My copy of the book (60th anniversary edition) had a forward by Neil Gaiman, and man, I really thought Mr. Gaiman was smart, but I believe either I have over-estimated him, or my media literacy skills for forewards are not up to par. Mr. Gaiman set the stage with “you have to imagine yourself back in the same era when this book was written, imagine their fears in order to see the speculative fiction Ray Bradbury wrote.” That’s not necessarily true. From my interpretation of the ‘why’ behind Fahrenheit 451 being written, it felt blatently obvious Ray Bradbury is writing a response to every single “older” generation’s fear about new technology and changing times. The new technology at the time of writing the book was apparently radio, and *maybe* TV (I cheated and read the “extras” at the back of the book - the copy I read is the 60th anniversary edition). Along those lines was a concern about how radio/TV was that generations “et circuses” as in “panem et circuses” (give people bread and circuses and they’ll never revolt against you). We have the exact same fears today, still. There are plenty of rants about how TikTok is “rotting people’s brains” these days (young, healthy brains don’t rot, they have plasticity 🙄 and what neuro pathways do get erased can be re-created with some effort), which weirdly seem to echo the same rants I grew up with about TV rotting kids' brains, and flipping between TV/radio stations causing short attention spans (sure, maybe, but uh...also ADHD is a thing, and that sounds like a symptom of ADHD 🙂 Much like "I went to the dopamine slot machine of social media for 5 minutes, and next thing I knew, it was 14 hours later" is an ADHD thing). Along those same lines, there is a belief/fear the younger generation is being dumbed down/getting “brain rot” because they say odd things like “Skibbi Dibbi” and “rizz” and “slay,” as if my own generation didn’t say odd things like “epic,” “doggo,” “for the win,” “all of your bases are belong to us,” etc. I am confident Gen X, Boomers, Silent Gen, Greatest Gen, etc. etc. etc. all had similar "brain rot" crap they said in their youth, too because that's pretty much what the youths *do* - they say cringey shit that drives the older generations bonkers. They adopt new technology like they came out of the uetero with it in their hands, causing older generations to wring their hands. All of that *probably* wasn't supposed to be what I got out of Fahrenheit 451. I definitely do understand the anti-intellectual argument, I am well aware there are people and places that would much rather ignore things like facts, and ignore nuance, and search for hours on end to confirm their own unconscious bias. I just tend to travel in with the intellectual crowd who points out "yeah, when we were young, we used 'brain rotting' slang, too. We eventually grew up and we're clearly out here being productive members of society, so perhaps this is not a valid fear, yeah?" 😅
I’ve been reading CG’s fanfiction for years and immediately pre-ordered the book as soon as I was aware it was finally in existence.
The book arrived today and I binge read it in one sitting (as one does with this particular author’s works). I enjoyed the story, but I do wish it were a duology or trilogy rather than a single book. I would have liked to have some time spent on world building the areas Ruti and Dakala travel. The last third of the book is a little confusing and feels rushed - like it could be its own plotline or have a couple of extra chapters dedicated to it if enough space were allowed. I would have liked to know more about how the world’s magic worked - it seemed like bonding was simultaneously something special that happened only if there were a “perfect match” and something that could easily trigger if two unbonded individuals were desperate enough.
All in all, though - it’s incredibly easy to relate to Ruti and get lost in the story. Definitely a classic romance/fantasy/drama from CG! I would definitely recommend the book to others and will absolutely reread it.
The first two heart stopper volumes are predominantly fluffy-romantic. Things start to get a little more serious in this volume as Nick starts to notice Charlie's disordered eating.
This was the first Ramona Quimby book I remember reading. I definitely have fond memories for Ramona learning "present" didn't necessarily mean gift, Beezus teasing Ramona about the "dawn's early light" from the Star Spangled Banner, and Ramona "quitting" school. I remember empathizing with Ramona's annoyance over how slow Howie and grown ups were (I often felt so much the same as a kid!).
As an adult reading this in the 2020s, it's painfully obvious Ramona has ADHD - can't focus on her own work, isn't able to relate well to her peers, can't sit still, very imaginative, incredibly impulsive. I also completely get why her peers do not like her (though I did not pick up that nuance as a kid when I read this book).
The Ramona Quimby Series was one of my favorites growing up. As a kid, I identified and empathized so strongly with poor, neglected Ramona who no one gave any attention to/the time of day to. I honestly don't know that I have ever read the whole series. I certainly don't recall reading this first book.
In reading this book as an adult, I cannot help but empathize with Beatrice. She just wants peace and quiet, and she has a rambunctious, imaginative, loud, four year old sister!
Let me start out by saying: This book is a mixed bag.
The Introduction for this book was written with a very "self-help" tone and self-help word choices. Choosing to be inclusive is to make the choice to accept "this isn't about me." Choosing to be inclusive is its own challenge that not everyone is ready to face (but at the same time, they are not ready to face "not being inclusive or trying to remain neutral to inclusivity is its own choice").
The book only truly starts to feel genuine and authentic around chapter three. It's a good starting point for anyone who is in the very start of their inclusivity/diversity journey (the angry/defensive stage).