Monday, April 28, 2014

LongReads Round-Up Volume Twenty-Four

The end of Peace Corps has filled me with an ennui like no other. This post has been languishing for so long I already have the next round of links ready to be shared. 42 days to go!

"The Man Behind the Comic that Finally Got Sex Right," by Laura Hudson for Wired. Sex Criminals, by Matt Fraction, is one of my favorite new comics, not just from Image but on the market in general. This well-done interview covers Fraction's impulse to write a comic where sex is not so much for titillation as it is for discussion. While most sex in comics has to do with women in spandex, Fraction has written a well developed heroine and a frank discussion of sexuality and pleasure that reflects a more modern view than classic superheros. "It’s a comedy that deals with how embarrassing, scary, and awesome sex can be for both men and women—as told through the eyes of a modern-day Bonnie and Clyde with a Masters-and-Johnson getaway tactic."

"Pharrell Williams is Finally Happy," by Zach Baron for GQ.
An interesting profile on one of the busiest producers in hip hop and pop, whose own success at headlining has been hit or miss in the past. I always enjoy reading about innovators in their field, and Williams has been on the credits of countless chart toppers. This piece follows his roots-- hanging out with Timbaland in Virginia Beach, through his crazy early/mid 2000s success, to the present day cultural savant he has become. "The boy who worshipped pop culture as a kid basically becomes it." Also, have you seen Williams cry while watching people dance to his song "Happy" on Oprah Prime?

"A Black Crip's Perspective on Fashion and Embodied Resistance," by Eddie Ndopu for The Feminist Wire. Ndopu expresses a sentiment that I have read elsewhere: that ableism enforces certain stereotypes against the chronically ill and disabled, including how they dress. Ndopu's commitment to fashion forward self presentation is an act of dissent against ableist culture. There is subversion in fashion and presentation. "... a visibly disabled body clad in sweats and lounging-around-at-home clothing invokes a longstanding and recycled representation of Crips as the objects of deprivation and targets of charity."

"Forget Shorter Showers," by Derrick Jensen for Orion. I'm not arguing that you should give up on the effort to be "green," but I agree with Jensen that your weekly recycling drop off is not saving the environment. I do believe personal investment in environmental efforts will be reflected in voting and lawmaking, but it calls for a more proactive call for representation and action. Consciousness raising must be answered with actual political change. "Consumer culture and the capitalist mindset have taught us to substitute acts of personal consumption (or enlightenment) for organized political resistance."

"Jennifer Lawrence and the History of Cool Girls," by Anne Helen Petersen for Buzzfeed. Gillian Flynn wrote about 'cool girls' in her novel Gone Girl, and I think many women raised their eyebrows in recognition. Many women understand the ideal of being 'not one of the girls,' still hot but above all that petty girl stuff (because femininity is so weak and degrading, hello, internalized misogyny!). Petersen accounts for the Cool Girls of pop culture history, from flapper Clara Bow to Barbarella space queen and frank talking Jane Fonda. "Cool Girls have been proof positive that a woman could be liberated and progressive and yet pleasing to men, both in appearance and in action."

"The Volcano that Changed the Course of History," by Gillen D'Arcy Wood for Slate. I recently slept through a volcanic eruption on my home island of Java! The ramifications were in no way comparable with the impact of Tambora, a volcano that erupted on the Indonesian island of Sumbawa in 1815. This eruption directly caused 100,000 deaths, and the toll it took on humanity from resulting tsunamis, droughts, floods, and the weather - not to mention blotting out the sun for a week and causing a new strain of cholera - are only now being studied. "Tambora stands today as a harrowing case study of what the human costs and global reach might be from runaway climate change."

"I love Outkast. I hate misogyny," by Mychal Denzel Smith for Feministing. Smith captures what so many feminists struggle with: when the music, films, or pop culture they love lets them down. We're vast, we contain multitudes, and we can both enjoy misogynistic rap lyrics, or the sparse landscape of male dominated True Detectives, and be conscious that not all is right with the media we consume. Being a feminist doesn't mean cutting oneself off from anything that isn't Ani DiFranco, but being conscientious consumers and, in my opinion, being conscientious in what media we financially support. "This stratified womanhood, in which “lady” is the pinnacle and everything that is good, is an intellectual fallacy that a good number of men have convinced themselves exist in order to justify their misogyny."

"Gabriel Garcia Marquez, The Art of Fiction No. 69," by Peter H. Stone for Paris Review. Gabriel Garcia Marquez recently passed away, and we've lost one of the greatest minds in modern literature, in my opinion. This interview comes from 1981, and while today GGM might be known best for his novels, he was originally a journalist. He reflects on the differences in novels and journalism, learning to write short fiction, and the art of translating. It's like a tiny primer on literary theory. "I don’t think you can write a book that’s worth anything without extraordinary discipline."

Bonus: "Light is Like Water," by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Read this wonderful short story that encapsulates the magic and beauty GGM crafted in his work. Truly, literature is a little less magical without his presence.

Monday, February 24, 2014

LongReads Round-Up Volume Twenty-Three

"The Robots that Saved Pittsburgh," by Glenn Thrush for Politico. I don't know a ton about robotics (other than that we should fear them and their inevitable takeover of society), but this long piece on how the robotics industry revitalized Pittsburgh while other industrial cities watched their economies crash is layman friendly. While I'd selfishly love for Pittsburgh to go unnoticed by the rest of the country so I can keep its low rents and post industrial culture to myself, this well researched article highlights the city's powerhouse-primed position in the national economy. "Improbably for a blue-collar town that seemed headed for the scrap heap when its steel industry collapsed, Pittsburgh has developed into one of the country’s most vibrant tech centers, a hotbed of innovation that can no longer be ignored by the industry’s titans."

This is relatively old news in the media world, but its worth a visit if you hadn't followed the story when it was published last month. "Dr. V's Magical Putter," by Caleb Hannan, released on Grantland, quickly gained notoriety and criticism for outing a trans woman who, prior to the publication, committed suicide. The article traces the journalist's fascination with a golf putter invented by an MIT physicist name Dr. Essay Anne Vanderbilt. As he researches her past, it comes to light that she is in fact lying about her credentials (though her putter still works as it claims). Along with discoveries about her education and work background, Hannan uncovers that Vanderbilt is in fact a transgender woman, and goes on to reveal this information to both her peers and the public at large with his article. This article is a sad reminder that mainstream media often mistreats and mis-reports on trans issues, and that society at large has minimal understanding of trans issues. After being met with vehement criticism, Grantland editor Bill Simmons published an apologetic "A Letter from the Editor," that addressed his own uninformed knowledge of trans men and women. Even better, ESPN writer Christina Kahrl, herself a trans woman, wrote an op-ed titled "What Grantland Got Wrong," that did an excellent summation of the problematic treatment of trans men and women in media.     "[Caleb Hannan's] essay on “Dr. V and the magical putter” figures to be a permanent exhibit of what not to do, and how not to treat a fellow human being."

"From Harvard to Webcam Girl," by Anna Katzen for Salon. A lackluster job and general malaise regarding the future sent Katzen in front of the webcam, where she stripped, masturbated, and discussed literature for strangers (and money). Katzen writes about her experience in a market driven by novelty ("pervs love new girls") and her worries that this choice in self employment will wind up being a regret later in life. Just enough voyeuristic details into the weirdness of camsex, but Katzen delivers with a sense of humor and self awareness, not titillation. "...some of my most popular performances entail me reading erotica, perhaps Anais Nin or the Marquis de Sade, in the buff...I have unwittingly created a powerful “brand” for myself: the wild intellectual, the bluestocking in garters."

"The Science and the Scam of the Séance" by Katie Heaney for Pacific Standard Magazine. The spooky spiritualism during the turn of the nineteenth century has been revealed to be mostly hoaxes and frauds (despite all the horror films that milk the séance trope). Heaney discusses one of the leading spiritualists of the day, who never let being exposed as a faker stop her from scaring the money out of curious folks' pockets. Heaney illuminates the tools for faking communication with the dead, and shares how even us twenty first century skeptics get the willies sometimes. "As much as I typically resent hoaxers for “ruining” many of the paranormal phenomena I hold dear, I am also impressed by anyone who can pull it off."
"The Academic Feminist: Melanie Klein on Yoga and Feminism," interview by Gwendolyn Beatham for Feministing. Klein discusses how she found yoga shortly after feminism, and the two practices have intertwined in her life ever since. This interview focuses on an upcoming book Klein edited with Anna Guest-Jelly, one of my favorite yogis who confronts body image issues in modern yoga practices. Their upcoming collection of body image centric essays tackles appropriation, racism, ageism, basically all the -isms with which popular Western yoga culture is fraught. Beatham includes a great round up of links and resources for those interested in the melding of feminist and yogic thought. "Feminism gave me my intellectual grounding and yoga provided the practice to embody and live these teachings."

"Himalayan Bath Salts Will Not Save Your Life," by Brian Palmer for Slate. Facebook is full of bad science, in the form of iStock photos overlaid with text that erroneously educates the masses that yes, the male brain hears music differently than a woman's, and blueberries cure cancer! Its not just science posts-misinformation gets spread around Facebook with the quickness of a "click share." A "science" website called Natural News is wildly popular, and wildly efficient at disseminating false information that feeds people's paranoia. Palmer reveals the misreporting and manipulation of information that happens in Natural News articles. Worse than instructing readers to eat lemon peels is the fearmongering it wages against the government, preying on fears of restricted liberties and conspiracies. "Natural News has an uncanny ability to move unsophisticated readers from harmless dietary balderdash to medical quackery to anti-government zealotry."

"Sexual Assault at Patrick Henry College, God's Harvard," by Kiera Feldman for The New Republic.  Oh, MAN. I have so many feelings about this piece and how it ties to fundamentalism's obsession with purity, conservatism's forced, unquestioning belief in authority, and my fears about how schools like PHC are feeders for politics. I attended one of those private schools with no federal funding (and no federal laws), and while I never witnessed the school administration cover up an assault case, I attended lectures that taught homosexuality could be "caught," like an illness, chapels that preached that women were meant to be wives and mothers, not leaders or careerists, and met several young women who blamed themselves for being assaulted. The culture at work in schools like PHC and Grove City College foster victim blaming and rape apology, placing responsibility on women's sexual, tempting bodies and not on the men who apparently can't control their raging testosterone. "'The entire line of questioning was basically like, ‘Did you make it up? Or did you deserve it in some way? Or was it consensual and now you’re just lying about it to make him look bad?’"

"Once Upon a Time," by Nicole Pasulka for Buzzfeed. I find this article incredibly stressful because, as a future hoarder, I could never throw away possessions with Pasulka's cavalier attitude. I even found myself thinking, as she bemoans losing a set of childhood books from her parents' home, 'you got what you deserved, lady.' This is a beautifully written, wistful essay on the memories she has of her most beloved books as a child. Buzzfeed isn't just for gif posts and "44 Things" lists. "The characters I remember the most show that bad can be good, that love isn’t reserved for those who do the right thing."

"How to Survive a Ten Hour Flight Like a Lady," by Hilary Fischer-Groban for The Hairpin. I've made the 'other side of the world' flight a few times now, and let me tell you, I looked HELLA ROUGH when I landed in America last summer. I had zero shame and wore my Peace Corps shirt and told myself people would let me slide for looking so beat/wolfing down a footlong Subway sandwich in a matter of minutes. Also, arriving home to the fanfare of friends and family also meant photos, photos of me looking exhausted, splotchy, and probably visible stink lines. If you're going to be picked up by loved ones at your next transpacific flight and don't want them to run screaming in the other direction, check out these tips, and the comments section too! "If this isn’t working for you, try thinking about how glad you are that you aren’t doing this journey by sea or worse, not at all, you spoiled brat."

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

V is for Violence: Five Films to Watch for a V-Day HorrorFest

What started as a tongue in cheek joke in college (dorm room full of sorority sisters, snacks, and a Netflix DVD of Number One on this list), has really become a bit of a tradition. We all know Valentine's Day is a played out Hallmark Holiday that has more roots in capitalism than in anything sentimental. So why not spend the time and energy you would spend on scrambling for dinner reservations, mastering that red velvet cupcake recipe you found on Pinterest, and trying to make your makeup look like an Instagram filter, and instead watch something that will scare your elastic waist pants off? In other news, I'm single, so maybe bring those cupcakes anyway. Don't worry, I'm not completely heartless - you can find some aspect of (warped, twisted) love in all these films.

Number Five: Jennifer's Body



This is, in my opinion, the only time Megan Fox has been in any way likable, and of course its as a bloodthirsty possessed cheerleader. With a knock out lady staffed team (Karyn Kusama directing, and Diablo Cody as screenwriter), this black comedy horror film features Amanda Seyfried as the almost believably dorky Needy, lifelong best friends with the bossy and privileged Jennifer. Jennifer oozes sex appeal while Seyfried's beauty is unconvincingly hid behind a pair of glasses and baggy skirts. Its not too long before Jennifer is punished for her sexiness as a satanic indie rock band tries to sacrifice her to Satan- only it backfires, investing her with the powers of a succubus. Maybe Jennifer's Body's biggest weakness is how much territory it tries to cover in one film - stretching to portray the thin (and apparently erotic) line between friendship and obsession and female sexuality as both a weapon and a vulnerability, all the while spinning a movie that is both funny and scary. 

Number Four: Warm Bodies



Look, a love story! In a post zombie apocalypse world, R, a zombie played by Skins heart breaker Nicholas Hoult, meets human Julie while she's foraging outside of the local fortress of survivors. I'm a big zombie fan, probably because I love being terrified of a virus based pandemic that destroys social structures. Warm Bodies is a little too light hearted for my tastes in zombie horror, but it is an original work that expands on the canon of horror. Hoult still manages to look freaking cute even as a rotting corpse, and his American accented narration is funny (even if the zombie nerd in me was like, UNREALISTIC, ZOMBIES AREN'T SENTIENT). Warm Bodies wins for best soundtrack, no contest.

Number Three: All the Boys Love Mandy Lane



This was a labor of love, spending seven years in post-production hell as the filmmakers pushed to see it released. Mandy Lane finally saw a theater release in October 2013, and has been lauded by horror film enthusiasts since then. Its a quiet, simple film, and one of the more beautifully shot on this list. Mandy is the outcast who "developed" over the summer and is now the target of every jock at school. She's invited to spend a weekend at a ranch with some other pretty teens, and from there the film launches from sunny, liquor soaked shenanigans to something much darker. This film plays with horror tropes- sexy teens in a cabin!, and also social tropes- the threatening lust of young men for a vulnerable girl. What director Jonathan Levine (yes, from number four fame!) manages to accomplish doesn't have a lot of jump out scares or even grisly gore, but it is distinctly horrifying and dreadful. 

Number Two: Thirst (Bakjwi)



Park Chan-wook is one of my favorite directors of horror - his ultraviolent Vengeance trilogy, especially Oldboy, can't be set in just the "foreign horror" box. And 2013's Stoker was beautiful, eerie, and packed a satisfyingly bloody punch. Thirst is equal parts vampire film and morality play, taking inspiration from a Zola novel about murderous lovers. A Catholic priest battles his bloodthirsty vampiric impulses and his lust for his friend's wife - what a metaphor! Atmospheric and moody, Chan-wook does an excellent job combining horror with high concept film making.

Number One: Teeth



The film that started it all. Teeth has been giving men nightmares for years (starting with my unwitting male friends I tricked into watching it). Its the story of a young woman who learns she is born with vagina dentata. If you aren't sure what that means, I picture the Sarlacc Pit from Return of the Jedi. In a vagina. Its not too long before the heroine is using her evolutionary gifted power for justice. Note, I really don't care for rape revenge horror films (Black Rock, Last House on the Left), and Teeth has aspects of that, but I manage to overlook an attempted assault scene because I consider this a worthwhile film, and not exploitative. Its hailed as a black comedy, but it doesn't have the same jokes or humorous dialogue as Jennifer's Body or Warm Bodies. Instead, its weird and satirical, more absurdist than laugh out loud. 

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

The Best Tunes of 2013

The death of my 80 gig iPod Classic approaches its one year anniversary. For those who haven't noticed, there is a trend of Peace Corps destroying electronics in my life. Armed with a modest 16 gig iPod Touch, I have braved Indonesian buses, world crossing flights, and noisy neighbors in 2013, with these most excellent jams.

BeyoncéBEYONCÉ



Lets start off with the obvious. At the tail end of 2013, Beyoncé dropped an album with zero press, promotion, nary a tweet in sight. She didn't try to get it considered for the Grammys, she didn't care about being on Best Of lists... she simply graced us with the most magnificent collection of songs and VIDEOS, completely changing the game for all pop songstresses out there. I almost feel bad for the Lady Gagas and Katy Perrys of the world, except I am too busy worshipping at the feet of Queen Beyonce. Every track is great, the album builds a narrative that shows Beyoncé at her most vulnerable and forthright. Its an evolution, as the star was notoriously private about her personal life, her relationship with Jay-Z, and the birth of Blue Ivy... and now here she is, telling us how she rides Jay like a surfboard and giving us a whole video with Blue Ivy cameos. I can't handle it. I. Can't.
Best Track: All of Them. 

A$AP Rocky - LONG.LIVE.A$AP. 



This album reflects the really cool fusion that's happening in hip hop, that I credit to the genre busting productions Kanye West explored back with Fantasy. A$AP Rocky combines all kinds of influences and sounds, from pop to electronic, to make a fresh record with crisp raps. He brings in a range of collaborations, from fellow rappers to pop songstress Florence Wench. 
Favorite Tracks- "Fashion Killa" ft Santogold, "Like I'm Apart" ft Florence Wench. 

Kanye West - Yeezus



Maybe Kanye deserves to be an egoist of no known rival. Because what he has done to hip hop is nothing short of transformative. Fantasy will be one of my lifelong favorite albums, and with Yeezus he dives deeper into weirdness and sounds that are completely original in the genre. This album deserves all of the hype. Praise Yeezus. 
Favorite Tracks - "Blood on the Leaves," "New Slaves"

Lana Del Rey - Born to Die 



Do I care this album was released nearly two years ago? Absolutely not. Lana Del Rey's character that is built throughout her album - nearly a concept album - is a modern day lounge siren with a penchant for trouble. Her songs revel in the morning after glamour of smudged make up and smokey hair. Her voice is simply smoldering. I won't be moving on from this album for a long time. 
Favorite Track - "National Anthem"

Miley Cyrus - Bangerz



Miley is as controversial as a white girl can get. She either represents the future of America or its downfall, or maybe both. Bangerz, and it's tacky album art and use of hash tags, is a pop album that dabbles in everything, and that's it's biggest weakness. Perhaps in its efforts to appeal to everyone from Hannah Montana fans to adult tastes, the scope of the album feels stretched. Despite an uneven tone (and the awful "4x4"), plenty of these songs are addictive. 
Favorite Tracks - "Wrecking Ball," "Love Money Party"

The National - Trouble Will Find Me



The National delivers more of the same aching indie rock that has had hipsters weeping into their PBRs for over a decade. They sound rich and mature, with just enough polish to remind you that they have been doing this for a fair chunk of time, but it still has all its heart and soul. Nothing slick about this album... unless you count all the tears shed on late night drives through backroads, because that is what The National is made for.
Favorite Track: "I Need My Girl"

No Doubt - Push and Shove 



Again with the 2012 albums! But when No Doubt has a comeback, they do it right. Gwen and the guys are back to blending pop, ska, dance hall and rock into a cohesive, rich album. The years since Rock Steady don't show here. Gwen sounds better than ever, and the groove is still edgy, displaying the depth of experimentation the band has explored over solo careers. 
Favorite Tracks - "Push and Shove," "Stand and Deliver"


Steve Martin and Edie Brickell - Love Will Come to You



Surprise of the year! I'm not a fan of bluegrass, per se, but Steve Martin's album (with lyrics and vocals by Edie Brickell) amazed me. My slight crush on the banjo playing silver fox led me to give this album a listen, and now I find myself craving gingham, sweet tea, and sunny porches looking out at wheat fields (I'm assuming that's what people who play bluegrass do. That, and drink moonshine.)
Favorite Tracks - "Love Has Come for You," "Sun's Gonna Shine"

Tegan and Sara - Heartthrob 



Twin sisters Tegan and Sara Quinn have run the gauntlet of labels, from queer folk rock to indie, and finally are bursting into the pop scene with an album that is as heartfelt as their acoustic roots. This album is a lot of fun, pairing great dance beats with their quintessential plaintive lyrics. Tegan and Sara proved that they can change their sound and keep all their fans, while gaining new ones in the process.
Favorite Tracks - "Closer," "Now I'm All Messed Up"

The Best Books of 2013

Exciting news! My laptop is relatively fixed, and I plan to be cracking down on the LongReads once again. My Best of 2013 lists are finally seeing the light of Internet. Now, rounding up the ultimate longreads: BOOKS!

Best Memoir : Wild by Cheryl Strayed


It's safe to say I'm not the outdoorsy-est girl around, nor do I like long solo trips-only slightly anachronistic for a Peace Corps volunteer, I know. So it means something when I say that Strayed's memoir of hiking the Pacific Crest Trail alone made me cast a few sidelong glances at my underutilized hiking boots. Strayed is a powerful writer, bringing so much emotion to the page as she parallels her journey up the trail with the fallouts of her life: her mother's death, her depression, her divorce. The challenges she faces on the trail become transformative opportunities for her to become more of the woman she wanted to be, to grieve for her mother, and to understand her impulses, for better or worse. This book reflects experiences I've faced in Peace Corps, from the frustrations of isolation and loneliness to realizations that come from being stuck with just yourself. Again, some of the most graceful and empathetic prose when it comes to putting words to complex emotions.

Best Book for Shaping My Feminism : The Whipping Girl by Julia Serrano


Serrano writes about her experiences as a trans woman, sharing intimate details from her life pre through post transition. As a professional biologist, she adds a level of scientific clarity to processes that are often misunderstood by cisgender individuals. She explodes preconceived notions of gender and the nature/nurture divide, relying not just on her experiences but scientific studies. Well researched and footnoted, but never dry or weighty, Serrano spends about half the book exploring the politics of transitioning, both in biology and its treatment in society. Not only does she offer this excellent primer into trans issues, she proceeded to blow my mind with her insight into how femininity has been stigmatized and looked down upon in modern America. Indeed, the most bizarre, and for some, repugnant, thing a person can do is reject masculinity in favor of living as a woman, let alone a feminine woman. Reminding us that femininity is not weak, and indeed can be powerful and subversive, Serrano takes feminism and mainstream society to task.

Best Short Story Collection : The Girl in the Flammable Skirt by Aimee Bender

Such a delightful and provocative collection of stories that swing from fanciful to macabre. Bender honors traditions of short story tellers before with a series of modern fables, stories of magical surrealism and metaphor. Every story is at least a little strange, and often times set in a reality far from our own. Her prose is so charming and light, full of clarity and sets a quick stepped pace. 

Best Book on Religion : No god but God by Reza Aslan


No god but God educated me about the history of Islam, not only how it arose but how it fits with the other major monotheistic religions. Aslan writes with a true enjoyment of his research and the history of Islam, and with a hope for a inclusive future. No god but God manages to be academic and brimming with sources and citations while also compelling and at times emotionally stirring. This work has really furthered my understanding of Islam and also, along the way, my knowledge of colonialism and its part in provoking radicalism and fundamentalism. Aslan's call for religious and political reformation rooted in pluralism and human rights is one that can be shared by all the major religions of the world.

Best Applicable to Peace Corps Book : The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down by Anne Fadiman


If you have an interest in medical anthropology, and haven't read this book before, frankly I'm amazed. Fadiman's tribute to the mistakes made when medical practices lack cross cultural understanding is a landmark work. It illustrates the myriad of differences between cultures, and reminds me of all the medical misunderstandings and occasional malpractices I see in my village on a regular basis. This is an excellent book in bringing together two unique worlds and gracefully displaying the shortcomings and benefits of both medical realms, not to mention an insightful history and collection of the Hmong culture.

Runner Up : The Water is Wide by Pat Conroy


Conroy lived his own Peace Corps when he moved to an isolated island in the Carolinas to teach a one room school during the nineteen sixties. Its a mirror to the frustrations and mistakes a volunteer makes as they rush head long into a relatively unknown culture with grand ideas and little preparation.


Best Graphic Novel : Locke & Key by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez



This series just wrapped in December 2013. Joe Hill, whose father happens to be Stephen King, writes a new take on the haunted house genre, while Rodriguez illustrates expressive characters and spooky dark evil. Hill knows how to build suspense, that's for certain. That the main characters are all children just makes the reader that much more nervous and concerned about the outcome. Keyhouse is full of secrets, riddles, and bloodstains. But throughout the series is a sense of humor and energy that is carried by the youth of the characters, so that the horror rarely feels punishing.

Best Young Adult Fiction : Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell


Here is the book for all of the fanfiction reading secret dorks, with hidden (or maybe out in the open) Harry Potter posters and desktop folders full of screenshots from our favorite scenes. Rowell not only captures the consuming thrill of fandom, she embodies the college experience for a typical freshman- less sexy partying and more laying around in bed on your laptop. Its an example of good young adult fiction - sweet and emotional without being manipulative or empty. These are real, if unglamorous, young adults, awkwardly growing up and dealing with all kinds of real and unglamorous issues.

Best Book Recommended by a Friend : Perdido Street Station by China Mieville


This recommendation came from my friend Tyler, and honestly he recommended it to me several years ago and I never got around to it... and once I had started reading Perdido, I was kicking myself that I had waited so long. I've gotten jaded to science/speculative/new universe fiction, and have read most of the "greats," and plenty of lackluster series as well. But Mieville has done something so new and unexplored, creating a world that doesn't reflect anything familiar. Its conceptually dense and the world building is phenomenal. Its dark and sometimes grotesque, just like the urban decay Mieville describes, but the story is compelling and again, new territory. 


Best Book I Haven't Finished Yet : Spillover by David Quammen 


There are several other works in this Best of List that have elements of horror, but Spillover is by far the most frightening. I am prone to laying in bed at night pondering the end of the world, and Quammen, a science and nature journalist, has brought all the fodder for nightmares. Some of the epidemics (SARS, AIDS, ebola) sound like the start of a young adult dystopian novel, only they're really happening. And what's to blame? Humanity destroying ecosystems and driving viruses into new hosts, and spawning new mutations that are just itching to jump ship and destroy our fragile pink bodies. Its a lengthy, dense tome packed with research facts that can be a little snooze inducing at times, but Quammen has a certain dark glee in squelching about the guts of gorillas or describing the life cycle of ticks, and I can appreciate that in a man. 

LongReads Round-Up Volume Twenty-One



Sadly, my laptop has once again met its match in Indonesia. I'm not planning on getting it serviced until the New Year, so I can only offer some less than beautifully formatted links for the time being.





A school in Mexico is producing some of the country's highest scoring math prodigies, using radical classroom methods - http://www.wired.com/business/2013/10/free-thinkers/all/






In memorandum of Lou Reed - http://m.newyorker.com/online/blogs/culture/2013/10/heroin-was-our-heroin.html?






Last Round Up I posted about Jezebel as revolutionizing women's media. Newcomer Bustle would like to inherit the throne. http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/09/23/130923fa_fact_widdicombe?



I'm a big fan of the podcast WTF with Marc Maron, and this interview exemplifies why - http://www.vulture.com/m/2012/07/marc-maron-podcast-interview.html




Talking about video games in a high brow manner, always - http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/9713372/looking-back-game-myst-20th-anniversary




So fascinating! How the sex lives of Japanese young adults has tapered off into an apathetic shrug - http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/20/young-people-japan-stopped-having-sex




Talking about education reform methods, attempted solutions and unanswered problems - http://www.texasmonthly.com/story/%E2%80%9Cit%E2%80%99s-not-school-problem%E2%80%9D?fullpage=1






A science research council supporting big corporations, only to discover its funded by those same dark overlords!? No way! - http://motherjones.com/politics/2013/10/american-council-science-health-leaked-documents-fundraising





Angry feminists take to Etsy to craft their man hate. - http://www.salon.com/2013/10/27/fighting_sexism_with_cross_stitch_the_rise_of_misandry_crafts/

The Best Podcasts of 2013

I arrived late to the podcast scene, but in the past six months it has become an essential part of my media consumption. You can find all of the following podcasts on iTunes.

The Podcast That Started It All : Ninjas vs Podcasts 

My dear friend Tyler and fellow GCC alums Jordan and Kevin have been recording NvP for two years, and before I ever had the podcast app, I was steaming their episodes on my computer at work. NvP debates the merits of X vs Y every week, taking questions from listeners who really need to know, "Denim vs Corduroy? Game of Thrones vs Jumanji? or Cotton Candy Hair vs Twizzler Mustache?" The guys have a great wittiness and knack for word play, and their personalities and friendships really make each episode. 

The News Podcast : Democracy Now!

The independent news hour Democracy Now! is advertising, corporate, and government funding free. Journalists Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez bring progressive reporting to listeners five days a week, via podcast, radio, and television. They feature international news with a commitment to social justice, labor politics, and the lesser reported issues around the world. Frequently Democracy Now! invites guests from grassroot organizations and policy think tanks to discuss the daily topics. 

The Sh!t Your Pants Laughing Podcast : Doodie Calls With Doug Mand

Doug Mand is on a mission: to break down the taboos surrounding poop. A writer at How I Met Your Mother, Mand is fascinated by bathroom business. Each episode he brings in an equally funny guest to recount bathroom (or, often, lack thereof) horror stories, discuss touchy stomachs, and come clean on farting habits. It's not for everyone, but nothing has made me laugh out loud harder. I've seriously rolled around snorting in laughter.

The Interview Podcast : Totally Laime

There are a lot of great interview centric podcasts out there (WTF with Marc Maron, Here's The Thing with Alec Baldwin, etc). But none of them have host Elizabeth Laime (and her husband, Psychic Andy) asking the guest to settle a recent argument between her and her husband, or a game based around Oprah episodes. Elizabeth has such charming charisma, and the chemistry with her co-hosting husband envelopes the guest every time.

The Social Issues Meet Pop Culture Podcast : TIE! The Read / Throwing Shade

Its so hard to choose! I love both of these podcasts, which both feature best friend duos (Kid Fury and Crissle on The Read, Bryan and Erin on Throwing Shade), occasional ranting, and lots of sass. The Read and Throwing Shade often take on racism, homophobia, and sexism, while mixing in plenty of jokes about reality television and Miley Cyrus. I love listening to best friends just hash it out and make in-jokes, so if fast paced humor about Drake's feelings is your thing (and also, pointing out sexism in advertising, homophobic lawmakers, and whatever horrible racist thing someone just tweeted), check out both of these. 


The History Podcast : Stuff You Missed in History Class

Stuff You Missed is chock-full of stories I didn't even know I had missed, like the episode on the Winchester Mystery House. Equally balanced between oddities and curiosities of history, and aspects of history that go untold (think Howard Zinn's People's History), Stuff You Missed brings frank, insightful reviews and analysis of world histories. Its also progressive minded and does its part to expose past injustices and unsung heroes, reminding us that history is often written by the winner.

The Highbrow Discussion of Pop Culture Podcast : Girls in Hoodies

Girls in Hoodies is a weekly podcast that is part of the aggregate Grantland Pop Culture podcast. Emily, Molly, and Tess take on pop culture news with the insight and thoughtfulness of a college class on literary theory. If you've ever thought to yourself, I wish someone took Kanye's twitter feed more seriously, this is the podcast for you. All three women also write and edit for Grantland, so checking out their articles and blogs are a worthy way to spend some time. 

The Twin Peaks of Podcasts : Welcome to Nightvale

Everyone tries to figure out just what Nightvale is- is it Twin Peaks was written by Lovecraft and made a baby with Tim Burton, or maybe Ed Woods? On the radio? Is it War of the Worlds crossed with the creeping dread of a Shirley Jackson novel and a handful of conspiracy theory forums from Reddit? What you need to know is its a twice a month broadcast of the community radio station from the strange town of Nightvale, and the intrepid announcer Cecil fills in the locals on charity jogs and new traffic routes while dodging the City Council, with their dead eyes and levitating hooded robes...