Un joli arbre dans les montagnes.

par

August 2024 in review / Récap d’août 2024

Hi!

Let’s keep the personal updates short this time:

And now, to the recommendations!

What I’ve read / Texte

📚 Books / Livres

In English

  • Fiction
    • Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey, a novella in which antifascist lesbians try to make their way to Utah on horseback in a dystopian society that resembles the Wild West.
    • Nightbloom by Peace Adzo Medie follows inseparable cousins − or rather, cousins that live a continent apart and have completely different lives, and who don’t talk to each other, but who were inseparable as kids. Heartbreaking and fantastic.
    • These letters end in tears by Musih Tedji Xaviere, follows a Catholic lesbian trying to find her lost love. The book is in the format of letters sent to Fatima, her atheist lover from a Muslim family. She tells of her search and of her own life with a gay best friend in a country where Francophone and Anglophone barriers, religious barriers, and mostly the illegality of being gay, all play a predominant role in her existence.
    • Depart, depart! by Sim Kern is a short novella of a natural disaster. Our narrator, a trans guy who is on hormones and pre-surgery, ends up in a public shelter with no privacy and where nobody seems to get any privacy. Also, the ghost of his grandfather, who narrowly escaped Nazi camps, keeps saving his life?
    • Women! In! Peril! Sex robot, lesbian stepmother of Jesus, traumatized dancer… they’re all women and they all have weird stuff happening to them, sometimes hilarious and sometimes just plain confusing. There was only one short story that missed the mark for me.
  • Non-fiction
    • How to say Babylon, c’est les mémoires de Safiya Sinclair, poète prodige jamaïcaine élevée par des parents Rastafari à la pratique extrêmement stricte. Elle prend le temps de rappeler que les Rasta, c’est 1% de la population de la Jamaïque, et qu’ils sont très discriminés dans la société. Une introduction fascinante malgré sa violence. (I have no idea why I wrote this in French but I cannot be bothered to rewrite it in English sorry.)

En français

  • Fiction
    • Fille de l’eau, d’Emmi Itaranta, m’a donné envie parce qu’il parlait de thé, et je suis resté pour tout le reste. Il m’a laissé un peu sur ma faim, pas parce qu’il était décevant mais parce que son monde, un futur lointain dans lequel l’eau est un bien extrêmement précieux, ouvre plein de portes sans les refermer.
  • Non-fiction
    • Paris, capitale du tiers monde de Michael Goebel retrace les mouvements anticolonialistes et leurs dirigeants dans les années 1930 à Paris. Passionnant (et long).
I read 20 books and 6614 pages. 80% books were fiction, and the most popular genres were Literary, LGBTQIA+, thriller, mystery and contemporary. I read 70% of my books in digital format. This is more books and pages than in July, and you can see that I had really big reading days on weekends, then a full week with nothing (that's when I fixed my Switch!), then 4 days of intense reading while on holidays.

I’ll let you guess when the weekends, holidays, and fixed Switch happened.

In more detail:

🔍 Papers / Articles académiques

Tous ces articles sont disponibles via Cairn.

📰 News and blog posts / Articles

🔏 = accès payant, envoyez-moi un message pour la version PDF / paid access, send me a message for the PDF version.

In English

En français
Au sujet des Jeux olympiques :

Au sujet du foot, mais pas des Jeux olympiques :

Au sujet de la reprise de Duralex en coop :

Au sujet des politiques françaises du moment :

Et enfin : 🔏 Le Monde valide mes opinions en affirmant que les avis sur Internet, c’est pérave : « si c’est moyen, on est déçu ; si c’est bien, c’était prévu ».

What I’ve watched / Vidéo

🎞 Movies / Films

My friend Ben and I watched Rasta Rockett (which non-Francophones will know as Cool Runnings) because he, somehow, had never watched it. The French dubbing is very racist.

The movie itself? I mean, it’s very « Disney comedy movie from 1993 about black men doing winter sports », but with the appropriate amount of nostalgia, it aged surprisingly decently.

📺 TV Shows / Séries

The best show of the month was incontestably Dopesick, an 8-part Hulu miniseries about the opioid crisis in America, following a doctor, a young girl in Appalachia, and the very evil Sackler family. Absolutely brilliant.

Fight the Power is an excellent 4-part documentary on hip-hop music by the BBC and is available on Arte until September 30 for French (and probably German?) people.

My partner and I finished the very funny Girls4Eva (or rather, caught up, because I’m assuming there’s another season coming). My friend Victor told me that Severance season 2 is coming out in January. I started watching The Sopranos. For now, I put it in the « nice enough but can’t get myself to care much » category, but I’m sticking with it.

My partner and I also watched the Nebula Original game show The Getaway (trailer on YouTube), which was hilarious and exciting. Then, we moved on to the newest season of Jetlag, where they race across Europe on trains that I took during my Interrail trip and one of them aims to reach a city very close to mine. Perfect.

📷 Online video / Vidéos en ligne

In English

What I’ve listened to / Audio

🎤 Podcasts

I only link to podcasts if they have a website or other legit platform.

In English

  • Bolshoi Colonizer Energy on Obscuristan (From the Periphery) follows the Russian people who fled Russia and went to Armenia, driving prices up and culture down.
  • 99% Invisible has a bonus series called Not built for this, which follows how America’s housing and urbanism was not built for climate change and environmental catastrophes.
  • The Coddling of the American Mind is a great episode of If Books Could Kill. Always funny, always instructive, always full of bad faith.
  • Upstream was on a roll:
    • Capitalist realism with Carlee Gomes
    • Capitalism and the weight loss industry with Johann Hari
    • The logical case for socialism and against capitalism with Scott Sehon
  • Rosie Ruiz and the Marathon Women with Maggie Mertens on You’re Wrong About

En français

🎹 Music

What I’ve played / Jeux

So… I accidentally fixed my Switch and reinstalled The Binding of Isaac and Zelda: Breath of the Wild, and played the latter for a bit. I’m just glad I forced myself not to bring it to the camping, because I would not have gone out. Oops!

Where I’ve been / Lieux

As linked above: Autrans, one of my favourite small ski stations in the Vercors. It’s a small ski station, and the village is pretty far from it (we were near the village), but it’s super cool because they hosted the ski jumping sessions for the 1968 Grenoble Olympics.

They’re still very Olympic-y:

Devant une maison dans les montagnes, des anneaux olympiques faits de jantes de vélo couvertes de tissus correspondant aux couleurs des anneaux.

Ski jumping isn’t really a thing at all in France, so the Olympic-sized jump is now abandoned, but the smaller ones are used for training and junior competitions.
Vue depuis le haut du grand tremplin de saut à ski, en bois et abandonné. La végétation a repris ses droits. En face, le village dans les collines.
Le petit tremplin de saut, qui n'a pas grand-chose de petit et est couvert de gazon artificiel pour protéger les skis. En fond, le village dans les montagnes. L'herbe est verte et le soleil brille.

❤️

Commentaire / Comment

Commenter

  1. 4:3 photo, of a sloping sea of coniferous trees, leading to an open clearing in the foreground, with the cut away grass and side arbors of the road at the photographer’s spot. A sunny day, the sea of trees shades of dark green, the cleared grass a bright green, the leaves on the arbors gleaming, the sky a gentle blue