decided to finish it 🤭
@@SluggishReader Well, by finishing a book that irritated you, we viewers had the pleasure of watching your full critique. Is the Ali Smith collection The First Person? Or Public Library? Enjoy!
@@lindysmagpiereads I got The Whole Story. Have you read that one?
@@SluggishReader oooh, it’s been so long that I wasn’t sure, but yes. I read it before I started keeping my reading journal online. I looked at a description and recognized the stories described, but my memories are vague. Definitely need to reread it.
I read Eve's Hollywood which is Babitz's memoir. I'm getting the sense that LA Woman is a fictionalized version of what she was describing in her memoir. Give her non-fiction a go.
Trying her nonfiction is definitely my plan! Actually, that was what I felt when I read LA Woman... there was strong lack of coherence that one would probably find when one recounts something from real life. Fiction or novels I find tend to play by that "novelistic" rule but LA Woman was just messy and did not have that novelistic character to it.
Great observations about reading a sensual book in a cold space!! Msy be we read sad books when we're happy & the other way round 😅
@@bilbobryan I find that my focus is better in cold spaces. The hot weather here does not help me at all in terms of focus and productivity 😆 anyway, I finished Artful in a cold MRT bus today!
@@SluggishReader I can't read on a bus. Too shaky. On MRT, OK 😅
@@bilbobryan Usually I can't too. But the MRT bus ride was smooth and the book was unputdownable lol
A shame about LA Woman. I love that all of these were knew to me, so I enjoyed your thoughts on them. I'm most intrigued by Your Name Shall Be Tanga
@@PageTurnersWithKatja Thanks Katja! I hope you'll get to read Your Name Shall Be Tanga one day!
I have Drndic on my wishlist. I would like to read Trieste, but I'm not sure that is considered a good place to start with her. Let me know if you want to give a try as a buddy read in 2025.
@@sarah-roadworthy a buddy read sounds good - I have never read any Drndić but flipping through the pages of Trieste the text looks... interesting, to say the least 😂 I'll let you know about the buddy read next year if I could get my hands on my Trieste! (My copy is now on the other side of Malaysia 😂)
@@SluggishReader No rush, Freddie. Any time. If after reading Leica and you decide Drndic is not for you, we can look for something else.
tq for pointing out the comical side of The Accidental Malay. The author doesnt pretend to know the answers to the very issues she has unearthed. To be fair, judging by the rabid reaction to recent events, the fictional albeit ‘mildly outlandish’ portrayals of extremists in the book is not that far-fetched. It is rooted in reality and people who get offended have simply failed to empathise with the realities of identity loss.
@@jarrodsio Thanks for your comments! I especially love the novel's epigraph - the Malay proverb about eating chili - because it is so apt to how books like this can be perceived. I agree with you - lack of empathy becomes more visible today and so does the polarization in Malaysia. I'm glad the book ends with that uncomfortable note (and not some faux-positivity) because the issue is still way too ingrained in real life society.
@@SluggishReader u r right. the epigraph was prescient 😁
So amused by your Dragonball Z story. 😂 And malls & KL are forever linked in my mind. It's like they're the essence of the city.
@@ThatsSoPoe I feel a bit bad about the deception 🤣🤣 I don't do pub crawls - I do mall crawls!
Fun tag. I get the love of construction site smells. I like smells of all sorts of new things.
@@alldbooks9165 Thank you Doris! I got a habit of associating memories with odors 😁
Ali Smith has a brilliant mind. I know what you mean about feeling stupid while reading Artful but please go easy on yourself. It’s okay not to know all of her references, and not to be sure if it’s fiction or nonfiction. I was glad to have discussed Artful within a bookclub, because we all brought different perspectives to the text. Anggraeni’s novel sounds great. I enjoy fantastical elements within otherwise realistic stories. As for Babitz’s word vomit… well, thanks for the warning!
@@lindysmagpiereads I think Ali Smith is brilliant in the sense that her writing is able to capture my interest even when I don't understand much of the references. I felt that way about How to be both too but it's one of my all-time favorite books 🧡 I hope you'll (and everyone) be able to try the Dewi Anggraeni book. I picked it up from a used book shop without much expectation. I think the fact that I just visited Indonesia for the first time some weeks prior helped with the reading experience. 😁
Kiss of the Spider Woman is a remarkable film. I would recommend everyone see it before any remake. It stars Raul Julia and William Hart. Thanks for the video! 👍
@@constancecampbell4610 Thank you for the film recommendation! 🥰
Great job with this tag.
@@JessBookgirlTV Thanks Jessica!
Malls in Asia are great. Ours here in the US mostly suck. I was afraid that this was going to be a very boing video so I was anxious about that, but then I felt anxious because I’ve long wanted to see this kind of video, and whew, it turns out you are a more interesting and exciting person than I might have unrealistically feared. So this was great! And you like to cook! Maybe there will be a second RUclips channel. 😂 🍳
@@davidnovakreadspoetry I find that here malls are fairly beloved. After all, a mall is a gigantic air-conditioned space in the middle of a heat island. In the US, malls to me feel more practical, a pragmatic conglomerate of shops. Thanks David, it's reassuring to know I'm more interesting than expected. 🤣🤣 I've been considering the idea of including cooking clips into the videos, so .. some time in the future perhaps?
I think you'll quite like Lolly Willowes. Reminds me just a little of The Hearing Trumpet in vibes. And very amused by the story the Toni Morrison cover made you imagine!😂
Yay - I think that was also why I was interested in Lolly Willowes. Apparently it's kinda... magical? Very interested now. There was a period this year in which I watched Lifetime movies almost every weeknight, so I feel like I'm quite attuned to the Lifetime aesthetics 🤣
I've got Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China, and would love to read it together. I enjoyed hearing about all the books you'd like to read. Some of them sound really out there 🤭, and I'd be tempted to read that regency book in verse if I wasn't so bad at reading poetryb 😂
Hi Katja! I would love to read the Xiaolu Guo book with you! Perhaps I can send you a message over on Instagram for that? I'm kinda planning to read Aurora Leigh for Victober (or some time around it) perhaps we can read that together also if you are interested. Can't say I'm good at reading poetry but one gotta start somewhere I guess (though starting with *nineteenth century* poetry is probably... a decision 😝)
IG is good. I'll think about Aurora. I just looked at a sample of the writing, and it's not as "scary" as I thought... but it's still more work than regular prose 😅
When I watched this earlier it said the comments were turned off, and now I can’t remember what I had intended to say. (Somehow I missed the ulterior motive - but this was a nice change of pace.)
For some reason I accidentally disabled the comment (instead of disabling comment moderation). It was so silly 😂 Anyway, my "ulterior" motive in making this video is to see if anyone wants to do any buddy reading! 😂
Hello Freddie!!!!! Great to see you posting frequently & posting your book haul!! This is amazing!! Love your book-buying anecdotes esp on Lolly Willowes!! I have Treacle Walker too! Acquired from Kino for RM 5 Lol. Buddy read!!
Thank you Bryan!! Yeah, I have a bit of time to post more frequently now. Kino's bargain bin is so unpredictable.. but you don't see RM3 books in mint condition often! And yeah, let's do Treacle Walker!
Loved seeing your hometown and the river! I enjoyed Revolutionary Road by Yates but I have not read anything else by him.
@@myreadinglife8816 Thank you Heidi! 🧡🧡
I remember enjoying Purge when I read it years ago. Funny my only vague recollections are scenes based in the kitchen. The Leopard has been on my shelf for a long time. I'm not sure if I want to hear your thoughts. What if you didn't like the book? The Xinran book sounded interesting. My library has mostly non-fiction written by her. The Book of Secrets sounds particularly interesting. I listened to Hell of a Book. I will wait for your thoughts before I tell you mine.
I guess I'm not surprised since the kitchen holds some significance in Purge. Many of the variant covers feature kitchens. As for The Leopard, I don't think I'm influential enough to affect anyone's thoughts, heheh.. I have not progressed much in that book, but so far I'm kinda liking it. It's a bit of a struggle navigating the foreign geographical setting, but that happens to me with every book taking place somewhere I'm not familiar anyway. Xinran apparently wrote a lot of nonfiction too, and I'm thinking of trying those out. And I finished Hell of a Book and I talked about it in my most recent reads video... So I guess you can share you thoughts now haha (I'm intrigued... since I saw your *gasp* Goodreads rating lol)
@@SluggishReader I have opened up the atlas for many books. When characters travel from one city to another, I need to know what that looks like on a map! I'm way behind on my BT viewing. I'm sensing differing opinions on Hell of a Book....
I enjoyed seeing your country! Show us more when you have a chance.
@@BeyondBooks-wt5il Thank you Reney! I hope to include more of such footage in my videos.