Wednesday, March 4, 2026

What I'm reading Wednesday...

Fourteenth challenge finish of the year.

This one has been on my Kindle since 2012.  I continue to try to satisfy the challenge prompts using books that I already own (and the longer I've owned them the better it feels to complete them). 

At 433 pages, this book took me two weeks to read.  Frankly, that's ridiculous.  Like one of the books I read last year, I can only assume that the print size in the book was tiny and closely spaced to allow a smaller page count.  I thought it would never end.  Carey checked in on me at one point, and I said, 'Not now, I'm at 96% and I just want to finish it!"  An hour later, I finally emerged.

The story, (written and set in the mid 1970s) was interesting.  An elderly brother and sister in Vermont, James and Sally (both widowed), are sharing their childhood home after the sister ran out of money to stay in the home she had shared with her husband.  Their relationship suffers due to their differing viewpoints on society, politics, etc., which is sort of a current issue isn't it?  I could really relate to their struggle.

After a heated argument, the sister escaped to her bedroom and locked herself in.  The brother, from the outside, then bolted her in.  

Neither one would 'say uncle', and it got to be big news (with a little help of the "nosy neighbor character" listening in on the party line phone conversations.

The thing that I thought was unnecessary was the inclusion of a book within the book.  Sally found a novel about drug smugglers in the room and read it as a distraction during her enforced and then self-enforced seclusion in the room.  The entire text of that book was included in this book.  That addition did not add to the story at all, in my humble opinion.  Luckily the sections of the 'other' book were in a bold font, and as the smugglers' story got weirder, I finally just stopped readinng those sections.

October Light won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction in 1976.  It often seems to me that awards go to books that are too...high brow?...scholarly?...to be an entertaining read.  This one did not change that opinion.

Now I am reading:

I'm not far into it, and I'm not sure yet what challenge prompt it will fit under, but this author is a personal favorite.

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