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emmadilemma

emmadilemma@book.dansmonorage.blue

Joined 2 years, 8 months ago

paranoia, ya, l'environnement, sapphic romance, possibly not in that order. can't speak french™ but pretend to flip through the odd french book

masto: eldritch.cafe/@tati

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commented on Smooth City by René Boer

Smooth City (Paperback, 2023, Valiz) No rating

The book would be more accurately called "Smooth neighborhood," on the scourge of master-planned, homogeneous theme parks-within-a-city. The author might have eventually gone on to indict whole cities, but started by dragging a single area in Amsterdam and the Kings Cross redevelopment project in London. I've not been to Amsterdam, but the vision of a place with magically no vacant doorways and not a bit of diversity is not what I saw at Kings Cross, and that was before Covid, when it wasn't an epic struggle to keep shops open.

To my mind overstated and oversold; I bailed out early, so DNF and no review. It could get more compelling. I'm notorious for throwing back too early.

World Almanac Guide to Places to Go Before You Can't (EBook, 2023, World Almanac Books) 3 stars

Good survey of human short-sightedness

3 stars

A good skim through some hundred travel destinations that are at risk of being less attractive in the future. Most are threatened by climate change, but some face more direct stupidity — war, neglect, bad planning. Each place is visited only briefly, but it is a good calibration for your own bucket list. You're unlikely to choose a new destination just because you see it here. But you might not realize that Stonehenge is at risk of being felled by rodents, or that Machu Picchu — already with twice the visitor load recommended by UNESCO — will be more crowded many times over after a new airport is completed as soon as next year.

Written in the Stars (Paperback, 2020, HarperCollins Publishers) 5 stars

With nods to Bridget Jones and Pride and Prejudice, a charming #ownvoices queer rom-com …

My inner monologue meets its match

5 stars

I'm not a gorgeous actuarial lesbian, but I've got the stick-in-the-mud bit down. Reading the chapters written in Darcy's voice is like seeing my internal monologue put to paper. That rabbit hole she leaps into is one that I've peered into a lot.

Another book for which I'm absolutely not the target audience, but acts as a sunnier, happier alternate universe. Who wouldn't want more of those?

Written in the Stars (Paperback, 2020, HarperCollins Publishers) 5 stars

With nods to Bridget Jones and Pride and Prejudice, a charming #ownvoices queer rom-com …

Darcy wasn’t a thrill seeker and she didn’t like roller coasters.… Surprisingly, what she disliked wasn’t the drop, but the moments before, when the rickety boxcar would creep up the metal track, higher and higher, her heart crawling into her throat as she gripped the bar in front of her for dear life. As if clutching a silly metal rod would spare her in the event of an emergency, total disaster. Those anxious moments right before the plunge, when all those worst-case scenarios would flit through her head, but getting off the ride wasn’t an option. Stuck, knowing what would come next, dreading it and being able to do nothing, Darcy hated being out of control, at the mercy of chance.

Written in the Stars by  (33%)

Imogen, Obviously (2023, HarperCollins Publishers Limited) 5 stars

Imogen Scott has questions…

Imogen Scott may be hopelessly heterosexual, but she’s got the World’s …

On permanent record

5 stars

I read this some time ago, quietly gave it five stars, and slipped out the side door. I still am not in a position to explain my reasoning, but the hardback is nestled between I Kissed Shara Wheeler and One Last Stop.