Top Ten Unique Books

Today’s topic is a really fun one – most unique books I’ve read. I’ve read some very unique (both good and bad) over the years, and here are the most bizarre of them:

1. Troll: A Love Story by Johanna Sinisalo – This very well be the most unique/bizarre book I’ve ever read. The title pretty much says it all. (Personal Verdict: Thumbs Down)

2. The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake by Aimee Bender – This is magical realism, and it’s not the food-emotion-synesthesia that I find unique here. Laura Esquival did that prior (and better imo) in Like Water for Chocolate. It was the chair leg bit of Lemon Cake – readers will know what I mean, those who haven’t read it will have to take it on faith less I spoil the book – that was particularly unique. (PV: Thumbs Down)

3. Metropole by Ferinc Karenthy – Man takes airplane to an unknown city where no one can communicate. Hungarian modern classic in the vein of Kafka (also super unique!). (PV: Thumbs Up!)

4. Warbreaker by Brandon Sanderson – Actually most of Sanderson is fairly unique. The man has amazing ideas about magic systems. But Warbreaker is the one I feel is most unique, given that the magic is built around color and breath. (PV: Thumbs Up!)

5. American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang – I can’t even begin to describe the weirdness of this graphic novel. The plotlines converge is startling ways. Some people love the book, others despise it, all seem to find it very unique. (PV: Thumbs Down)

6. The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde – It’s Jasper Fforde. He could fill an entire top ten list of Unique. (PV: Thumbs Up!)

7. Britten and Brulightly by Hannah Berry – The sidekick in this detective graphic novel is not someone you’d expect. One of the oddest books I’ve ever read. (PV: Still undecided and it’s been eight years)

8. The Supernatural Enhancements by Edgar Cantero – This is another of those books where just about anything and everything comes out of the blue. This time, they all come together in really awesome ways. (PV: Thumbs Up!)

9. Choose Your Own Autobiography by Neil Patrick Harris – There’s nothing new about CYOA books, but to use that format for autobiography, including fictional dead-end paths, is downright awesome. (PV: Thumbs Up! Mostly.)

10. The Unconsoled by Kazuo Ishiguro – WTF????? That’s pretty much what I felt the entire time I read this book, long before I began blogging. (PV: Thumbs Down)

So have you read any of these? Interested in trying any of them now? Disagree with my thumbing?

topten

Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

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Sunday Coffee – Slumpity Slump

April is one of my three “bad” months each year. In the past, this has generally been associated with weather, because in San Antonio, April is the month of soaring temps, high humidity, and very little hope for further cold fronts. It’s when 100 degrees starts appearing regularly and there’s little relief at night. It’s the beginning of summer. And with summer comes a kind of reverse seasonal depression in San Antonio, seeing less of the sun because it’s too hot to be outside for the next six months. Needless to say, that’s no fun.

Because of this early flop into depression, most of my world takes a bit of a dive. Books included. I often find myself drawn toward mysteries and thrillers to escape, or I simply go into full-on reading slump. And while I’m not in Texas anymore, my body has gone through this particular cycle so often that it’s kinda built in. Even in years when I’m feeling awesome in March – this was not one of them – something just falls apart the first week of April. Since this year I was already feeling awful, the slide into depression isn’t terribly noticeable. However, the reading slump is very, very noticeable.

I loved the books I read in March. I had a hard time picking a favorite. There were a ton more I was looking forward to, particularly queued up on audio. I started re-listening to a favorite series. That was enjoyable…until the last day of March, when all of a sudden, I just didn’t want to listen anymore. I tried other audiobooks: adult and YA, fiction and nonfiction, fantasy and realistic. Every beginning sounded like a book I’d like to read – just not yet. In the end, since I was out walking, I put on music instead.

So that’s fine, right? One day of a break is fine. No big deal. Only since then, nothing has sounded remotely appealing. I don’t want to read. I don’t want to listen to audiobooks. I don’t want to do anything, really, with books. Of course, it’s only been a bit over a week, but I recognize the signs. Slump, slump, slump.

Hopefully it won’t last long. Especially with the Readathon coming up at the end of the month (yay!). Especially with it finally being my turn at the library for some books I’ve looked forward to for months. Especially with my body realizing that it’s actually turning to nice weather here rather than the reverse.

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Wellness Wednesday #48: First Quarter Fitness Test

buttonAlright. It’s time. My goal was to test my strength quarterly, using a specific test that I’ve done a half-dozen times since 2013. So on Sunday, I got down to business, and here are the results. (Spoiler – I improved slightly in all measurable areas but not as much as I would have liked.)

Pull-ups: In January, I was able to hang from the pull-up bar for 12 seconds (forget doing an actual pull-up!). Three months later, that time went up to 16 seconds. Honestly, I expect this would be longer if not for the factors in the note below.

Push-ups: Another small improvement, from 8 to 12.  I’m still a far way from my pre-gain numbers, but I’m getting there slowly. (Note: These are full push-ups, rather than the on-the-knees kind.)

Toe touch: This one surprised me. I was already seven inches past my toes in January, a huge improvement from before I started doing yoga. I was not expecting to be nine inches past them now. !!!

V-crunches (no hands): I had another slight improvement, from 16 to 19.

Wall squat: This is another place that, like pull-ups, I imagine I’d do better on if not for the factors noted below. With my thighs already shaky from the previous day’s workout, it wasn’t the best time for wall squats, but I still managed to improve my time by a measly six seconds, from 1:09 to 1:15. (Morrigan, who did the strength test as well, was two seconds short of five minutes on his wall squat!!!)

Arm curls to failure: I can’t really say if I had any improvement on this. Last time, I messed up the test the first time and had to do a second round, and I used a lighter poundage (10 lbs in each hand, for 23 reps). I used 16 lbs in each hand this time for a greater challenge, and completed 10 reps. So I don’t know if that’s an improvement, but I like the new baseline better.

Note: Sunday was probably the worst day possible for doing this particular test. The night before, we had a celebratory dinner (Morrigan made State in Solo & Ensemble!) of pizza, wine, and ice cream. I didn’t sleep well, woke up early, and was sore/swollen from a super-tough lunges-based yoga workout on Saturday. None of that makes for particularly good strength-testing conditions, heh. But hey, it is what it is. Maybe in early July, my results will be stellar compared to these, haha!

 

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In Twenty Years, by Allison Winn Scotch

Six friends live together in a townhouse off campus. Friends forever, they think, not expecting the end of college to change that. On their last night of school, Bea asks them to write a letter to their 40-year-old selves. Only now, eighteen years later, Bea is long dead, and the rest of the group long ago splintered. No one expects the letters that arrive from Bea’s family lawyer, asking them to reconvene at their old townhouse for what would have been her fortieth birthday on the fourth of July.

Quick, funny story about this book: When I first saw it, I thought it sounded interesting but was also wary. I read Time of My Life (link contains spoilers) by the same author years ago, and remembered being extremely disappointed by a few things. When the same didn’t happen with this book, I was glad – until I went back and read over my review of Time of My Life…and realized it wasn’t the book I’d been remembering. The book that had soured for me at the end was a completely different book by a completely different author read over a year later. I’m not sure how my brain mixed them up! Either way, I enjoyed ToML, and really had no reason to be particularly wary with this book.

My experience with this book was mixed, but ultimately more on the positive side. My negatives had to do with the five living friends. Individually, their forty-year-old selves were not all that great. In fact, I found myself kinda sorting them into categories: the Runner, the Mask, the Fraud, the Savior, and the Martyr. I felt like the two male characters got less time and development than the women, and I really didn’t like anyone in the group. That didn’t change even as they changed. The other thing that bothered me was that three characters worked outside the home and were wildly successful/famous/wealthy, while the two staying home with kids (one mom, one dad) were polar opposite. I would have preferred the working characters to have more relate-able situations. A CEO of a middling craft company, rather than the most famous craft blogger name/brand out there. A plastic surgeon, rather than THE plastic surgeon who works on all the famous celebrities in LA. Etc. I would have liked to see some normal in the group outside the stay-at-home parents.

Despite those negatives, though, I did enjoy the book. Well – maybe enjoy isn’t the right word. I deeply appreciated the book. I felt about it the way I feel about many suburban-decay books: a sort of connected horror and sinking ennui/depression. Because while the book was ultimately heading in a positive direction, with characters discovering things about themselves and each other that will hopefully help them to be happier in the future, there was still a lot of middle-aged angst here. I don’t use that term with derision. Part of getting older, I think, is understanding that the angst we tend to associate with adolescence just morphs into different versions of itself as we age. That’s what midlife crises are all about, right? Angst. Regrets about the past. Fear about the future. Nostalgia for the past, Bitterness about the future. Desperation for change. Desperation for everything to stay exactly the same. Generally the inability to be present right here and right now, a condition that I imagine affects most of the population. And that’s frankly depressing, as well as comforting in its own way, knowing it’s a condition shared so widely. So it’s like I said before, not enjoyment so much as appreciation, making this a book I’m glad I read, but one that also made me want to pour myself a glass of wine.

Posted in 2017, Adult, Prose | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Sunday Coffee – First Quarter Goal Check-in

When I posted my goals for 2017, I said I’d check in quarterly. I imagine these check-ins are more for my own benefit than that of my readers, so I’ll try to keep things brief! (Yeah right, Manda…how about I include random kitten pictures to make this post squee-worthy instead??) Here’s how I’m doing thus far.

Health: For my health, I’d like to lose weight, improve my health numbers (especially my insulin levels), improve my strength, improve my nutrition, and redevelop regular exercise habits and routines. To do this, I plan to:

  • heal my ankle – I’ve done no high impact work and lots of yoga. Healing, but going slow
  • do 100+ weight bearing workouts this year – Completed 28 of these, mostly of the yoga variety
  • spend the warmer months walking to complete the Appalachian trail on the Wii Fit U (687 more miles) – The warm months are just starting to tease us, but I’ve completed 249 miles so far, leaving 438 to go
  • average 3+ fruits and veggies daily – Averaged 3.3 daily in the first quarter (3.8 in Jan, 3.0 in Feb, and 3.2 in March)
  • create and complete monthly challenges to improve nutrition and fitness – I’ve been generally failing here

Overall Results in Health: My health is still not great and my habits disorganized. I’ve gotten a bit stronger thanks to yoga, but otherwise life in general is interfering with any progress I wanted to make. I managed to maintain my weight in the first quarter, though “maintaining” actually means “losing a little until a medication change caused a big gain then managing to lose back to the original level.” Still, at least I’m no worse off now than I was on January 1st, and better off than I was mid-March!

Social: My goals this year will focus on two things – keeping up my strong current ties with friends and family in Texas, and creating new ties in my current location. To do this, I will:

  • participate in the Run 4 Hope 5K (an annual tradition with friends) in San Antonio – Went to SA for this and signed up, but had to skip the actual 5K due to weather and injury. I consider this complete, though!
  • spend Christmas in San Antonio with family – n/a
  • meet my newest nephew, Rory, in person – no chance yet
  • send 25+ non-Christmas cards/letters – Failing so far, with only three short things sent out
  • go to 25+ new-to-me local places and/or events – Already hit 13 new-to-me places!
  • participate in NaNoWriMo here to find other local writers – n/a

Overall Results in Social: I’m happy that I got to spend some time in San Antonio with friends and family. Old ties are going well. Not going as well in the new area. I keep trying to go out and do things, meet people, and still have yet to make a single friend, even of the casual variety. Sigh. The only place I feel I’m making a connection is at the Humane Society where I volunteer, and that’s with the animals. Sigh. Speaking of animals, though:

Writing: My goals are simple here – to redevelop regular writing habits. To help with this, I plan to work on edits for my current manuscript, write a second draft of one pending manuscript, and draft something entirely new during NaNoWriMo. While it’s not necessary, I’d love to get back to an average of at least 10K words monthly.

Results: I really have done absolutely nothing in the writing area. Part of that is due to a medication issue that I’m trying to find a doctor to work out, and part is due to my focus on other areas of my life. Honestly, I’m probably going to let go of this goal altogether while other things are at the forefront of life.

Books: Another simple area, as I’m happy with my current book-and-blog life. This year, I’d like to make good progress into the Wheel of Time series, and get through my backlogged Audible queue.

Results: I quit the Wheel of Time series midway through the fourth book. In Audible, I’ve either listened to or culled/returned all but one of my 2016 backlog. Of course, I’ve added a bit more since then…

Other: This category is a kind of everything else catch-all. Other things I’d like to accomplish in 2017:

  • get out of credit card debt – Not there yet, but almost. Huge progress made.
  • replace our roof – Thanks to that major windstorm that swept across the northern half of the country, much of this will be paid by insurance. Yay! We’ve found a roofer and begun the scheduling process. Should be this month, crossing our fingers.
  • finish our current weekend project list (house repairs/improvements) – About half completed
  • finish making my in-progress afghan – Very little progress as I’ve been mostly on a crocheting break
  • use up my current yarn inventory – Same
  • get two specific tattoos that I’ve been meaning to get for almost three years now – nope
  • do 10 tarot readings (for myself or others) – One down, nine to go – anyone want one?

Overall Results in Goals:
I’ve made some progress, hitting the right buttons but discovering that button-hitting isn’t helping toward the actual goals. I hope that makes sense. It’s like with my goal to discover new-to-me local places. I’m doing that, yeah, but doing so isn’t making me feel any more at home here, or connecting me to the area or other people. (Just cats – cue cute kitty pic!) The same has been happening with 2017’s One Word: Nurture. I’ve essentially forgotten the word even exists, and instead have found myself drawn more toward the word Cultivate (probably thanks to Yoga With Adriene). When I do remember longer-term goals, it’s Cultivate that comes to mind, and I’m okay with that. Unfortunately, I’m mostly drowned with everyday mundanities, and I’m not going forward no matter how hard I try. I’ll probably try to tweak these goals a bit and see if I can make better progress in the second quarter of 2017.

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The Nimi Settles In

It’s been about six weeks now since Nimi joined our family. She has been an absolute delight and a fantastic addition to our household. She’s sweet, cuddly, affectionate, smart and devilishly determined to get her own way. While not an alpha cat – she’s fine letting Ash keep that position – she’s got a definite youngest-child way of dealing with the world and the people/kitties around her.

Piles
As previously stated, Nimi likes to cuddle. Her favorite thing ever is the kitty-pile…and the more kitties, the better. (In her mind, people count as big kitties.) She follows me in the morning, in the early afternoon, and again in the evening. If I’m too busy to cuddle with her, she gives up on me and flops down on one of the two other kitties. Literally flops down on them. Gavroche will cuddle for a short while, but as Nimi gets closer and closer, he eventually decides he’s had enough. Ash, in a completely surprising-to-us move, is perfectly happy to cuddle. In fact, he periodically initiates his own kitty-pile with Nimi, sitting on her instead of flopping against her. Pics:

Nimi-initiated kitty-piles

Ash-initiated kitty-pile

Baths
Unlike the other two cats, Nimi is fastidiously clean. She spends multiple hours a day bathing, and she likes to bathe everyone else as well. In the evening, she demands to put her face up to mine and bathe me. She does the same to the other cats, often holding them down so that she can bathe them. They reciprocate a tiny bit, but she’s intense when it comes to cleaning. She even stops purring when she gets serious about it. Once, she squeezed into a kitty pile (Jason’s head in my lap, Ash also on my lap, Nimi pushing in between them two of them) in order to bathe the back of Jason’s head. Ha!

Bath-time, dad!

It’s not just during bath-time, either. She uses her tongue as a weapon. For example, I was once playing with Ash with the laser pointer. Nimi has no interested in said pointer, and Ash loves it. Just to see what would happen, I put the light on Nimi’s side while she wasn’t paying attention. Ash was distressed. He started whining and his tail got puffy, because that red dot was attacking his sister! She turned to look at him, noticed he was in a pre-pounce position, and immediately sprang into her own pounce. She bounded over and jumped on top of Ash, and proceeded to furiously lick his head all over.

Sneak
Nimi is also a sneaky sneak. I mentioned she was smart. It didn’t take her long to figure out the bedtime rituals. In the evening, when it’s time for me to sleep, Jason tucks me in, kicks the kitties out, and closes my door. Nimi does not like to be kicked out. She would prefer to spend the night in my room. Unfortunately, due to insomnia and other concerns, that’s simply not possible. Doesn’t stop her from trying, though. When it’s nearly time for me to sleep, she crawls under my dresser, or hides behind the armchair, or sneaks into the bathroom shadows. Normally, Jason finds her, but this past Saturday, he didn’t. He thought she’d left on her own. Instead, she hid for a couple hours – yes, hours – then came out and jumped up to cuddle against my face in purring triumph. She was quite offended when grouchy, woken-up mom deposited her outside the bedroom. And because I have no pics of this, here’s another kitty-pile pic, as the cats followed my wine glass with interest, ha!

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Wellness Wednesday #47: April Challenge

buttonAs far as food and fitness challenges go for me, February and March were a bust. I didn’t even bother to make challenges for March. There was just too much going on between vacation, two medicine changes, a major health scare, and my doctor dismissing me. My health has suffered from all this, and I need some direction for April.

Fitness
Back in January, I made and kept a fitness goal to complete the Yoga With Adriene 31-Day Yoga Revolution. It was lovely, and I found myself completely in love with yoga. I got stronger, more confident, more flexible, and more relaxed. While I’ve continued to do yoga periodically over the last couple months – especially while on vacation – I haven’t felt any real direction, picking videos at random. I’ve decided that for April, I’d like to complete Adriene’s 30-day yoga challenge from 2015. I actually already started this, so I’ll be ahead a few days and will be able to take a few  break days during the month, which sounds perfect!

In addition to this, I’d like to do five days of out-of-my-comfort-zone fitness. This can be anything from taking a class at my local community center (even a yoga class!) to trying out a new kind of fitness equipment. I’d just like to break away from my normal yoga-and-walking routine to keep my body guessing a little. This part of the challenge, however, is far less important than becoming regular in my yoga practice again!

Nutrition
I have three huge struggles with nutrition. The first is eating not out of hunger or desire, but out of depression. Even if I eat the same things, eating for comfort does bad things to my body. The second struggle is an addiction to sugar combined with PCOS-related insulin resistance. The third is that after years of doing it religiously, I really really hate food-tracking (especially calorie-tracking). Over the last couple years, I’ve gone back and forth between trying to force myself to count calories and eating on nutrition plans that are lower-carb (cutting out flour, sugar, and refined grains). The former is tedious beyond imagination, the latter is limiting in what I can eat. The waffling back and forth isn’t helping me!

So for April’s challenge, I’ve decided to do something 100% new to me. I’ve downloaded a couple different food-trackers that aren’t focused on calories. One, for instance, involves taking pictures of your meals. Another records what you ate in text along with a mini-journal of how you felt at the time of eating, as a way to become mindful about why you’re eating. I don’t know which of the trackers will work best over time, but my goal is to use them throughout April and evaluate their helpfulness to my health journey. I think treating it as a data-gathering experiment will help me tremendously. I like experiments, data, and new things. I like the fact that this is one step removed from me, tracking for the sake of gathering data, rather than to try to help my health. That removal makes it more clinical and cuts out the emotional ties that tend to sabotage me. We’ll see!

Wish me luck!

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Gilded Cage, by Vic James (audio)

The world is divided into two: those with Skill – the Equals – and those without – the commoners. In England, the Equal aristocrats rule, and the commoners by law must give up a decade of their life to what’s known as slavedays. During that decade, which can begin as early as ten years old or as late as fifty-five, commoners become non-people, forced into whatever work is needed without pay or respite. And now that the youngest member of the Hadley family has turned ten, all five of them enter their slavedays together. They’re meant to serve on an Equal’s estate, a cushy job as far as slavery goes. Of course, not all goes to plan.

This book is told from many points of view, including both commoner and Equal. It falls into a dystopian/alternate history/fantasy range of genres, and is the first of a trilogy (next book due out this year). Having read this book almost directly after another similar setup (Red Queen), I was worried I would feel burned out. I didn’t. Red Queen was fun, but I had some issues with it, and it didn’t completely sweep me away. This one swept me away. I started in print, bought the audio from Audible so that I could keep listening as I went about my day, and sped through the entire audio in a single afternoon. The book was absolutely excellent!

It had everything I love in this kind of fantasy: excellent world-building, lots of character development, a world that is not as black and white as it first appears, characters that make bad decisions for good reasons, good timing/pacing, perfect setup for multiple books, lots of questions still to be answered, etc. Of course, no book is perfect, but honestly I can’t immediately think of anything that I’d call a complaint. The only thing I worry about is my own speedy reading, which tends to make me forget a book quickly. I’ll likely have to revisit in the future before moving on to later volumes.

Performance: The audio is read by Avita Jay, who does an absolutely amazing job. I highly recommend it!

Posted in 2017, Adult, Prose | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Sunday Coffee – Knowing When to Quit

One of my goals this year was to make some good headway into the Wheel of Time series, with the ultimate aim being to get to those books that Brandon Sanderson wrote. There are fourteen books in the series. Sanderson wrote the last three. That made eleven books to read in order to get there, and only one that I’d read prior to this year.

I read that first book in 2013 and was unimpressed. I temporarily gave up the series, only to take it up again in late December. From December to February, I read through the second and third books, and halfway through the fourth. During my vacation, I didn’t listen to any audiobooks. My phone was acting up – long story – and audio simply wasn’t practical. Once I got home, I tried continuing the book…and I just didn’t want to. I found myself skipping through sections in 30-second chunks. I tried to break up the reading by listening to other audiobooks as a “break” from this super long book. Eventually, I decided to get the book in print instead.

My goal was to skim the rest of the book, then skim books 5-11 to get to the Sanderson books. That seemed a fair compromise between slogging through all the books I wasn’t interested in and outright skipping them. But then I couldn’t even get myself interested enough to skim the print book. I tried reading chapter summaries online, and I couldn’t even maintain interest in that. And at that point…well, if even chapter summaries bore you to tears, perhaps it’s time to just give up.

I thought about skipping ahead to see if I could read the Sanderson books without the background I’d need from books 5-11. Honestly, though, I don’t think I’d get much out of the experience. It doesn’t seem worth the effort. I gave it a good try, and this series simply isn’t for me. Not the first time that’s happened, won’t be the last. I appreciate knowing when it’s time to bow out and give in.

Posted in Book Talk | Tagged | 6 Comments

Real Food, Fake Food, by Larry Olmsted (audio)

Subtitled: Why You Don’t Know What You’re Eating and What You Can Do About It

Let me start by saying what this book isn’t. This is not about so-called Frankenfoods. It’s not about Lucky Charms or Velveeta or Pepsi. When we eat those sorts of foods, we know they’re fake and highly processed. This book is about a different kind of fakery, the kind that:

  • legally and silently “enhances” products (think corn syrup added to honey without being on the label)
  • pretends to be something it’s not (think tuna in both stores and restaurants actually being a fish called escolar, unrelated to tuna at all and potentially poisonous)
  • takes the name of something higher-quality and/or region-specific and erroneously uses it (think California “Champagne” or Kraft “Parmesan”)

The book tackles government regulations inside and outside the US, and discusses the way food fraud has made its way into just about everything in our supermarket. Some of the main foods and worst offenders discussed are wine, olive oil, seafood, cheese, beef, tea…and you know, I could go on and on, but you get the point.

Six years ago, I read The Omnivore’s Dilemma. (Notably, Real Food, Fake Food directs readers to Omnivore if they want to read about the fakery practices prevalent in processed food.) It changed the way I thought about eating, and definitely changed my nutrition for the better. (Hm. It’s about time for a reread, I think…) I love reading about food, food history, and the food industry, and while this book isn’t Omnivore, I did learn a lot about food that make me think. I don’t always agree with the author on certain kinds of “fake” foods. There’s an inherent class bias in saying “Only eat Parmesan from Parma, and if you can’t find it or afford it, simply don’t have it!” Parmesan-style cheeses don’t bother me, as long as they’re real cheese, which of course isn’t always the case. Other fraudulent food practices – as defined by the author – do really bother me.

When you can’t tell the difference between pure honey and honey adulterated with corn syrup and other sweeteners, that’s a problem. When cheaper, lower-quality, possibly-lethal fish is substituted for everything from tuna to salmon to lobster, that’s a problem. When products are imported from parts of the world that allow slave labor and US-banned hormones/antibiotics in the production of those foods, that’s a problem. When loose (or non-existent) labeling laws allow chemically-created oil that’s never seen an olive to be called 100% grade A extra virgin olive oil, that’s a problem.

I’m a big fan of regulation and food protections. You know, the kind our current government is trying to cut as “unimportant” and “unnecessary.” I know that corporations, far removed from the consumer, do what they can to cut costs and meet market demand. I also know that people ought to be smart enough to know that their fast food lobster sub sandwiches have never been near an actual lobster, because lobster is an expensive item for a good reason: it’s extremely time-consuming and provides little meat yield per item. However, it’s too easy to be duped when your can of tuna claims to be tuna, or when your tea looks like tea when it’s really made up of something unrelated, or when any kind of rice in the world can be called “basmati” with no repercussions. As a wine drinker/lover, I know the trash brands and would never get “Champagne” from Korbel, but I didn’t know some of the other common fraud practices in wine production/distribution. Thanks to this book, I now know what to look for. I recognize authentication seals on certain bottles, and I recognize specific third-party authentication seals on seafood (yay Aldi for being excellent about its seafood products!), and I have good ideas about how to avoid other food frauds.

While there were some grey areas and class-bias problems to this book – the former of which is actually pointed out by the author up front – I feel that this is an important one to read. I don’t have tons of money (especially after three cross-country moves in three years! not to mention three teen boys…), but for the first time in all my years of food-reading, I’ve begun thinking about sustainably-sourced meat products. This is something I’d dismissed before not because I didn’t want to care, but because I simply didn’t have the money to afford those higher-end products. (Let’s not talk about vegetarianism. I’m an omnivore by philosophy and medical need.) Now, though, my mind has shifted into a different mode, similar to when I read The Omnivore’s Dilemma, that will (hopefully) lead to choices that are better for the animals, the environment, and my family. (I say hopefully because I live in a tiny area with very few choices, and I don’t even know if what I’m looking for is possible to get a hold of here.)

I read this book on audio, but have put the print version on my wishlist. There are many places throughout that list ways to check if what you’re buying is really what you’re buying, and while I remember some from the audio, I really want a physical copy to refer to. Multiple reviews on GoodReads mention that the written version is riddled with copy errors. While I hope that’s mostly e-copies and ARCs, I wanted to put that warning out here to others who might be interested in reading the book. This wasn’t a particular problem I had to deal with, but print-readers might come across it.

Performance: This audiobook was read by Jonathan Yen, and was my first experience with this particular narrator. Unfortunately, I did not enjoy the performance. Yen reads the book similar to shows I’ve seen on HGTV or Food Network, with exaggerated vocal inflections like a cross between a game show and a shocker news program. He also generously used accents for both real and hypothetical people, often when no accent was needed, and the accents were as exaggerated as everything else. This latter point is one of my pet peeves, so obviously this didn’t go over well for me. That’s not to say someone else wouldn’t love the audio version – I know this is a very popular style of vocal acting! – it just didn’t work for me.

Posted in 2017, Adult, Prose | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments