The Mookse and the Gripes discussion
Favorite Presses
>
Two Dollar Radio
date
newest »



I highly recommend 2 Dollar Radio's The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish. The Newest Literary Fiction Group had a great discussion thread on it a couple of years ago.

"Two Dollar Radio is a family-run outfit founded in 2005 with the mission to reaffirm the cultural and artistic spirit of the publishing industry. We ai..."
I am wallowing in their website! They've got a 5 books for $49 deal that looks so tempting.....

I second the recommendation for The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish.
I also have Alligator and Other Stories from Two Dollar Radio.

I’m on page 93. How far are you and what troubles you?


And thanks, Stacia, for starting the thread. As Nadine is, I'm very tempted to by that 5 for &49 deal.
The Deeper the Water, the Uglier the Fish sounds like a book that could induce depression. I am not a fan of books in which children are abused by parents - it happens way too often.

LindaJ, Generally, I avoid depression-inducing books, but I don't think Deeper is one of those, at least it wasn't for me. I read it a couple of years ago, but as I recall, there's no graphic abuse, no violence - it's more allusive. And there's humor, the girls are strong characters in different ways, so it's not a tale of pure victimhood.

Peacefully, I would like to point out that while there was indeed a faction of "far right militia/neo-n*zi" activity in re: to Ukraine in 2014, Russia has repeatedly & extensively amplified that as part of a long-term playbook of Russian propaganda/disinformation. Russia has also completely fabricated similar information.
For example:


Linda, I liked The Deeper the Water…and Nadine is right, the abuse is not physical, it’s much more twisted than that. It’s more psychological.

On a different note, I noticed that Hoopla has some Two Dollar Radio books. So maybe I'll be reading one of theirs soon (although I feel some trepidation about trying The Deeper the Water, at least right now. I'm not in the right headspace for it, I think.)

Sorry to jump in, but I just want to point out that the far right factions (ultranationalists and neo-Nazis) were the driving force in 2014 and those who shaped its outcome. It was an illegal coup but the West still loved them in spite of their pedigree and political ideology because they were useful pawns in the game against Russia (just like al-Qaidah / jihadist groups were a useful tool against Assad in Syria)
The neo-Nazi Azov battalion was later incorporated into the Ukrainian army in whole and let loose on the Russian-speaking populations of the Donbas and elsewhere. It is still part of the Ukrainian army.
Not a single Western media outlet, any pundit or analyst, will give the necessary context and tell the full story because it would be career suicide. One can still abhor the invasion and still see the complete picture.
Propaganda and disinformation is a two-way street.



David, you make a good point about further context and balance might have strengthened the book. (I have no real opinion on that yet as I haven't yet read the book.)




Katya and Vera are important characters in I Will Die in a Foreign Land, too.

Linda, would you say this is a depressing book? I love Vodolazkin, but I keep putting it off.....


Good to know. Laurus is my favorite too - one of my favorite books ever. I measure all historical fiction by it (well, along with the Wolf Hall trilogy.)


Books mentioned in this topic
Laurus (other topics)The Aviator (other topics)
The Aviator (other topics)
Laurus (other topics)
I Will Die in a Foreign Land (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Eugene Vodolazkin (other topics)Eugene Vodolazkin (other topics)
Hanif Abdurraqib (other topics)
Andre Perry (other topics)
Adam Thompson (other topics)
Their page:
I like some of the voices they are publishing. I have They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us by Hanif Abdurraqib waiting on my shelf. And while I can't say I loved Some of Us Are Very Hungry Now by Andre Perry, I am still glad to have read the essay collection.
I am looking forward to the publication of Born Into This by Adam Thompson, an indigenous writer from Tasmania.