User Profile

ju

ju@lire.boitam.eu

Joined 3 years, 2 months ago

Photojournalist and many other things in -ist.

I read a lot of SFF, obscure LGBT, travel, photography theory and women authors, in French and English.

This link opens in a pop-up window

ju's books

To Read

Currently Reading (View all 22)

2025 Reading Goal

25% complete! ju has read 13 of 52 books.

Tom Parfitt: High Caucasus (2023, Headline Publishing Group) 5 stars

Emotionally scarred after witnessing the bloody climax of the Beslan school siege in Russia's North …

A simple and beautiful book about a very complex region

5 stars

I'm simultaneously jealous of this whole Caucasus mountain trek, and grateful that the author described the scenery, the people he meets and their history in such a generous and humble way. This is not an ethno-study, an adventure book full of swagger or a historical essay, it's journalism in the purest form, with genuine curiosity and a real attachment to a region and its inhabitants.

reviewed Those Beyond the Wall by Micaiah Johnson (The Space Between Worlds, #2)

Micaiah Johnson: Those Beyond the Wall 4 stars

Faced with a coming apocalypse, a woman must reckon with her past to solve a …

A great read

5 stars

I had the re-read The Space Between Worlds quickly, after beginning this one, because there were things I didn't remember and a lot of the context is needed for this one. I liked the change of perspective, with Mr Scales being a runner this time and her different views on things. It was interesting to see that she's also an unreliable narrator, and that's all right really. One thing I regretted was the lack of explanation as to why a certain event happen (I won't spoil with explaining why what, it should be obvious I guess) In any case, it's a great read, lots of action, despair, anti-heroes and queerness.

Justine Niogret: Gueule de truie (French language, 2012, Éditions Critic) 3 stars

Il s’appelle Gueule de Truie. Le visage dissimulé sous un masque de métal, il est …

Un livre court aux prémices intéressantes

3 stars

J'aime bien écouter le podcast d'Arte "Bookmakers", parce que régulièrement, ça me fait découvrir des voix très singulières et des auteur·es dont je n'avais jamais entendu parler. Et après trois épisodes avec Justine Niogret, ça donnait pas mal envie. Alors sans doute Gueule de Truie n'est pas le plus évident pour aborder sa bibliographie, l'écriture est brutale, très imagée, le propos sans interdits, donc on aime ou pas. C'est un peu indigeste parfois, dans la seconde moitié, lorsqu'on perd un peu de vue où l'auteure veut nous emmener, où on a l'impression de tourner en rond dans la folie des personnages sans aller vers une résolution. Malgré tout, il y a plein de choses intéressantes, de tournures de phrases, d'idées, d'images.

Nghi Vo: City in Glass (2024, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom) 5 stars

A demon. An angel. A city.

The demon Vitrine—immortal, powerful, and capricious—loves the dazzling city …

Deeply original

5 stars

Another brilliant book by Nghi Vo, who is such a consumed storyteller, the kind who gently take your hand and make you believe every detail. A fascinating read.

Sandra Lucbert: Personne ne sort les fusils (French language, 2020) 5 stars

De mai à juillet 2019 se tient le procès France Télécom - Orange. Sept dirigeants …

Percutant et poignant

5 stars

Un court livre hyper percutant, à la croisée entre le récit (des bribes du procès des dirigeants d'Orange), l'essai (sur le monde du travail et le langage managérial), et l'objet littéraire pour parler de cette langue et porter ce récit. Le chapitre 23 est l'illustration parfaite de la violence des entreprises et du mépris insondable de ses dirigeants pour leurs employés.

Francis Spufford: Cahokia Jazz (Hardcover, 2023, Faber & Faber) 5 stars

In a city that never was, in an America that never was, on a snowy …

A wonderful alternate history

5 stars

It has the tropes of the genre : a tired detective in a metropolis he doesn't quite know, powerful men, booze and prohibition, sleazy journalists, and of course, melancholia, jazz and femmes fatales. But the rest is a very smart departure in an alternate history: what if the smallpox brought to America was a non-lethal variant? The Native community would be thriving, along the Mississippi, it would have a city and a state built on their power and syncretic beliefs. That's Cahokia, where the delicate balance that holds it all is threatened by a gruesome murder. It's a book that takes you in, and embraces you and makes you believe that Cahokia is real and pulsating, on the right bank of the Mississippi.