rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Jun. 23rd, 2025 01:08 pm)
Rana Mitter, Forgotten Ally: China’s World War II, 1937–1945: China fought imperial/Axis Japan, mostly alone (though far from unified), for a long time. A useful reminder that the US saw things through its own lens and that its positive and negative beliefs about Chiang Kai-Shek, in particular, were based on American perspectives distant from actual events.

Gregg Mitman, Empire of Rubber: Firestone’s Scramble for Land and Power in Liberia: Interesting story of imperialist ambition and forced labor in a place marked by previous American intervention; a little too focused on reminding the reader that the author knows that the views he’s explaining/quoting are super racist, but still informative.

Alexandra Edwards, Before Fanfiction: Recovering the Literary History of American Media Fandom: fun read )

Stefanos Geroulanos, The Invention of Prehistory: Empire, Violence, and Our Obsession with Human Origins: Wide-ranging argument that claims about prehistory are always distorted and distorting mirrors of the present, shaped by current obsessions. (Obligatory Beforeigners prompt: that show does a great job of sending up our expectations about people from the past.) This includes considering some groups more “primitive” than others, and seeing migrants as a “flood” of undifferentiated humanity. One really interesting example: Depictions of Neandertals used to show them as both brown and expressionless; then they got expressions at the same time they got whiteness, and their disappearance became warnings about white genocide from another set of African invaders.

J.C. Sharman, Empires of the Weak: The Real Story of European Expansion and the Creation of the New World: Challenges the common narratives of European military superiority in the early modern world (as opposed to by the 19th century, where there really was an advantage)—guns weren’t very good and the Europeans didn’t bring very many to their fights outside of Europe. Likewise, the supposed advantages of military drill were largely not present in the Europeans who did go outside Europe, often as privately funded ventures. Europeans dominated the seas, but Asian and African empires were powerful on land and basically didn’t care very much; Europeans often retreated or relied on allies who exploited them right back. An interesting read. More generally, argues that it’s often hard-to-impossible for leaders to figure out “what worked” in the context of state action; many states that lose wars and are otherwise dysfunctional nevertheless survive a really long time (see, e.g., the current US), while “good” choices are no guarantee of success. In Africa, many people believed in “bulletproofing” spells through the 20th century; when such spells failed, it was because (they said) of failures by the user, like inchastity, or the stronger magic of opponents. And our own beliefs about the sources of success are just as motivated.

Emily Tamkin, Bad Jews: A History of American Jewish Politics and Identities: There are a lot of ways to be an American Jew. That’s really the book.

Roland Barthes, Mythologies (tr. Annette Lavers & Richard Howard): A bunch of close readings of various French cultural objects, from wrestling to a controversy over whether a young girl really wrote a book of poetry. Now the method is commonplace, but Barthes was a major reason why.

Robert Gerwarth, November 1918: The German Revolution: Mostly we think about how the Weimar Republic ended, but this book is about how it began and why leftists/democratic Germans thought there was some hope. Also a nice reminder that thinking about Germans as “rule-followers” is not all that helpful in explaining large historical events, since they did overthrow their governments and also engaged in plenty of extralegal violence.

Mason B. Williams, City of Ambition: FDR, La Guardia, and the Making of Modern New York: Mostly about La Guardia, whose progressive commitments made him a Republican in the Tammany Hall era, and who allied with FDR to promote progressivism around the country. He led a NYC that generated a huge percentage of the country’s wealth but also had a solid middle class, and during the Great Depression used government funds to do big things (and small ones) in a way we haven’t really seen since.

Charan Ranganath, Why We Remember: Unlocking Memory's Power to Hold on to What Matters: Accessible overview of what we know about memory, including the power of place, chunking information, and music and other mnemonics. Also, testing yourself is better than just rereading information—learning through mistakes is a more durable way of learning.

Cynthia Enloe, Twelve Feminist Lessons of War: War does things specifically to women, including the added unpaid labor to keep the home fires burning, while “even patriotic men won’t fight for nothing.” Women farmers who lack formal title to land are especially vulnerable. Women are often told that their concerns need to wait to defeat the bad guys—for example, Algerian women insurgents “internalized three mutually reinforcing gendered beliefs handed down by the male leaders: first, the solidarity that was necessary to defeat the French required unbroken discipline; second, protesting any intra-movement gender unfairness only bolstered the colonial oppressors and thus was a betrayal of the liberationist cause; third, women who willingly fulfilled their feminized assigned wartime gendered roles were laying the foundation for a post-colonial nation that would be authentically Algerian.” And, surprise, things didn’t get better in the post-colonial nation. Quoting Marie-Aimée Hélie-Lucas: “Defending women’s rights ‘now’ – this now being any historical moment – is always a betrayal of the people, of the revolution, of Islam, of national identity, of cultural roots . . .”

Ned Blackhawk, The Rediscovery of America: American history retold from a Native perspective, where interactions with/fears of Indians led to many of the most consequential decisions, and Native lands were used to solve (and create) conflicts among white settlers.

Sophie Gilbert, Girl on Girl : How Pop Culture Turned a Generation of Women Against Themselves: Read more... )

Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Message: Short but not very worthwhile book about Coates navel-gazing and then traveling to Israel and seeing that Palestinians are subject to apartheid.

Thomas Hager, Electric City: The Lost History of Ford and Edison’s American Utopia: While he was being a Nazi, Ford was also trying to take over Muscle Shoals for a dam that would make electricity for another huge factory/town. This is the story of how he failed because a Senator didn’t want to privatize this public resource.

Asheesh Kapur Siddique, The Archive of Empire: Knowledge, Conquest, and the Making of the Early Modern British World: What is the role of records in imperialism? Under what circumstances do imperialists rely on records that purport to be about the colonized people, versus not needing to do so? Often their choices were based on inter-imperialist conflicts—sometimes the East India Company benefited from saying it was relying on Indian laws, and sometimes London wanted different things.

Thomas C. Schelling The Strategy of Conflict: Sometimes when you read a classic, it doesn’t offer much because its insights have been the building blocks for what came after. So too here—if you know any game theory, then very little here will be new (and there’s a lot of math) but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t vital. Also notable: we’ve come around again to deterring (or not) the Russians.

rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Jun. 20th, 2025 05:48 pm)
Sarah Langan, Pam Kowolski Is a Monster!: self-obsessed in the apocalypse )

Stephen King, Never Flinch:Holly Gibney )

Shannon Chakraborty, The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi: piracy and magic )

Olivie Blake, Gifted and Talented: for fans of Succession )

Ai Jiang, A Palace Near the Wind: Natural Engines: marriage and conquest )

John Scalzi, When the Moon Hits Your Eye: moon made of cheese )

M. L. Wang, Blood Over Bright Haven: white women's guilt )

Emily Tesh, The Incandescent: magic school administrator!  )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( May. 9th, 2025 08:09 am)
Ivan Ermakoff, Ruling Oneself Out: A Theory of Collective Abdications: how do democracies die? )

James Tejani, A Machine to Move Ocean and Earth: The Making of the Port of Los Angeles and America: land grabs )

Henry Jenkins, Where the Wild Things Were: Boyhood and Permissive Parenting in Postwar America: boyhood, media, and race )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( May. 8th, 2025 07:00 pm)
Athena Aktipis, A Field Guide to the Apocalypse: A Mostly Serious Guide to Surviving Our Wild Times: cursing and prepping )

Sarah Hook, Moral Rights, Creativity, and Copyright Law: The Death of the Transformative Author: a non-American against moral rights )

Andrea Long Chu, Authority: Essays: not here to make friends )

Tom Segev, 1967: Israel, the War, and the Year That Transformed the Middle East: tragedy )


Adam Hochschild, To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918: also tragedy )

Jordan S. Carroll, Speculative Whiteness: Science Fiction and the Alt-Right: alt-right sf readers )

Sianne Ngai, Theory of the Gimmick: Aesthetic Judgment and Capitalist Form: what's a gimmick for? )

Sarah Wynn-Williams, Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism: the book Meta didn't want you to read )

William Neuman, Things Are Never So Bad That They Can't Get Worse: Inside the Collapse of Venezuela: where we might be heading )

Omar el Akkad, One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This: justified rage and walking away )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( May. 7th, 2025 05:43 pm)
Francis Spufford, Red Plenty: Soviet SF? )

Dean Koontz, The Husband: Kidnap thriller )

Rosie Danan, Fan Service: Romance with a fannish twist )

Rosie Danan, duology romance with porn performers )

Django Wexler, Everybody Wants to Rule the World Except Me: In this sequel, the accidental Dark Lord tries to lead her new people to peace with the humans, against strenuous opposition from parties on both sides. Flippancy and lesbian lust guide her way. If you liked the first book, the second continues perfectly well in that vein.
rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Apr. 6th, 2025 05:02 pm)
Seth Dickinson, The Tyrant Baru Cormorant: not for me I fear )

Katherine Addison, New Goblin Emperor works )

Erik J. Brown, All That's Left in the World: apocalypse YA )

Lavie Tidhar, Central Station: Israel/Palestine as spaceport )

Matt Dinniman, up to date on dungeon crawler Carl )


rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Mar. 31st, 2025 09:58 pm)
My tumblr was just deleted. Why? I don't know. Have submitted a support request, but wild how unpersoned I feel.

ETA: Restored! No communication from Tumblr. But I am personed again.
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Mar. 23rd, 2025 02:13 pm)
Peter Beinart, Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza: wrongs in our name )

Enrico Bonadio & Andrea Borghini, Food, Philosophy, and Intellectual Property: Fifty Case Studies: short stories )


Yongyan Li, Perspectives on Plagiarism in China: History, Genres, and Education: interesting overview )

Hadeel Al-Alosi, The Criminalisation of Fantasy Material: Law and Sexually Explicit Representations of Fictional Children: the precautionary principle )

Kathy Bowrey, Copyright, Creativity, Big Media and Cultural Value: Incorporating the Author: authors in a world they tried to shape )


Bryan Caplan, The Case Against Education:a terrible book )

Errol Morris, The Ashtray: against  )

Gary J. Bass, The Blood Telegram: Nixon, Kissinger, and a Forgotten Genocide: Nixon probably was as bad as Trump, just more constrained )


Carl Elliott, The Occasional Human Sacrifice: Medical Experimentation and the Price of Saying No: on whistleblowing )


Cynthia A. Kierner, The Tory’s Wife: A Woman and Her Family in Revolutionary America:lost histories )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Feb. 21st, 2025 04:07 pm)
John Scalzi, Constituent Service: Lightweight novella about a human doing civic service in a district made mostly of nonhumans.

Matt Dinniman, Dungeon Crawler CarlI discover litRPG )

Rachel Haimowitz, Anchored m/m romance in slavery )
Xiran Jay Zhao, Heavenly Tyrantlots more bastards to kill )
Ursula Whitcher, North Continent Ribbon: Series of short stories set on or around a planet colonized by humans and still struggling with the human relationship with machines and machine intelligences, as well as what happens when you put human minds in nonhuman bodies. Fine, though the short story form makes it hard for me to really bond with characters. I noted that one story was actually published as an Original Work on AO3, which is the first time I’ve seen that particular credit!

Raquel Vasquez Gilliland, romances with witches )

James Alan Gardner, They Promised Me the Gun Wasn’t Loaded: Second in a hoped-for series about newly superpowered university students, this time from the perspective of Jools, the screwup of the bunch, who now knows everything that a human can do and can do anything that the best human can do. When Jools becomes entangled with an attempt to auction off—and then steal—a supervillain weapon, she’ll have to fight her insecurities as well as a bunch of villains and self-styled heroes, including one whose Robin Hood schtick includes a glamor that gets women to want to have sex with him.

A.D. Sui, The Dragonfly Gambit: Novella about sapphic fighter pilots in a collapsing space empire. The protagonist was in a horrific accident that left her without a lover or the ability to fly, and left her a rebel; she’s forced back into service, where she finds her former lover now splitting her affections between the Third Daughter (head of the military) and the intelligence officer who’s forcing the protagonist to work for the empire. But the Third Daughter is really hot, oh no—will that complicate the protagonist’s desire for revenge?
rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Feb. 12th, 2025 03:48 pm)
David Graeber, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropologyspeculations and thoughts )

Nick Seaver, Computing Taste: Algorithms and the Makers of Music Recommendationmatching music )

Rachel Hope Cleves, Lustful Appetites: An Intimate History of Good Food and Wicked SexRead more... )

Daniel J. Sharfstein, The Invisible Line: Three American Families and the Secret Journey from Black to Whitepassing strange )
William Manchester, The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill: a big biography of a big man )

rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Jan. 13th, 2025 05:09 pm)
Charles Stross, A Conventional Boy: Going back in time in the Laundry Files, even though I really want to know what’s going on under the New Management. Derek was imprisoned as a fourteen-year-old mildly autistic, somewhat magically talented boy because of a moral panic over D&D and never released. Nearing fifty, he breaks out to attend a gaming convention—that just happens to be where a cult is trying to raise a god. It’s what you’d want from a Laundry Files novel (other than timeline progression); there are also two previously released short stories to make it a bit longer.

Adam Roberts, The This: A bunch of riffs on group consciousness as the next stage of/enemy of individual human consciousness. Wittily enough, it spreads as a social media platform embedded into a person’s skull—hands-free tweeting! There are different riffs on the concept, including Forever War-like interludes, a 1984 pastiche where Eurasia, Eastasia and Oceania are warring group consciousnesses, and weirder stuff. I am not even sure I liked it, but I thought it was interesting.

James Alan Gardner, All Those Explosions Were Someone Else’s Fault: In a world of superpowers and magic, an accident leaves four grad students with superpowers. Kim, an agender geology student, becomes Zircon, who can become incredibly tiny and super-hard, with some other extra powers as well, but they’re still hung up on their ex-boyfriend, a rich kid who several years previously broke up with them and joined the Dark forces. That’s kind of how it goes—it’s fun and not too serious despite all the explosions.

The Best American Poetry 2014, ed. Terence Hayes: I’m not a huge poetry fan, but I was struck by Tony Hoagland’s viciously witty Write Whiter, (“When I find my books in the ‘White Literature’ section of the bookstore,/dismay is what I feel—I thought I was writing about other, larger things”) and of course Patricia Lockwood’s astonishing Rape Joke.

Asha Greyling, The Vampire of Kings Street: Radhika Dhingra is a lawyer in late nineteenth-century New York, struggling under the dual burdens of her race and sex, when a vampire comes stumbling into her office, begging her to write his will. Then he’s arrested for murder. Vampires can only be sustained by the most wealthy, and his patron family quickly swoops in and tells Radhika her services are no longer needed, but she’s already swept up in the mystery. I would’ve liked this better if Radhika were a better lawyer; she talks about keeping client confidences, but her concept of this is TV-level at best as she spews relevant, privileged information to cops and journalists. Useful for plot advancement, I guess, but horrendously unethical and likely to get actual clients convicted and actual lawyers disbarred. Arguably things would be different in the magical (but still racist and sexist) nineteenth century, but it’s hard to see why they would have been; the basic principles were in place and were likely to have been applied particularly harshly to a legal outsider.

Kage Baker, The Machine’s Child: This seventh novel in Baker’s series about the time-spanning Company and its immortal slaves suffered both from my long delay between books and more from the fact that Mendoza, the most compelling character and the main character most of the way through, is here both amnesiac through most of the book and also actively being gaslit by her rescuers. They did rescue her from horrific torture, but they are also actively concealing that there are three separate entities sharing one body—all three of which are in love with her and having sex with her, which does not come off very well. She spends almost the whole book behaving like a Heinlein heroine, enjoying sex with her man/men as she accepts and aids their plans. They’re plotting to overthrow the Company and setting up for a final battle, but I’m not sure I am invested enough to read the final book in the series. (There are two subsequent standalones in the Company universe and some short stories.)

Kate Wilhelm, Somerset Dreams and Other Stories: Short story collection, some sf and some fantasy-esque or just lives of quiet desperation in which middle-class 70s white American women fantasize about escape from the lives they are expected to live.

David Mitchell, The Bone ClocksLiterary sf done reasonably well (to my somewhat grudging surprise). In a narrative starting in 1984, loosely connected people in England have strange experiences involving psychic powers, missing time, and people appearing and disappearing around them. The men were mainly tedious, though that was clearly on purpose. Most interesting: Mitchell’s choice to extend the story past where a conventional plot about the secret war between good and bad immortals defending/preying on humanity would have ended to show a world that had a seemingly unrelated climate collapse anyway (though still preserving stakes for the individual participants).

MJ Wassmer, Zero Stars, Do Not Recommend: A Very Apocalyptic Vacation: Dan Foster is on a Caribbean vacation with his girlfriend, Mara, when the sun disappears. When the people in the luxury accommodations start hoarding all the resources, things get bleak very quickly. Will class war kill them before the cold does? And is there any chance of survival? The tone is a lot more flippant than the summary, and though there are deaths and serious injuries, many of the people do survive for vaguely-plausible-within-the-framework reasons. I don’t know, don’t think too hard about it, and you might enjoy it.

TJ Klune, The House in the Cerulean Sea: Linus Baker is a mild-mannered, dutiful caseworker in the Department in Charge of Magical Youth, visiting orphanages to ensure that magical children are not being abused. He takes his job very seriously, although not everyone does, and lives an otherwise gray life. When he’s sent to an isolated orphanage with some very special magical children, he finds them—and their intriguing headmaster, Arthur Parnassus—challenging his determination to stick to the rulebook. It’s a nice YA about embracing difference and magic.

Rivers Solomon, Model Home: Three sisters grew up in an otherwise all-white enclave in Texas, in a home that hated them. The oldest has a dissociative disorder, and believes that she was possessed by the woman with no face who lived in the house—a woman at least one of the other sisters had also seen. What follows is a horror story about racism. The story felt over the top in the way the best horror can be.

Invisible Strings: 113 Poets Respond to the Songs of Taylor Swift, ed. Kristie Frederick Daughtrey.
Look, it’s an obvious money/attention play, but good for them and if they can get more attention to poetry, it’s a win. Radioactive Apology by Subhaga Crystal Bacon has lines that slither around, changing meaning as they go in ways that do feel Swiftian enough that I didn’t notice until I double-checked that there’s really only one actual rhyme in there. Amy King’s Lessons Learning is a poem about how being in love is the only worthwhile thing—again very Swiftian in a puckish way. (available here  (gift link) I found Anti-Sonnet by Mag Gabbert poignant.

Seanan McGuire, Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear: Another Wayward Children novella, set this time mainly in one of the worlds before the return. Nadya is a Russian orphan adopted by well-meaning Americans who think her missing arm is a disability in need of correction; when they force a prosthetic on her, she escapes through a Door, but she doesn't really mean to do so, which causes trouble later despite the life she builds in a Drowned world. I thought it was well done.

W.H. Auden, The English Auden: Poems, Essays and Dramatic Writings, 1927-1939: I’m not sure there are any gems that aren’t already well known, but it was fascinating to read these in concert with a bunch about Churchill to get the literary version of the lamps going out all over Europe—lots of poems about dread. If you want one that hits different now, right before “Musée des Beaux Arts” there’s “Gare du Midi”: A nondescript express in from the South,/Crowds round the ticket barrier, a face/To welcome which the mayor has not contrived/Bugles or braid: something about the mouth/Distracts the stray look with alarm and pity./Snow is falling, Clutching a little case,/He walks out briskly to infect a city/Whose terrible future may have just arrived.”
rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Jan. 1st, 2025 01:45 pm)
I wrote for Yuletide this year! It was just a volunteer thing so I didn't get anything, but it was fun to get back in. Thanks so much to [personal profile] kass for quick beta! I also have a small SPN story burbling along, amazingly enough.

Leavetaking (2993 words) by rivkat
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: The Diplomat (US TV 2023)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Kate Wyler/Austin Dennison
Characters: Kate Wyler, Austin Dennison
Additional Tags: Post-Season 2
Summary:

Kate’s going away, without Hal, so she’s saying goodbye to Dennison. A very demonstrative goodbye. Set after S2 ends.

rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Dec. 4th, 2024 01:49 pm)
Anne Kustritz, Identity, Community, and Sexuality in Slash Fan Fictionslash and fandom more generally )

Christian B. Long, Infrastructure in Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic Film, 1968–2021images of subways, sewers, etc )
Alfred L. Martin, Jr., Fandom for Us, by Us: The Pleasures and Practices of Black Audiencesenjoyment, recognition, and power )

Carrie M. Lane, More Than Pretty Boxes: How the Rise of Professional Organizing Shows Us the Way We Work Isn’t Workingprofessional organizing as a response to social dysfunction )

Brian Klaas, Corruptible: Who Gets Power and How It Changes Usevo-psych diagnoses and some mild solutions )
rivkat: Wonder Woman reading comic (wonder woman reading comic)
( Dec. 2nd, 2024 11:24 am)
Ryan North & Chris Fenoglio, Star Trek Lower Decks: Warp Your Own Waycoffee or raktajino? )
Robert Jackson Bennett, A Drop of Corruptionkings! what a good idea!  )
Susanna Clarke, The Wood at Midwintershort )
Sharon Shinn, Alibiteleportation and creeping fascism )
Sacha Lamb, The Forbidden BookYiddish fantasy )
Adrian Tchaikovsky, Days of Shattered Faithimperial overreach )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Nov. 11th, 2024 09:58 am)
Claire Bishop, Disordered Attention: How We Look at Art and Performance Todayart theory )
Renée DiResta, Invisible Rulers: The People Who Turn Lies into RealityHow misinformation works now )

Kathy Peiss, Hope in a Jar: The Making of America’s Beauty Culturefrom painted faces to made-up faces )
Corinne E. Blackmer, Queering Anti-Zionism: Academic Freedom, LGBTQ Intellectuals, and Israel/Palestine Campus Activismat least two things can be true )
Victoria Vantoch, The Jet Sex: Airline Stewardesses and the Making of an American Iconglamor and flying )
Don H. Doyle, The Cause of All Nations: An International History of the American Civil Warsuper interesting  )
Tracy Campbell, The Year of Peril: America in 1942fear and loathing )
Carrie Lowry Schuettpelz, The Indian Card: Who Gets to Be Native in Americablood quantum and its discontents )

Joseph A. Tainter, The Collapse of Complex Societiescomplexity is its own enemy )
Since these reviews aren't spoilery and I am sad, no cut tags.

Elaine U. Cho, Ocean’s Godori: In a Korean-dominated space culture, a disgraced pilot tries to follow her captain, but her captain’s unwise decisions lead to conflicts with pirates and with people out to kill a scion of an important industrialist—the pilot’s old friend/partial source of her disgrace. Also, a new member of the crew comes from a death-handling caste and may have trouble fitting in. I probably could have done with more time to breathe on the worldbuilding, but if you like not-totally-cohesive crew stories this might suit.

David Ignatius, Phantom Orbit: I thought this would be more sf-y, but it’s basically a thriller about nations interfering with satellites to gain advantage, with much of the action sparked by the invasion of Ukraine.

Genevieve Cogman, Elusive: I liked this more than the first book—Eleanor continues to work for the Scarlet Pimpernel, and returns to France, but she has more agency and doubts about the work of saving aristocrats from the French Revolution. She also learns more about her powers, the mage inhabiting her head, and the relationship between mages and vampires. A cliffhanger ending rounds it out.

Shelly Jay Shore, Rules for Ghosting: Ezra Friedman is a trans man whose problems mainly stem from his complicated Jewish family, its funeral business, and the fact that Ezra can see ghosts. Although he’s been a peacemaker all his life, the stress starts to get to him when a shocking Seder announcement disrupts the family, a main source of income disappears and he has to return to working at the family business, and the hot Jewish guy checking him out turns out to be the widower of a ghost that is behaving very unusually. This is very cozy—ghosts are not evil or tangible—and it reinforced for me that I’m no longer much of a romance reader, because the Jewish specificity wasn’t even doing it for me.

Virginia Black, No Shelter But the Stars: Kyran is the princess of a people who are trying to retake their lost planet after being forced out by a brutal empire; Davia is the emperor’s daughter who has tried to renounce politics in favor of spirituality. After a battle, they crash land and are forced to rely on each other to survive. It’s enemies-to-lovers, with the more experienced Davia teaching Kyran to calm her frantic soul. I thought the description of physical recovery from the serious injuries described was a bit unrealistic, but if you really like enemies-to-lovers, this might work for you.

Garth Nix, We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord: In 70s? Australia, the protagonist and his genius little sister are being raised by quirky parents who don’t allow things like TV. When his little sister finds a mysterious sphere that can talk in people’s heads and even change their behavior, he has to turn from his D&D games to saving the world. I think I would have enjoyed it as a middle-grade reader (it naturally seems slighter now).

Madeline Ashby, vN: Conscious, self-replicating Von Neumann machines are a controversial but significant part of the world; they have fail-safes that require them to love and not harm humans. Amy Peterson is a vN whose growth has been carefully constrained by food restriction so that her mother (another vN) and her father (a human) can raise her like a human child. But when she’s five, her grandmother shows up and attacks her mother for being a traitor. Amy reacts immediately—by eating her grandmother. Now she’s a lot larger, has her grandmother living in her consciousness, and lacks the fail-safe. Interesting stuff going on here; warning for sexual abuse of vN (not of Amy) as a motivating factor for several key points.

James S.A. Corey, Livesuit: Humanity’s in a war of extermination with aliens, and so some people sign up to do Forever War journeys, but with a twist: They’re put into exosuits that make them incredibly strong and improve their senses. It seems like a worthy mission. But is something deeply, terribly wrong? Creepy novella.

Holly Jackson, The Reappearance of Rachel Price: Sixteen years ago, Rachel Price disappeared, leaving her toddler in her car. Her family consents to a documentary about the case in order to get money to take care of an elderly relative with dementia. But, while the documentary is being filmed, Rachel Price reappears. Her daughter is suspicious; they were doing fine without her. A rather gothic plot unfolds. I see why people liked it, but I don’t think this is the variety of thriller for me.

Chuck Wendig, The Staircase in the Woods: In 1998, four loser kids and one golden boy were best friends—they called the bond between them the Covenant. But one night, drinking and doing drugs out in the woods, they came across a staircase standing alone in the woods, and the golden boy climbed it and disappeared, along with the staircase. Decades later, the one who stayed in their town calls the rest of them back, and leads them to another staircase. Trapped in an apparently unending house of horrors, can they survive and maybe find out what really happened? Effectively creepy in its use of trauma and the mundane; a few typos in the eARC.

Daryl Gregory, When We Were Real: Gregory seems endlessly inventive; this novel is set in a world with irrefutable proof that we live in a simulation, including Impossibles, which are phenomena that can’t be explained using physics (as well as a weekly text reminder that we are living in a simulation beamed to everyone’s brain—not clear what happens if the recipient can’t read). Some have responded with nihilism, considering everyone else (except perhaps fellow gun-toting, Matrix-loving incels) to be bots. On a tour of seven American Impossibles, a pregnant influencer, a rabbi, a nun (and accompanying novice), two German tourists, a would-be right-wing podcaster and his feckless son, a comic book writer, and his best friend, a retired engineer, join an inexperienced tour guide and seen-everything bus driver. But the trip gets more complicated when a fugitive joins them. Her mission is mysterious but urgent. Each of the characters has a distinctive perspective—the Engineer (“The thing is ridiculously oversized and out of scale, like a Koons Balloon Dog. He also doesn’t know how he feels when he looks at a Koons Balloon Dog.”), the Realist’s Son (“Why was anyone shocked that the world was not in our control, and that nothing we did mattered? The Simulators could hit reset at any time. Or climate change would kill us all. Same difference.”), and so on. I loved it.

The Neurodiversiverse: Alien Encounters, ed. Anthony Francis: I’m not a big poetry fan, so the poems sprinkled throughout didn’t do much for me. Brian Starr’s The Interview engaged with the idea that, just because you’re not like other humans doesn’t mean that you have common interests with another entity who’s not like humans. Power fantasies (of which there were a number, where neurodiversity enables success) are fine and welcome, but I liked the challenge. Stewart C. Baker’s The List-Making Habits of Heartbroken Ships is likely to appeal to Murderbot fans for reasons suggested by the title.

Sung-il Kim, trans. Anton Hur, Blood of the Old Kings: A widow who lost her young child as well determines to rebel against the oppressive conquerors who killed them, and seeks out the defeated dragon that used to protect her country for help. Meanwhile, a young sorcerer determines to escape her fate of being used as an undead power generator for the same empire, and a young man seeks to find the murderer of his friend, no matter who he angers in the process. The widow, Loren, doesn’t spend too much narrative time contemplating what she’s lost, although she does share a few memories; she’s too busy finding out that politics are complicated even in a rebellion against a terrible enemy. Unusually for the fantasies I tend to read, there’s also no romance or really sexual energy at all.


rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Sep. 25th, 2024 04:41 pm)
Sarah Rees Brennan, Long Live Evilbad guys are having a moment )
Keanu Reeves & China Miéville, The Book of ElsewhereMy immortal )
Stuart Neville, Blood Like Minesaving a daughter at what price? )
C.S. Pacat, The Captive PrinceI read the whole trilogy )

Caitlin Rozakis, DreadfulI'm the bad guy )
Emma Newman, The Vengeance:pirates and other monsters )
James S.A. Corey, The Mercy of Godshumans, conquered )
Craig Schaefer, Harmony BlackFBI witch )
Madeline Ashby, Glass Housesfeminist in a dystopia )
Naomi Kritzer, Liberty’s Daughterseasteading sf )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Sep. 24th, 2024 04:34 pm)
Alan Taylor, American Colonies: The Settling of North Americatransnational history )
Erin Thompson, Smashing Statues: The Rise and Fall of America's Public Monumentsmonuments are instructions )
Jeffrey A. Engel, When the World Seemed New: George H. W. Bush and the End of the Cold Warhegemonic dreams )
Brooke Lindy Blower, Americans in a World at War: Intimate Histories from the Crash of Pan Am's Yankee Clippersnapshot of (white, cosmopolitan) diversity )
Jonathan D. Sarna, American Judaism: A Historytwo Jews, three opinions )
Andrew J. Bacevich, America's War for the Greater Middle Eastcontrolling the oil )
Carolyn Woods Eisenberg, Fire and Rain: Nixon, Kissinger, and the Wars in Southeast Asiabad men )
Eric Klinenberg, 2020: One City, Seven People, and the Year Everything Changeda vulnerable nation )

Annette Gordon-Reed & Peter S. Onuf, "Most Blessed of the Patriarchs": Thomas Jefferson and the Empire of the ImaginationHow Jefferson imagined himself )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Aug. 30th, 2024 02:51 pm)
Adam Higgenbotham, Challenger: A True Story of Heroism and Disaster on the Edge of Spaceminute by minute )
Alison Arngrim, Confessions of a Prairie Bitch: How I Survived Nellie Oleson and Learned to Love Being Hatedabuse and survival )
Jonathan Haslam, The Spectre of War: International Communism and the Origins of World War IIpropping up fascism to fight Reds )
Into the Desert: Reflections on the Gulf War, ed. Jeffrey A. Engel: was it a good war? )
Andrew M. Wehrman, The Contagion of Liberty: The Politics of Smallpox in the American Revolutionrecommended: inoculation is different from vaccination )
David Bellos & Alexandre Montagu, Who Owns This Sentence?: A History of Copyrights and Wrongsa skeptical history )
Monica Hesse, American Fire: Love, Arson, and Life in a Vanishing Landtrue crime )
Mark A. Noll, The Civil War as a Theological CrisisChristianity and the Civil War )
Henry Reynolds, Why Weren't We Told?Australian history )
Tony Judt, Reappraisals: Reflections on the Forgotten 20th CenturyEssay collection )
Vaclav Smil, Invention and Innovation: A Brief History of Hype and Failureagainst survivor bias )
Sarah Chayes, The Punishment of VirtueUS mistakes in Afghanistan )
Karen E. Fields & Barbara J. Fields, Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life: actively creating racism )
Marjoleine Kars, Blood on the River: A Chronicle of Mutiny and Freedom on the Wild Coasthistory of a rebellion )
Bruce H. Franklin, Most Important Fish in the Seahave some more depressing reads! )
Susan Stranahan et al., Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disasternope, not getting better )
Lauren Benton, They Called It Peacewho defines war? )
Benjamin C. Waterhouse, One Day I'll Work for Myself: The Dream and Delusion That Conquered Americaa self-employed man has a fool for an employer )
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