Apparently the UK summer officially extends to the 22nd – though you’d never believe it from the autumnal cold snap we’re having just now – so that’s my excuse for not posting about the rest of my summery reading until today. I have a tender ancestry-inspired story of a Jewish family’s response to grief, a bizarre YA fantasy comic, and two rereads, one a family story from one of my favourite contemporary authors and the other the middle instalment in a super-cute graphic novel series.
Florence Adler Swims Forever by Rachel Beanland (2020)
After reviewing Beanland’s second novel, The House Is on Fire, I wanted to catch up on her debut. Both are historical and give a broad but detailed view of a particular milieu and tragic event through the use of multiple POVs. It’s the summer of 1934 in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Florence, a plucky college student who intends to swim the English Channel, drowns on one of her practice swims. This happens in the first chapter (and is announced in the blurb), so the rest is aftermath. The Adlers make the unusual decision to keep Florence’s death from her sister, Fannie, who is on hospital bedrest during her third pregnancy because she lost a premature baby last year. Fannie’s seven-year-old daughter, Gussie, is sworn to silence about her aunt – with Stuart, the lifeguard who loved Florence, and Anna, a German refugee the Adlers have sponsored, turning it into a game for her by creating the top-secret “Florence Adler Swims Forever Society” with its own language.
The particulars can be chalked up to family history: this really happened; the Gussie character was Beanland’s grandmother, and the author believes her great-great-aunt Florence died of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. It’s intriguing to get glimpses of Jewish ritual, U.S. anti-Semitism and early concern over Nazism, but I was less engaged with other subplots such as Fannie’s husband Isaac’s land speculation in Florida. There’s a satisfying queer soupcon, and Beanland capably inhabits all of the perspectives and the bereaved mindset. (Secondhand – Awesomebooks.com) ![]()
Lumberjanes: Campfire Songs by Shannon Watters et al. (2020)
This comics series created by a Boom! Studios editor ran from 2014 to 2020 and stretched to 75 issues that have been collected in 20+ volumes. Watters wanted to create a girl-centric comic and roped in various writers who together decided on the summer scout camp setting. I didn’t really know what I was getting into with this set of six stand-alone stories, each illustrated by a different artist. The characters are recognizably the same across the stories, but the variation in style meant I didn’t know what they’re “supposed” to look like. All are female or nonbinary, including queer and trans characters. I guess I expected queer coming-of-age stuff, but this is more about friendship and fantastical adventures. Other worlds are just a few steps away. They watch the Northern Lights with a pair of yeti, attend a dinner party cooked by a ghost chef, and play with green kittens and giant animate pumpkins. My favourite individual story was “A Midsummer Night’s Scheme,” in which Puck the fairy interferes with preparations for a masquerade ball. I won’t bother reading other installments. (Public library) ![]()
And the rereads:
Instructions for a Heatwave by Maggie O’Farrell (2013)
I read this when it first came out (original review here) and saw O’Farrell speak on it, in conversation with Julie Cohen, at a West Berkshire Libraries event – several years before I lived in the county. I expected it to be a little more atmospheric about the infamous UK drought of summer 1976. All I’d remembered otherwise was that one character is hiding illiteracy and another has an affair while leading a residential field trip. The novel opens, Harold Fry-like, with Robert Riordan disappearing from his suburban home. Gretta phones each of her adult children to express concern, but she’s so focussed on details like how she’ll get into the shed without Robert’s key that she fails to convey the gravity of the situation. Eventually the three descend on her from London, Gloucestershire and New York and travel to Ireland together to find him, but much of the novel is a patient filling-in of backstory: why Monica and Aoife are estranged, what went wrong in Michael Francis’s marriage, and so on.
I had forgotten the two major reveals, but this time they didn’t seem as important as the overall sense of decisions with unforeseen consequences. O’Farrell was using extreme weather as a metaphor for risk and cause-and-effect (“a heatwave will act upon people. It lays them bare, it wears down their guard. They start behaving not unusually but unguardedly”), and it mostly works. But this wasn’t a top-tier O’Farrell on a reread. (Little Free Library)
My original rating (2013): ![]()
My rating now: ![]()
Average: ![]()
Heartstopper: Volume 3 by Alice Oseman (2020)
Heartstopper was my summer crush back in 2021, and I couldn’t resist rereading the series in the hardback reissue. That I started with the middle volume (original review here) is an accident of when my library holds arrived for me, but it turned out to be an apt read for the Olympics summer because it mostly takes place during a one-week school trip to Paris, full of tourism, ice cream, hijinks and romance. Nick and Charlie are dating but still not out to everyone in their circle. This is particularly true for Nick, who is a jock and passes as straight but is actually bisexual. Charlie experienced a lot of bullying at his boys’ school before his coming-out, so he’s nervous for Nick, and the psychological effects persist in his disordered eating. Oseman deals sensitively with mental health issues here, and has fun adding more queer stories into the background: Darcy and Tara, Tao and Elle (trans), and even the two male trip chaperones. It’s adorable how everything flirtation-related is so dramatic and the characters are always blushing and second-guessing. Lucky teens who get to read this at the right time. (Public library) ![]()
Any final “heat” or “summer” books for you this year?
Interesting: “I was less engaged with other subplots such as Fannie’s husband Isaac’s land speculation in Florida” My Grandmother’s cousin, whose first marriage is the basis of my hope-to-publish manuscript, moved to Florida after being widowed, met and married a Jewish man and got into real estate speculation! But, had that not occurred, I’d have said the same thing about that subplot.
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Huh. Well, that gives you a good reason to read the Beanland!
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Well, I’ve just read “Stories for summer and days by the pool” so that counts! Review out tomorrow. And “The Secrets of Flowers” takes place through a summer so they can have the flower stuff front and centre. I’ve done well this time!
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Excellent!
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The whole bit in “Instructions” about the dyslexic daughter really spoke to me, because I’m dyslexic. Plus, I was actually in the UK that same summer of that horrid heat wave, and I remember how strange people acted. So I’d probably not change my rating on a re-read (but I don’t usually re-read books).
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Oh wow, you experienced the 1976 drought for yourself! I’ve never read another account of dyslexia so serious that someone was functionally illiterate.
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Well, only for about 10 days in August, but that was enough. And yes, how she describes severe dyslexia was perfect. My dyslexia is mild, but I have a niece who had to work her tail off to be able to read anything. She’s functional, but thankfully, she is a swimming instructor so she doesn’t really need to read or write much.
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We have a close friend who always needs someone to proofread her work because of her dyslexia. In particular, she falls foul to predictive text errors all the time.
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I read the first two volumes of Lumberjanes and wasn’t too impressed with them. I’ve never read Maggie O’Farrell and I think it’s a real gap in my reading that I should remedy.
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Yeah, I don’t think Lumberjanes is for me.
OMG, O’Farrell is amazing! Everyone else seems to love Hamnet, but that’s the last one I’d direct you to; The Hand that First Held Mine is my favorite.
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Instructions for a Heatwave remains my least favourite O’Farrell – it’s the only one I DNF. Heartstopper vol 3 is the weakest instalment of the series, I think, though I enjoyed the TV series’ take on the Paris adventures!
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I’m rereading them all, out of order. Volume 2 feels like the weakest right now as it just drags out them being secretive about their relationship. I’ve not had the chance to see the TV adaptation. Is it authentic?
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I loved Nick coming out to his mum in Vol II, one of the strongest scenes in the books for me. The TV adaptation is pretty good, yes – some changes from the books, but nothing hugely significant, and I liked the inclusion of an asexual character.
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Tori (Charlie’s sister) is ace, yes?
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I liked the Lumberjanes books but I can see where, in another mood, I might have been impatient (I know they’re for young readers but, at times, they felt particularly juvenile?). Have you read the Giant Days comics? I read them not long before Lumberjanes and I think I had been hoping for more of “that”. Slightly older, slightly more bookish, bit of a Rainbow-Rowell feel?
We had a frost warning on Labour Day weekend, then things got extremely hot. Just last night it fell to zero again (but no frost warning…I’ve decided that I do not understand weather) so my coffee was cold before I’d gotten to my desk this morning. My reading reflects this: I’ve just finished Three Holidays and a Wedding a light rom-com rooted in the idea that Ramadan and Hannukah and Christmas all fall at the same time in one season of holiday hijinks (I keep hoping for another Romantic Comedy but nobody has come close to Sittenfeld’s mark).
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No, I’ve not come across Giant Days. I read Rowell’s Pumpkinheads and enjoyed that.
Huh, frost in early September, eh? That’s quite something. We’re into chilly misty days here, and the clocks go back on Saturday, so soon it will be dark not long after 5 p.m.
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It looks like they’ve got an omnibus edition now too:
https://www.boom-studios.com/series/giant-days/
I’m glad we moved all the plants indoors (the ones in planters) as they’ve had nearly two months of warm weather since although soon overnight frost warnings will be normal once more. Our time changes this weekend too. I can never remember which countries also shift and which have opted out.
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