lirazel: Anya from the animated film Anastasia in her fantasy ([film] dancing bears painted wings)
lirazel ([personal profile] lirazel) wrote2025-08-07 09:08 am

what i'm reading (not) wednesday 7/8/2025

Yesterday I wasn't feeling well, but I am here today with book thoughts!

What I finished:

+ Off the Edge: Flat Earthers, Conspiracy Culture, and Why People Will Believe Anything by Kelly Weill. I listened to the audiobook read by the author. Weill is a journalist who's been digging into Flat Earther culture for a long time. She writes about them with a balance of compassion and even genuine affection for people she knows in that world and rage that the lie of Flat Earth is growing.

If you've read many books about conspiracy theories, most of this is pretty familiar, but I did not know about the roots of modern Flat Eartherism--it has its roots in one jerk in a utopian community in England in the 19th century--who knew? Then it had a few followers for the subsequent decades, but honestly it did not really take off till the 2010s and most of the reason was...YouTube. I'm sure we all know the trajectory of radicalization by now, so I won't go into that. But it's pretty harrowing reading.

This was good but not great! A good thing to listen to while I worked and dragged boxes around and such. The first few chapters about the history of Flat Eartherism were the best part to me--the rest was well written but stuff I mostly already knew. Still, if you have no idea how conspiracy theories are currently taking over the world, this would be a good case study introduction.

+ Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett. I was enjoying this as I read it. I liked the premise, the characters, and the dynamic between the leads. There was some fun worldbuilding stuff here.

But two things did not work for me.

1. The prose. I am much more forgiving of mediocre third person than I am of mediocre first person. If you're going to do first person, I want it to be really good (many of my favorite books are first person!), and this was not. For one thing, the author doesn't seem to have much of a grasp on how an Edwardian woman would actually write. Sometimes she would write these overly florid lines that seemed dated even for an early 20th century setting, and then she'd do things like have one character ask another character if two people were "an item." I found this annoying!

There weren't quite enough footnotes to warrant the footnotes conceit, though I did enjoy the stuff we learned in them (frankly, I think I would have enjoyed a book about Danielle de Grey more than this one!). I guess I'm just spoiled by Jonathan Strange? If you're going to do footnotes DO FOOTNOTES.

However, I could have forgiven this (not everyone can be Susanna Clarke!) if it weren't for....

2. The ending. Spoilers incoming, obviously.
So the book had made a very big deal about the pattern of faeries being learnable through the medium of folk stories. This is great! One of my favorite things about the book! So when we got to the end, where Emily was trapped by a faerie king in a faerie kingdom, and her human friends and her love interest were plotting to free her, and the plot was straightforward but violent, and Emily started going, "This isn't the way to do it! This isn't the way they do it in stories!" I was 10000% with her. I thought sure were were going to get her using what she knew from stories to free herself. The rule of three! A loophole no one else could see! You know, THE STUFF THE BOOK WAS ABOUT.

But no. Her boyfriend just grabbed her hand and they...ran out?
It was such a letdown that it soured my up-to-that-point mostly positive feelings about the book. This was one of those cases where the gun was introduced in the first act and then it did not go off in the last act. Instead, the characters mentioned, "Oh, remember that gun?" and then...nothing happened with the gun!!!

So anyway, I can see why everyone loves the book so much, but I was disappointed by it. I might still try the second book and see if it fixes the problem, but we'll have to see.

+ The Great Trek of the Russian Mennonites to Central Asia, 1880-1884 by Fred Richard Belk. I picked this up as background reading for The White Mosque, and I am here to tell you: you don't need to do the same. This extremely dry and straightforward account does what it says on the tin. I believe it was originally the author's dissertation, and it shows. I am sure that when this work was published, it was a big deal in the field of Mennonite Studies--bringing together accounts of all the various strands of immigration of Mennonites in Russia to various places in Central Asia--but it's definitely not for popular readers.

The history he writes about deserves a retelling as interesting as the original events. To make a long story very, very short, the Mennonites started out in Switzerland and the Low Countries, then moved to Prussia, then moved to Russia, then moved either to the Americas or to Central Asia. Each time they had to move because as Anabaptists they were extreme pacifists who refused to serve in the militaries of a given country. They would go to a certain place and at first the leaders of that place would be like, "It's fine if y'all just want to chill off by yourselves and farm and not have anything to do with the government so long as you pay your taxes," and then, inevitably, either months or years or decades later, someone else would come into power and be like, "No, you must serve in the military or the forest service or something," and then Mennonites would be like, "Well. Guess we've got to move."

So the groups that went to Central Asia went there because a) the Russian empire was trying to make them do either military or national service of some kind and b) there was a charismatic leader who said that Jesus was about to return and he would be coming to the East.

So they packed up their covered wagons and road across steppe and desert and a bunch of them died and the places they were headed to seemed not to be the Edens they hoped they would be--you can guess how the rest of this song goes. Some of the communities ended up staying there for only a few months or years before leaving again (mostly to the US), a few stayed for about fifty years before leaving, and a handful might still be there! It's unclear--this book was published during the Cold War, so communication beyond the Iron Curtain wasn't great. At any rate, there were varying kinds of successes and failures.

This is super interesting stuff! I want to know everything about how their neighbors saw them and how they saw their neighbors! Tell me everything about culture clash! Tell me more about why the millenarian preacher appealed to them!

But alas, this is just an overview of who went where and who did what. There were a few moments--mere sentences, really--of something like personality that emerged in various tales (a mentally ill man saving his friends from brigands, a conversation between a little Mennonite girl and a Chinese girl whose feet are bound, these contraptions they rigged up to carry their kids balanced on either side of a camel, etc.) but there were never enough details to be compelling.

Now, I am judging this thing by unfair standards--this was not written for a popular audience, he wasn't intending to write a rip-roaring account of this era in Mennonite life. But I was still disappointed, and now I'm looking forward to The White Mosque even more than I already was!


What I'm currently reading:

+ 3/4 done with the book club reread of The Dawn of Everything.

+ A chapter into Shamanism: The Timeless Religion by Manvir Singh and liking it so far.

(Btw, between rereading The Dawn of EVerything, reading Proto a couple of weeks ago, always having Ursula K. Le Guin on my mind, and now reading Singh...I am wistfully imagining what my life would have been like if I had become an anthropologist and studied either extinct cultures or current ones with indoor plumbing. I am not cut out for the kind of field research that most anthropologists do.)
qian: Tiny pink head of a Katamari character (Default)

[personal profile] qian 2025-08-08 07:38 am (UTC)(link)
What a pity about the Mennonites book! I read academic books by historians and anthropologists fairly regularly and I feel it's a real toss-up: sometimes you read someone's PhD and it's someone who can really write and is interested in stories; other times it is ... not like that. I hadn't heard about The White Mosque but am looking forward to it now!
pauraque: bird flying (Default)

[personal profile] pauraque 2025-08-08 12:42 pm (UTC)(link)
current ones with indoor plumbing

lol. I used to have fantasies about being a field linguist and studying underdocumented languages, but the lack of indoor plumbing in many of those situations would have been a dealbreaker for me too.
sawthefaeriequeen: (Default)

[personal profile] sawthefaeriequeen 2025-08-08 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Instead, the characters mentioned, "Oh, remember that gun?

Wait, what was the gun?
sawthefaeriequeen: (Default)

[personal profile] sawthefaeriequeen 2025-08-09 03:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah. Well the last one is called Compendium of Lost Tales, so maybe she's saving it?
regshoe: Frances from NTS Kidnapped, raising one hand to her face with an expression of disgust or annoyance (Disappointed Frances)

[personal profile] regshoe 2025-08-08 03:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Aurgh, historical first-person narrators who don't sound convincingly period are the worst. (I also dislike this in third person, but it is worse if it's supposed to be something the character is actually writing/thinking). And that sounds like a bizarre way to do the ending O_o
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[personal profile] genarti 2025-08-09 04:17 am (UTC)(link)
Agreed about Emily Wilde. (I also was not particularly interested in the romance, and wanted the book to deal much more with the grad students, if they'd been dragged along. Why did we have them if they were going to be so ignored? It felt realistic for the characters to do that but eyebrow-raising for the narrative to agree, if that makes sense.)

It was fine. I'm not averse to reading the sequel, but I'm not in any great rush to, you know?

I've heard good things about The White Mosque! It's a pity about The Great Trek of etc, though; it sounds like a super interesting subject, but not a super interesting book about it.
chestnut_pod: A close-up photograph of my auburn hair in a French braid (Default)

[personal profile] chestnut_pod 2025-08-10 05:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I believe it was originally the author's dissertation, and it shows. -- *clutches chest*

I did read all three Emily Wilde books, and they remain consistently mediocre. They were really the books that made me understand the precise connotation of "mid." They're not even that bad, but they don't rise to any heights. I would just leave it where it lay, tbh.

Can't wait for you to move on to The White Mosque itself!