juushika: Photograph of the torso and legs of a feminine figure with a teddy bear (Bear)
[personal profile] juushika
The first two are from finishing up the landing; the last is from, bless, painting the very last wall in the living room, the one that required patching after the electrical work was done. We have a couch! being delivered tomorrow!! so the patch & paint job jumped from a background process to a sudden priority; our current couch is a loveseat but the new one is a hefty sectional, and moving it/painting around it would be a nightmare. The patches came out acceptable and the room looks so much better with that last and maybe most important (b/c it frames the couch) wall done!

I see more books about MKUltra in my future, but I am forever at the whim of "what does the library have, in audio, maybe with no waitlist" because that's how my nonfiction reading works.


Title: The Man from the Train: The Solving of a Century-Old Serial Killer Mystery
Author: Bill James, Rachel McCarthy James
Narrator: John Bedford Lloyd
Published: Simon Schuster Audio, 2017
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 465
Total Page Count: 401,710
Text Number: 1515
Read Because: more true crime while painting, audiobook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: I almost DNF'd an hour in but, surprisingly, not only did the conversational style grow on me, I even think it complements the content. This is an investigation into axe murders from early 20th century America what may have been the work of a single killer traveling by rail. Such very cold cases require a lot of conjecture and bargaining; explaining this directly to the reader, inviting doubt and making them participant in the reasoning, is an effective approach. It also makes for a lot of repetition and failed humor—the book's not-infrequently obnoxious! But it's also engaging. I like it alongside Hollandsworth's The Midnight Assassin: they share time period and IIRC some cases, and the different approaches to overlapping content gives a more complex picture than one book alone can provide.


Title: Poisoner in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control
Author: Stephen Kinzer
Narrator: James Linkin
Published: Macmillan Audio, 2019
Rating: 4.5 of 5
Page Count: 370
Total Page Count: 402,080
Text Number: 1516
Read Because: while reading Stranger Things fic that talked about MKUltra, I realized that I don't know much about MKUltra; audiobook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: The audiobook reading is most sincerely awful (choppy sentence breaks! doing all the accents! I constantly felt like I was being yelled at!); nonetheless this is deeply compelling. It's competent both as an overview of MKUltra and as a biography of its director, Sidney Gottleib; and it's better for being both. People who are apparently likeable and even sympathetic can commit atrocities—indeed can orchestrate and institutionalize them, can believe them completely justified, can even feel bad about them. Simultaneously larger-than-life and a thorough, complex portrait of a single life, that framing contextualizes acts that without context are almost incomprehensible. Maybe read it in print, though.


Title: Blood Royal: A True Tale of Crime and Detection in Medieval Paris
Author: Eric Jager
Narrator: René Auberjonois
Published: Hachette Audio, 2014
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 350
Total Page Count: 402,750
Text Number: 1518
Read Because: more true crime ("true crime") while painting, audiobook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: The elevator pitch is "medieval true crime," but in reality this is just a history lesson, and that's okay. Centered on the assassination of Louis I, Duke of Orléans, tracing the event's antecedents and far-reaching consequences in French civil war, it's a grounded and catchy approach to an interesting political avalanche. The focus on the investigation works tolerably well, introducing a lot of repetition but also providing a remarkably detailed glimpse into a slice of history.

But, honestly, the real pleasure here is that René Auberjonois read a book to me.

(No, I cannot easily define what separates "true crime" from "history of a murder.")

Profile

juushika: Drawing of a sleeping orange cat (Default)
juushika

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
45678 910
11121314151617
1819 202122 2324
25262728293031

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Tags

Style Credit