First this:
Because we all need a little brightness in dark times—and if you read nothing else today—here are the Winners of the 2025 World Nature Photography Awards. Scroll down to see the blue-spotted mudskipper. You won’t be disappointed.
The what
Some of the most interesting books I read have been recommended to me by other writers. Recent finds:
Girl in a Bear Suit, poems by Jen Jabaily-Blackburn, Winner of the Elixir Press Annual Poetry Award
Shark Heart, A Love Story, novel by Emily Habeck, about marriage, motherhood, metamorphosis, letting go, and a beloved husband who transforms into a great white shark (see also Let me tell you – a previous Under Construction post)
Big Breath In, novel by John Straley about a marine biologist dying from cancer, saving babies, and a ton of whale information which is both real and metaphor
The Braille Encyclopedia, Brief Essays on Altered Sight, experimental memoir in the shape of an encyclopedia, by Naomi Cohn (from Rose Metal Press)
Remember – the Science of Memory and the Art of Forgetting, NF by Lisa Genova, about exactly what its title says it is
And the why
All stories have an emotional engine that drives them. Mysteries run on curiosity. Thrillers run on heart-thumping adrenaline. Horror stories run on fear.
And the fuel for those emotional engines is anticipation.
Most stories use a fair bit of what’s called negatively valenced anticipation: A sense of worry. Dread. Anxiety that things will get worse. …
But guess what kind of anticipation romance novels use?
Positively valenced.
Katherine Center, in her essay disguised as an author’s note to Hello Stranger, the story of an artist that loses her ability to see faces.
Stop by. Tell us what you’re reading and what you thought of the blue-spotted mudskipper.