WWW Wednesday – March 19, 2025

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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 am momentarily between books.


Recently Finished

Last week I finished reading Pandora’s Jar by Natalie Haynes, which I’m not surprised I loved until the very end. It really had been a long time since I read any books about Greek mythology, and this was the perfect book for getting back into it. Although I’m now really curious about reading the author’s fiction, another book in a similar vein to this one, Divine Might, recently came out and I really want to read that one now too. I should read A Thousand Ships first, though, since I have a copy. Unsurprisingly, a big takeaway for me has been a newfound appreciation for the roles that women play in Greek mythology, especially in how they are often integral to different heroes’ successes, something that feels often overlooked or downplayed in more modern retellings.

I also read through Godhusk: Rebirth by Plastiboo, another art book in the form of a game guide for a game that never existed. Unlike Vermis, this book takes more of a science fiction approach and presents a game that seems to be very much in the Metroid-style action/adventure genre. Though I love the author’s Vermis books a great deal, I came away from this one desperately wishing that the game it depicts was real. The visual style, clearly inspired by the work of H.R. Giger, made for a captivatingly bleak world full of biomechanical horrors, and the lore was utterly engrossing. Beyond that, the game mechanic of swapping out different limbs of the player character’s “vessel” to augment how the character plays and interacts with the world sounds really cool as an idea. I could vividly imagine how the game would feel playing, so it’s a bit of a bummer that it’s only a work of imagination.


Reading Next

I have decided that I will start reading Trickster Drift by Eden Robinson next, so that I can finally continue the Trickster trilogy after having read the first book nearly three years ago. I really need to stop leaving book series hanging like this.

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

WWW Wednesday – March 5, 2025

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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’ve made some decent progress with Pandora’s Jar by Natalie Haynes, though my attention has been a little divided this past week, so I haven’t gotten as far along in it as I would have liked. There’s a dry humour to the writing I’m really enjoying; Haynes is doing a good job of injecting wry remarks here and there without the jokes detracting from the more serious analysis and examination of these figures and the different ways they’ve been interpreted. One of the biggest reminders about Greek mythology that this book hits you with is just how varied these stories really are; it’s hard to tell where believed-in myth ends and ancient art/literature begins, especially with some of the accounts covered being plays. Did the playwrights take artistic liberties or are they just adapting a version of the tale? Also, having just read the Medusa chapter, I have a new appreciation for just how much Perseus was some sort of maniac.


Recently Finished

This week I read through We Stand on Guard by Brian K. Vaughn and Steve Skroce, a graphic novel set 100 years in the future about the United States invading and occupying Canada in order to extract the country’s water resources, armed with giant robotic weapons of mass destruction. On paper, it sounds like a fairly compelling idea, but this was a surprising miss from an author whose work so often hits. Overall, it was a rather middling, pedestrian story about oppressive occupation, rebel fighters fighting the good fight, and light political commentary with a cast that felt more like cardboard cutouts and stereotypes than real people. The art was quite good, and there were some legitimately impactful moments, but overall this feels like a good idea that was rushed out before it was fully developed.


Reading Next

I’m not sure what I’m going to read next, as I’ve exhausted my line-up of library books and I haven’t settled on any comics that I actually own that I want to read next.

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

WWW Wednesday – February 26, 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 decided to pick another book from my winter TBR list and finally started reading Pandora’s Jar by Natalie Haynes, a nonfiction book discussing women from Greek mythology, both how they are represented in the surviving art and literature from ancient times and how they have been depicted in more modern times. So far, I’ve only read the first chapter, on Pandora herself, and I am really enjoying this book. As much as I love Greek mythology, reading some texts about it can be unfortunately dry, but Haynes’s writing style reads like an engaging lecture, so it’s been easy to hang onto every word. It’s also reminding me about details I’ve sadly forgotten from my university days, as I’ve read Hesiod before but had no recollection of his depiction of Pandora, especially the idea that she’s supposed to be the first woman. I’ve come away learning/relearning so much already.


Recently Finished

Last week, I read through Bomb by Steve Sheinkin and Nick Bertozzi, a graphic novel telling the story of the Manhattan Project’s creation of the atomic bomb and the network of spies working to steal their plans for the USSR. As I had been worried about last week, this book very much was more of a Middle Grade read, although considering some of the language choices perhaps YA would be more appropriate. In any case, the target audience didn’t matter, as it made for a rather good (if simplified) telling of a world-changing development in world history. Most notably, funnily enough, I’ve never come away from something understanding how a nuclear bomb works better than I did with this book. It’s written for younger readers, so that tracks, but perhaps it should always be explained a little like this, since adulthood doesn’t magically make nuclear physics any easier.

Earlier this week, I also finished reading Waking Gods by Sylvain Neuvel, the second book in the Themis Files trilogy. Something changed in my feelings toward this book as I was getting further through it last week. Though I still have some ambivalence towards certain aspects of the story, the real gravity of the threat that humanity was facing started to take hold as I realized that, like the first book, this novel about people piloting a giant alien robot isn’t really about piloting a giant robot. I still came away from this book finding it weaker than the first one, but it also gives such a stark and dismal look at facing an all-powerful alien threat, with some great hard science thrown in as the characters try to understand the threat before them and how to deal with it, that I got a lot more invested by the end. The ending felt unfortunately more like a tacked-on sequel hook than a satisfying ending, but I’m hoping that the third one ends things on a high note.


Reading Next

The book I read next will likely be We Stand on Guard by Brian K. Vaughn and Steve Skroce, a graphic novel about a group of Canadian civilians turned freedom fighters defending their country from invasion by the US, who are equipped with giant, robotic war machines. I don’t feel like I’m on a giant robot kick, but it’s starting to look like I am. I’ve actually been meaning to read this for a while, and recent events have reminded me of this book’s existence, so I thought now would be as good a time as any to take it out of the library and give it a read.

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