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kitewithfish: (down the rabbit hole)
What I’ve Read:
A Power Unbound - The Last Binding #3 by Freya Marske
I read this in about two days, after re-reading the prior two books, and I am really excited – Marske absolutely nailed the landing on this series! The ending took all the themes of the prior books and was like, Hold my beer. I strongly recommend this book and this whole series!

The main couple for this book are Jack Allen, Lord Hawthorn, and Alan Ross aka Alonzo Rossi. They have a dynamic that would be hate sex if they didn’t both openly acknowledge how much fun they have arguing with each other. Watching them test and push each other starts off as a safe way for each of them to get what they want, but gradually becomes a situation where they are entangled and tender with each other. It’s a great relationship dynamic.

I was particularly pleased with how Marske managed to figure out a happy ending for three different committed couples, AND addressed the central problem of inequality

If you’re able to, I think the trilogy is best enjoyed by reading straight thru - Marske doesn’t spend a lot of time reworking events from the prior books, which I appreciate, but it does mean you’ll need to remember who the key players are from book to book. Several of the reveals are set up as far back as the first book. (I do know someone who picked up the second book as a stand alone, and while she enjoyed the romance, the stakes of the larger plot were a bit opaque.)

System Collapse – Martha Wells – Audiobook by Kevin R. Free
First: the events of this book take place immediately after Network Effect, the full-length Murderbot novel that came out in 2020. The Tor.com review mentioned that this novella felt like it was taken directly from NE, and I agree – you will not understand this story without reading Network Effect

I listened to this audiobook immediately (Libby got it to me the day it came out! When did I get in line??) and I really enjoyed it. It felt like a continuation of major themes coming out of the earlier books – what does it mean to be human? What does it mean to be free? - and takes a look at those from multiple angles. As much as previous stories with Murderbot were about recognizing trauma, this book is about the messy process of *feeling* those feelings and grief, and figuring out what to do next.

What I’m Reading:
City of Blades – Robert Jackson Bennett - Xing Book Club – Compulsively readable. Feels very interested in the bloody awfulness of having an empire and keeping it, no matter who gets in the way. The main character was introduced in City of Stairs and the story will not make sense without it.

A Canticle for Leibowitz – Walter J Miller Jr – not much progress but was able to renew from library (Stream; SciFi Classics)

It Came from the Closet: Queer Reflections in Horror - Joe Vallese (Editor) – SPN Seminar – Short essays where queer authors talk about horror cinema’s impact on them, with a focus on particular movies.

What I’ll Read Next:
Dark Rise – CS Pacat – re-read before the next book comes out.
Dark Heir – New book!
House of Leaves – Robobook Club – Haven’t touched it since I started it.
Ninefox Gambit – Xing Book Club
When Women Were Dragons - Xing Book Club

Owned and need to read: California Bones, Raven Song by IA Ashcroft, 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

Some thinking about reading organization : Streams? Cut bc probably boring )

kitewithfish: (columbo just one more thing)

What I've Read
A Restless Truth - Freya Marske - Second in a series and I bring that up because the people I read who started this book did so without KNOWING that it was the second in a series. (It holds its own but a lot of the background does not make sense).

I really enjoyed this book - the main characters got to do some whacky and hilarious stuff in the midst of quite a serious investigation with high stakes. The sapphic love story is a delight but they are far from perfect people, and I think overall, I enjoyed this more than the first book. I found Maud to be a bit more relatable than Robin, the POV character for most of the first book, but I also just adored Violet and all her showy, prickly ways. Third book comes out this fall.

(I think that The Locked Tomb series may have unlocked something in my brain that really enjoys series, and having to wait for another feels like a gift of future pleasure rather than a punishment for not being a single book.)

Fanfic I've read

cacio e pepe by serephemeral - https://archiveofourown.org/works/21845440 - I adored this "Some Like it Hot" continuation. After movie ends with "Well, nobody's perfect!" Daphe, who is still sometimes Jerry, runs off into the sunset with Osgood. And Joe, and Sugar. The future doesn't look anything like they planned but it's amazing none the less. Kudos to schneefink for reccing this, I would never have found it otherwise and it's officially my favorite Some Like It Hot fic.

Polite Company by spicedrobot - https://archiveofourown.org/works/37924555 - Star Wars Prequels and Clone Wars Cartoon. Maul isn't a very good Jedi. Obi-Wan isn't a very good Sith. They make it work, after the kidnapping.

What I'm Reading

Mexican Gothic - Silvia Moreno-Garcia - 23% - A re-read for me for the Discord book club. Super creepy and really readable.

The Gothic: A Very Short Introduction - Nick Groom - 39% - This is my first time reading the "very short introduction" books and it's really interesting! Pulling together some threads about English history and this aesthetic mode that have never quite tied themselves together in my head. 

Also, I had re-watched Crimson Peak this week, and it was a fascinating re-watch! I caught so much more of the symbolism around Edith's clothing and Lucille's cryptic statements about their mother. I liked Thomas a lot less on this re-watch, before the ending, but I think I saw more of his wistful attempt to escape. I also totally did NOT remember how much Edith's writing shapes the early edges of her relationship with Thomas - he first is interested in her because of her writing! When he's trying to break her heart, he attacks her writing 

The Traitor Baru Cormorant - Seth Dickinson - 19% - A re-read before I get into the rest of the books for fun. I'm listening to the audiobook and the narrator, who I will not name, is pronouncing "duchy" wrong for the entire book. (So that it rhymes with "cootchie") and I'm solidering bravely on. I forgot how much of the book is just "terrified lesbian of color gradually sells people out for safety and the promise of future power" and ooooh, man, it's good.

Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection - Julia Kristeva - This is a very navel-gazing literary theory book that makes me realize all afresh that I have real problems with Freudian framing for everything, BUT, it is cited by every major work on horror that I have read. It's French, it's slow, it's worth a read but it's going to be a slog.

True Colors - Karen Traviss - 23% - static

Too Like The Lightning - Ada Palmer - Static

Underline the Black by not_poignant https://archiveofourown.org/works/41396784 - Probably going to return to this when it's finished.

On Earth as It Is in Heaven
by samyazaz https://archiveofourown.org/works/833193 - Soulmate AU of Vikings - You don't need to know anything other than the first season or a vague sense of how history went down


What I'll Read Next

The Calculating Stars - Xing Book Club
Babel - Looks like it will on the Hugos list eventually, I'm trying to get out ahead of things

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, Aphorisms of Kerishdar

Owned and Read/Reading: Frey Marske's A Restless Truth, Susanna Clarke's Pirenesi, True Colors by Karen Traviss

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kitewithfish

May 2025

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