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Jessica Locked account

jessica@books.realityfabric.net

Joined 3 days, 5 hours ago

I read books sometimes. In my 30s.

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2025 Reading Goal

98% complete! Jessica has read 49 of 50 books.

Grady Hendrix: The Southern Book Club’s Guide to slaying Vampires (AudiobookFormat, 2020, Blackstone Publishing)

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The real monster is white hetero patriarchy. And that being the monster, with no LGBT characters, made most of the characters extremely unrelatable. I am not straight, a housewife, a mother, a southerner, or a Christian. The first half of the book, largely following the mundane life of a housewife as the stage is set, was a major slog.

However, it did set the stage for an exciting last half of the book. Once the punches start coming they don't stop coming. The safety of the institutions these women had always relied on crumbles away, and they are forced to choose: live in the fantasy of an idyllic suburban life, or risk it all, seize their independence, and be truly safe with their fates in their own hands.

I would consider this to be a good book, but it gets 3 stars because I found the first half boring. You …

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I'm enjoying this series, but not enjoying how the LGBT characters are portrayed, nor am I particularly a fan of what seems to be the main moral quandary of the series: do fetuses have the right to be born at the expense of their host? Or, should we harvest the organs of the comatose to save the life of another person? Very Philosophy 101 Utilitarianism questions, the angle of which seems to imply a forced-birth conclusion. I doubt it's intentional.

There are some deeper philosophical questions arising, but I'm at a point where I kinda just want the series to be done so I can read something where the LGBT characters aren't all dead or evil.

reviewed Parasite by Mira Grant (Parasitology)

Mira Grant: Parasite (Hardcover, 2013, Orbit)

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Capitalism is the real monster. Except, maybe a zealous pursuit of science for the sake of science is the real monster. Or maybe parasitic brain worms are the real monster.

I read this when it first came out, but had forgotten most of it. Rereading it was worth it. Themes of what it means to be human, the importance of agency and self determination, and cute dogs.

Josh Malerman: Goblin (Hardcover, 2021, Del Rey)

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It held my attention for the bits I read because I expected it to get scary or thrilling and was anticipating that, but the prologue and first novella didn't deliver, so I'm abandoning this book. 2 stars, because I wouldn't hate finishing it if I had to.

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No rating

I didn't finish this book, so I will refrain from rating it. I was expecting a more general analysis of rural society, but instead it is very specifically about French peasant societies during the transition from feudal to capitalist relations. It's interesting, but also dry reading, and I was hoping to apply what I learned in this book to my analysis of local conditions. There are no peasants, and as far as I'm aware no French villages, in the Pacific Northwest, so I'm going to turn my attention to other resources. Perhaps someday I will return to this.

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Sadly this report is still relevant and still reflects much of the political landscape today, although the power of socialists has decreased and the major fascist threat of the day is gone (Fascist Italy, Germany, Spain, and Japan).

Excellent analysis of fascism across the world, excellent analysis of how to work towards the defeat of fascism. I'd say that anyone who wants to defeat fascism should read this, but especially anyone who considers themself a Marxist-Leninist (since it is from a very Bolshevik perspective).

Jane McAlevey: No shortcuts (2016, Oxford University Press)

"The crisis of the progressive movement in the United States today is so evident that …

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An excellent read, I can already see how my work as a communist is going to improve with this knowledge, especially now understanding the difference between organizing and mobilizing, and activists vs leaders.