lory_enterenchanted's Reviews (582)

adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious tense

Read for Witch Week 2024 -- post to come.
adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious tense

Read for Witch Week 2024 -- post to come.
adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious tense

Read for Witch Week 2024 -- post to come.
funny lighthearted

A pleasant tale about a cat who turns into a woman and helps a hapless news reporter. Watched this after seeing the movie Miss Minou -- I thought the movie was somewhat more enjoyable, as it gave more character to the descriptions.
informative inspiring reflective sad

For armchair traveling, this was a delight -- visiting  locations where a longtime custom is in danger of disappearing, and getting to know the last practitioners. The variety was wide, from rope-bridge builders in the Andes to movie sign painters in Taiwan, from a matchmaking tree in Germany to the fungus and bacteria that produce real soy sauce in Japan (I want to taste this before it disappears). Though often focused on an individual with particular endangered skills, each story was also about a community, and about the history of a people and a place. It is sad that such customs may go the way of the dinosaurs, but humanity will evolve new ones. It is our nature to create and to form living networks of meaning, even if that is currently obscured under a barrage of technology. It will rise again, because it is what makes us human. And reminding us of that fact was the underlying gift of this book.
adventurous funny lighthearted

Baum comes back to Oz with one of his better efforts, in spite of Ozma's behavior being illogical as usual. (Mari Ness calls it "Ozma fail.") The problem is that those few people allowed to use magic in Oz are too powerful, but that has to be ignored or side-stepped at times so that anything can happen. In one of those logical holes the Patchwork Girl was brought to life, a welcome addition to the population! The standard quest narrative of finding items for a magical potion is unnecessary if Ozma would just remember to use the Magic Belt, but it's not even mentioned in this book. But the real point is for Ojo to travel and learn ...
emotional hopeful inspiring reflective

Enjoyable tale of a cat who was rescued from a library drop box and became the library cat. Other reviewers have complained that they didn't want to know about the author's life or the town in which the library was located, but I don't see why not -- they were part of the story too. The book is not particularly well written, but not bad, and Dewey's personality comes across anyway. He seems to have been a very special cat indeed.
adventurous emotional funny hopeful lighthearted

I can generally count on Eva Ibbotson for a comfort read that also has wit and humor, and best of all, an artistic-musical sensibility. She plays with the tropes of romantic literature with tongue in cheek, yet somehow makes you believe in and root for her characters. The details of life in prewar Europe are just perfect, and the eccentric opera company delightful, though it's sad to think of what will soon happen to them. A running gag is the twelve-tone opera the company's conductor is writing, which turns out to be terrible. As for the hero and heroine, they are too ideal to be exactly real, but I adore them anyway and wish them all the best in their fairy-tale life.
emotional reflective

Looking for something to read for Literary Potpourri's Reading the Meow, I came across this acclaimed translation, but was gravely disappointed. It may be the translation, but the writing just seemed flat and banal. I wish I could read it in Japanese to appreciate the subtleties of the language.
adventurous informative inspiring reflective sad

I found this a fascinating exploration of the idea that North America is deeply influenced by its original "nations" -- the way its different regions were settled by Europeans and how those cultures spread and interacted. It helped me to understand current problems and tensions in the US, and also my own perspective, which is thoroughly Yankee. Knowing the shortcomings of that point of view and how different it is from others is helpful in understanding and possibly in communicating with them. I wish this were known more widely, but there is little interest for most people in understanding and communicating with other nations. Most only want to keep on struggling for dominance.