WWW Wednesday – June 25, 2025

www_wednesdays

WWW Wednesday is a weekly book meme run by Sam over at Taking on a World of Words. Check out her post and others over on her blog!

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?


Currently Reading

Once again, I am between books. Work has been whooping my butt a bit this week so far too.


Recently Finished

Over the past week, finishing on Sunday, I read through all of The Complete Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman, a graphic novel I honestly should’ve read years ago, as it feels like one of the biggest pieces of required reading in the medium. The book details the author’s father’s experiences in Poland leading up to and during World War II and his persecution at the hands of the Nazis. The people are all drawn as anthropomorphic animals (Jewish people are mice, Germans are cats, Polish people are pigs, etc.) in a style reminiscent of newspaper comic strips, but in its abstraction of this heavy subject it manages to be both haunting and full of raw humanity, depicting the horrors of the Holocaust in a way impossible to ignore yet not so grisly as to be an unpalatable reading experience. The frame narrative, depicting Art’s conversations with his father about his experiences during the war, wonderfully complimented the core story as well, making the book not just about history but the rippling effects upon those who endure it.


Reading Next

I have a few things lined up that I want to read through soon. First is Curses by George Wylesol, a book I request for the library back in February that finally arrived recently. Though I still have a bit of time on my loan, somebody else has already reserved it after me, so I want to make sure I read it promptly. I also want to start reading Return of the Trickster by Eden Robinson soon too, but I think I’ll make sure I’m done with Curses first. Lastly, I just got a copy of Ew, It’s Beautiful by Joshua Barkman, the latest collection of False Knees comics, and I’d really like to give it a read-through in the near future as well, especially as I expect it won’t take me very long.

Until next time, thank you for reading! Feel free to share your own post down below.

WWW Wednesday – June 18, 2025

www_wednesdays

WWW Wednesday is a weekly book meme run by Sam over at Taking on a World of Words. Check out her post and others over on her blog!

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?


Currently Reading

Nothing at the moment, I’m between books.


Recently Finished

Last week, I read through An Illustrated History of Urban Legends by Adam Allsuch Boardman, which details well-known and perhaps less-well-known urban legends from around the world, covering broader subjects like cryptozoology and UFOs and specific phenomena like Sasquatch sightings  and various hauntings. On the one hand, I enjoyed the colourful simplicity of the art; it was pleasing to look at and made it easy to digest in a single reading session. I do wish it had indulged in being a little more creepy, however, befitting the subject matter. I read this book because I liked books like this as a kid, but this one was a little too sanitized. It would’ve been hard to get a spooky thrill out of this book. There were also an unusual number of glaring mistakes, such that I had to question who proofed this book. Still, I enjoyed this enough that I’d like to read more of the author’s work.

Yesterday, I finished reading Begotten: A Gothic Novel by Kate Cherrell. It feels like I was reading it a lot longer than I actually was, and I’m honestly having a hard time pinning down my feelings on this book. It’s atmosphere was immaculate, and while the characters felt fairly archetypal, they were also well fleshed out. However, I struggled with the pacing, which was slow and ponderous. In some respects this added to the atmosphere well, but I felt like I was waiting far too long for something to happen. The story was also too obscure for its own good. I do find myself tantalized by the mystery of what was really going on and why, but so much is obfuscated from the reader that it’s difficult to form any concrete interpretations. Though I have others queued up that need writing, I’d particularly like to review this book to get deeper into my thoughts on it.


Reading Next

The next novel I plan to read is Return of the Trickster by Eden Robinson, the third and final novel in her Trickster trilogy. Until then, however, I plan on reading The Complete Maus by Art Spiegelman, a graphic novel I feel remiss in not having read despite being a life-long fan of the medium. I’ve borrowed it from the library, so I’m going to more singularly focus on this comic before starting another novel. Comics tend to be much faster reads, but this one is a lot longer than the average volume, and I have a feeling it is also a lot longer content-wise.

Until next time, thank you for reading! Feel free to share your own post down below.

New Books & Novel Discoveries (May 2025)

I managed to show a bit more restraint last month, though I couldn’t help succumbing to some random whims. I really don’t know how it is that you can decide for years that you don’t need certain books, that it doesn’t matter to you if you read them, and then suddenly your mind completely changes—for arbitrary reasons, no less.

Enough talking around it, let’s check out these books.Read More »

WWW Wednesday – June 4, 2025

www_wednesdays

WWW Wednesday is a weekly book meme run by Sam over at Taking on a World of Words. Check out her post and others over on her blog!

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?


Currently Reading

I’m currently in the early chapters of Begotten: A Gothic Novel by Kate Cherrell, and so far I wish I liked it better. However, I’m still pretty early into it, and in no way do I think it’s bad, so I’m going to soldier on. I think the main hurdle I’m having trouble with, other than my poor sleep habits this week, is the fact that this is written as a Neo-Victorian novel, embracing both the setting and the style of novels of the period, and this book is certainly reminding me of Victorian novels I’ve read in the past in terms of style. It having been a while since I read any, I think the problem is more a deficiency on my part, one that I hope will change as I get further into this book. Style notwithstanding, I have found the pace to be a little slow too, but I’m hopeful that will pick up.


Recently Finished

Having skipped last week, I have a number of books to report here now. First and foremost, since my last post I finished reading Only Human by Sylvain Neuvel. Though I had the benefit of reading it shortly after the previous book, I’m a little dismayed to find that I liked this book the least of the whole trilogy. As usual, when it explores more concrete sci-fi ideas this book continues to be really intriguing, but I think my main problem is I don’t particularly care for most of the main cast, and more than ever this book felt focused on them rather than a bigger picture with a cast of recurring characters. The ending, though thematically on point, felt a little too convenient for me too. Still, I’m happy I finished this trilogy, and hopefully I can flesh out my full thoughts in a review soon.

I’m happy to announce that I finally let The Immortal Hulk languish no longer and properly finished the three volumes I had left over. The big one was Of Hell and Death, the tenth volume that concludes the series’s story line. I really loved it, despite having waited literal years to pick this volume up, though I wish all the same that I’d read these closer together. Volume 11, Apocrypha, was more a collection of tie-in comics with other series and a lot of content from old Hulk comics that helps flesh out background details a little better. It was fine, but definitely below par for this series for me. Lastly, Great Power is a collection of one-shot stories that could be slotted in between issues in the main series, and I’m happy I finished off with this volume, because I really enjoyed it; this volume was a great demonstration of how to write great supplemental chapters.


Reading Next

At the moment, I’m not sure what novel I would like to read next, though I have some ideas lined up; I’m just not ready to commit to any yet. In the meantime, I do have more visually oriented books from the library, the graphic novel The Complete Maus by Art Spiegelman, which I can’t believe I still haven’t read, and An Illustrated History of Urban Legends by Adam Allsuch Boardman, a book which I suspect would have captivated me as a child. I’ll likely be giving these books a look fairly soon, especially the latter, as Maus will be more of a commitment.

Until next time, thank you for reading! Feel free to share your own post down below.