Bookish Beck launched 11 years ago today. I find that hard to believe as I still feel like a newbie in the blogging world compared to veterans like Annabel, Kim, Laura, Liz and Simon; imposter syndrome (Imposter Foster!) strikes again. And yet I can’t really remember what it was like before I had a blog, nor can I imagine life without one.
Pratyya Ghosh, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
This is my 1594th post, which means I’m maintaining an average of 2.8 posts per week. I feel like I’m posting less often these days, with most of my reviews clumping around the end of a month as I scramble to report back on library reads and finish everything I’ve started towards particular challenges.
It’s also International Women’s Day, a coincidence I would have been unaware of when I started the blog. The Women’s Prize longlist is always announced at around this time of year, with the Carol Shields Prize longlist to follow on Tuesday. I’ve read three of the Women’s Prize nominees (Castillo, Hutchinson and King) and skimmed another (Choi). I’m currently reading Wendy Erskine’s The Benefactors, which is also just right for Reading Ireland Month.
To mark the day, I’ll reproduce my review of one of the best books I’ve read by a woman recently. It’s one of my early favourites for the year.
Brawler by Lauren Groff
The nine short stories in Lauren Groff’s exceptional eighth book profile women in states of desperation and probe legacies of loss and violence.
Most of the stories employ third-person narration and originally appeared in the New Yorker. Often, inherited trauma binds mothers and daughters. The title character is high school swimmer Sara, who shoplifts and fights in frustration at her mother’s incurable illness. In “Under the Wave,” set after a natural disaster, a woman adopts an orphan as a replacement for her dead child—despite their racial differences. The title of “The Wind” symbolizes women’s fear and rage after an attempted escape from an abusive patriarch. Accidental harm and imagery of the Madonna and Child link the three mother–daughter pairs in “Annunciation.”
Themes of midlife reinvention and latent queerness (cf. Matrix) recur. Bisexuality is a secret between a dying woman and her friend in “Birdie.” In “Between the Shadow and the Soul,” a woman finds new hobbies following early retirement. Although she flirts with her female gardening teacher, she realizes her desire is not to leave her husband but to “brush up against the dazzling future again.”
“Such Small Islands” is a startling Jamesian fable; “To Sunland” a 1950s Southern gothic black comedy that would do Flannery O’Connor proud; and the masterful “What’s the Time, Mr. Wolf?” a suspenseful, novella-length examination of privilege and obsession.
The prose is stellar and the endings breathtaking. Groff is a first-rate novelist, but her short stories are truly peerless.
(Reposted with permission from Shelf Awareness.)
Thanks to all who support my blog by reading and commenting. You’re stars!
Happy Blogversary Rebecca! Here’s to many more years x
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Thanks, Cathy! I can’t imagine the blog universe without you.
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Same!
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Congratulations! 11 years is a real achievement!
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Thank you, Karen!
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Wow, how can it be 11 years?
I still remember a brilliant post you did on repairing/cleaning second hand books, and also a post on ‘how to cull’ your shelves. Both have been very useful!
I also always look forward to your Love your Library posts.
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That’s very kind of you, Penny. I think my blog was more interesting in the early days 😉 I’ve been doing some culling and reorganising recently, so maybe it’s time to reprise the topic.
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Congratulations, Rebecca! Here’s to many more. Glad to hear Brawler hit the spot.
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Thanks, Susan! Your blog must be of a similar vintage?
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Thirteen years in April. My first review was of Hello World, a book about design which made me feel less of a klutz!
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Brilliant. You were one of the first bloggers I started following.
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I don’t know if you meant me or Laura Tisdall, but either way, every year when you post about your anniversary I’m surprised, because I thought you’d been here longer. Not like 11 years is short, but you know. You’re an essential book blogger as far as I’m concerned! I’ve still not read Groff but these sound really good! Tho the title of the novella gave me bad memories because I hated playing that Mr Wolf game 🙂
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Hmm, I know you’ve been around for 15 years because of your recent post, but I also had Laura T. in mind as she think she had a proto-blog before the current one pretty early in the 2000s. So I guess I meant Lauras!
Thanks for saying I’m essential, that means a lot 🙂
It was an unusual choice of title for the Groff novella; I’m not actually sure how it was relevant.
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Happy Blogiversary! You’re definitely a blogging veteran/pro to my mind. (Also, great review of Brawler. I love what I’ve read of Lauren Groff’s short stories and need to read more.)
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I’m thinking you’ve been writing online for a similar length of time?
Her story collections would go on my save-from-fire shelf for sure (though this one I only own digitally, alas).
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I just checked and the earliest post on my blog is from September 2013! So, twelve and a half years? Wild. I wasn’t posting entirely or even mostly about books for a while there, though; it took some time.
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Wowee! I think you were one of my earliest followers. I can’t remember how we came across each other. Was it before or after I submitted something to the short-lived Quadrapheme?
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Happy blogversary!
Glad you enjoyed Brawler – it’s one I’m really looking forward to.
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So good! You’ll like that the title story is about swimming.
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Happy Blogversary Rebecca! Keep those posts coming!
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Thanks! I plan to.
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Well, 11 years is excellent. Happy Blogoversery (or however you spell it).
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Thank you kindly 🙂
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Congratulations – here’s to 11 more fun years!
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Ack, I don’t want to think about how old I’ll be then…
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Congratulations! You are definitely and comfortably among the veterans now 😀 (…coming up for my 18th soon!!)
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Ha ha, I guess anything over a decade is venerable. You’ve been blogging nearly half your life!
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I’ve enjoyed several books by Groff, but I haven’t read this one yet. I’ll have to add it to my list!
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