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What I’ve Read

RIP my Storygraph streak – I missed a day three days back and ended a streak of 150 continuous days of logging my reading. That means I started it April 20th, 2023, when I had covid and before my dear spouse’s appendix got removed. (It’s been a year, don’t recommend)

Saga Vol 9 & 10 – 10 is nominated for a Hugo for Best Comic. This series remains very solid. I think the heart of it is the relationship of Hazel to her parents and them to each other, the spiral of family that is vulnerable and unsettled because, well, people are trying to kill them. I did read them all rather quickly so they flowed together a bit.

Revenge of the Librarians by Tom Gauld – This was charming! A collection of short cartoons, zoomed thru it in a day.

Into the North by Amber Huxley – Debut novel – billed as a “Dark MM Romance” and while it doesn’t really come together for me, there are some interesting points between characters, and I hope she doesn’t stop writing. I found out about it from a tiktoker who didn’t actually recommend it, but liked a particular scene in which the captive Roman character explains the size of the Roman empire by drawing a map of the Empire for the Germanic tribes that are interrogating him. They cannot comprehend the scale of the Roman Empire until they ask him to mark their village and the site of the recent battle where he was captured. Tho these locations are days of travel away from each other, on the map, they are almost on top of each other – and at that point, the Germans understand the scale of the Empire that has just attacked them. That scene was good! The romance was largely meh. Didn’t see the attraction between the main characters. Made me want to re-read Patience, A Steady Hand by Helenish, which had much darker darkness and much more believable romance.

Smoke Gets in Your Eyes – Caitlin Doughty – Audiobook – I have enjoyed Doughty’s YouTube channel “Ask a Mortician,” which has provided a thoughtful and compassionate approach to answering questions about death, and does a great job of looking at historical corpses from a thoughtful and funny lens. This books is much more autobiographical, and quite touching, and also, very very blunt about the realities of death and the death industry. It was great book and I really enjoyed her story about how she got to where she is, and holding the criticisms she does about the death industry in the US.

- A note on fatness: I have seen Caitlin Doughty discuss the reality of dying while fat with compassion and helpful information. However, the opening anecdote about the corpse in the chapter “Bublating” is… not that. It feels gross, and that’s striking to me; I was surprised by that from Doughty. The rest of the chapter goes into decay as a topic, and is not focused on fat bodies in particular; just, this anecdote felt like it leaned into the whole “fatness equals death and that’s a fat person’s fault” narrative in a way that doesn’t actually doesn’t add to the book or need to be highlighted. There’s an element of moral shaming in the story where a colleague warns her against getting fat as a risk to her life – which is funny since the whole point of the book is that death is inevitable and everyone is going to die, and we should maybe talk about that as a society? I mentioned this when reading this last week and most of the rest of the book is mostly okay. I do like Doughty, but this one part was in fact a bit hurtful.

Short stuff - “Murder By Pixel: Crime and Responsibility in the Digital Darkness” S.L. Huang - Up for the Hugo for Best Novelette – This is an article on real world internet harassment and AI with a fictional conceit at its core. It’s fine – I think the reporting is probably more interesting to me than the fiction, and that’s okay.

What I’m Reading:
To Shape a Dragon's Breath - Moniquill Blackgoose – 6% - Just starting, but really enjoying it.
Thud! By Terry Pratchett
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51%
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next:
House of Leaves – The Discord book group has picked this to read next! We’ll see how it goes!
Murderbot Diaries 1 +2 for Xing Book club
City of Blades – Robert Jackson Bennett Xing Book Club

Hugos (longer stuff)
A Mirror Mended (Hugos, novella)

Hugos Short Stories and Novelettes:
“The Difference Between Love and Time” Catherynne M. Valente (Someone in Time: Tales of Time-Crossed
“A Dream of Electric Mothers” Wole Talabi (Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction
“Resurrection” Ren Qing (Future Fiction/Science Fiction World
“The Ghost of Workshops Past” S.L. Huang (Tordotcom)
“D.I.Y.” John Wiswell


Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read:
Winter’s Orbit – Everina Maxwell – Xing Book Club - Done with this re-read! I love this when it was a fic called “The Course of Honour”, I loved it on the first read in 2021; this was a lovely chance to revisit. I think that Kiem and Jainen make a fascinating study of contrasts – Kiem has a good heart and strong ethics and charisma that no one has seen as a skill because it’s never been put to serve a cause they thought worthy. Jainen has a strange and stubborn endurance that comes from having a cause he’s absolutely devoted to, but he’s exhausted and isolated. Together, they are both a great couple to read about, and a force to be reckoned with.

Ogres – Adrian “Tchaikovsky” Czajkowski - currently reading for Hugo purposes. (Best Novella nominee) – I am not quite convinced by this book at the 20% mark, but I recalled that last year, Elder Race crept up on me slowly and won me over completely at the end.
-Well, called it – definitely an interesting twist to the ending! It’s meaningful that the story is told in the second person, let’s just say – that the main character and the narrator are not the same person.

Saga – Vol 1-8 (so far) Brian K Vaughan – I had read the first few collected volumes of Saga went it came out, but most of this is new to me. I am trying to get context for Volume 10, which is up for a Hugo. I like Marko and Alana, and by Volume 5, the fact that this is a serialized story is starting to show at the seams. The themes of the series: parenthood as sacrifice, the way having a child changes you and makes you vulnerable or stronger, the complicatedness of being married, are all still showing up front and center. It’s goofy with a good heart and I am inclined to be a bit indulgent but I should probably give it more time between volumes – I read 1-5 in a rush over two days and it’s starting to blue together. I really enjoyed the writer in volume 2, the kidnapper Dengo, and the computer prince’s unhinged fall from grace. Update: I’m up to 8 now, actually – continues to be good, probably groundbreaking for certain topics in mainstream comics but just overall good for most of the writing.

Hugo bits and Pieces
“If You Find Yourself Speaking to God Address God with the Informal You” John Chu (Uncanny Magazine) – Gay, kind of about Superman as an immigrant who cannot pass as white, if you squint.
“We Built This City” Marie Vibbert (Clarkesworld) – I think this is a good story but I would like some Latine people to read it and have opinions. I’m not sure if I am missing something.


What I’m Reading:

Thud! By Terry Pratchett
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51%
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

Smoke Gets in Your Eyes – Caitlin Doughty – Audiobook – I have enjoyed Doughty’s YouTube channel “Ask a Mortician,” which has provided a thoughtful and compassionate approach to answering questions about death, and does a great job of looking at historical corpses from a thoughtful and funny lens. This books is much more autobiographical, and quite touching. I will admit, it is unflinching about the details of how a crematory handles bodies, so I don’t recommended it without reservations, but I am enjoying it.
- A note: I have seen Caitlin Doughty discuss the reality of dying while fat with compassion and helpful information. However, the opening anecdote about the corpse in the chapter “Bublating” is… not that. It feels gross, and that’s striking to me because I have seen Doughty address the realities of dead fat people in ways that don’t make me upset. I think this anecdote needed to be reworked or excluded entirely – Doughty comes across as unreflective here in a way that is just… not in line with my high opinion of her.

What I’ll Read Next:
Hugos (longer stuff)
Saga Vol. 10 (Hugos – but I liked this series and fell away from it, so I might dig into it again)
A Mirror Mended (Hugos, novella)

Hugos Short Stories and Novelettes:
“Murder By Pixel: Crime and Responsibility in the Digital Darkness” S.L. Huang (Clarkesworld
“The Difference Between Love and Time” Catherynne M. Valente (Someone in Time: Tales of Time-Crossed
“A Dream of Electric Mothers” Wole Talabi (Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction
“Resurrection” Ren Qing (Future Fiction/Science Fiction World
“The Ghost of Workshops Past” S.L. Huang (Tordotcom)
“D.I.Y.” John Wiswell

To Shape a Dragon's breath
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes – came from the library
Dresden Files (sigggh)


Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
The Spare Man – Mary Robinette Kowalski – A g ood little mystery in space! I like the characters, I liked the author devoting time and attention to the main character’s emotional and physical past traumas and I like the cleverness of the whole thing. As a person who doesn’t read mysteries that much, I have no idea if this is good!

The Yakuza's Bias 1 by Teki Yatsuda – Adorable – I love a scary tough man wholeheartedly devoting himself to being an excellent fan of a boy band.

DUNE: The Official Movie Graphic Novel by Drew Johnson, Zid, Lilah Sturges
- Meh. Better than the other one, but not actually interesting.

What I’m Reading:
Winter’s Orbit – Everina Maxwell – like 90% done – Xing book club
Thud! By Terry Pratchett
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51%
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next:
Hugos (longer stuff)
Saga Vol. 10
Ogres
A Mirror Mended

To Shape a Dragon's breath
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes – came from the library
Dresden Files (sigggh)

(I also have like, 8 short stories and novelettes to get to)

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
I'm Kinda Chubby and I'm Your Hero Vol. 1 (Original Japanese:
冴えない僕は、君のヒーロー ) by Nore – This was a very cute and fluffy romance manga – a young and fat stage actor, Ponjirou, is anxious about his performance skills when an anonymous fan leaves a gift of baked goods for him. Konnosuke, the shy and dedicated apprentice baker, left his gift for Ponjirou after seeing him give a compelling performance in a small role. They have a couple of near misses on actually meeting and recognizing each other, but eventually meet and confess their intention to be mutual fans of each other. I think this is charming and the stakes could not be lower. There’s some diet talk and some shallow depictions of Ponjirou’s eating habits, but I hope that’s all resolved when Ponjirou is told by a doctor that he should eat and rest regularly. I think I went in with a little exposure to Japanese fan culture from friends who follow Takarazuka Review, and I think that was helpful to smooth over any questions I had about cultural differences. The translation seemed quite good!

Dune: the Graphic Novel: Book 1 - Dune -Brian Herbert, Frank Herbert, Kevin J. Anderson. I read this book by mistake bc I didn’t realize there was an “Official Graphic Novel” and an “Official Movie Graphic Novel” and I am moderately annoyed because this means I have to read another Dune book. Actual review – this is a staid and restrained adaptation of the novel, it has little visual charm but it’s not badly done. It’s just not anywhere near as fun as any film or TV adaptation I’ve seen, and I’ve seen most of them. So, moderately resentful, I move on to the actual book I was supposed to read.


What I’m Reading:

The Spare Man – Mary Robinette Kowalski – like 70%, a good little mystery
Runaway Jury – 50% ish – Abandoned
Thud! By Terry Pratchett
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51%
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next:
Hugos (longer stuff)
Saga Vol. 10
Ogres
A Mirror Mended
The correct Dune Graphic novel
winter's orbit
the shape a Dragon's breath

(I also have like, 8 short stories and novelettes to get to)

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read:

Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow – Tom King – Hugo Nominee – Best Graphic Novel – Pretty meh. It’s competently written? I think it alludes to the themes that it’s interested in more than actually explores them. I don’t like Tom King’s character work and I think this suffered from a tonal problem of trying to mimic an older style of Golden Age SciFi that I tend to find distant and boring. Tom King can write a great paragraph! I don’t think I’ve seen him do things that actually explore character very well, except in a grim ‘everyone is selfish and evil at their core’ vibe. Strange Adventures last year was more interesting, possibly because I was less familiar with the character that he was reviving and the nostalgic tone he struck worked better with that kind of spaceman spiff character. While I don’t think I like King’s view of the world, I think he’s a perfectly fine writer, just not to my tastes.

Abandoned: Still Just a Geek: An Annotated Memoir – gave it three tries, it assumes I know far more about this guy’s life than I do, and apologizes for writing his memoir in 2004 that had some moderately awful takes (mostly being an edgelord and whiny teenages takes) but it’s rendered basically unreadable bc the footnotes on the text from 2004 assume you know the content of the whole memoir from 2004 – and since I don’t, the book ends up giving important information in a very haphazard manner. I tried?

Wedding Bells… No More like Hell's Bells by Jade_Dragoness – Dresden Files fanfic, about 100k and incomplete, it was great and plotty and hit the tone I loved for Dresden Files back in the day.

What I’m Reading:

The Spare Man – Mary Robinette Kowalski – Fun!
Runaway Jury – 50% ish
Thud! By Terry Pratchett
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51%
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next:

Dune Graphic Novel
Other hugo bits like Ogres 

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read:
Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes – Rob Wilkins - Hugos 2023 Best Related Work Nominee – This was lovely and touching and deeply sweet and sad. Wilkins was Pratchett’s personal assistant and business manager for 20 years, which often involved literally taking dictation for Pratchett as he was writing out novels. It shows – there’s a deep affection and clear eyed understanding of Pratchett that makes the grief of the last sections of the book hit all the harder. It’s a great review of Pratchett’s life from childhood – and since Pratchett was working on the autobiography before he got too sick to work, he was able to contribute a lot of his childhood memories. It feels like a book that starts very very Pratchett and ends with Pratchett slowly leaving the text, as he slowly left his life. I cried at the end, and coming on Season 2 of Good Omens, it made me want to get immediately back into Pratchett’s writing, so I picked up Thud for a re-read.

(I honestly don’t know how many Pratchett books I have read – I have definitely read Guards, Guards!, Witches Abroad, Lord and Ladies, Maskerade, Feet of Clay, The Wee Free Men, Monstrous Regiment, Small Gods, Night Watch, Going Postal, Making Money, Snuff, and at least one of the Rincewind books – so I have definitely got a sample going. I have been cautious about reading all the rest – I am trying to keep a few new ones back for a rainy day.)

I also re-read This Is How You Lose the Time War and I enjoyed it as much the second time.

What I’m Reading:
Thud! By Terry Pratchett
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51%
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next:
Fun home : a family tragicomic
Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow
The Spare Man
Still Just a Geek: An Annotated Memoir

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read:
Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher – Oh, I loved this. I do love T. Kingfisher in general, and this has a great set up: One of three princesses has figured out that something terrible is happening to her sister, and decides to do something about it. Kingfisher’s author’s note says that this book arose out of a single line that stuck in her head “You came to me in your cloak of nettles with the dog made of bone at your side” and that became first the short story Godmother (https://storyspeaker.wordpress.com/2015/01/25/godmother-by-t-kingfisher/) and then later this novel. It’s compelling and sets a march of a determined main character who has a deadline to save her sister by doing several impossible tasks – the first of which is to build a dog out of bones. The cast of characters feel deeply real, even as they are magical, and each sounds like a distinct person. I love this. I love T. Kingfisher. I love it so much I cannot do more than hug the book to my chest and coo at it.

The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi - Hugo 2023 Nominee for Best Novella – Somehow, in a book where each character sounds exactly the same, there is more dialog than actual plot, and all of it (all of it, how can it be all of it) is info dumping. It’s utterly derivative of Pacific Rim and Jurassic Park, and makes a joke of how unoriginal it is by having every character reference this at least once. I wish he would stop hanging lampshades on the tropes and just let them happen! Stop patting yourself on the back for telling your audience where your toolkit came from! Godzilla had something to say with its Kaiju, so did Pacific Rim - you've absorbed the form of the story but not the meaning behind it! It’s competent? It’s definitely a whole book? The reading is technically going quickly in terms of page count, but I am truly honestly not enjoying any of it. It’s like an action movie script - all potentially interesting visuals that some kind effects team will fill in later.  Note: I just finished it and while I definitely felt like this book was a chore to read, I respect it as a pandemic project that needed to be fun and joyful bc nothing else in life was good or easy at that time. But I don’t think I’m going to read more of Scalzi - too much of this book was just description of things that are happening.

What I’m Reading:
Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes – Rob Wilkins – 31% - Hugos 2023 Best Related Work Nominee (Delightful!)
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51%
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next:
Fun home : a family tragicomic
Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow
The Spare Man
Still Just a Geek: An Annotated Memoir

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (catwoman is angry)
What I’ve Read:

City of Stairs – Robert Jackson Bennett – Ok, this is a bit of a pacy read with some good world building and a great main character. It sets things up nice and slow and delivers on them throughout the book consistently. I really enjoyed it! The main character is from Fantasy South Asia

Monstress, Vol. 7: Devourer by Marjorie Liu (illustrated by Sana Takeda) (Hugo nominee for best comic) – Once again, I am torn between wishing I had started reading this when it came out and wishing the Hugos would only nominate single works in the comics category. This is beautiful and full of characters who are probably very important to the plot, only I don’t know anyone who wasn’t in volumes 1 and 6. I am begging the author to include a page with the headshots and names of each character in the collected volumes – the first volume came out in 2015, it’s been a while.

What I’m Reading:

Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes – Rob Wilkins – 31% - Hugos 2023 Best Related Work Nominee (Delightful!)
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 51% - continues bewildering with an interesting side of “Are you really sure that the documentary hypothesis unambiguously supports what you’re saying about the Hebrew Bible, bc you keep citing it like it does? You didn’t have nearly this many citations when you were talking about religion’s function in “““primitive cultures”””, dear author.”
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next
Horror: a very short introduction Darryl Jones.
The artist's reality : philosophies of art Mark Rothko
Helpmeet Naben Ruthnum.
Fun home : a family tragicomic
Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow
Nettle & Bone
The Kaiju Preservation Society
The Spare Man
Still Just a Geek: An Annotated Memoir

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
Legends & Lattes - Travis Baldree (Hugo Nominated Novel) -Cute but light, kind of an uncomplicated ‘power of friendship’ story.

What Moves the Dead – T. Kingfisher – Loved this. Creepy mushrooms and Gothic horror. Similar premise to Mexican Gothic, different metaphor. Nonbinary lead.

Blood, Sweat & Chrome: The Wild and True Story of Mad Max: Fury Road
- Kyle Buchanan – Delightful! Like the special features on the Lord of the Rings. Minor downsides: My vaguely positive feelings about Tom Hardy are well and truly toast, and the last chapter is an ad for the Furiosa prequel.

In other news, I finished watching Severance for the Hugos and it was so good that I forgot that I wasn’t watching it for its own sake. Compelling and aesthetically beautiful.

What I’m Reading
Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes – Rob Wilkins – 13% - Hugos 2023 Best Related Work Nominee (Delightful!)
Still Just a Geek – Wil Wheaton (tried this as an audiobook first and since it’s his previous memoir with lots of footnotes, that format did not work well.)
City of Stairs – 15% Xing Book Club
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 39% - static
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next
Horror: a very short introduction Darryl Jones.
The artist's reality : philosophies of art Mark Rothko
Helpmeet Naben Ruthnum.
Fun home : a family tragicomic Alison Bechdel.
Monstress vol. 7: Devourer
Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow
Nettle & Bone
The Kaiju Preservation Society
The Spare Man
Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes
Still Just a Geek: An Annotated Memoir

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (Answer the question; black and white)
What I’ve Read
Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia – Hugo Nominee 2023 Best novel – I would not vote for this book. I think the history element was fascinating, I think Moreno-Garcia did a really good job of situating this fictional set of circumstances into a place in history, but it felt a bit meh, a bit effortful, a bit lacking the charm of Mexican Gothic, and it felt very slow by comparison (which is a slow book). I have several other books from her that seem more interesting.

What I’m Reading

Legends and Lattes – Travis Baldree – 19%- Hugo 2023 Best Novel Nominee
Terry Pratchett: A Life With Footnotes – Rob Wilkins – 13% - Hugos 2023 Best Related Work Nominee (Delightful!)

City of Stairs – 4% Xing Book Club – 

Kristeva Powers of Horror – 39% - I keep running into this problem where Freudian analysis and its descendants feel like they are talking about a universal human infancy experience in forming views of the world AND ALSO turning to anthropology to mine it for anecdotes from specific “““primitive””” cultural practices. They hold them up as having something say to each other, and while the conclusions Kristeva draws out of these comparisons are sometimes interesting, it feels like there’s an assumption that an infant in Freud’s writing would have anything in common with a person engaging in, like, cultural practices half a world away? Like. Kristeva is both Bulgarian and writing in French -there’s got to be some local cultural contrast to draw from here that would have a far more grounded set of information to draw from. You’re claiming something is universal to human experience but can’t actual provide evidence that babies in the “”primitive”” cultures do the same thing as the babies in Western cultures? Like, it’s not unlikely to have lots of overlap – babies are gonna baby. But like, evidence? Please? But this is theory for theory’s sake, so I soldier on.

Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static

The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next
What Moves the Dead 
Monstress
Horror: a very short introduction Darryl Jones.
The artist's reality : philosophies of art Mark Rothko
Helpmeet Naben Ruthnum.
Fun home : a family tragicomic Alison Bechdel.

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
kitewithfish: (down the rabbit hole)
What I’ve Read

A Substitute Wife for the Prizefighter – Alice Coldbreath – Second in the series, and it remains are really well-crafted look at working class people in this period. The dynamics of the relationships are really human – the male leads are a bit on the ‘big hulk’ side, but with the capacity for self-reflection, kindness, and decent communication. I think Alice Coldbreath has written some damn good characters in this series.

The Last Unicorn – Peter S. Beagle – Oh, this was a pure indulgence to revisit. It feels both sweeter and sadder than I remembered. I need to watch the movie again. The sequel remains in my library pile.

Where the Drowned Girls Go – Seanan McGuire – Hugos 2023 Novella Nominee – Audiobook. Wayward Children #7 Last year I read #6, Across the Green Grass Fields, and I liked it as a standalone. This seems to unite threads from earlier books and talk more about the school that was only alluded to in the book I did read. So, I think I need to read the rest of the series before I judge, but, overall, while this is well written, I felt a bit at sea. I do think this is perfectly aimed for younger readers.

Into the Riverlands – Nghi Vo – Hugos 2023 Novella Nominee – Delightful, a reflection on how stories and who is telling them changes the meaning while also being very fun adventure story about a little cleric on a dangerous road.

Once and Future Vol 4 Monarchies in the UK by Kieron Gillen and Tamra Bonvillian – Hugos 2023 Comics Nominee – Eh. I feel more conflicted about giving any more attention to English culture than I have to these days. I would like to actually dig into the Welsh sources of the Arthurian legends from the older sources, someday, but it’s a distant project with no real drive behind it. That said, this does have different versions of King Arthur trying to kill each other, and that’s really fun.

Even Though I Knew the End by CL Polk – THIS is delightful. Speedy read. I adore CL Polk and will read anything she ever writes. Hugo 2023 Novella Nominee

Cyberpunk 2077 Big City Dreams – Eh. It’s fine, a short comic set in a dystopia with a thread of bittersweet nostalgia. Not bad! But not my vote for the win. Hugos 2023 Best Comic Nominee

What I’m Reading

Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia – It’s been years since I watched the movie, and I’m sure I ought to read the classic book. I had recently re-read Mexican Gothic and found it… basically fine? But it felt a little undercooked? I admit there are likely elements of Moreno-Garcia’s allusions and structures of reference that are escaping me. I will see how it works for me. Hugo Nominee 2023 Best novel

City of Stairs – 4% Xing Book Club – Static, annoyed at it for petty reasons, but starting it up again, I think I will enjoy it this time around!
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily and sometimes via the Podcast, so this is hard to pin down where I am, but it’s very fun.
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 24% This book makes no sense but we soldier on.
The King in Yellow 25% -static

What I’ll Read Next
Horror: a very short introduction Darryl Jones.
The artist's reality : philosophies of art Mark Rothko
Helpmeet Naben Ruthnum.
Fun home : a family tragicomic Alison Bechdel.

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe
kitewithfish: (Default)
Real Life

I usually try to get a re-watch of 1776 in on July 4th weekend as a reminder that, yes, this country has always been a mess and we've found stuff worth saving from that trashfire each and every time. Didn't happen this weekend bc I had folks over - actually a lot of folks! We actually celebrated the holiday (unusual for us!) as an excuse to throw a party for personal reasons: The dear spouse got citizenship this last year!  In what felt like more of whimper than a bang since the immigration offices are still doing small-scale citizenship oaths on the day of the exam rather than, as was traditional, having hundred of people congregate at a local historical site with all their family and friends. Spouse just went in, did the exam, passed, hung out for a couple of hours, and got sworn in as a citizen! (Missing the opportunity to change their name easily, which is apparently a one-time freebie you get with your naturalization.)


What I’ve Read

This is How You Lose the Time War by Max Gladstone and Amal El-Mohtar – Just excellent. It’s like a poem with a plot, and the plot is about how the act of loving someone and choosing them changes the world and changes you. If you liked Good Omens, you will probably like this. Does not pull its punches.

Arcana by blackkat - Ongoing Star Wars fic just hit the 50K mark so I am logging it as Read, even tho it is ongoing. I'm not putting it in my reading journal yet bc it's ongoing but I wanted some record of this fic because it's gorgeous and I'm adoring the war kat's writing is developing Granta Omega and his weird force null powers to work with overthrowing Palpatine.  Link: https://archiveofourown.org/works/47838349

What I’m Reading:
The last unicorn by Peter S. Beagle -51% - Continues devastating.
A Substitute Wife for the Prizefighter – Alice Coldbreath – 64% - Working class Victorians? Communication issues solved by communicating? Rather hot (het) sex? So far so good!
City of Stairs – 4% Xing Book Club – I had previously not finished this book, despite the excellent plot and good characters, because I was annoyed at it for petty reasons, but starting it up again, I think I will enjoy it this time around!
Dracula – Keeping up with Dracula Daily and sometimes via the Podcast, so this is hard to pin down where I am, but it’s very fun.
The Count of Monte Cristo – 46% - Static
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 24% This book makes no sense but we soldier on.
The King in Yellow 25% -static


What I’ll Read Next

Library Books
The way home : Peter Beagle.
Fun home : a family tragicomic Alison Bechdel.
Beasts of burden : occupied territory Evan Dorkin
Neighborhood watch Evan Dorkin
The spear cuts through water Simon Jimenez.
Horror: a very short introduction Darryl Jones.
The artist's reality : philosophies of art Mark Rothko
Helpmeet Naben Ruthnum.
Into the riverlands Nghi Vo.
Unnatural magic C.M. Waggoner.

Libby Books
Neon Gods
The Bromance Book Club

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe

 

kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
The Witch King - Martha Wells – I think I had some user error with this one – I read the first third one day and got sidetracked and ended up reading the rest in a fugue stress state while waiting anxiously for something – not a good approach. I like Kai and the world build here is actually very interesting – the central mystery is engaging. The structure and some components of the stories definitely show Wells’s appreciation for Mo Dao Zu Shi (Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation) but it has some divergences that make it a stand alone story. Some thematic elements that crossed over are the dual timelines of the novels, the main character’s general cheerful demeanor, the element of breaking a social taboo being crucial to their social acceptance, and some body switching!

Beasts of Burden: Animal Rites – Evan Dorkin – I think I liked this volume better than the first one I read, and this is actually the first in the series. Shorter sections, a big more goody, slightly different cast, an artist I preferred for the animals – overall, a really pleasant read.

Nimona - ND Stevenson – A good book! I was a victim of overhype here, I had heard about it so much that I had formed some opinions before going in, but that was a mistake. I generally think that this was a pretty fun story with a really honest core about the emotional cost of being deliberately hurt by people. I’ll read more by Stevenson.

Podcasts – I am FINALLY getting to the good stuff in the fourth and final season of Wolf 359. It’s rare for me to go into something really totally unspoiled but here I am!

What I’m Reading:
The last unicorn by Peter S. Beagle -19% - I really thought that there would be fluff in this book or thing I didn’t recall, but nope, I have a very solid (if unordered) memory of all the elements of this book. I am deeply enjoying the re-read.
The Count of Monte Cristo – 45% Getting into the swing of the revenge plot! Our vengeful lead is in Paris causing marital strife for the Danglars family by means of horse sales.
Kristeva Powers of Horror – 24% This book makes sense for no more than three sentences at a time, then I am just thrown back into the confusion of a person who Does Not Believe in Freud.
The King in Yellow 25% -static – The next story up for me would be In the Court of the Dragon

What I’ll Read Next
Book Club – This is how you lose the time war

Library Books
The way home : Peter Beagle.
Fun home : a family tragicomic Alison Bechdel.
Beasts of burden : occupied territory Evan Dorkin
Neighborhood watch Evan Dorkin
The spear cuts through water Simon Jimenez.
Horror : a very short introduction Darryl Jones.
The artist's reality : philosophies of art Mark Rothko
Helpmeet Naben Ruthnum.
Nimona Noelle Stevenson.
Into the riverlands Nghi Vo.
Unnatural magic C.M. Waggoner.

Libby Books
Neon Gods
A Substitute Wife for the Prizefighter
The Bromance Book Club

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe
kitewithfish: (snoopy the red baron crashing)
What I’ve Read
Babel – by RF Kuang -  Xing Book Club – Oh, man, this book was devastating. I truly could not tell how this was going to end, and in some sense it may have actually split that difference by having several characters have very different outcomes from the same journey. I loved Robin; his hope and his hopelessness both felt deeply explored, and I am really looking forward to the bookgroup to talk about it.

Beasts of Burden: Wise Dogs and Eldritch Men -Ben Dewey, Evan Dorkin – Some excerpts from this comic book had crossed my Tumblr dash and I think it is lovely – Tonally a bit more adventure focused than I was expecting, but lovely art and really good characters, too!

What I’m Reading:
The King in Yellow 25% -static – The next story up for me would be In the Court of the Dragon
The Count of Monte Cristo – 23 % Getting into the swing of the revenge plot!
Kristeva Powers of Horror -back in the swing of things! Chapter 2 for the end of the month.

The Witch King - Martha Wells - p232 – Why did it take me this long to realize there’s some Supernatural DNA in this? I really enjoyed this the past few days.

What I’ll Read Next
Book Club – This is how you lose the time war

Library books:
The last unicorn by Peter S. Beagle
The way home : two novellas from the world of The last unicorn by Peter S. Beagle.

Unnatural magic by C.M. Waggoner.
For the wolf by Hannah Whitten.
Horror: a very short introduction by Darryl Jones.

The spear cuts through water bySimon Jimenez.
Helpmeet by Naben Ruthnum.

The artist's reality : philosophies of art by Mark Rothko ; edited and with an introduction by Christopher Rothko.
Into the Riverland by Nghi Vo
Fun home : a family tragicomic by Alison Bechdel.

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe
kitewithfish: (laika the dog in space)
What I’ve Read
A Bride for the Prizefighter by Alice Coldbreath – This Victorian working class romance was rather charming – I got the rec from Reformed Rake, a podcast by a Tiktoker who blogs about Romance novels of many eras. I found the main character really convincing, smart, and kind – when Mina’s father dies, she meets her estranged half-brother who arranges a marriage for her to HIS estranged half-brother, William Nye, the son of his father’s mistress who became a prize fighter and runs an pub. It felt like the descriptions of Mina’s life in the pub and her connections to the staff working there were very natural – Mina is a ‘lady’ in the sense of having an innate sense of decency and the value of other human beings, and Nye has a backbone of kindness to him that comes thru his rough demeanor. I felt like this had, as the Reformed Rake podcast noted, some genre connections to the Gothic, which was right up my alley. Very good romance, you can really see WHY these people like each other.

Love for Sale bypoisonivory - (https://archiveofourown.org/works/29789145) – Roy Harper, Arsenal, is between jobs and ends up hooking up with Jason Todd, who just happens to have an apartment to lend him – it’s just a business deal. Right? This story is a bit of a soft sugar daddy vibe, it works for me, despite being rather a departure from how I think about Jason Todd.

What I’m Reading:
The King in Yellow 25% -static – The next story up for me would be In the Court of the Dragon
The Count of Monte Cristo – 9%

Babel – Xing Book Club – 53% - I was just thinking about how much the first part of this novel reminds me of Naomi Novik's Scholomance series, in that it feels like someone taking the challenge of Hogwarts seriously - what does it mean to be brought into a magical community from the outside? What are the real impacts of magic on the world? What are the economies of how magic works? And who does this world consider expendable? We have just gotten to the point where Babel's students are going to be forced to confront those questions outside of England as adults who have been raised to serve the powers of the Empire of Britain. It's brutal and great.

Kristeva Powers of Horror -back in the swing of things! Chapter 2 for the end of the month.

The Witch King - Martha Wells - p80 - Solid introduction, feels akin to Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation in some details but its also very much its own thing 

What I’ll Read Next
Book Club is going to need to pick some more books soon but until then I have a breather.

Library books:
The last unicorn by Peter S. Beagle
The way home : two novellas from the world of The last unicorn by Peter S. Beagle.

Unnatural magic by C.M. Waggoner.
For the wolf by Hannah Whitten.
Horror: a very short introduction by Darryl Jones.

The spear cuts through water bySimon Jimenez.
Helpmeet by Naben Ruthnum.

The artist's reality : philosophies of art by Mark Rothko ; edited and with an introduction by Christopher Rothko.
Into the Riverland by Nghi Vo
Fun home : a family tragicomic by Alison Bechdel.

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
The Devil in Us All – Sineala – Excellent Marvel Avengers fic – Tony and Steve in the early 1980s. Sineala is always a great writer and this has been on my TBR list for a while – the writing is lovely and the characterization is spot on. It’s got the period typical homophobia we’d expect but also engages with the fact that some kinds of queer are more acceptable than others, and the stress and shame that causes. Also, bridge as a sex metaphor? Like, the card game, which is apparently about forty times more complicated than I recalled it being.
Link: https://archiveofourown.org/works/36092107

Dowry of Blood – ST Gibson – Beautiful writing with a lot of visual metaphors and some lovely introspection. It’s set up like a memoir or a love letter to Dracula from the viewpoint of his oldest surviving wife after she’s killed him and is living her new life outside of his shadow. It does not follow the Bram Stoker canon, but alludes to it. This book is most interested in how and why a woman chose to enter a relationship with a controlling man and why she chose to leave it, and the metaphor is vampires. Which is a GREAT metaphor.

Not a Book - Finished Wolf 359 – Season 2 – which was great and deeply creepy. On Ep 33 now.

What I’m Reading Next

The King in Yellow 25% -static – The next story up for me would be In the Court of the Dragon
The Count of Monte Cristo – 9% - I love this for puttering around. I’m familiar enough with the set up and the plot that I can just enjoy the writing. Villefort is a delightfully shitty villain, I look forward to his downfall.
Babel – Xing Book Club – 29% Enjoying the mental duplicity
A Bride for the Prizefighter – Alice Coldbreath – 9% - Audiobook, really fun marriage of convenience story in a Victorian period – I picked this up because a podcast I like, Reformed Rakes, did a great run thru of it. So I’m thoroughly spoiled but they made a great case for the book on its writing.


What I’ll Read Next
This is How You Lose the Time War for Xing Book Club next next book

Library books have piled up so I’m going to try and add them and propel myself forward on that.
Unnatural magic / C.M. Waggoner.
For the wolf / Hannah Whitten.
Horror: a very short introduction / Darryl Jones.
The last unicorn / Peter S. Beagle
The spear cuts through water / Simon Jimenez.
Helpmeet / Naben Ruthnum.
The way home : two novellas from the world of The last unicorn / Peter S. Beagle.
The artist's reality : philosophies of art / Mark Rothko ; edited and with an introduction by Christopher Rothko.


kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
Watchmaker’s Daughter – CJ Archer – Read for RoboBook Club – This is the fantasy detective story with small amounts of magic, set in “TV Show Victorian England”. I should probably be kinder; the book is 1 in a 13 part series and I suspect that the reasons that I didn’t enjoy it (slow development of key features, incomplete worldbuilding that zooms forward at the 90% mark, glacially paced romance) are part of pacing the book as part of that larger series. However, they are annoying enough that I am not going to both reading the series unless someone makes a really strong pitch. Devastatingly hetero.

The Risen King – Taylor Titmouse – Well written and fun, just not quite working for me bc of the mind control element. Solid little porny story, but just not quite for me. 

What I’m Reading

The Devil in Us All – Sineala – 45% - Excellent Marvel Avengers fic – Tony and Steve in the early 1980s. Due to a financial hiccup, Steve starts drawing illustrations for a magazine of particular interests. I adore this and the mutual pining is amazing.
The King in Yellow 25% -static – I have read the first two stories, which were both quite good in a sort of old fashioned style. I wish I had a historical annotation edition – half of this is fascinating and half just obscure.
The Count of Monte Cristo – 1% - Just started this as an audiobook, which claims to be 47 hours long. Amazing.
Babel – Xing Book Club – 16% Moderately devastating.
Carry On-  Tamryn Eradani -static -37%
Freefall – Umei_No_Mai - static 

Other Media – Wolf 359 (Podcast) – I started listening to this on Saturday as part of my move to listen to more podcasts. I found the first season to be deliberately tonally light while handling a fairly bleak subject, but I really enjoyed it, and I have gotten to Season 2 where they are more straightforward about the desperate situation. 

Since listening to Malevolent, I gather up a spreadsheet of potential other podcasts to try out, mostly pulling from Tumblr tags then, when I got another friend onto the bandwagon, she gave me quite a few recommendations as well! She and I had both started the Magnus Archives in the last couple of years and then gradually lost interest in, so I think we have similar tastes. I also was surprised to find a second friend who recently has begun to enjoy horror podcasts, and I decided it was worth writing up my list into a spreadsheet to get the recs into circulation among the three of us - I think she will be trying out Malevolent soon!

What I’ll Read Next
Dowry of Blood

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe, the Witch King by Martha Wells
kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
A Star To Steer By – By Norcumi – I had read this last December and very much enjoyed it, but there was something very charming about it this time around to really just soak it all in again.


Not a book – I caught up to Malevolent Podcast by Harlan Guthrie, which started as “very much my thing” and transcended that into categories of “Entirely My Thing.” This is a high stakes three legged race through eldritch horrors and the darkest part of the human heart, with two people who have come thru fire and fundamentally take care of each other. It’s wonderful, not for the squeamish.

I actually decided to go on and listen to the whole of Guthrie’s newest podcast, Deviser, which is a much darker story than Malevolent but has some very real interesting bones to it – the question of what it means to be human, the cost of having a body, the disorientation of having one person be your only source of information and to have them be untrustworthy – great stuff, about ten times as violent

So, I have some finally been able to read the fanfic, and it has some real bangers.


What I’m Reading

The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers – 1895 – 17% This is one of those classic weird fiction collections, it came up a lot in Malevolent and I figured, free on Gutenberg, not bad. I am trying to read each short story on its own so I have just finished “The Repairer of Reputations” – Definitely some content warnings for colonialism, anti-semitism, abilism, and views of mental illness that are real real bad.

Watchmaker’s Daughter – by CJ Archer – 43% - Discord bookclub- Decent romance novel with some fantasy elements, tho I suppose true readers of Romance would find this to be a fantasy novel with some romance elements. I will withhold judgment on the book, since I haven’t finished it. I’m enjoying it more as an audiobook than the straightforward read.

Babel – Xing Book Club – 16% Moderately devastating.
Dracula Daily
Carry On Tamryn Eradani -static -37%
Post Mortem File 3 by Furiosophie – on hold until I finish Rebels and some other books, sadly.
Freefall – Umei_No_Mai – lost steam


What I’ll Read Next
Dowry of Blood (Necromancers Book Club)
Watchmaker’s Daughter (Discord Book Club)
Count of Monte Cristo (Discord Book Club)

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe


kitewithfish: (Default)
What I’ve Read
The Gothic: A Very Short Introduction by Nick Groom – Great Queer Supernatural Re-Watch item – This was a great little book that covered about 400 years of artistic trends in English (and later American) architecture and literature with about 150 pages, and I think it did a really good job! I certainly learned far more about the English trend towards regarding Gothic tribes as somehow “English” came from a need to understand their own culture in opposition to Roman/ Romantic/European values. You can see the roots of English Exceptionalism growing out of the whole thing, and the ties to the Gothic novel – fascinating! I particularly liked the chapter at the end that talked about the ways American gothic movements tend to have different skeletons in their closets than English, which honestly felt like a great discussion element. I ended up being so intrigued that I ordered some collected works of Poe and Lovecraft, both of whom lean into the whole issue of racism as the specter in the soul of American Gothic. Highly reccommend.

Roger Crenshaw: The Wolves of the West by Taylor Titmouse – This is a goofy little porn novella (available on itch.io) about a folklorist who has a fling with a quartet of bandits who kidnap him off a train. It’s delightful and accompanied by some very nice art. It’s set about the turn of the century and the main character is trans. I will probably read the other two books in the series – you don’t quite have to read them in order. This is about 30 pages and very fun.

Roger Crenshaw and the Vampires of New Haven by Taylor Titmouse – I wrote up this journal on Tuesday and then ended up reading the one, too! The first in the series, this one had a little more backstory on our favorite folklorist and also, some vampires at Yale. Pretty sexy, I think I preferred the Wolves of the West but both are great. Content warning: Connecticut

In “Not A Book” news, I finished Season One of Malevolent and really enjoyed it! It’s a dark supernatural gothic horror fiction podcast focused on Arthur, a detective who picks up a cursed book and gets blinded and a new passenger in the form of an otherworldly voice in his head. They fight crime! Or, rather, they are stuck together while they investigate the secrets, cults, and eldritch forces that pushed the voice out of its own world into Arthur’s head. It starts rather inhuman and antagonistic, but resolves eventually into a kind of care for Arthur that feels genuine. I find the “sharing a body” trope compelling – it takes normal human interdependence and intimacy to an exaggerated limit and then pushes it further. If you like Venom (movie or comics), you’d probably find this central relationship compelling. The podcast’s worldbuilding is Lovecraft-based (minus the overt racism) so I’m enjoying the tour around fictional New England towns with dark secrets. There are three finished seasons and the fourth is ongoing, episodes are about 40 minutes. The main podcast is an edited combination of shorter episodes where Patreon members are presented with weekly shorter passages, and a poll to decide what Arthur-and-co should do next. 


What I’m Reading

Babel – Xing Book Club – 16% Moderately devastating.
Dracula Daily is back! Dracula’s “lizard fashion” for going out remains delightful - 8%
Carry On Tamryn Eradani -picked this back up after not touching it for months (since November??) -37%
Post Mortem File 3 by Furiosophie – this is great but I mistimed where I was in the canon reading and I might actually have to watch Rebels and read three other books before I can come back to this. SIGH.
Freefall – Umei_No_Mai – the adventures of their OC Jedi character.

On Hold:
Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn (1991) – 39% - Static
Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection - Julia Kristeva - static
True Colors by Karen Traviss
Beauty by Robin McKinley
What If? 2: Additional Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions by Randall Monroe (of XKCD fame) – 8% - Static

What I’ll Read Next

Dowry of Blood (Necromancers Book Club)
Watchmaker’s Daughter (Discord Book Club)
Count of Monte Cristo (Discord Book Club)

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe
kitewithfish: (Default)
I missed posting last week due to some Real Life stuff (see the end for more) so this covers April 26th to May 10th 2023


What I’ve Read

I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jenette McCurdy (Audiobook, narrated by author) –
McCurdy was a child actor with an abusive mother who gave her an eating disorder and other issues. Her mother had cancer early in McCurdy’s childhood and leaned into that as a component of her identity for the rest of her life in a way that is, in the telling, rather pathetic. McCurdy was on a Disney show called iCarly that was slightly too young for me, but I have heard of it. I listened to the audiobook, it was compellingly written, and at the end, I, too, was glad her mom was dead.

Game of Thrones: Alderaan by B_Radley, shadowmaat, SLWalker - https://archiveofourown.org/series/798396
A series of stories that posit that Maul was adopted into the Alderaanian royal family from an early age after being imprisoned at age 12, never became a Sith, and embarked on a romance with Bail and Breha Organa. Very much a story focused on an abused child recovering and finding a new home, with minimal smut. It’s adorable and plays a bit look with canon. Palpatine dies off screen sometime before Maul gets adopted – the story is blissfully unconcerned with Sidious as a character.

Montress Vol 1. Awakening by Marjorie Liu, art by Sana Takeda –
A graphic novel that I had dipped into last year when a later volume was nominated for a Hugo. I think it’s got some nice things going for it – vastly female cast, decent art, the worldbuilding is robust enough for the later stories to have some interesting scaffolding. I mostly found the main characters to be a less charismatic version of Venom, and I’m not super intrigued by the family history of the main character. I might read some of the others. It was a very pleasant discovery to find that my tablet is quite good for comic books.

Stalking Killing by Koogi – A Korean webcomic,
I read the first printed volume from the library and enjoyed it enough that I went out and found the rest of the comic online. It’s complete! The story is incredibly dark and riddled with gore, torture, sexual violence, obsession and suffering – it was very much published Dead Dove, Do Not Eat. The main plot is a rather pathetic young gay man with a pattern of stalking has found a way to break into the house of old classmate that he’s fixated on – he discovers that the object of his affections is a serial killer just in time to get a baseball bat to the back of the head. That’s the first 20 pages of 400+. The rest is like if Misery by Stephen King had romantic interludes. Definitely not for everyone, but I very much enjoyed it. I ended up logging each of the published volumes of the manwha on Storygraph rather than sorting out how to log it. I might be on a kick for m/m dark romance manga – found some recommendations thru Tumblr I can try.

The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal – Xing Book Club - Part 1 of the Lady Astronaut series –
Ok, first of all, I had not heard this was a series and found that this book ended in a place that is uh, emotionally satisfying for some of the main arcs but did not leave me particularly happy. That said, I will confess that I found this book utterly deligthtful. I had heard about it too often and in not enough detail, so I decided I didn’t want to read it – I had some vague sense of it being a story about girlbossing your way out of 1950s sexism into space. It’s very much NOT that book. It’s both less trite and more interesting – the first third of the book is about the shock and grief of surviving a natural disaster that kills thousands of people, and how you take up the pragmatic tasks of figuring out how to the rest of your people survive. I found that the element of sexism in this book is not about how sexism impedes the main character’s personal fulfillment, but how sexism presents a very real risk to effectively addressing a global crisis. I also just really liked Elma, the main character, as a Jewish scientist with a crippling anxiety related to specific kind of systemic past abuse at the hands of people in authority over her. Honestly, a great read.


Read a bunch of other fanfic

What I’m Reading:

Babel – Xing Book Club – this is dark and bleak and dealing with racism in the 1830s and feels so much like it has something to do with A Memory Called Empire that it literally uses the same quote to describe the work of an empire “ to make a wasteland and call it peace”

Started to re-listen to Beauty by Robin McKinley, which is the best 39%

Dracula Daily is back! I’m enjoying my emails from Mina and Jonathan.

The Gothic: A Very Short Introduction - Nick Groom – 44% Got a little bit back on my bullshit today for this – finally got to the literature portion, tho the bit on architecture was indeed fabulous.

What If? 2: Additional Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions by Randall Monroe (of XKCD fame) – 8% - Static

Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn (1991) – 39% - Static

Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection - Julia Kristeva - static

What I’ll Read Next

(edited to add: Dowry of Blood for the Necromancer's book club, Watchmaker's Daughter for the Discord Book club)

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, Kraken's Sacrifice by Katee Robert, Even Though I Know the End by CL Polk, At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard, Tamryn Eradani's Enchanting Encounters Books 2 and 3, Like Real People Do by EL Massey, Tom Stoppard, Invention of love, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes by Caitlin Doughty, "You Just Need to Lose Weight" and Other Myths about Fatness by Aubrey Gordon, Alisha Rai Partners in Crime, the Right Swipe


Real Life: I skipped last week because my spouse had appendicitis! Which appears to be related to the covid, tho the literature is not conclusive on causation here, and appendicitis is one of those things that you tend to focus on treatment rather than cause. But there’s some recent papers from doctors who saw a pattern of treating a patient for severe covid and then seeing the same patient back within a month for an appendectomy.

The Spouse is up and much better and puttering around the garden today, but they have some restrictions on lifting things and are, generally, acting like a person who has recently had abdominal surgery – pain management and some dietary restrictions for a while, and lifting restrictions for a bit longer.

I mostly powered thru that with pure adrenaline and coffee, and then crashed hard for some of this week. I do have some fairly real post-covid fatigue still going on, to my irritation.

We are well set up with soup and care from our local friends, and I caved and ordered groceries so I didn’t have to face the supermarket (Spouse does most of the grocery buying and nearly all the cooking under normal circumstances.)

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