I'm procrastinating again, news at 11
Sep. 22nd, 2013 12:38 pmIf book reviews could just be my off-the-cuff analysis and flailing about books and characters and such, it'd take me less than half an hour to do them, instead of (some of them) months because I procrastinate. Writing plot summaries is the bane of my reviewing life, because it's boring and also the author did it much better than me: that'd be the novel. And you have to try to limit spoilers or else it's not useful to people who haven't read the books.
The best part about reviewing is where you can just dissect the novels. If I want to take issue with your dinosaurs on spaceships (side note: if anyone has read a novel with this premise, tell me now please) then I totally can, or I can run about yelling it's the very best part of the book, everyone on my flist, you should go find this book! Or--and this is my favourite part of the speculative fiction umbrella--it's the speculation on what parts are taken from Earth and what's not. (Even secondary world fantasy invariably borrows from earthly institutions, beliefs, political structure, biology, climate.) For some reason this is so satisfying. And also I can talk about characterization or plot twists or just the writing flat out (like C.S. Lewis', because it was simply, remarkably beautiful), anything I think is relevant.
This has been brought to you by the fact I finished Megan Whalen Turner's The Thief. Review forthcoming.
The best part about reviewing is where you can just dissect the novels. If I want to take issue with your dinosaurs on spaceships (side note: if anyone has read a novel with this premise, tell me now please) then I totally can, or I can run about yelling it's the very best part of the book, everyone on my flist, you should go find this book! Or--and this is my favourite part of the speculative fiction umbrella--it's the speculation on what parts are taken from Earth and what's not. (Even secondary world fantasy invariably borrows from earthly institutions, beliefs, political structure, biology, climate.) For some reason this is so satisfying. And also I can talk about characterization or plot twists or just the writing flat out (like C.S. Lewis', because it was simply, remarkably beautiful), anything I think is relevant.
This has been brought to you by the fact I finished Megan Whalen Turner's The Thief. Review forthcoming.
BOOKS TL;DR
Date: Sep. 24th, 2013 03:40 am (UTC)Kushiel's Legacy! I like the third trilogy best (it was my entrance, and it has much more magic, which is always my weak spot). They begin (the first trilogy) in France, alt-universe France without Christianity as a main influence, but a separate system of gods; Romans don't have as much influence, etc. Moirin (protagonist of the third trilogy) is from Alba (Britain) from a people who live in very secluded areas (almost but not quite hermitage).
I liked Cold Fire/Cold Magic by Kate Elliott which I think I reviewed a few weeks ago. It's set in steampunk Victorian England with magic, mostly coalesced in the hands of cold mages, who wield as much power as princes seem to do; the world is full of ice. It revolves around Cat, a girl of Phoenician descent who is abruptly taken away from her family, and trying to unravel what's going on with magic and such. I particularly liked the characters, and that the relationship overall was focussed on Cat and Bee, her cousin.
Oh! Sort of more historical than fantasy, but Gillian Bradshaw's Hawk of May (series: Down the Long Wind). I am so in love with these books, it's actually embarrassing. They're basically a more historical telling of the Arthurian legends, focussed initially on Gwalchmai (Sir Gawain); in doing so she also uses more Welsh names/places. They do feature some magic, but more of the religious worship (Lugh), so people like Merlin don't exist, nor does stuff like the Grail or Excalibur. This is one of my hands-down favourite retellings of the Arthurian cycle, no joke, although then again I haven't read all that much... I absolutely loved Gwalchmai though.
Speaking of Arthurian, you've read The Dark is Rising by Susan Cooper right? I also really like the Chronicles of Prydain which are a remix/reimagining of Welsh mythos and stories. I used to want to live in Prydain when I was a kid (both of these are usually classified as kid's lit.)
Ahhhh Jonathon Strange and Mr Norrell. This novel is a huge tome and written like...almost like a history text. Full of footnotes and annotations, kind of dry feel (deliberately), as though it were history and history isn't gonna bow to your desire for a good story, it's trying to tell you what happened. It's a fascinating novel set in I think 18th or 19th century England and incorporates a lot of folklorish or medieval tales (passed down) and all the little minutiae that builds up around towns and hamlets inhabited a long time. There's the legend of the Raven King, from the north, who used magic. It's more loosely written than a lot of modern books--reminiscent of Hugo and such, I feel, who didn't really care that he went off track sometimes, to give you a really good feel for everything. Magic has dampened to the point where there are gentlemen societies about magic...purely theoretical magic, of course. Until someone kind of brings it all crashing down.
And I asked this amazing library at the sf/f collection about alt-history sorts of books, and she gave me this list (including Cold Magic, for which I will love her forever). I haven't read any of these though:
Robins, Madeleine
Point of Honour, Petty Treason
Flynt, Eric
1632
Baxtor, Steven
All Men of Genius
Shades of Milk and Honey
Thomas Harlan
Wasteland of Flint
Oh and trawling through my excel spreadsheets reminded me of a sort of sf/f book--yes sf/f, what am I talking about--which I really loved: Steven Hall's Raw Shark Texts. It's so hard to explain but it involves sharks made of ideas (it does talk about memory loss and fugue states though, idk if you want that) and some really interesting textual and formatting designs. It's more modern, but I really liked the story and even the writing; it's a full-length novel or else I'd have tried to record myself reading it. And it has some really interesting concepts about memory, about reality.
Re: BOOKS TL;DR
Date: Sep. 24th, 2013 11:09 pm (UTC)also thank you a lot for the warning re raw shark texts. it sounds super-fascinating but i shall have to wait for optimum spoons when reading it, which is not right now.
Re: BOOKS TL;DR
Date: Sep. 25th, 2013 03:00 am (UTC)Let me know what you think! Sometimes I don't know where the division between "things people might enjoy" and "things I really enjoy because of X" is ;) (I may or may not be dying for fic in a couple of these.)