2021 has been a year of many surprises, some of them of the "interesting times" variety. The pandemic continues, with the media yanking us back and forth between optimism and pessimism, depending solely, it seems, on where we are in the pendulum's inevitable sweep. Worse, conflict of one sort or another seems to have become a permanent feature of life here in the US, mostly conflict between those hell-bent on preserving privilege and inequality at any price (which seems to include most members of the US Supreme Court) and everyone else. Climate-change projections are getting worse while people who either put their personal accumulation of wealth or think changing how we live is the worst disaster that could happen to us are doing everything in their power to keep governments from adopting policies addressing this existential threat.
Still, our aesthetic pleasures, whether stimulating or comforting, persist, nourishing our moral imaginations. And for me, this is always a reason for hope, however thoroughly entangled with our neoliberal economy they may be.
Reading, viewing, and listening pleasures continue to vary widely, maybe even wildly. (Another reason for hope!) From the reports flowing in, 2021 marks a difference from 2020 that is in no way a reset of 2019. With that difference in mind, I'm especially pleased to announce that this blog's annual series of posts on reading, viewing, and listening is about to begin. Once again I've solicited pieces from a bevy of writers and critics to tell us what they particularly enjoyed reading, viewing, and listening to in the last year. This year's edition will include posts by Lisa Tuttle, Sarah Tolmie, Cat Rambo, Nisi Shawl, Tansy Rayner Roberts, Cheryl Morgan, and others. As usual, I'll be adding links below as I upload each new contribution, to provide a list for convenient reference.
I hope you'll enjoy reading these as much as I do, and maybe even swell your ever-growing list of titles you want to read. Sometimes it seems that the volume of books published is so tremendous that it's no surprise that really wonderful work often slips below one's personal radar. And of course, this year, will be the added interest of seeing how or whether the difficulties of 2021 have affected others' reading, viewing, and listening pleasures.
Part 1: Sarah Tolmie
Part 2: Cesi Davidson
Part 3: Tara Campbell
Part 4: Cat Rambo
Part 5: Mari Ness
Part 6: Lisa Tuttle
Part 7: Holly Wade Matter
Part 8: Gwynne Garfinkle
Part 9: Christina M. Rau
Part 10: Cheryl Morgan
Part 11: Margaret McBride
Part 12: Lesley Wheeler
Part 13: Tansy Rayner Roberts
Part 14: Andrea Hairston
Part 15: Susan diRende
Part 16: Erin K. Wagner
Part 17: Suzy McKee Charnas
Part 18: Nisi Shawl
Part 19: Octavia Cade
Part 20: Ritch Calvin
Part 21: Kristi Carter
Part 22: Christopher Brown
Part 23: Nancy Jane Moore
Part 24: Anne Carly Abad
Part 25: Mark Rich
Part 26: Cynthia Ward
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