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kitewithfish: (richard the iii cool sunglasses)
What I’ve Read
Persuasion
– Jane Austen – I was sick this week and re-watched the 1995 adaptation and, as often happens, lead to me returning to the book. The movie is wonderful, the book is wonderful, I was comforted by the world that Austen builds and writes in. I think this one is growing on me to the point it passes Pride and Prejudice now for me. I just love Anne Elliot, I love Wentworth, I love the whole stupid bunch of all the young people in a flurry of attraction and engagement bouncing off each other like superheated particles.

The Books of Magic – Neil Gaiman – Yeah, that guy. I picked this up because I had come across an article talking about the unacknowledged influences that JK Rowling (yeah, that guy) had on Harry Potter – and the dark haired working class boy with dumb glasses and a magical owl, getting introduced to the secret world of magic by a stranger, seems like it very well might have been in her mind when she started writing Harry Potter. (This series is from 1990). However, this book is largely a retrospective of magic characters in DC Comics thru the lens of a new character, Timothy Hunter, who could be “the greatest magician of his age” as he gets the guided tour from several magical trenchcoat guys from DC’s vault. It feels like themes that have been done before by better people. The charm of the comic-specific retrospective relies on Gaiman’s skill at re-working existing comic characters into the brief cameos they get in the story along with existing myths and legends. My opinion is that Gaiman did this better and more gracefully in Sandman, but, I am inclined to be far less charitable towards him because of his whole fucking shitshow of a personality. I recalled reading this book and thinking it was good – but I realize now that I was thinking of the continuing series that came after this by John Ney Rieber and Peter Gross, and that certain key moments are simply the work of other writers. (Also, I didn’t like the art in this series except for book three, so, there’s that.) I don’t feel like I can entirely rule out my suspicion that Rowling had seen or read this series before she wrote Harry Potter, but I also can’t prove it and I’m not willing to take the law suit. In short, I think it can be skipped unless you are particularly interested in DC Comics magical characters.

What I’m Reading

The Fortunate Fall – Cameron Reed – Static, due for book club next week.

Into the Drowning Deep – Mira Grant – about 70% and while I made a comparison to Michael Crichton last week, I think that was perhaps too generous. I’m not losing interest in this book so much as I get frustrated with the scene-level pacing. Multiple scenes have seemed like they are building up to punchy scientific revelations!Only to have decidedly unurgent exposition pop up in the middle and drag out the scene, taking the delicious tension with them. It ends up taking the steam out of my excitement to have it happen so often. I can’t really give details without spoilers. But, for example, our intrepid scientist who is on a mission to discover the deep sea creatures who killed her sister are real and dangerous, uses her scientific subskill (which has been described before) to discover that her ship’s about to face an immediate threat! And in the middle of that action, the narration of the book picks up on how she’s typing really hard and throws in a flashback to let the reader know that the main character has actually broken the keyboards on several of her laptops this way! Now, that detail is good character work! I like it! It just doesn’t belong in the space between the set up and payoff of her big discovery because it let the tension out of the scene like a balloon – you should have popped that balloon for a big bang, but it’s just farted it all away. I remembered this being a frustration with Mira Grant’s Newflesh book, so I feel like this is a writer/reader mismatch – she’s clearly doing all right for herself in getting her works published! She loves to tell you about how things work. But it keeps interrupting the action, and I’m getting fussed.

A Contracted Spouse for the Prizefighter by Alice Coldbreath (audiobook) – Audiobook romance by a favorite author. This is the third in a series that focuses on the lives of Victorian working class people in a variety of jobs. Our heroine, Theodora, wants to be on the stage doing the fun, risque musical hall act that she has been working on for years – but her stuffy family wants to be respectable and will not allow that kind of act in their theatre! When her sister elopes and her brother pulls her out of acting entirely to work as the family’s drudge, Theo runs off to a prizefighter turned music act manager as part of a deal -he’ll get a share in her family’s much larger theatre and she’ll get her chance on the stage!

I often find the structures of historical romances less grating to my brain than modern romances – something about the stronger patriarchal structures makes the genre less silly to me. Modern women can simply not get married and have a perfectly fine life – historical women leads have to figure this shit out and fast. (This is like monarchy – makes for a great drama, I’d rather it only appear in fiction.)

Guillermo del Toro: Cabinet of Curiosities – on hold. (This book is just obnoxiously large.)

What I’ll Read Next
Natural History of Dragons
The Hunger Games
The Grief of Stones
heated rivalry, since the show is all the rage

kitewithfish: (geralt witcher black eyes intense)
­What I’ve Read

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison – This is my fourth time thru this book, and different things stood out to me that the first time. A major turning point for Maia in the novel that I had really not remembered was him shifting from a mindset of, How can I please everyone who is making demands of me? to, Since it’s impossible to please everyone what do I think is the right thing to do?  And as a person who only recently discovered that disappointing people is not legally punishable, I felt that in my heart. This audiobook version was great - Kyle McCarley had a lot of character to each voice and it felt like it made sense for the choices he made.

I have also read a good deal of Star Wars fic by Blackkat that are all slightly too short to be counted as novels, but special attention to Cor Cordium - https://archiveofourown.org/works/52209091

What I’m Reading
His Majesty’s Dragon – Naomi Novik – I picked this up to keep my post-vacation chill mood intact, and then the library took it back. Treason! I will return to it, tho. Honestly, I feel like this one of those book series that I think I would give to any kid who lives near an ocean. 

Master and Commander – Patrick O’Brian – Since the library took Novik’s book back too early for me to finish, I figured I would go to the source material that inspired her, and start reading this! It’s about the sea and also about how being English is great because you get to fight people about stuff – wild nonsense. Jack Aubrey is a certified dummy and I think I love him – how can you not notice that the people around you are speaking Catalan and not Spanish, you hot mess of a captain.  I think audiobook is the right choice for this, as it allows the longer passages about how a sailing ship works can just glide past my ears. 

The Antarctica Conspiracy – Derin Edala made the least normal space ship in the world and the second half of the story is not any less wild. We started with a murder! 

Male Order – Unwrapping Masculinity -edited b y Rowena Chapman


What I’ll Read Next
The Memory Librarian - Janelle Monae - crossing book club 

HUGOS – This is my first year as a voting member, and I want to try and read everything (that is a single book- too many series and I will fall over). I know there is packet that goes out containing some of the books but I think it might arrive too late for me to get to all the books, so I have decided to start with what my local library can get me and work from there.




I found out about two different interesting nonfiction books recently that I want to read: 
Manhood in the Making: Cultural Concepts of Masculinity by David D Gilmore which is from 1990 and came up in a recent "If Books Could Kill" podcast episode where the host got really interested in the description of how masculine social roles construct nurturing differently than for feminine roles. It sounded interesting! 

I also found a book from 1925,  The English Language in America by GP Krapp, which came up in a Tumblr post about the way 'eye dialect', aka, phonetically writing out nonstandard spellings to portray dialects in writing, is used to portray people speaking in dialect as ridiculous and stupid (which is a dick move). I started to skim this book after finding the wikipedia article on 'eye dialect' and I found it so interesting in just the portion of the discussion where he gets into New England town hall records as a primary source for linguists to understand how colonial America was using English. I want to read it some time in more detail, or at least skim the interesting points. I realize it is literally a century out of date but I'm not a scholar, I am doing this for fun! 
kitewithfish: (richard the iii cool sunglasses)
Sept 11 2024


What I’ve Read:
Children of Ruin by Adrian Tchaikovsky – Oh, man, this is delightfully weird.
Spoilers ahead!
So the first book in the series started with a terraformed world, an unexpected disaster on earth, and an opportunistic species that wasn’t intended to get a boost in evolution to human level intelligence and cooperation actually getting that boost and becoming the dominant species on the planet.

In the background, humans from earth flailed around and tried to figure out how to live somewhere else, but failed, and basically were all set to commit genocide in order to get enough of the liveable planet to survive. It has an unexpectedly positive ending where cooperation and Science! win the day, and humans and spiders live in harmony enough to build an exploratory space program together.

The second book looks at a different terraforming team that landed on a different planet and what happened to them during the Big Disaster that ended Earth’s run to space – in this case, they land on a world with actual factual alien life to deal with, and pivot to terraforming an entirely different world in order to provide a safe haven for that alien life to develop on its own. Like the first book, humanity goes thru a HARD bottleneck and actually, the worst happens, everyone dies, and the species that survives on the terraformed world is a bunch of hyper-intelligent octopuses, and they are So Delightfully Weird. They are volatile and have a completely weird de-centralized neurology, so they have intuition and quick action as a main tenent of their civilization and it’s wild to figure out how these people managed to survive each other. The alien life takes the form of a slime mold that is straight out of a horror movie about invasive fungus (and actually reminds me a lot of the way demons in Penric and Desdemona are described) that relies on the cognitive function of the humans it invades for understanding – its so weird and functionally more akin to the character that is a computer program saved from a human personality template

This book was so fucking weird and fun and horrifying and so so hopeful – the spider civilization’s connection to humans makes a deeply interesting connection which is that their chief export to the galaxy is going to be COOPERATION and UNDERSTANDING of each other, and I found all of the characters (human and spider and octopus and even the sentient slime mold) to be incredibly compelling and so weird. I loved this book. I’m going to the next one eventually but I’m taking a short break first to chew on it.


What I’m Reading

She Who Became the Sun – Xing book club – Re-reading as an audio book. This is a fascinatingly gendery book and the vibe was so interesting that I actually started a C-Drama to keep the feeling going – I’m watching Nirvana in Fire, which I have absorbed a great deal of via fic. (I do not speak Chinese, the dubbed version would have been fine for me but Viki keeps shutting down when I click that version so we’re on subtitles. )

Paladin’s Grace - Re-Read – As seems to be the case, I have read this before and picked this up in audiobook form to fall asleep to, which is working nicely, but then it gets actually too engrossing and I end up listening to it ahead of things. It starts in a fascinating place, but is very much about two people with a lot of trauma being deeply horny for each other and trying to be decent to themselves and each other while they figure their shit out.


Back Burner
Ash: A Secret History –
Paladin’s Grace
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
The Two Towers
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Lottery and Other Stories
The Power Broken – Audiobook #2
Mo Dao Zu Shi vol 5
It Came from the Closet

What I’ll Read Next
Murderbot #5 -Network Event – Xing Book Club

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