I think I‘d sum this one up as bonkers but brilliant. My favourite read of November #12BooksOf2021 @Andrew65
I think I‘d sum this one up as bonkers but brilliant. My favourite read of November #12BooksOf2021 @Andrew65
“The past is an anchor….chained at one end to our ankles and buried in the mud of history at the other. It drags us down; it keeps us from moving forward.”
This satire rips into identity politics, religion, dysfunctional families and tradition, in a most bizarre fashion. At times hilarious, at times moving, always slightly weird, the book is well written, but begins to become repetitive and unsubtle as it makes its point again and again.
1. Mother For Dinner by Shalom Auslander;
2. The old faithful, Goodreads. I‘ve tried keeping a written journal but I always gravitate back to GR;
3. I‘ve never Googled a book, I Amazon them 🤣! The last one I Amazoned was Pandora by Susan Stokes-Chapman
#WeekendReads
@rachelsbrittain
Outrageous satire of identity politics and family dynamics that gets a bit same-y after a bit
I need to find a way to read and cross stitch at the same time #champagnebookwormproblems
Early days in this satire of identity politics and dysfunctional families told through a Cannibal-American lens. So far the writing sizzles.
This should be good written by the author of Foreskin‘s Lament