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#keefsreads

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I read The Nix by Nathan Hill. And after a few pages I realised I'd already read it and forgotten about it. Doh! But perhaps the moment to pick it up was well timed. It centres on student protests in Chicago in 1968. It feels like we've learnt precisely nothing along the way. If you like John Irving's work you'll get along with this. #keefsreads @bookstodon

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If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery: a very readable collection of connected short stories through about 30 years. Particularly taken with 'Splashdown' which gently draws you in and...well. A story of an American family with Jamaican roots mainly told through the youngest son. Life often just happens rather than is lived. Humans mess up of course. #bookstodon @bookstodon #KeefsReads

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Having enjoyed Swan Song by Kelleigh Greenberg-Jephcott a while ago, couldn't resist Capote's Women by Laurence Leamer (h/t @Hey_Beth who's been immersed in the Capote world recently).

Privilege and entitlement means it's hard to empathise with the swans; but they landed then married detached sometimes cruel men. I thought about Larkin's words on parenting a few times.

Capote comes across as vain and narcissistic. It's pretty unedifying but very readable. @bookstodon #bookstodon #keefsreads

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Given I enjoyed Okwiri Oduor's short story in that collection so much I read her novel Things They Lost. A story of dysfunctional families and love between two girls (Mbiu Dash from the short story is one of them.) Set in a strange shifting world inhabited by wraiths. Feels like visiting a strange dream. #keefsreads #bookstodon @bookstodon

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The best of the The Best American Short Stories from 2022 were the ones where you wanted to know more. Gina Ochsner's rather bleak Soon the Light vividly brings to life a tough rural existence. Mbiu Dash by Okwiri Odour gives glimpses into the precarious life of a young poor Nigerian woman. Inevitably some stories reflect on Covid. Those did not convince as much. #bookstodon #KeefsReads
@bookstodon

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Be Mine. The last of Richard Ford's five Frank Bascombe novels. Frank's a bit of a boomer dick isn't he? You can't warm to him much despite life throwing plenty of crap his way. I guess age has brought a bit more self-reflection. The glimpses into American life are as ever the best things about these books for me. I'm going to have to look up the game #cornhole now. #bookstodon #KeefsReads @bookstodon

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A Spell of Good Things by Ayòbámi Adébáyò. Two interweaving stories set in Nigeria. It's extremely well done. I guess it's the 'mundane' violence that was most, er, striking. One poor person and one rich person, both of whom have limited control of their lives for different reasons. #KeefsReads #bookstodon

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Just read The Country of Others by #LeilaSlimani. Possibly for the second time. May be going mad. Anyway a young French woman falls in love in 1944 and makes a new life in Morocco. The turmoil in that relationship reflects the upheaval under French rule. I was struck by the symmetry between the dreadful way Amine, the husband treats his wife and family, and the way the colonial power treats Morocco. #bookstodon #BookToot #KeefsReads

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The Unfolding by #AMHomes. As Obama wins the 2008 election, Republican grandees start to plot... the ups and downs of the family life of the main character run in parallel. It's satire mostly, rather than a deep insight into what these people believe in although their methods feature. They're a lot like you and me. Except they're richer and want to overthrow the government. #bookstodon #KeefsReads

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Finally finished The Nutmeg's Curse by Amitav Ghosh. Learnt a lot of things that probably should have been obvious to me. Mainly about how colonialism uses destruction of the environment as a weapon. The displaced lived alongside nature, the occupiers saw it as a resource to be exploited. They still do of course. The richer ones have their eyes on other planets... #Bookstodon #BookToot #keefsreads