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Yay for a decent reading month! :) And 150 pages totally counts, especially in a

From: senorbrightside Find all posts by senorbrightside View senorbrightside's profile Send private message to senorbrightside
Date: Wed, 11-Mar-2026 10:14:52 AM PDT
Where: SoapZone Community Message Board
In topic: πŸ“š πŸ“š πŸ“šWhatcha Reading, SZ? March 2026 Edition πŸ“š πŸ“š πŸ“š posted by senorbrightside
In reply to: T'was a decent reading month for me and despite it being a shorter month, I posted by Wahoo
short month.

The Guest Cat by Takashi Hiraida - If someone asked me to sum up, in the most general way possible, Japanese fiction, I would do so with just two words: magical cats. The cat in this novella (this was my 150 page read) isn't quite as magical as the cats in some of the other Japanese fiction I've read; he's more mystical, and a bit inspiring. I wasn't even sure at first that this was fiction, as it reads a lot like a memoir. A nice little book but beware--the cat does NOT get a happy ending. And for that, I cannot give the book higher than a B, even though I mostly enjoyed the story and TH's writing style.

Hmm, I can't remember any cats in Haruki Murakami, who I think is one of the most famous Japanese writers. It's been ten years or so since I've read him and it was always in Spanish SO there may have been magical cats that I just don't remember :)

The Morningside by Tea Obreht - Set in yet another dystopian future where flooding is ruining the planet, The Morningside is about an 11 year old girl and her mother who are part of a refugee program and are living with the mom's aunt in the crumbling but still stately luxury apartment building, the Morningside. At first, I thought I'd read this before as the beginning chapters as a lot of the set up is reminiscent of Awake the Floating City by Susanna Kwan, but then the premises veer sharply away from one another. I don't want to give too much away but I will say this: the Morningside is set in a land that seems to be the US but isn't specifically named, and our heroines come from a fictitious land that is reminiscent of Central American countries, and despite being written in 2024, The Morningside is relevant to, and even somewhat prescient regarding the current situation regarding immigration. There was one thread that I thought was going to be the main premise--a somewhat supernatural one that I was finding really intriguing--but then it fades somewhat and the story becomes something else entirely. Which is why I'm giving the book an A- and not an A because darn it, I wanted the first premise to be the one that's followed through <g>.

Hmm, I'm suddenly interested in this one!


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