The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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Praise Song for the Butterflies
Women's Prizes
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2019 WP Longlist - Praise Song for the Butterflies
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Hugh, Active moderator
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Mar 19, 2019 04:45AM


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I would be very happy if this made the shortlist or even won.


To be honest I have been a little underwhelmed with the surprise books on the longlist - my favourites so far were pretty well all from the ones I had already read before the longlist, but this is the exception for me.
I would like to see it shortlisted.

The narrative was so devoid of emotion that it felt like a simple time line of events until the the last few pages where we learn about the emotional turmoil of Serafine, which in light of all Abeo had suffered seemed a bit beside the point.
The only character that will stay with me is the fiery little Juba.

I thought it was very well-written, impactful, interesting. Like seemingly everyone, I learned something. I thought she got the trauma psychology exactly right, and I cared about the characters. So I don't know what exactly held me back from loving it or what it is that makes this book almost muted for so many readers? It seems to be almost universally graded "really good" or the equivalent. Thoughts people who are smarter than me?

Enjoy!

Perhaps I should increase my rating to five stars, since I liked the aspect which knocked it down to four, but that would put it on a par with "Freshwater" and "Milkman", and it is not.

Gosh I'm a moron sometimes. I knew that. I'd apparently just forgotten all about it. I've been a member of that group for ages, but my participation tends to be on the books I decide to read with the group. I'm "leading" the discussion of Washington Black right now. Interestingly, the group is finding tons of interesting things that nobody else has mentioned to me previously about the book. They dive deep over there! I shall settle into that for my evening reading tonight. Thanks for reminding me.
Val wrote: "Perhaps I should increase my rating to five stars, since I liked the aspect which knocked it down to four, but that would put it on a par with "Freshwater" and "Milkman", and it is not. "
I have this discussion with myself all the time. GR needs either more stars or the ability to give half stars. There are so many extremely worthy books, but they aren't "I will love this book with all my soul for the rest of my life" books. That little discussion you just had about "maybe I should bump it up a star" is one I've had about this and other books. It always ends the same way your comment ended though.
(I've gotten more stingy with stars through the years too, and my star system is not a system at all.) I'm just interested in the fact that this book seems to inspire so little discussion both here and elsewhere. (Except LFPC, where I shall go read.)
Thanks to you both!