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.


Richard Overy, Why the Allies Won:it wasn't inevitable )
Claudio Saunt, Unworthy Republic: The Dispossession of Native Americans and the Road to Indian Territory:awful echoes )
Eric H. Cline, 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed: Revised and Updatedand sequel )

Dominic Erdozain, One Nation Under Guns: How Gun Culture Distorts Our History and Threatens Our DemocracyHere, have a comprehensive summary )
Judith Butler, Who’s Afraid of GenderButler questions the TERFs and their allies )
Gary J. Bass, Judgment at Tokyowar crimes )
Adam Zamoyski, Phantom Terror: Political Paranoia and the Creation of the Modern State, 1789 – 1848peace crimes )
Edward J Larson, Summer for the Gods:monkey trial )
Jill Burke, How To Be a Renaissance Woman: The Untold History of Beauty and Female Creativitycomes with recipes )
Brian Merchant, Blood in the Machinepaean to the Luddites and modern successors )
Jennifer M. Black, Branding Trust: Advertising and Trademarks in Nineteenth-Century Americafor advertising nerds like me )

Joyce Appleby, Shores of Knowledge: New World Discoveries and the Scientific Imaginationo brave new world )
Kate Manne, Unshrinking: How to Face FatphobiaA philosopher on fatphobia )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jul. 5th, 2022 10:45 pm)
Beforeigners has disappeared from HBO! Tragedy. I guess that means no S3?

Out of the Ruins, ed. Preston Grassman: apocalypse stories )
Carmen Maria Machado, Her Body and Other Parties: everyday horrors of having a body )
Robert McGill, A Suitable Companion for the End of Your Life:flattened people as methods of dying by suicide )
Tade Thompson, The Legacy of Molly Southborne: More mollies )
T. Kingfisher, Nettle and Bone: princess on a quest )

Ben Aaronovitch, Tales from the Folly:lots of non-Peter POV )
K.D. Edwards, The Hourglass Throne: Glad this is finally out! )
Isaac Fellman, Dead Collections: trans vampire archivist romance )
Charlie Adhara, m/m romance where one is a shifter )

Naked City, ed. Ellen Datlow. urban fantasy )
Seanan McGuire, Seasonal Fearsfollowup to last year's archetypes book )
Fonda Lee, Jade Citynew palace intrigue/magic series )
Justina Ireland, Rust in the RootDepression-era magic )
Carrie Vaughn, Questlandisland of tropes )
Holly Black, Doll Bonesnot magical realism, more realistic magic )
Maya Deane, Wrath Goddess Singtrans Achilles fights (with) gods )
Sunyi Dean, The Book Eatersreally, they eat books )
Katherine Addison, The Grief of Stones:not more Maia, sadly, but it will do )
Rachel Hartman, In the Serpent’s WakeTess and colonialism )
Kameron Hurley, Future Artifacts: Storiesgrim, dark )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( May. 4th, 2022 03:38 pm)
Holly Black, Book of NightNew magic system just dropped )
Max Barry, The Twenty-Two Murders of Madison Mayserial killers in time )
Adrian Tchaikovsky, Eyes of the Voidhostile universe )
Emily St. John Mandel, Sea of Tranquilitytime ... flies )
James S.A. Corey, Memory’s Legionshort stories )
Freya Marske, A Marvellous LightEdwardian m/m fantasy )
Casey McQuiston, I Kissed Shara Wheelersmall town girl )
Nghi Vo, The Chosen and the BeautifulGatsby retold )
Ben Aaronovitch, Amongst Our Weaponsdomesticity )
Stephen King & Richard Chizmar, Gwendy’s Final TaskKing in spaaace )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jan. 29th, 2020 08:49 am)
KJ Charles, Gilded Cagemore Lilywhite boys )
Robert Jackson Bennett, Shorefallmagic as programming )
Nnedi Okorafor with Tana Ford & James Devlin, Laguardiaaliens not welcome )

Emily Skrutskie, Bonds of Brassspace opera with romance )

Sarah Kuhn & Nicole Goux, Shadow of the Batgirlorigin story )
Tobias S. Buckell, Mitigated Futuresshort stories and IP )
The Obama Inheritance: Fifteen Stories of Conspiracy Noir, ed. Gary Phillips.  still not pleasant )
Molly Knox Ostertag, The Midwinter Witchwitch family follies )
K.D. Edwards, The Hanged Manmy jam )
Tamsyn Muir, Gideon the NinthI disliked it, then liked it )
Rainbow Rowell & Faith Erin Hicks, Pumpkinheadsso cute )
Monstrous Affections: An Anthology of Beastly Tales, ed. Kelly Link & Gavin J. Grant: YA-ish )
This semester, I'm still not late on anything, just vaguely one step ahead of all my obligations, and it feels like victory. Someday I will even write fiction again.

Incredibly well written story about fraternities that is also about law. Warning for white men behaving badly, exactly as you’d expect. Intro:
One warm spring night in 2011, a young man named Travis Hughes stood on the back deck of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house at Marshall University, in West Virginia, and was struck by what seemed to him—under the influence of powerful inebriants, not least among them the clear ether of youth itself—to be an excellent idea: he would shove a bottle rocket up his ass and blast it into the sweet night air. And perhaps it was an excellent idea. What was not an excellent idea, however, was to misjudge the relative tightness of a 20-year-old sphincter and the propulsive reliability of a 20-cent bottle rocket. What followed ignition was not the bright report of a successful blastoff, but the muffled thud of fire in the hole.

Also on the deck, and also in the thrall of the night’s pleasures, was one Louis Helmburg III, an education major and ace benchwarmer for the Thundering Herd baseball team. His response to the proposed launch was the obvious one: he reportedly whipped out his cellphone to record it on video, which would turn out to be yet another of the night’s seemingly excellent but ultimately misguided ideas. When the bottle rocket exploded in Hughes’s rectum, Helmburg was seized by the kind of battlefield panic that has claimed brave men from outfits far more illustrious than even the Thundering Herd. Terrified, he staggered away from the human bomb and fell off the deck. Fortunately for him, and adding to the Chaplinesque aspect of the night’s miseries, the deck was no more than four feet off the ground, but such was the urgency of his escape that he managed to get himself wedged between the structure and an air-conditioning unit, sustaining injuries that would require medical attention, cut short his baseball season, and—in the fullness of time—pit him against the mighty forces of the Alpha Tau Omega national organization, which had been waiting for him.

It takes a certain kind of personal-injury lawyer to look at the facts of this glittering night and wrest from them a plausible plaintiff and defendant, unless it were possible for Travis Hughes to be sued by his own anus. But the fraternity lawsuit is a lucrative mini-segment of the personal-injury business, and if ever there was a deck that ought to have had a railing, it was the one that served as a nighttime think tank and party-idea testing ground for the brain trust of the Theta Omicron Chapter of Alpha Tau Omega and its honored guests—including these two knuckleheads, who didn’t even belong to the fraternity. Moreover, the building codes of Huntington, West Virginia, are unambiguous on the necessity of railings on elevated decks. Whether Helmburg stumbled in reaction to an exploding party guest or to the Second Coming of Jesus Christ is immaterial; there should have been a railing to catch him.
fiction: Holly Black, Margaret Ronald, Joe Hill )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jun. 7th, 2012 10:20 am)
Wow. Your views on race affect what you think about this dog (Bo Obama, as it happens).

In the same vein, Anne Fausto-Sterling on Bodies with Histories:
Or consider spirometers, which measure lung function. The normal functioning of black people’s lungs is typically presumed to be 10–15 percent below that of white people’s. As Lundy Braun, who studies the intersection of race and medical science and technology, has shown, the presumption stems from a poorly supported idea that blacks inherently have lesser lung capacities than whites. Yet spirometers are calibrated to account for this difference. Some machines actually have a “race” switch built into them, which technicians flip depending on what race they believe the patient to be. Pegging the lung function of blacks at a lower level means, among other things, that they have to be sicker than whites in order to qualify for worker’s compensation or other insurance for lung-related illness.
Quis Copyright Ipsos Custodes: Another perspective on Watchmen prequels, including discussion of copyright and fan fiction, along with the difficulty of defending as feminist the argument that one particular guy should control these characters, instead of a corporation. Unlike the author, I like the original Watchmen, though.

neat fantasy by P.C. Hodgell, Holly Black, Joe Haldeman, Alison Bechdel )
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