Books Magazine

May Reading Wrap-up

By Curlygeek04 @curlygeek04
thug falling raisin say nothing drop gustav leavers

May was an eventful month, beginning with a DC blogger happy hour, Zezee with Books, and Grace from Books without Any Pictures.  It was awesome to meet them and I look forward to hearing more about their blogs — I’ve already thought of questions I want to follow up on.  We met at local bookstore Kramerbooks, an independent bookstore in DC and one of the few places you can shop for books AND drink wine (and also where I had my first date with my husband twenty years ago).

Speaking of, this month the husband and I went to a local arts festival, where we talked to a gallery owner about Harry Potter art.  We spent Memorial Day weekend tasting wine in Charlottesville.  I’ve got squash and tomatoes growing in my garden, which is sorely ready for a little more heat and a little less rain (or maybe I’m projecting my own feelings onto my plants).  We saw Guardians of the Galaxy opening night, and I’m really excited to see Wonder Woman this Thursday.

Here’s what I read in May:

  • The Leavers by Lisa Ko
  • The Gustav Sonata by Rose Tremain
  • The Long Drop by Denise Mina
  • The Sound of Things Falling by Juan Gabriel Vasquez
  • To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis
  • A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
  • The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas

My reading this month was challenging but also rewarding.  I loved The Leavers and The Gustav Sonata, two very thoughtful books about young men growing up in difficult circumstances.  I read The Sound of Things Falling, which was about crime and corruption in Colombia in the 1980s, for The Readers’ Room “Read Around the World” challenge.  I read A Raisin in the Sun for the Classics Book a Month challenge. Both gave me a lot to think about. This month I read four books by authors of color.

My favorite read?  I LOVED The Hate U Give.  Even though I may be older than its target audience, I read this book sniffling and sobbing the whole way.  Angie Thomas gives her sixteen-year old heroine an incredibly real voice.  It’s a gut-wrenching read, and one that is sadly so relevant today.  It was interesting to read it back to back with A Raisin in the Sun, a play that opened on Broadway in 1959 and was also about a black family struggling to get ahead, and to care for each other, in a racist world.  Yet another thing that reminds me we haven’t made much progress.

My only disappointing read this month was The Mothers by Brit Bennett.  I gave up on it halfway; I didn’t like where the story was heading and didn’t care for the characters.

ARCs I read this month: The Long Drop, The Leavers

What I’m reading now:  Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett

What’s coming up: 746 Books is once again hosting Twenty Books of Summer, which gives me a good chance to think about and organize my summer reading.  I’ll post my list shortly, but it’s a mix of Bailey’s Prize books, classics, around-the-world reads, science fiction from my Humble Bundle, and just a few books I’ve been wanting to get to.  Right now I’m looking forward to reading Stay With Me, The Power, and V.E. Schwab’s A Gathering of Shadows.

That’s my wrap up of May.  How’s your summer going, and what are you looking forward to reading?


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