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Posts by Courtney Johnston

It’s so weird. And so obvious.

1 month ago 4 0 0 0

But seriously - no. I asked the Google guys how education was going to have to change to support kids in the world they were describing, and got crickets in reply

1 month ago 8 0 1 0

It was like I was speaking another language. And to be fair to them — with jet lag and a thick Nu Zild accent, I kinda was

1 month ago 11 0 0 0

This is so similar to the question I asked a bunch of (non-decision-makers) at tech companies in SF last year. If successful AI use is relying on judgement skills users cultivated in a pre-AI world, in 2-10 years time with users who’ve never had a chance to cultivate that judgement — what happens?

1 month ago 14 4 3 0

Benjamin Myers’ “Perfect Golden Circles” is a story of tender male friendship that I found magical & restorative. Curtis Sittenfeld’s “Romantic Comedy” — if you haven’t read this, you must, it’s perfection. My forever comfort read: Stella Gibbons’ “Cold Comfort Farm”.

1 month ago 4 0 0 0
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Leather & Chains: excerpts from Kate Camp’s 1986 diary 'In the pantheon of bad teenage writing, this surely rates among the greats.'...

Leather & Chains: excerpts from Kate Camp’s 1986 diary

2 months ago 6 5 0 1

Spotted it first

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

Her “When You Reach Me” is hands down one of the best middle grade books I’ve read

3 months ago 1 0 1 0
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This was probably my favourite middle grade read last year. Stead is just so good at family dynamics and tender friendships and this story’s VERY quirky premise sets these off beautifully

3 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Little interlude with a novella by a writer I’ve never read before — a mash-up of Bluebeard and the Garden of Eden

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

Once again, it’s the warmth and depth of the family relationships I enjoy the most here (probably even more than the teenage psychology, which happens when you’re a reader in your 40s). The Potter family in this book might be my favourite Mahy family to date.

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

… that Mahy turns up the saturation in her books, full of sinister characters, signs and portents, word play that fringes on spellcasting

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

Like “Memory”, this is a book where nothing strictly supernatural happens. In fact, it’s quite circumscribed: two main characters, one city setting, one mystery to resolve. Having said that, I noted down the words “heightened brightened tightened frightened” while reading, in response to the way..

3 months ago 0 0 1 0
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My summer re-read of Margaret Mahy’s 1980s YA (the author was so prolific that this constitutes a reading project) reached The Catalogue of the Universe today

3 months ago 6 0 1 0

Do you make comfrey tea? And does it smell as bad as I’ve read it does?

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

Weighing up watching A Room with a View

Pro: the way HB-C says “Cecil” and her fringe pouffe

Con: never revisit the things you loved at high school

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Kings of This World by Elizabeth Knox - Aotearoa New Zealand Review of Books A 'coming-of-age adventure set in a boarding school steeped in supernatural talent'.

In the meantime, here’s a proper review www.nzreviewofbooks.com/kings-of-thi...

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

I think I might have to back read the duology & Knox’s other Southland book, “Mortal Fire”, to see how this all meshes together

3 months ago 1 0 1 0
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… whereas KOTW feels more like social media — the wielding of P feels (at its worst) an awful lot like online influencing in our current political climate

3 months ago 1 0 1 0

Specifically, I wanted to find out more about how the Place of the Dreamhunter duology relates to the Power of Kings of this World. I went down a little rabbit hole thinking about how Dreamhunter was about broadcast technology (it centres on the sharing of dreams in theatres, kind of like movies)…

3 months ago 1 0 1 0

The book has the pace of a thriller rather than the languor of a fantasy. While the two central stories (the kidnapping, and the true nature of Vex’s power) are resolved, I found myself constantly diverted by the extra details & wanting Knox take me down some of the side paths she strews throughout

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

The two timelines mean the fleshing-out of the “dark academia” setting is disrupted: backstories about the networks of friendship and the varieties of “P” power are dotted throughout rather than given in the run-up. You have to read with your memory switched on.

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

The book moves on two timelines (the kidnapping, and the five weeks leading up to the kidnapping) as well as flashbacks to Vex’s childhood and the point where we enter the book: little Victoria Magdolen, found in a parked car with her ribs broken, deserted by her father, the leader of a commune

3 months ago 0 0 1 0
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It’s fastest to share the official blurb because there’s a lot going on in this book beyond the plot

3 months ago 0 0 1 0
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I saved up @elizabethknoxnz.bsky.social’s latest book for the summer break and was DELIGHTED to re-enter her fictional world of Southland, the setting of Dreamhunter + Dreamquake, brought up to the current moment

3 months ago 13 2 2 1
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So it was just a ten-minute read, but it’s a terrific little ghost story and I had an actual shiver when I clicked the twist 3/4 of the way through

I really recommend you look in to Barrington Stokes if you’re looking for good books for less confident readers of all ages (plus very good authors)

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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I reserved this thinking it was one of Strange’s longer novels, but it’s actually from a series she’s done for Barrington Stokes, an imprint of Collins that publishes short books by British children’s writers that are designed (writing, layout, typeface, paper stock) to be dyslexia-friendly

3 months ago 1 0 1 0

Not 100% down with the narration, but definitely holds your attention on a long walk

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

It is weird and brutal and richly layered and I struggle to imagine it being published today.

3 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Rediscovering how complex Melvin Burgess’s “Bloodtide” is. Based on the Völsung epic, set in a London abandoned to warring gang factions, fringed by human-animal-machine hybrids, told from multiple perspectives, & with a long passage I’ve just listened to that I suspect is based on Princess Diana

3 months ago 1 0 1 0