I wouldn't call this the most enjoyable book I ever read, and sometimes I let it sit for a bit before returning to it, but in the end it is a well written, unique and interesting novel. ⭐⭐⭐⭐
I wouldn't call this the most enjoyable book I ever read, and sometimes I let it sit for a bit before returning to it, but in the end it is a well written, unique and interesting novel. ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Yesterday, my boyfriend was telling about a googling typo that somehow led him to Mary Toft, and I remembered reading about this book! It happened to be less than $4 on Kindle, so here we are. One of the things I find most interesting very early on is the descriptions of the meals. Stewed lettuce, anyone?
So I finished this novel in 3 very separated readings but WOW. It‘s such an unusual story that it‘s based on, and I think it‘s so fascinating.
I loved this weird book based on a true story about a woman in the 1700s who gives birth to 17 rabbits. Or does she? And whose voice is more important - the male surgeons attending her, or Mary Toft‘s own?
I was super excited to read this after absolutely loving Version Control and this did not disappoint. Like that book, this goes deep into big picture ideas--the availability of humanity, otherness, history and factualness for lack of a better word--yet the plot still moves and the characters still pop. I will read whatever Dexter Palmer writes.
Unsurprisingly, I freaking love this.
This was such a weird book, and took a long time for me to finish. I knew that it was based on actual events, but the whole freak-show quality of the narrative was uncomfortable for me. Bringing in an actual freak show at one point didn‘t help. It was really a very sad story, when considered from Mary Toft‘s point of view. I would have liked to have heard more in her voice. I listened to the audiobook, and thought it was well done. #ToB #ToB2020
#TOB2020
I liked both books a lot and Mary Toft is so unique but in the end I‘ll go for Lost Children Archive because of its political relevance and its impressive observations of marriage and parenthood.
A book like this is why I love the #ToB so much. I never would have read this if it weren‘t for the tournament. And how glad I am I did. The tale of Mary, giving birth to rabbits, is storytelling at its best. I loved every page of it. It‘s mostly about (the ego‘s of) the surgeons and their apprentices surrounding her but in the end the story becomes hers.
#Booked2020 #Headcovering #ToB2020
I don't think I would have found Dexter Palmer's Mary Toft; or The Rabbit Queen if it weren't for the Tournament of Books. This is a DEEPLY strange novel that was fantastic on audio (I listened on Scribd that tells the story of a women who begins giving birth to dead rabbits. Set in a small town in 1726, the story focuses--for the most part--on the understanding of local surgeon John Howard and his apprentice (and son of a minister) Zachary. ⬇️
January was a crazy good reading month for me. My favorite was Mary Toft, but there was a lot of good stuff in here.
8 #tob/1 #supertob
2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/12 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/7 ⭐️⭐️⭐️/1 ⭐️⭐️
10 physical/9 audio/3 ebook
12 owned/9 library/1 #lmpbc
5 nonfiction/14 adult fiction/1 middle grade
4 #botm
1 #Newbery
#januarywrapup #januarystats #januaryreads