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'Ala Al-Aswani: Palazzo Yacoubian (Italian Edition) (2012, Feltrinelli) 4 stars

A political soap-opera about Mubarak Egypt

4 stars

Ricordo di aver letto questo libro nel mio primo anno di un'universitá. Ció nonostante, ogni pagina é stata una completa sorpresa: non mi ricordavo assolutamente della trama soap-operescha e dei personaggi le cui storie si intrecciano attorno a palazzo Yacoubian, un (vero) edificio nel centro del Cairo, un tempo centro dell'aristocrazia e alta borghesia coloniali, ora un posto dove i nuovi e vecchi ricchi si mescolano con gli straccioni e i giovani frustrati dall'ingiustizia e dalla corruzione. Mi é piaciuto moltissimo, al punto che gli perdono persino la vena omofobica (i gay sono fatti cosí, tendono ad avere questa espressione triste e spiacevole, etc).

Russell Shorto: Amsterdam (Hardcover, 2013, Doubleday) 3 stars

As the subtitle says, this is a history of the world's most liberal city. To …

An introduction to Amsterdam

3 stars

This was actually a pretty good book, albeit very straight and male. It essentially a pop-history book, but made arguably more elegant by having an overarching if somewhat simplistic argument throughout: that Amsterdam is the birth place of liberalism, both meant as a set of ideas concerning freedom, tolerance and human rights, and also as an ideology promoting individualism and self-enrichment. Indeed, those are two side of the same coin. The argument kind of works, connecting disparate topics that seem important to Amsterdam's history: land reclamation (which requires collaboration but was carried out so that individuals retained control over land), trade, bourgeois portrait art, the resistance to and complicity with the Nazi, coffee shop and counter culture, social housing. In the chapters about the more recent history, however, I struggled to overlook the book's smug celebration of Dutch (and US) society, its quick glossing over the horrors of colonialism, the …

reviewed Alfabet/Alphabet by Sadiqa de Meijer

Sadiqa de Meijer: Alfabet/Alphabet (2020, Palimpsest Press, Anstruther) 4 stars

On finding home in a new language

4 stars

I think of this book as the companion to Fifty Sounds, in that they are both memoirs and reflection on language. If Fifty Sounds is about learning a new one and feeling alien in a far-away place that doesn't ever quite become familiar, A/A is about the feeling of nostalgia, the ways one remains attached to their mother tongue and childhood home, and reworks them in new ways that fit new places, new languages, new skills. De Meijer manages to talk about being multilingual without coming across as pretentious or self-congratulatory, or plain boring. Perhaps by virtue of being of Afghan-Punjabi-Kenyan descent she also manages to describe her love for the Netherlands in a way that doesn't feel claustrophobic or reactionary.

Sarah Schulman: Conflict is not abuse (2016) 4 stars

From intimate relationships to global politics, Sarah Schulman observes a that inflated accusations of harm …

Conflict is not abuse

5 stars

Gist (no major spoilers): in many situations, from the personal scale of relationship to geopolitics, people tend to react to perceived abuses through group shunning. We experience discomfort, pain or fear, identify a culprit, and direct punishment at them, which often involves a refusal to talk. This dynamic is often fueled by traumatic experiences or a sense of Supremacy: the two are remarkably similar, and often coexist in the same person. Our reaction is enabled by people who belong to the same group as us, being a family, a social group or a nation, who ‘take our side’ and help to implement punishment. But what if many of these situations where not instances of abuse, but simply conflict, which can only be resolved through open confrontation? This would require us to engage in many uncomfortable conversations, being honest and ‘rigorous’ with our friends and family members even at the risk …

Torrey Peters: Detransition, Baby (Hardcover, One World) 4 stars

An almost-love almost-triangle

4 stars

Content warning Spoilers ahead!

reviewed Bear by Marian Engel

Marian Engel: Bear (Paperback, 1987, D.R. Godine) 4 stars

Bear

4 stars

Content warning Major spoiler

Italo Calvino: Se una notte d'inverno un viaggiatore (Italian language, 2016) 4 stars

L'impresa di cercare di scrivere romanzi 'apocrifi', cioè che immagino siano scritti da un autore …

Not what I remembered

2 stars

Ricordo di aver amato questo libro la prima volta che l’ho letto, a sedici anni o suppergiu’. In particolare, i primi capitoli mi erano sembrati insuperabili, una vertigine di incipit and giochi di prosepettive, io narratore, io scrittore, tu lettore, tu protagonista, tu personaggio, lei personaggio. Questa prima impressione e’ rimasta, ma con gli occhi di ora l’ammirazione per il gioco letterario cede presto il passo all’irritazione per il virtuosismo. Fine a se stesso, perche’ diciamolo, le analogie tra la lettura e l’amore, la lettura e la vita, sono un po’ banali. Ed e’ anche invecchiata male la serie di dieci scrittori, tutti uomini, la donna relegata a lettrice, un oggetto spiato da lontano. A volte rileggere svela nuovi aspetti, e si gioisce di essere cresciuti. A volte forse si farebbe meglio a lasciare perdere per non rovinare la magia del ricordo.

reviewed Boulder by Eva Baltasar

Eva Baltasar, Julia Sanches: Boulder (2022, And Other Stories) 5 stars

Working as a cook on a merchant ship, a woman comes to know and love …

On not moving to Iceland for love

5 stars

Content warning minor spoilers

McKenzie Wark: Capital is Dead: Is This Something Worse? (Hardcover, 2019, Verso) 5 stars

A chapter-by-chapter summary of Capital is dead

5 stars

Content warning capital is dead