silverflight8: stacked old books (books)
I'm apparently on a re-read kick, and I have too many to review in the same way I did Mistborn (words! words everywhere!) so here's a quick thing:

The Sky is Falling, Looking at the Moon and The Lights Go On Again by Kit Pearson

The novels are about Norah and Gavin, two siblings who are sent to Canada as war guests as the Blitz ramps up in England. I'm struggling to think of a good descriptor of the books that involve plot, but the core of the books is really the emotional journeys that Norah and Gavin go through. They move into the house of Florence Ogilvie and Norah immediately has personality conflicts with Aunt Florence.

One thing I think Pearson did really well was portray unusual grief/emotions. Norah is young but she's twelve or so, and she doesn't want to leave England. She's angry with her parents for sending them away, afraid for them, ashamed of running away, angry she's being put in charge of her younger brother, resentful that he can't help being afraid and distressed himself. She's not happy with being put with the Ogilvies and she's not fitting into her new school. It's an ugly combination of emotions that nevertheless feels really honest.

There's also Gavin in The Lights Go On Again Major spoilers )It gets resolved and I love their grandfather, but I thought that his anger mixed with guilt towards him and Norah, too, was really honest.

Also I learned that Pearson is gay! That is pretty cool. I read her books when I was a kid and never looked at author bios (nor do I think they would have mentioned it). She's also from Alberta!

The Secrets of the Jedi by Jude Watson

Ahh, yes, my Star Wars obsession. When I say I love Star Wars what I actually mean is "the Prequel EU books" and Jude Watson is at least 50% responsible for this. I think the only post-RotJ books I've read is Zahn's Thrawn trilogy (which is really good, I get why people keep trying to sneak it into yuletide).

Secrets of the Jedi is about Obi-Wan and Siri's relationship. Watson also wrote Jedi Apprentice (about young Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon) and Jedi Quest (about Obi-Wan and Anakin) and The Secrets of the Jedi tie into Jedi Apprentice; this book ties into the Jedi Apprentice series. Obi-Wan and Siri, along with their respective masters, are assigned to escort a talented young boy named Talesan Fry to Coruscant after he discovers the plot of a group of bounty hunters. They're partly successful even though the Padawans get separated from their Masters halfway through, but Tal's parents are killed. Years later, when the galaxy is consumed by the Clone Wars, the Temple is informed that Tal, now a successful businessman, has created a perfect codebreaker and is offering the Republic the first bid.

Being Jedi, love is forbidden, and the book has an interesting treatment of it. In one of the Jedi Apprentice books Obi-Wan actually left the Jedi Order once; he felt that the Temple was not helping the civil war on Melida/Daan enough and refused to go back to Coruscant, staying to help. Spoilers for how they handle it )

Dragon Rider by Cornelia Funke

Dragon Rider )

Snakecharm by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

Snakecharm )

Hawk of May by Gillian Bradshaw

Hawk of May )

Airborn and Skybreaker by Kenneth Oppel

Airborn )

Among Others

Among Others )

--

I'm working on Conspiracy of Kings by Turner and enjoying it a lot so far, though I'm having some trouble with the different perspectives. I think I've reread the previous three books altogether too many times already and I understand them really well now, but there is a lot here I'm skimming--the political bits for one. Sophos is growing up though! Awww.

This post took long enough that I finished a book while writing it. I wish I was faster!
silverflight8: Barcode with silverflight8 on top and userid underneath (_support)
Among Others cover
I've tried for awhile to try to describe Among Others. It's an epistolary novel, composed of Morwenna Phelps' journal entries as, in 1979, she leaves her home in Wales to a boarding school in England. By doing so, she's escaping her witch mother but becoming reliant upon her formerly-estranged father and his relatives, and she's also going from a place where she's cut off from--well--magic. And throughout all this she is still dealing with the death of her twin sister, Morganna, who died while foiling their mother.

Magic in Among Others is neither showy nor fantastical nor ordered; it has plausible deniability. A skeptic would have no problems disproving magic, because there's no solid proof. This magic is set against the magic of books instead. In the accident that killed Morwenna's sister, Morwenna is injured; in the sports-heavy boarding school, Morwenna is excluded straight off by being unable to participate in any sort of sport. Instead, she spends her time in the library, reading science fiction. And in this way, Among Others is a novel not about Wales or England or magic or boarding school (magic or otherwise) or ostracization or family--although it is about all these things--but almost a homage to science fiction novels. Mori is a voracious reader, and sprinkled throughout her accounts in her journal are her opinions on books she's just read--Le Guin and Heinlein, Delany and Zelazny, even some fantasy like C.S. Lewis and Susan Cooper.

All this isn't getting across the feeling of the book, which is a remarkably understated but powerful nonetheless. It's written clearly, without any sort of tricks or elaborate constructions; except for the narrative structure that ties everything together, Mori's entries could have come out of any well-read person's personal journal. Mori's voice is direct and matter of fact, and it gives the reader somewhere to stand when strange or even conventional things happen--she's level-headed throughout, which helps also merge the magical/fantastical elements with the more conventionally-historical-fiction parts. There is no grandstanding, no showy magic. As Publishers Weekly's little comment says, it's an inversion of the magical boarding school trope, but it's not really about boarding school. Mori's stay at the boarding school's just a way of highlighting the other parts of the story; Mori's not really 'part' of the boarding school like her classmates are. She's kind of detached.

But yes--if you get a chance, this is a fantastic novel. I loved it.
I see that it won a Hugo and a Nebula, and both are absolutely well-deserved, holy cow. Also, once you get Ursula K LeGuin's review in The Guardian--oh my god what am I saying, read this book. And I think the more books you've read and the more you love books, the more you'll like this book. 10/10
silverflight8: bee on rose  (Nanowrimo 2010)
It's just sunny enough outside that today during my lunch hour, I went outside and finished reading Among Others (Jo Walton). It's supposed to snow at some point I think, but at one o'clock it was just like the beginning of spring - snow in the shadows of the building but lots of warmth in the sun. Still wearing my winter coat though.

Among Others, that was excellent. Oh my god. I've explained and recced it to three people today and I still can't come up with a suitable summary. Review forthcoming, after I post the Crimson Crown one (it was also excellent, but in a different way.) I'd be off to find allllll of Jo Walton's books, but I actually have a pile of sf/f on my floor right now, including the complete Lyonesse, so I have to get to those first.

But yes! If you see it on the bookshelf, grab it and see if you like it! Unqualified rec.

God, I've missed reading books. I've read so much novel-length fic, but it's not the same as a totally self-sustaining secondary fantasy. Even one with ties to the real world.

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