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Checked Baggage - Kindle edition by Valentine Wheeler. Romance Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.:

This is the next thing I read, on my embarrassment-of-riches Kindle. This was an impulse purchase because it’s one of y’all, but I won’t @ you because I’m not sure whether the Tumblr streams cross with Twitter or not. But anyway! A real live published work from a real live Tumblr mutual. 

It’s actually a Thanksgiving holiday short story, none of which I realized when I impulse-bought it– and this is an annoying thing about ebooks, because it’s so difficult to gauge how long a thing is when you pick it up. But! It worked out really well because I was about to have to put it down when I came to the end anyway, and I didn’t want to.

It’s a sweet little love story, with one of my favorite fanfic tropes, but instead, of course, of the fanfic shorthand character study structure, you’ve got to meet a character and get to know him and also his potential love interest, and there’s not much time to get sucked in and find out everything you need to know. Fortunately, there’s plenty of character in this brief study, and you get what you need to root for him to not be an idiot by the end. It’s a sweet, elliptical little romance, and very hopeful, and very Thanksgiving-y. Do recommend!

Unexpectedly, there is a lot of loving detail about Lebanon in it. Also, inflatable yard turkeys. 
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dragonlady7: self-portrait but it's mostly the DSLR in my hands in the mirror (Default)
Oh so I read Naomi Novik's Uprooted yesterday because I had read the preview chapter on Libby and grudgingly placed a hold even though I wasn't sure about the process, and it came through ahead of schedule so I went ahead and borrowed it and then devoured it.

It was great, I recommend it. I read it with zero spoilers, not even knowing what it was about beyond a vague suspicion of "fairy tale", and it delivered on that for sure, but not in the expected ways. (I had a vague notion of Sleeping Beauty, kinda? and there was a dreaming queen in a thorny woods, but mostly the myths it was borrowing from were expressly stated as Polish ones, the heroine is directly out of a book the author had read to her as a child, and I am ashamed I can't spell her name but it was in first person so her name only appears a handful of times in the book!) (Also: to all of you who were like YOU CAN'T WRITE A BOOK IN FIRST PERSON NO ONE WILL READ IT well fuck you guys, if Astolat can do it well that's no guarantee anyone else can but. Whatever it was great.)

Anyway. Quite apart from anything else-- the storytelling is superb, it's very well-drawn, lots of vivid details and unexpected characterizations and actually not being able to easily categorize the various characters in their fairy tale arch-types gave a lot of suspense because you never knew who was deathproof and who was gonna get it, this was quite a violent story-- what I found most moving?

It was a super-vivid story about learning disabilities. A character is trying to learn to be a wizard and it was exactly like me doing math all through middle school on up through programming classes in college, I'd take the book and muster all the courage I had and try to hone my damaged attention as sharp as it would go, and focus it with all my desperation on this book, with its series of instructions, that was Supposed To Work, but it was always just dead paper in my hands that never made any sense and there I was following the completely-nonsensical steps to the absolute limit of possible precision and in the end I just had a big mess of smudged pencil graphite and a nonsense answer, and all the experts staring at me like I'm some kind of wilfully-obstinate freak doing this on purpose, and I'm shaking and trying not to cry and it makes no sense, and then I find the bit that my battered brain can actually get around (oh, say, trigonometry, after that hellish year of algebra) and suddenly it's alive and I can make it do whatever I want with fluent ease, and everyone else is like "ugh you moron what are you even-- oh that's the right answer, wait what?" and I'm like "but this makes sense! look! i can make it fly! you can extrapolate this infinitely!" and they're like--

only since this is a fantasy story, it works out, unlike how in real life that just meant they didn't give me partial credit for the algebra because clearly I was just doing this on purpose, and so I failed junior year math and didn't get into the college i wanted and have never had a job that paid much more than minimum wage and now I'm middle-aged and have never been able to really believe in myself and so on and so forth. Ha! Ha ha. Ha! (This isn't usually where book reviews go, whoops! Sorry some of us just aren't over 1996.)

Anyway. I recommend the book just for that, it was so fucking vivid, and then she makes a fucking earthquake at them, and that's so poorly told (i mean by me, just now, it's really good in the book) it's not really a spoiler, you'd have to read the book to know what I meant.

So, like. Do.
dragonlady7: self-portrait but it's mostly the DSLR in my hands in the mirror (Default)
Confession time: I don't read much. Yes, really. I was a voracious reader up through high school, I don't do it as much now.
Anyway.
I remain a fast reader, but it's a bit like a drug, to me; I go on benders, and it consumes my awareness, and it's just. I don't know, I don't like what it does to me. I have terrible impulse control about it, and I get so sucked in I can't think about anything else, and so on.

But. Tor.com has a mailing list, and if you sign up, you can get free novellas and novelettes once in a while.
And this month they have Brooke Bolander's The Only Harmless Great Thing. So like, run don't walk.

Another confession: I had heard of this largely because I follow a few authors on Twitter who are hilarious, and another confession: I had Brooke Bolander confused with I think Sam Sykes because her Twitter handle is gender-neutral and I am easily confused and so I thought Sykes' user pic was hers and it was a whole thing where I just had no idea who was who. And in the Twitter threads, it was easy to lose track of who was self-promoting and who was talking about a friend and such.
So I had no idea 1) who Bolander was, 2) what this book was about, 3) why I should read it, except a vague "friend of friend" feeling because she's in this circle of authors I like who talk to each other. (I don't really talk on Twitter, actually; I mostly retweet political things, which is why I haven't much linked to my Twitter. It's not fannish content for the most part. It's not personal content either. It's political shit and nothing crossposts anymore.)

So anyway, I downloaded it, and managed to get it onto my Kindle, and I wasn't going to read it today, but then I opened it to make sure the thing had worked, and then there was the opening paragraph, and...
well it's really good, ok.
There are four POV characters and one of them is an elephant and another is a mammoth. The elephants speak to humans using sign language with their trunk. (The mammoth is in the past and is not referred to as such.)

!!!

Anyway it's really good and I won't say any more because I don't want to spoil it. I'd say there are some warnings for a POV character who is severely ill and dying, and the accompanying body horror, so do be careful if that's a thing for you, but it's not like it creeps up on you, it's basically the first thing you learn. It's not a fluffy story.

ETA: I feel I should mention that I just cried in the shower thinking about one of the final scenes of this book. It's. I mean. It's dark. But it's like. I mean grim, but sort of hopeful. But grim. The scene that specifically made me cry was from the elephant's POV, and to tell it as spoiler-free as possible, hmmm... she's paralyzed with fear at one point, and the only thing that gives her the courage to go on is that one of the human POV characters takes her lead rope away from a mean man to lead her instead, and this gives her enough of a sense of "we", long-missing in her absence from a herd, that she is able to go on. It's so-- it's that, I don't know what that is, but that distills the book pretty neatly, I think.
dragonlady7: self-portrait but it's mostly the DSLR in my hands in the mirror (Default)
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mrkinch:

mrkinch:

Whoever rec’d me Martha Well’s Wheel of the Infinite: I think I know who but prefer not to look like an idiot, so please remind me? It was great! Thank you!

ETA: I checked my messages (I have so few, I forget!) and it was in fact @bomberqueen17, so thank you! More recs perhaps?

 I am not in fact very widely read, of late, beyond Martha Wells, but I do recommend her entire back catalogue. I am so glad you enjoyed it! She is active on Tumblr and Livejournal, by the way– @marthawells, on here. Marvellously fannish, and continuously active! 

[Aside note, since reblogs are the way to do this: to anyone else reading this conversation, remember that post that kept going by with people saying “why don’t more prophecies involve grannies?” and I thought, you know, Wheel of the Infinite features a Chosen One who is a woman old enough to have an adult son, though if he has his own children they’re not mentioned in the book, and is an excellent example both of yes, how great that is as a trope subversion, and alas, how commercially unsuccessful. Yes, authors should write more books about older women fulfilling prophecies instead of pimply insecure teens, but nobody buys them, that’s the sad truth. So go buy this one, which is now an ebook to which I don’t have the link but surely Google does.]

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