reading log: cheap lands colorado by ted conover

Book Info

Cheap Land Colorado: Off-Gridders at America’s Edge by Ted Conover (2024)

Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir, History

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/28281260/book/300006632

Acquired from: Little Free Library, Denver, Colorado, USA

Started reading: November 13, 2025

Finished reading: December 2, 2025 (DNF)

Reading Notes

Page 20: It’s hard not to be a little judgmental of people who buy land and put a house up and then have no money to sustain themselves afterwards but this author is supremely kind and writes in an un-sensationalistic manner which I appreciate.

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reading log: confessions of a concierge by bonnie g. smith

Book Info

Confessions of a Concierge: Madame Lucie’s History of Twentieth-Century France
by Bonnie G. Smith (1985)

Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir, History

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/1238610/

Acquired from: Capitol Hill Books, Denver, Colorado, USA ($6.50) [see also: Indie Bookstore Visit Log]

Started reading: November 6, 2025

Finished reading: November 13, 2025

Review

An interesting memoir/biography of a woman who grew up in early 20th century France and lived through to the 1980s. Focuses almost entirely on the subject (the concierge) and not so much on the people who live in her building, and in fact the “memoir” part ends when she gets the job and then the “biography” part starts when she’s been working there for 40 years. The gap was noticeable but I assume it happened because the author couldn’t get her to talk about that time period as much as she did the before-concierge job part.

Reading Notes

Copyright page says the following:

The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.

I’ve never seen that before, but sure enough the pages aren’t yellowed and are sturdier than many other paperbacks, more like a nice hardcover paper.

Page xvi: Quite a long-winded intro on why this story deserves to be told by a historian and why it’s important to historians or whatever which I think must be a sign of the time it was written (1985,) because nowadays it’s just taken for granted that first-person historical info is important and wanted?? Published by Yale so maybe something there too– like author had to argue why it’s academic, maybe?

Page 3: First part of book is written in first-person POV from POV of Madame Lucie, and covers her childhood and adult years up to becoming a concierge. Second part is third person from POV of historian and covers her life that overlaps with the historian.

Page 12: Can’t find a β€œQueen Navolo” but there was a Queen Ranavalona III around that time period: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranavalona_III

Page 14: Separation of church and state apparently means you can have religious schools but the teachers can’t wear religious garb? I’m gonna have to Wikipedia this later for more info.

Page 19: β€œlittle bugs” in their hair from lack of regular washing, but it wasn’t lice. French term punaises β€” which a quick search pulls up either stink bugs or bed bugs, neither of which I think someone would tolerate in their hair for months.

Page 38: First boyfriend died in the war, second one was already married. My god, it’s like a novel!

Page 51: Both her parents were buried in Pere Lachaise cemetery. I’ve been there!

Page 60: Secret stash of 700 francs in 1925 = worth about $645 USD in today’s money

Page 63: Ford factory workers (and their families) were evacuated from Paris during WW2 and sent to Bordeaux! I didn’t know that.

Page 76: Kitten murder! Gah πŸ˜–

Page 88: About a Californian painter living in Mme Lucile’s building:

Harton always returned to Paris, glad to be back to the French style and a place where he, like most expatriates, could feel his freedom by not belonging to the society.

Page 129: Noticing quite a few typos/missing ending punctuation in this part of the book.

Page 151: Interesting theory that as Mme Lucie aged her memory started to go and as it went her focus became her physical body because that’s all she could see/interact with. On the other hand ending the book with the main β€œcharacter” sitting with her underwear around her ankles because she couldn’t bend to pull them back up is a major bummer.


See also: Books Read (2025) / All Reading Logs

reading log: my love affair with england by susan allen toth

Book Info

My Love Affair with England: A Traveler’s Memoir by Susan Allen Toth (1992)

Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir, Travel

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/56906/

Acquired from: Capitol Hill Books, Denver, Colorado, USA ($7.50) [see also: Indie Bookstore Visit Log]

Started reading: October 31, 2025

Finished reading: November 4, 2025

Review

I picked this up because I nearly bought it from a UBS in Milwaukee a few months ago. It caught my eye again, mostly because I’m planning to go to England for a few months next year AND I adore pre-internet travel memoirs, so I decided to get it!

It’s a very charming book which focuses mostly on the bits of England that the author enjoyed, mixed in with some memoir-type stuff about her personal life and how it intersected with her visits to England and how that affected her time there. I enjoyed reading about the specific things she likes, as you can tell she REALLY likes them– but not to the point where it sounds like ass-kissing.

I also liked that she said specifically she only likes visiting and doesn’t want to move there; often I find that actually living somewhere is way different than being a visitor, often to the location’s detriment because now you have to deal with things like sorting trash and paying electricity bills, when really what you want to do is wander around looking at old buildings and eating bacon sandwiches.

Having been to England myself several times I recognized a lot of the stuff she was talking about, and that was fun, too. Overall I really enjoyed this book!

Reading Notes

Page 9:

I do not blame the English. If they keep to themselves, I also keep to myself. At home in America, I guard my privacy, cherishing the easy and congenial company of my husband or quiet time alone. When I am in England, I need even more meditative space. Since I travel quite intensely, looking and listening and walking hard, at night I am ready to stop. I have to absorb what I experience and gather my energies for the next day. I want to sink into bed with a book, not traipse down to the pub to talk about politics or football. So I do not usually make social overtures.

Same!!

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reading log: enemy feminisms by sophie lewis

Book Info

Enemy Feminisms: TERFs, Policewomen, and Girlbosses Against Liberation by Sophie Lewis (2025)

Genre: Nonfiction

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/32671363/

Acquired from: Library (ebook)

Started reading: October 8, 2025

Finished reading: TBD

Reading Notes

0%: Started reading this to give my brain a little workout and so far it’s working! This is also the first ebook I’m doing a reading log for, and I haven’t decided how to mark down the annotation locations. Based on how my KOreader Sync plugin downloads things (eg without percentages), looks like it’s gonna be grouped under chapter titles.

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reading log: a trip of one’s own by kate wills

Book Info

A Trip of One’s Own: Hope, Heartbreak, and Why Traveling Solo Could Change Your Life by Kate Wills (2021)

Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir, Travel

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/28155352/

Acquired from: Little Free Library, [undisclosed location], USA

Started reading: September 19, 2025

Finished reading: October 28, 2025

Bookmark: Books, Inc. β€œWhere the Bay Goes for Books” (came with book)

Review

I feel like she sold the idea of this book as her following historical solo female traveler’s travel routes and then it turned into a memoir about how she messed up her life and kept making probably bad choices and then somehow it turned out okay. Every other chapter is a “how to” for other solo female travelers and mostly they’re pretty good, but it’s weird to include those in a personal memoir type book when they seem like they’d better fit in a guide type book. I did enjoy reading about all the different historical women– many of whom I haven’t heard of before, and whose books I can’t find online despite them being in the public domain.

Notes

Page 0: I already travel solo extensively (in fact, full-time for years) but this seems more like a travel memoir than a how-to so I think it’ll be good to read.

She’s following the travels of one of the early travel writers, Egeria, who went on a pilgrimage which means visiting Israel and other nearby sites. In fact this author starts right off in Israel, just fyi.

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πŸ“– reading log: here begins the dark sea

Book Info

Here Begins the Dark Sea: Venice, a Medieval Monk, and the Creation of the Most Accurate Map of the World by Meredith Francesca Small (2023)

Genre: Nonfiction, History

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/29433561/book/293129903

Acquired from: Little Free Library, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA

Started reading: August 21, 2025

Put on hold Sept. 2 — switching to ebook but I’m on a waitlist for it at the library

Finished reading: TBD

Bookmark: Powell’s, “Never Lose Your Place”

Reading Updates

Page 0: This font size is so small! I thought I’d be able to speed through this book because it didn’t look that big, but with this font size it’s actually probably very long whoops

I do love maps! I’m trying to train myself to use a paper map when I’m out sightseeing, but it’s a bit cumbersome compared to just pulling out your phone. And you’re obviously a tourist if you’re looking at a map (paper, street sign style) which can be a problem in some places. Anyway I’m excited for this book!

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πŸ“– reading log: bootstrapper by mardi jo link

Book Info

Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/13493339/t/Bootstrapper-From-Broke-to-Badass-on-a-Northern-Michigan-Farm

Acquired from: Digger’s, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA

Discarded: In Unnumbered LFL, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA

Started reading: August 18, 2025

Finished reading: August 21, 2025

Review (written Aug 21)

I think it’s easy to judge someone when they seem to be making multiple bad decisions in a row so I don’t want to get into all the things I think she did wrong (most of which stemmed from her inability to ask for help) and how she never changed through the course of the memoir. (I’m not sure if she was trying to point out how stupid she was being or if she was trying to brag about making it without help; either way I’m judging her. Silently. Mostly silently.) (Edit: if you want more specifics about the things I’m judging her for, this review from Ella_Jill on LibraryThing pretty much covers it.)

The tone did kind of change though– the early chapters had a more witty biting humor to them and the last chapters were much more melancholy. Which makes sense, because of course she’d be sad about losing all the things she lost. But I don’t know that I’d say those last chapters “matched” with the first few chapters, as such. I think perhaps the biting humor ones were sold individually as stories to magazines and the melancholy ones came after, so that’s the disconnect.

I’m not sure I’d recommend this for people interested in farming/homesteading OR Michigan-based memoirs, but perhaps if you’re interested instead in post-divorce life then this would be a good book for you.

(Crossposted to LibraryThing)

Reading Updates (Aug 17-21)

Page 0: The Forest Unseen is too brainy to read straight thru, so I’m alternating it with this memoir which is about a newly divorced single mom on a farm in Northern Michigan.

Can’t find a bookmark so I’m using a Goodwill receipt from Chicago.

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πŸ“– reading log: the forest unseen by david george haskell

Book Info

Cover of The Forest Unseen

Genre: Nonfiction, Natural History, Ecology

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/11720259/t/The-Forest-Unseen-A-Years-Watch-in-Nature

Acquired from: Little Free Library, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA [see log]

Started reading: August 17, 2025

Finished reading: September 2 (DNF)

May come back to this later (in ebook version) but it’s not holding my attention and I don’t want to carry it around waiting for it.

Reading Updates

Title Page: This copy is signed by the author!

Page xii:

Indeed, the truth of the forest may be more clearly and vividly revealed by the contemplation of a small area than it could be by donning ten-league boots, covering a continent but uncovering little.

Page 8: Somebody did a lot of underlining in pencil but stopped after the second chapter. Guessing they DNF’d this, but I’m enjoying it so far. It reminds me of Seasons of the Wild but more satisfyingly science-y.

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πŸ“– reading log: i married a logger by julie anderson

Book Info

Genre: Nonfiction, Memoir

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/1911762/t/I-Married-a-Logger-Life-in-Michigans-Tall-Timber

Acquired from: Digger’s, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA

Started reading: August 14, 2025

Finished reading: August 17, 2025

Review (written Aug 17)

Overall a good read– author has a good amount of humor and can write funny scenes well. It’s interesting to read about how the logging industry worked before it became industrialized in the late 1940s. The author has some typical 1950s attitudes about thinness and unions which are questionable in modern times, but overall not too bad. It’s an upbeat memoir about a particular time in Michigan that I enjoyed reading.

(Crossposted to LibraryThing)

I’m not going to keep this particular copy because the glue binding is totally falling apart, but if and when I happen to build a library for myself in the future I would enjoy having a copy of this on the shelf.

Reading Updates (Aug 14-17)

Page 0: I picked this book up because a) it’s a memoir set in Michigan (where I’m currently catsitting) and b) the author did her own illustrations and they’re pretty good! Published originally in 1951 and this is a reprint by a local Michigan publisher in the 80s.

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πŸ“– reading log: seasons of the wild by sy montgomery

Book Info

Topics: Nonfiction, Nature

LibraryThing: https://www.librarything.com/work/3092900/

Acquired from: Little Free Library, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA [see visit log]

Started reading: August 6, 2025

Finished reading: August 9, 2025

Review

A book with enthusiastic views of nature (animals, plans, seasons, etc.) presented in a way that just wanted me to see sources. Like, many mentions of things that happened in “recent times” (the 90s) but in a way that reminded me of those newspaper tidbit sections that were just there to give you something to read. Bibliography at the end which does include things used to write the book itself, but I personally would’ve preferred something more science-y rather than casual info-sharing.

Reading Updates

Page 0: This one didn’t come with a bookmark like Moby-Duck did, so I’m using one I got from Downtown Books in Milwaukee. I picked up this book partly because of the topic, partly because the blurbs on the back (“Sy Montgomery has insight into the Others that every nature writer on this continent envies.”), and partly because the author photos shows Sy holding a barred owl.

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