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Tag: death

W&D Revisited: Review of Cormac McCarthy’s “No Country for Old Men”

2022 Update: Just shy of ten years since I first read it, No Country for Old Men is every bit as grim as I remember, and then some. One thing shifted for me on my second reading: I used to think of this book as an ultra-gritty crime story, but this time around, it felt more like […]

SNQ: Walter M. Miller, Jr.’s “A Canticle for Leibowitz”

Summary: Walter M. Miller, Jr.’s A Canticle for Leibowitz is a work of speculative fiction that celebrates humanity’s ability to endure and laments our tendency to self-destruct. Beginning 600 years after a catastrophic “Flame Deluge” (i.e. late-20th-century nuclear war), Part One introduces the “Order of Saint Leibowitz,” a group of Catholic monks dedicated to preserving precious scraps […]

SNQ: Mikhail Bulgakov’s “The Master and Margarita”

Summary: The Master and Margarita is a work of magical realism by Russian author Mikhail Bulgakov. The story takes place in Moscow during a brief but tumultuous visit from Satan and a retinue of his followers, who kick off all kinds of macabre mischief upon their arrival. Caught up in the chaos are the eponymous Master […]

SNQ: Marilynne Robinson’s “Gilead”

Summary: Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead is a superb contribution to the American literary tradition. The book is narrated by John Ames, a preacher from the fictional town of Gilead, Iowa. It’s the late 1950s, and Ames is approaching the end of his life. Before giving up the ghost, he decides to write a missive to his young son […]

SNQ: N.K. Jemisin’s “The Stone Sky”

Summary: N.K. Jemisin’s The Stone Sky is the third and final book in her Broken Earth trilogy. It presents the concluding events of Essun and Nassun’s narratives, revealing how the fate of the world is decided by these two women and their companions. Jemisin also takes us on a journey through Hoa’s memory of how The Shattering occurred, […]

SNQ: N.K. Jemisin’s “The Obelisk Gate”

Summary: N.K. Jemisin’s The Obelisk Gate is the middle book in her Broken Earth trilogy. Jemisin invites us deeper into the Stillness, continuing the story of Essun and some familiar supporting characters from the first novel (see my review of The Fifth Season for an overview). In The Obelisk Gate, we learn more about the history of the Stillness, including the mythology of […]

SNQ: N.K. Jemisin’s “The Fifth Season”

Summary: N.K. Jemisin’s The Fifth Season is the first installment of The Broken Earth, a fantasy trilogy set on a vast continent called the Stillness, “which is not still even on a good day” (7). The inhabitants of the Stillness experience frequent seismic events and other natural disasters, including brutal “Fifth Seasons”––long winters lasting six months or more that […]

SNQ: Sarah Jaquette Ray’s “A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety”

Summary: Sarah Jaquette Ray’s A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety isn’t a book about how to solve the climate crisis. Rather, it’s about how to cultivate a mature, compassionate, and resilient mindset that will allow climate activists to pursue climate justice in a healthy and sustainable fashion. Ray presents a series of lessons about the psychological challenges […]

SNQ: Paul Conti’s “Trauma”

Summary: Paul Conti’s Trauma: The Invisible Epidemic provides a basic introduction to the topic of trauma and summarizes what Conti has learned during his career working with trauma victims. In Part One, Conti defines trauma, breaks down the different types of trauma, and suggests some conceptual frameworks for how to best understand trauma’s effects on individuals and […]

SNQ: Warren Farrell and John Gray’s “The Boy Crisis”

Summary: Warren Farrell and John Gray’s The Boy Crisis examines how and why boys and men are struggling to survive and thrive in modern life, and seeks to provide a preliminary blueprint for how to reverse this trend. In Part One, Farrell lays out the statistical evidence for the problem, demonstrating how boys and men are failing […]