Decorah High School National Honor Society Inducts 52 New Members

The Decorah High School chapter of the National Honor Society inducted 52 new members during its annual induction ceremony Monday, January 30, at 7 p.m. in the high school auditorium.

This year’s program included speeches by the NHS officers: Ella Grouws, Annalise Skrade, Rebecca Anderson, Sally Laybourn, and Ellen Rooney.  Music featured included an orchestra ensemble and a performance by the Madrigal Singers.

In order to be inducted into the National Honor Society, a student must have maintained a minimum 3.5 grade point average and must have demonstrated effective leadership, scholarship, character, and service. Members are selected by a committee of faculty members after a review of applications.

The new National Honor Society senior inductees for this year are Jaden Baker, Casey Brickley, Benson Newhouse, Brock Taylor, and Benjamin Wymer.

The new National Honor Society junior inductees include Brooke Anfinson, Lucas Arendt, Annaleissa Arnold, Brady Bohner, Caden Branum, Annika Brynsaas, Grace Brynsaas, Cody Carolan, Brock Christensen, Olivia Christopher, Peter Essa, Jorja Folkedahl, Lydia Frank, Madelyn Fromm, Bethany Hanson, Brody Hanson, Brayden Hartl, Gabriel Hiner, Elayna Hook, Kathryn Kelly, Sydney Kipp, Simon Kutz, Evon Leitz, Danielle Losen, Anders Lovstuen, Alexander McGohan, Lydia Monreal-Rice, Creed Monroe, Aidan Nalean-Carlson, Brenna Parker, Liberty Phillips, Elizabeth Pritchard, Jeramiah Rediske, Danielle Rix, Naomi Simon, Joseph Stammeyer, Brynn Storhoff, Grace Stortz, Will Teslow, Corina Timm, Fisher Tweten, Abbie Valkosky, Ciara Wedmann, Henry Weis, Yazmeen Whitsitt, Paige Wrightsman, and Kaiden Youngblood.

Current National Honor Society members include Julia Alberts, Rebecca Anderson, Kyleigh Batterson, Justin Berlage, Lange Betts, Isabella Bishop, Ethan Bockman, Hailey Bohr, Hailey Bower, Rebecca Bruening, Lydia Caddell, Leslie Campbell, Sophia Christman, Amelia Dugger, Bryar Duwe, Ella Grouws, Sydney Hageman, Nev Kairi Harper, Jenna Hartz, Dahlyn Headington, Madison Heim, Erik Hjelle, Ethan Holthaus, Grace Hoyland, Amy Jensen, Alexandra Kane, Jackson Knoke, Brinley Krivachek, Sally Laybourn, Franklin Lesmeister, Ada Lovelace, Jacob Magner, Britann Mettille, Rachel Mikkelson, Morgan Moen, Sami Mount, Nathaniel Myers, Grace Neal, Michael Njus, Kortni O’Connell, Kylie O’Hara, Julia Phillips, Mya Redenius, Chloe Reiser, Ellen Rooney, Autumn Schaller, Thea Schissel, Carter Schmelzer, Hannah Schnitzler, Mairi Sessions, Annalise Skrade, Daniel Skrade, Ethan Stravers, Gareth Sweet, Jaden Weis, Addison Wemark, Paige Werner, Max Wilson, and Emma Wold.

Liz Fox and Shannon Horton are the faculty advisers of the Decorah chapter of the National Honor Society at Decorah High School.

NHS ExecBoard
DHS NHS Officers (l-r): Ella Grouws, Annalise Skrade, Sally Laybourn, Rebecca Anderson, and Ellen Rooney
DSC 0244
Current DHS NHS Members (One of two): Row 1 (l-r): Julia Alberts, Kyleigh Batterson, Justin Berlage, Lange Betts, Isabella Bishop, Ethan Bockman, Hailey Bohr
Row 2 (l-r): Hailey Bower, Rebecca Bruening, Leslie Campbell, Sophia Christman, Amelia Dugger, Bryar Duwe, Sydney Hageman, Nev Kairi Harper, Jenna Hartz
Row 3 (l-r): Dahlyn Headington, Madison Heim, Erik Hjelle, Ethan Holthaus, Grace Hoyland, Amy Jensen, Alexandra Kane, Jackson Knoke, Brinley Krivachek, Franklin Lesmeister
DSC 0251
Current DHS NHS Members (Two of two): Row 1 (l-r): Ada Lovelace, Jacob Magner, Britann Mettille, Rachel Mikkelson, Morgan Moen, Sami Mount, Nathaniel Myers
Row 2 (l-r): Kortni O’Connell, Kylie O’Hara, Julia Phillips, Mya Redenius, Chloe Reiser, Autumn Schaller, Thea Schissel, Emma Wold, Hannah Schnitzler
Row 3 (l-r): Mairi Sessions, Daniel Skrade, Ethan Stravers, Gareth Sweet, Jaden Weis, Addison Wemark, Paige Werner, Max Wilson, Carter Schmelzer
Not pictured: Lydia Caddell, Grace Neal, and Michael Njus
DSC 0261
New Inductees (One of Two): Row 1 (l-r): Senior inductees Jaden Baker, Casey Brickley, Benson Newhouse, Brock Taylor, Benjamin Wymer and junior inductees Brooke Anfinson, Lucas Arendt
Row 2 (l-r): Annaleissa Arnold, Jorja Folkedahl, Lydia Frank, Annika Brynsaas, Bethany Hanson, Cody Carolan, Brock Christensen, Elayna Hook
Row 3 (l-r): Peter Essa, Brady Bohner, Caden Branum, Madelyn Fromm, Brody Hanson, Brayden Hartl, Gabriel Hiner, Olivia Christopher, Kathryn Kelly
DSC 0273
New Inductees (Two of Two): Row 1 (l-r): Anders Lovstuen, Sydney Kipp, Simon Kutz, Evon Leitz, Danielle Losen, Alexander McGohan, Lydia Monreal-Rice, 
Row 2 (l-r): Creed Monroe, Aidan Nalean-Carlson, Corina Timm, Liberty Phillips, Elizabeth Pritchard, Jeremiah Rediske, Danielle Rix, Naomi Simon, Paige Wrightsman
Row 3 (l-r): Brynn Storhoff, Grace Stortz, Will Teslow, Brenna Parker, Fisher Tweten, Abbie Valkosky, Ciara Wedmann, Henry Weis, Yazmeen Whitsitt, Joseph Stammeyer, Kaiden Youngblood

DHS Jazz Band Earns Another Superior Rating at Contest, Hosts Coffeehouse March 3rd

On Monday, January 23, the Decorah High School Jazz Band, nicknamed the 7 O’Clock Jazz Band, traveled to Charles City to participate in the Iowa High School Music Association State Jazz Festival. Under the direction of Director Matthew Cody, the ensemble performed a set of contrasting music for three expert judges who rated the musicians on style and general ensemble playing. The 7 O’Clock Jazz Band earned the highest rating–Division I or Superior–from each of the three experts. This marks the 9th straight Division I rating for the DHS jazz program. 

The band’s musicians and instruments they play are as follows: alto saxophones Brenna Parker and Benson Newhouse; tenor saxophones Grant Zilka and Morgan Moen; baritone saxophones Carter Kowitz and Henry Weis; trumpets Aitor Cuevas, Joe Stammeyer, Liz Pritchard, Andy Kruger, and Cody Carolan; trombones Max Wilson and Lucas Hanson; drum set Alex McGohan and Liam Chamberlain; bass Ezra Vorvick; piano Gabe Hiner and Natalie Goodner; vibraphone Natalie Goodner; and guitar Oliver Brummel. 

“I was very pleased with how the band performed on Monday evening and how hard they’ve worked so far this season,” said Director Matthew Cody. 

An opportunity exists to see the jazz bands in concert.  On Friday, March 3rd, the Decorah band program will host its annual Jazz Coffeehouse Concert at the high school featuring the middle school jazz band and the 7 O’Clock Band. The public is invited to attend.

IMG 4190
Director Matthew Cody leading the DHS Jazz Band
IMG 2414
Members of the DHS Jazz Band

Home Composter Group Purchase Program

In case you haven’t heard, we are ordering more home composters for 2023! Composting your food waste helps reduce pressure on our landfill. It also creates healthy soil that can be used as fertilizer in your garden! Click here to learn more! Supplies are limited. The order form will be closed when supplies run out.

Rhymes With Decorah Podcast: Rhymes With… Ukraine – Professor Maryna Nading

Maryna_Headshot.png

Maryna (Bazylevych) Nading has been a professor at Luther College since 2010, focusing on the topics of medical anthropology, body and health, and post-socialism. She was born in Ukraine and first visited the US while participating in English studies programs as a young adult. Those roots lead to her eventual return to the US in higher education. Maryna’s work now supports students in Anthropology studies as well as Luther College’s Global Health Major.

From growing up in urban Khmelnytskyi Ukraine (living with a great dane!) to making her way to Indiana, graduate work in upstate New York, and eventually to Luther College – Maryna’s story is rich and meaningful. Much of Maryna’s family and many friends are still living in present day Ukraine, and living through the Russian invasion and ongoing war. 

In the Spring of 2022, Maryna helped Luther College Students organize “The Ride for Ukraine” fundraiser, a 75-mile bike ride from Rochester, Minn., to Decorah. Luther Graduate (’22) Anita Tamang organized the event with the help of Luther College (’23) Souk Sengsaisouk ’23. The event raised  $7,000. for an oncology clinic where Maryna’s mother works.

Ukraine_Ride_Banner.png
(Photo courtesy of Anita Tamang and Souksakhone Sengsaisouk)
Anita Tamang (‘22, left), Professor Maryna Bazylevych Nading (middle) and
Souksakhone Sengsaisouk (‘23, right) organized a 75-mile bike ride in order to advocate for peace in the country of Ukraine.

A benefit concert was also organized in the Fall of 2022 with several Luther College Faculty and community members including Brooke Joyce, Decorah Middle School orchestra members, and more. The concert featured music about or from Ukraine, and also raised over $2,000. for another localized organization in Ukraine. 

Nading continues to speak with family and friends in Ukraine on a regular basis, and also help connect resources. Her parents both work in health care, and while her hometown has generally not yet been in the immediate high-danger areas of attacks, the influx of those fleeing the war torn regions have been very real. Shortages of many basics exist, while power and cell services are frequently lost as attacks occur in close by regions. She continues to connect with on-the-ground organizations that are supporting the Ukrainian efforts. 

Nading translated a piece from a friend that was run in the Des Moines Register in March of 2022 that gives many glimpses into the day to day life in Ukraine. 

If you would like to connect with Maryna or help by donating funds to on-the-ground, grass roots organizations, please feel free to contact her at: bazyma01@luther.edu

 

 

Ukraine_Emblem.png

Our Transforming Tomorrow project continues to gain momentum

Winneshiek Medical Center is growing in many ways to meet the needs of the broader region. One of the ways that will be most visible is in their facilities with the Transforming Tomorrow project, which involves a major facility expansion and remodel.

Transforming Tomorrow is a long-term facility growth and improvement plan for Winneshiek Medical Center.  Expanding and remodeling the existing footprint, Transforming Tomorrow will provide:

  • A new, fully renovated birthing unit that features all Labor, Delivery, Recovery, Postpartum (LDRP) suites, and direct access from Obstetrics to Surgery for patients needing a C-section.
  • An expanded Surgery area to include larger rooms to accommodate new technology and an additional operating room to meet the growing volume of their surgical practice.
  • A two-story addition to house expanded primary and specialty clinics to the north of the current clinic building, allowing for additional access, growth, a better patient experience, and promotion of team based care.  

View from the northeast of our Surgery area expansion. This addition which will include larger operating rooms to accommodate new technology and an additional room to meet the growing volume of surgical practice.

The project costs are near $50 million and are financed in large part by low-interest USDA loans.  The remaining balance will be funded by WMC dollars and loans from local banks.

“We have recently received approval of the project from the Decorah City Council, who followed the recommendation of the Planning and Zoning Commission.  Currently, we are completing final architectural documents, identifying our interim construction financing and then we will put the project out to bid in early summer,” says Steve Slessor, chief administrative officer, Winneshiek Medical Center.  “As always, final approval is needed from our Board of Trustees to proceed with all or even part of the project.”

As blueprints and plans are refined by architects and WMC staff, leaders continue to review costs of the project to ensure good stewardship of the invested dollars.  Slessor says, “It is our goal to identify opportunities to continue to reduce project costs in an era when construction costs are increasing dramatically.”

Once Transforming Tomorrow work begins, Slessor believes the work will take approximately 2.5 years. He says, “The architects are outlining a plan that will allow for work to progress with minimal disruption to patient care activities.  Patients will notice the construction, but we will ‘choreograph’ changes so services can continue at or near capacity.”

Winneshiek Medical Center believes the Transforming Tomorrow project demonstrates their commitment to their patients, staff, communities and to progress in general. Slessor says, “Our goal is to be the regional hub of health care services for an eight-county area.  We are investing in facilities, staff and technology, and are actively recruiting physicians to join the Mayo Clinic Health System primary and specialty care practice here at Winneshiek Medical Center.  These are exciting times to be part of Winneshiek Medical Center as it grows into the future.” 

Source link

Isabelle Demers to perform the 2023 Luther College Benefactor’s Organ Recital

February 2, 2023

Luther College will host its annual Benefactor’s Organ Recital, featuring Isabelle Demers, associate professor of organ at McGill University in Montréal, Québec. The recital will take place at 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 19, in the Main Hall of the Center for Faith and Life on the Luther campus. 

“Isabelle Demers is one of the premier organists in North America. She plays traditional repertoire but approaches it in a new and innovative way. She’s adventurous, well-rounded, and exciting to listen to. Her program will capture the musical capability of our instrument perfectly,” said Alexander Meszler, organist and assistant professor of music at Luther. 

Demers’ program will include works by Bach, Alkan, Heiller, Mozart, Albright, and Reger. The recital is open to the public with no charge for admission. 

The Chicago Classical Review has described Demers playing as having “bracing virtuosity” and the Amarillo-Globe News said she is “fearless and extraordinary.” She has appeared in recitals throughout Europe, Oman, Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Canada including at the Cathedrals of Cologne and Regensburg in Germany; the ElbPhilharmonie in Hamburg; and the Royal Festival Hall, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Westminster Cathedral, and Westminster Abbey in London to name a few.

Demers is in high demand to play at regional and national conventions of the American Guild of Organists, the Institute of Organ Builders and International Society of Organbuilders, the Royal Canadian College of Organists and the Organ Historical Society. She has released multiple CD recordings on the Acis and Pro Organo labels. Her latest album, recorded at Chicago’s Rockefeller Chapel, was released in January 2020.

The annual Benefactor’s Organ Recital features outstanding artists of international caliber on the Robert Sipe Organ in the Center for Faith and Life. The intent of the concert is to provide an inspirational role model for current and prospective students who wish to pursue organ study at Luther. It is sponsored through the Kathryn Ulvilden Moen ’41 Organ Fund and the William B. Kuhlman Endowment.

Read more about the organs at Luther College.

 

About Luther College Music 

Luther is home to one of the largest undergraduate music programs in the nation, with five choirs, three orchestras, two bands and two jazz bands. One-third of all Luther students participate in music, including large ensembles, faculty-coached chamber groups, private lessons and master classes. Nearly 175 music majors study music theory, ear training, history, education, composition, jazz, church music and performance. Learn more at luther.edu/music.

Source link

Holden Village: A Place Apart info graphic

Holden Village: A Place Apart info graphic

Decorah Public Library is continuing a monthly program series called “Local Celebrities, Secret Identities” designed to highlight interesting work being done by members of the community. The February program in the series is called “Holden Village: A Place Apart” and is presented by Rachel Sandhorst and Jon Jensen. The program will take place in the event room at Pulpit Rock Brewery on February 23rd at 7 pm.   

Few places are so revered by those who have visited than Holden Village, the mountain retreat center deep in the wilderness of Washington’s Cascade Mountains.  Come hear about this former copper mine turned magical mountain community and how it has inspired and renewed so many from the Decorah community (perhaps including you).  Jon and Rachel will share stories of visits to Holden Village from different seasons with a focus on winter where the 300 inches of snow and sabbatical from all technology have been a regular J-term experience for Luther College students for over 25 years.  If you have been to Holden Village this is a time to connect with others and share your own experiences.  If you’ve never been to Holden (or even heard of it), this will be an opportunity to learn about a truly unique place that you just might want to put on your bucket list. 

For more information about this presentation or the series, please contact Zach Row-Heyveld at Decorah Public Library – zrow-heyveld@decorahlibrary.org or by calling 563.382.3717. 

Source link

The Best Books DPL Staff Read in 2022

2022 was another great year of reading for DPL staff. Not all of our favorites were published in the past year, but these are (well, some of!) the books that most moved, thrilled, and enlightened us. What were the best books you read in 2022?

 

 

Tricia’s Best Books Read in 2022

 

Mad Honey by Jodi Picoult & Jennifer Finney Boylan

This was a fast-paced book with excellent dialogue, interesting facts about bees, and a suspenseful murder mystery that kept me guessing until the very end.

 

The Ways We Hide by Kristina McMorris

Another captivating historical fiction by McMorris. This book has magic tricks, gadgets, romance, and a gripping WWII storyline. The protagonist is a whip-smart, creative woman that you can’t help but invest in.

 

Things We Do in the Dark by Jennifer Hillier

An average woman escaping her past by marrying a famous actor. What could go wrong? This thrilling murder mystery had me racing to the end.

 

You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi

This story is a new take on self-discovery. What social norms deserve to be lived by, and which ones are better off broken?

 

A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T. Kingfisher

This is a delightful YA fantasy title about a young wizard who “only” has the ability to make magic bread. How could this ever be useful? It turns out, bread and pastry are useful in every way, and the wizard that holds the power holds the future of the kingdom in her hands.

 

The Diamond Eye by Kate Quinn

A woman doing a job she was never meant to succeed at, let alone become the best in the biz. I loved the way this story crossed continents and brought this historical figure to life.

 

Funny Farm by Laurie Zaleski

This memoir is a poignant reminder that you can’t pick your family, but you can change your circumstances. This book is full of heartbreak, survival, and love.

 

Sparks Like Stars by Nadia Hashimi

An amazing story of a little girl whose life was turned upside down in a single night. How the choices of others helped her to survive, but her choices allowed her to thrive.

 

Beyond the Wand by Tom Felton

A witty, fun, and fast-paced memoir for anyone who remotely likes Harry Potter or the film biz. It was a fun opportunity to learn more about the actor behind the character.

 

 

Nick’s Best Books Read in 2022

 

The Desire Factor by Christy Whitman

Whitman shows us that there is no need to be ashamed of our desires. Our desires are what drive us, to be creative and to grow as human beings. The secret is to not cling to the result of the desire, but to allow things to flow through us. It’s the experiences that we achieve while we strive for one desire that spawns new desires, leading us to new growth.

 

Radical Acceptance: Embracing Your Life with the Heart of a Buddha by Tara Brach

Dr. Tara Brach introduces us to radical acceptance, offering us a path to personal freedom. To accept what IS does not mean to give in to self-indulgence or passivity, and it does not mean to play a victim to others’ behaviors. Radical acceptance is simply releasing your own internal judgment of other people, situations, or even yourself, allowing meaningful change, action, or even inaction to flow through you.

 

The Power of Your Subconscious Mind by Joseph Murphy

In this power book, Murphy introduces readers to the power of the often-overlooked subconscious mind and its power to create and destroy habits, fears and phobias, and even to affect physical healing or your surrounding environment. He teaches us to harness that power to create well-being and happiness in our lives.

 

The Light We Give: How Sikh Wisdom Can Transform Your Life by Simran Jeet Singh

This book is the personally-told story of Simran Jeet Singh, a Sikh Indian activist born and raised in Texas, who has learned to fall back on the Sikh teachings of interconnectedness, love, and mindful service to overcome hate, racism, physical threats, and so much more. Not only does Simran overcome, but he thrives and finds love in the connectedness of even those who would seek to harm him.

 

 

(A Handful of) Rachael’s Best Books Read in 2022

 

Nonfiction

The Art of Gather­ing: How We Meet and Why It Mat­ters by Priya Parker (available via Bridges)

If you are a person who hosts events, facilitates, teaches, or who is planning a party or big event, I would categorize this one as a must-read. Parker sets forth a purpose-centered approach to gathering that will help everyone create meaningful, memorable experiences.

 

Why Fish Don’t Exist by Lulu Miller

Invisibilia podcaster and writer Lulu Miller explores the life of scientist David Starr Jordan, who lost everything—again and again (in very dramatic ways)—and somehow was never fazed. But her study in resilience takes an unexpected turn as she delves deeper into some of the darker parts of Jordan’s story. This page turner asks big important questions about when we should persist in the face of adversity and when we should step back and re-examine our own thinking.

 

What My Bones Know: A Memoir of Healing from Complex Trauma by Stephanie Foo

What happens when a writer and podcaster turns the mic on herself? When Stephanie Foo is diagnosed with Chronic Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome (a misunderstood condition that is still not recognized by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders), she applies her journalistic rigor to researching C-PTSD and its treatments.

 

How ­to Keep­ House While Drown­ing: A Gentle Ap­proach ­to Clean­ing and Or­ga­niz­ing by KC Davis

Writer and therapist KC Davis talks to her readers with so much compassion and accommodation as she explores ideas such as seeing chores as kindnesses to your future self (rather than as a reflection of your worth), how to clean in quick bursts within your existing daily routine, and how to rest in your home even when there are dishes in the sink. This book preaches compassion and models empathy.

 

Fiction

True Biz by Sara Novic

I loved Novic’s first book, Girl at War, and was so excited about this novel which explores Deaf culture through telling the stories of two high school students and one administrator at a boarding school for Deaf students. A story about sign language, disability and civil rights, isolation and injustice, rebellion and joy.

 

Great or Nothing by Joy McCullough, Caroline Tung Richmond, Tess Sharpe, and Jessica Spotswood

A re-imagined Little Women that takes place in 1942 during World War II. While the US starts sending troops to the front, the March family of Concord, Massachusetts grieves their own enormous loss: the death of their daughter, Beth. Each March sister’s point of view is written by a separate author, three in prose and Beth’s in verse, as she watches her family struggle to come together from beyond the grave.

 

Sisters of the Neversea by Cynthia Leitich Smith

Muscogee Creek writer Cynthia Leitich Smith re-imagines Peter Pan. This book takes a thoughtful look at Neverland as a place—who populates it, how they got there, and how stories impact our perception of ourselves and others—while also packing a page-turning punch that will appeal to a wide range of ages.

 

 

Erin’s Best Books Read in 2022

 

Honorable mentions (alphabetical by title)

Blue-Skinned Gods by SJ Sindu

Cantoras by Carolina De Robertis

The Cherry Robbers by Sarai Walker

Counterfeit by Kirstin Chen

Matrix by Lauren Groff

Nona the Ninth (The Locked Tomb #3) by Tamsyn Muir

NSFW by Isabel Kaplan

Spear by Nicola Griffith

Thieves by Lucie Bryon

When Women Were Dragons by Kelly Barnhill

 

Top ten

10. Shelterbelts by Jonathan Dyck

Jonathan Dyck paints a portrait of a Canadian Mennonite community in this gentle graphic novel. The stories of individual characters interlink and overlap when a megachurch opens nearby and begins siphoning congregants, and generational fractures form as residents reckon with LGBTQ+ rights and Indigenous land ownership. Non-genre graphic fiction is few and far between, but Dyck’s work steps comfortably into the big shoes left behind by Craig Thompson’s classic Blankets.

 

9. Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton

Cartoonist Beaton’s (of Hark! A Vagrant fame) penchant for humor peppers her sprawling graphic memoir, but this is not a funny story: determined to pay off her student loans after graduating in the mid-aughts, Beaton descends into the heart of darkness of Alberta’s oil sands, an isolated work environment in which men outnumber women fifty-to-one. What follows is a threnody to violence in its many forms—violence against the female body, against Indigenous land, against financial stability, and against the Earth itself. I think it’s safe to say that Ducks has already taken its place alongside works such as Bechdel’s Fun Home, Walls’ The Glass Castle, Machado’s In the Dream House, and McCurdy’s I’m Glad My Mom Died as a landmark memoir of the early 21st century.

 

8. Know My Name by Chanel Miller

This memoir from the woman who was assaulted by Brock Turner was so much more than I expected. Miller approaches every moment of her story from an unconventional angle; not only does she explore her trauma and the systems that reinforced it, but she highlights how the love and care she received in its aftermath—things she should have been receiving her whole life—were dependent on that trauma as a prerequisite. There is so much good in the world. Why then, she asks, have we constructed a society in which it emerges only as a response to evil?

 

7. Kaikeyi by Vaishnavi Patel

One of the few Circe­-likes that actually manages to rival its predecessor in quality, Kaikeyi reframes the story of the villainous character from the Ramayana as that of a woman who is navigating a complicated (literal) web of courtly relationships and bettering the lives of women and men in a patriarchal society. At once both epic and intimate, Kaikeyi shines in its complex portrayals of gender, motherhood, and toxic masculinity. Madeline Miller better watch her back; I can’t wait to find out what Patel does next.

Additional thoughts here: https://www.decorahlibrary.org/reviews-essays/erin-larson-book-reviews-essays/2022/kaikeyi-by-vaishnavi-patel

 

6. The Poppy War + The Dragon Republic + The Burning God by R.F. Kuang

The Poppy War and its sequels—arguably the most culturally-significant series in the glorious new wave of Asian-inspired fantasy—were written by a talented amateur (Kuang, determined to make the rest of us look bad, was in her early twenties when they were published), and it shows in the clumsy prose and disjointed storytelling. But these books did a rare and welcome thing: they sunk their teeth into me and kept me up long after I should have gone to bed. These aren’t subtle or nuanced novels by any means, but Kuang herself has argued that when it comes to the themes she deals with here—war, racism, sexism, genocide, imperialism, colonization—subtlety and nuance aren’t always sufficient. Sometimes, to get a message across, you need to scream.

 

5. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow is the book I didn’t know I needed this year: the sprawling story of an intense, intimate friendship between two young video game developers—a love story, but not a romance—that celebrates the importance of play and the importance of platonic relationships. Sam and Sadie are not always likeable, but they are complex, dynamic, and sympathetic; they feel fully human, for good and for ill, and I loved every page I spent with them. Zevin also handles subjects such as abuse, racism, sexism, and disability with grace and sensitivity. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow is a messy book in many ways, but it soars beyond its technical shortcomings by virtue of having so much heart.

Additional thoughts here: https://www.decorahlibrary.org/reviews-essays/erin-larson-book-reviews-essays/2022/tomorrow-and-tomorrow-and-tomorrow-by-gabrielle-zevin

 

4. Hyperion by Dan Simmons

Sometimes you read a classic, genre-defining novel, and you think, “That was it?” Hyperion is not one of those books. Adopting the structure of The Canterbury Tales, Simmons’ 1989 science fiction barnstormer is built from the stories of six pilgrims who share their tales while traveling to the planet Hyperion, which is home to a mythic, monstrous time-travelling entity called the Shrike. Hijinks ensue. And by “hijinks,” I mean “some of the most mind-melting stuff you’ve ever read.” Join the DPL Speculative Fiction Book Group in February for a discussion of Hyperion!

 

3. Elsewhere by Alexis Schaitkin

What Gone Home is to video games, Elsewhere is to literature: it defies classification, dressing up at first as folk horror (“with elements of Shirley Jackson’s ‘The Lottery,’” the description said, and like a moth to the flame, I was lured in) before discarding that outfit and morphing into something else entirely. It flows from genre to genre like a river making its way from biome to biome on its way to the ocean. I don’t know how to describe it, but I do know that it is one of the best books of the year, an ineffable meditation on motherhood that I can’t stop thinking about.

Additional thoughts here: https://www.decorahlibrary.org/reviews-essays/erin-larson-book-reviews-essays/2022/elsewhere-by-alexis-schaitkin

 

2. The Idiot + Either/Or by Elif Batuman

The Idiot and its successor, Either/Or, are probably the two best works of literary fiction published this side of the 20th century (fight me). Set during the first and second years of protagonist Selin’s Harvard education, Batuman expertly demonstrates the ways in which we use stories to lift ourselves up and ascribe significance to the mundane, and the ways in which mundanity keeps us compassionate, keeps us grounded, keeps us human—and she delivers plenty of laughs along the way. Please, Batuman, I’m begging you: give us Selin’s junior and senior years.

Additional thoughts here: https://www.decorahlibrary.org/reviews-essays/erin-larson-book-reviews-essays/2022/either-or-by-elif-batuman

 

1. My Volcano by John Elizabeth Stintzi

My Volcano is one of those rare books that reminds me why I fell in love with reading in the first place—an electrifying, invigorating literary fantasia that pinballs through time and space, My Volcano follows a phantasmagorical mosaic of characters in a world that becomes increasingly absurd, and it punctuates their stories with those of real victims of violence, which highlights the collective desensitization we have experienced in the first few decades of the 21st century.

Source link

1 3 4 5