I have a complicated relationship with money. Judging by the information in this book, it’s also probably quite an unusual one. But whatever your views and feelings on the topic, if you’re ready to take charge of the relationship, this book is probably a good place to start.
One small caveat is that the specific terminology and specific examples used are very Canadian. In some cases, the author mentions the US equivalent. Other places don’t even get a mention. So while I do think people everywhere could benefit from the information provided in this book in a general way, when it comes to specifics, be aware that some of the wording and legal/regulatory framework will be different.
Father Ray is a priest who’s the closest thing to a father Cass has. He confesses to her that someone’s been stalking and threatening him – and is promptly murdered. Cass is an ex-cop and current private investigator – and she won’t rest until she solves the case.
The plot isn’t exactly unique, but what makes this one shine is the characters. Compelling and kinda broken and supportive of one another.
I’m physically perceived as a woman, yet simultaneously as ‘other’. I was mostly raised to believe that gender stereotypes were stupid and irrelevant, yet partly socialised to believe they were vitally important (but probably didn’t apply to me). I exist outside of gender. To me, it’s an alien concept.
Only as an adult have I discovered that most people are socialised into gender. How do women not overthrow the system? Why do women not burn it all down? Why aren’t women angry all the time?
This book was infuriating in all the right ways. Fascinating.
I was grateful that the author made an effort to include trans and nonbinary people.
Alistair Campbell is right about a lot of things. He’s deadly wrong about a few, but let’s set those things aside for the moment.
The best review I can write for this book is to share two quotes from it. 1. Everything is impossible until you make it happen (which in turn is a quote of someone else – but it’s kinda the point of the book). 2. If change can be for the worse, it can also be for the better.
An interesting take on off-world colonisation, with a mix of generations of people born and raised on the ship (gens) and people from Earth who’ve been been in cryonic sleep for 200 years (woken). The gens are workers without much education, whereas the woken are STEM specialists. And therein lies the central conflict.
Suffers a bit from plot holes and inconsistencies but, overall, a very readable story.
I love the inclusiveness and acceptance in this book. Absolutely delightful to see.
This story felt like it wasn’t as fully developed as it should have been. It really would have benefited from another round of developmental work. It also needed to be a bit longer to more fully flesh out the world building and character craft.
When everyone is equal, we all benefit. The only way we’re ever going to improve life on Earth is by working together.
This book is broken down into sections, each of which focuses on a different way in which some people see othered. The author dogs in to each one and talk about how we can improve everyone’s lives by working together and being inclusive.
I’m so glad this book exists.
But…
A non-disabled cis-het woman was not the right person be writing the sections on disability or queerness. For example, while advocating for making the world more inclusive of disabled people, she repeatedly uses dated and/or offensive terminology.
Top marks for the ideas and the intent. But the execution (in some sections) needs improvement.
This book gives insight into why the Trump family – and Donald in particular – are the way they are. I don’t think it’s vital that people read this, but it is interesting.
What a horrible family. And now they’re going to destroy the world.
And I get it – we’ve had similar characters in my own family (but without money). Escaping their influence is hard to do. They make it hard to do.
One thing I found confusing: the names. There’s a Friederich, a Fred, a Freddy, and a Fritz. There’s Mary Sr, Maryanne, and Mary Jr. and of course Donald and his son Donald. Ivana and Ivanka. I mean, I get it. Those are their names; nothing the author can do about that. But it still makes for confusing reading.