rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
( Apr. 13th, 2011 05:15 pm)
I'm not sure I've ever totally lost respect for a person I previously thought was rational, if someone with whom I disagreed, in the course of reading one comment thread. (The problem may have been my initial assessment, however.) I gotta say, by comparison to the general blogosphere, the parts of LJ/DW where I hang out are filled with rainbows and puppies. And respectful if sometimes sharp dialogue. So, you know, thanks!

Fiction: Patricia Briggs and a thriller by Blake Crouch )
Fic rec: Mistaken for Strangers, by [personal profile] bellatemple . As an acafan I couldn't not love it. And if you think about the SPN-fan relationship as indicated by the show, the title gets even better.

Werewolves, assassins, dragons, young offenders, and whatever it is that CJ Cherryh writes )
(Post title taken from actual grading story I was told by a professor who shall not be named.) Grading today; confronted with an exam bearing a note that the examinee had not noticed Part 3 until the end of the (8-hour) exam, and thus had not provided an answer, ensuring a pretty bad grade given that the question was worth 35% of the grade. I feel horrible for the student, but mainly I think because my embarrassment squick’s been triggered. Here is what I did beforehand: I announced there’d be three sections in class, each with a different format: short answer, essay, fact pattern. I posted the exam instructions on the course site before the exam; the instructions specify that there are three parts and set forth the percentages. On the exam itself, those instructions are repeated. On each question, the points available are marked at the beginning. The exam has “page X of Y” on each page. The third part took up several pages—it even had pictures, for pete’s sake! It’s an exam disaster, to be sure, and I do feel sorry for the kid. But sorry with a lot of argh attached.

fiction: YA fantasy, Regency paranormal, and Patricia Briggs )
O my Honda Civic Hybrid -- I love you because when I took [livejournal.com profile] misterrivkat to the airport for his trip to Iceland, we left DC at 4:15 and I spent until around 6:30 navigating the usual, moderately awful DC-area rush hour in DC, Maryland, DC again and then Virginia.

And I got over 45 miles per gallon.

Admittedly, this is a notable result, and I probably won't get that for the whole tank. But it still makes me unreasonably happy.

Book reviews: Coben, Rusch, Robinson, Kellerman, Briggs, Stross, MacLeod, Butler )
Patricia Briggs, Dragon Blood. As [livejournal.com profile] melymbrosia said, this sequel to Dragon Bones isn’t as good. Dragon Bones told the story of Ward Hurog, the heir to a small but important part of a kingdom. Because Ward had feigned stupidity to avoid his brutal father’s wrath, he had a hard time proving himself fit to rule when his father died. In Dragon Blood, everybody understands that Ward’s a good, competent guy, and so the interesting conflict is gone. The story just sort of plods along. It also bothers me a bit that the homosexual characters are all bad guys (the exception, who really wants to be sleeping with his wife rather than another man, is a victim of molestation and dark magic to bind him to the bad guy, and so I’m thinking he doesn’t count). This isn’t really fair of me, because I don’t think Briggs is homophobic and I don’t think all gay/bi characters have to be good, but it just makes me nervous.

Lois McMaster Bujold’s Vorkosigan books include one in which a man is coerced into sex with other men, by drugs and not magic, but it doesn’t bother me so much because many of the characters are comfortable with polymorphous perversity. The patriarchal Barrayarans aren’t generally, but they’re backwards folks being dragged into the fiftieth (or whatever) century by the recently reestablished contact with other worlds, some of which are very strange, to Barrayarans and to us. I like Bujold’s style. She has a real gift for putting heroic quips in characters’ mouths, and when a bad guy’s head is cut off, his last words are “You can’t --“instead of a complete sentence. There are very few Evil Overlords about; indeed, one of the things I liked most about Diplomatic Immunity, the most recent book in the series and also the most recently written, is that the bad guy is really clever, thinks of lots of fallback plans, and is not easily defeated at all. Go space opera!

Buffy the Vampire Slayer script books are up to Season 2, vol. 3 of 4 now. They’re great to have around, because the writing is fantastic, but it’s sad that the typos and spelling errors haven’t been corrected. Sure, I’d like insight into the process, but that’s a little too much insight. Exception made for the direction “FITE! FITE! FITE!”

The West Wing Script Book, by contrast, has six chosen episodes, rather than a complete set. The scripts have much less direction to the actors than the BtVS scripts, though both are dialogue-intensive. It turns out that I like reading BtVS scripts better, because the actors on WW are relatively more important to my enjoyment of the dialogue than the actors on BtVS.

Steven Brust, The Paths of the Dead is set long before the time of Vlad Taltos (pronounced Taltosh), one of the best characters in modern fantasy. Vlad will be a human thief in an elvish world, though the elves call themselves human, which is a great detail. Anyhow, this book purports to be a history of a time before Vlad, but it turns out that I only like Vlad. Well, I like Sethra Lavode, a sorceress who will know Vlad later in life and who plays a role here, but the style of the book made me sick. It’s a conscious decision by Brust to write in a slow, precious style, where the characters constantly repeat themselves and engage in other verbal tics that often end with “I hardly think I have been asking anything else for the last hour!” when a questionee finally restates a question asked a page ago. That it’s conscious doesn’t make it tolerable. Apparently, Brust intends to write at least one more book in this manner, and I doubt I’ll buy it even in softcover. I want more Vlad! People who want a great fantasy world with a funny, engagingly flawed protagonist should check out Jhereg and the other Vlad books, which are being reissued in double editions, or To Reign in Hell, Brust’s spectacular version of Paradise Lost. But skip this one.

Judith & Garfield Reeves-Stevens, Federation is the book with the hilarious ramming scene, of which I was reminded by the latest Star Trek movie. The ramming scene is as great as I remembered, complete with Geordi calling up from Engineering, asking what just happened, and, upon getting the response, asking “No, really, what just happened?” The rest of the book didn’t move me much. It’s a Zefrem Cochrane story, crossing over between TOS and TNG, and it’s been Jossed (Gened?) to hell and back by one of the TNG movies. I can’t really recommend it unless you’re a real fan of Zefrem. Or, you know, books in which one spaceship rams another.

Which is actually a good transition to C.S. Forester, Mr. Midshipman Hornblower. It’s evident why the Hornblower books are often cited as predecessors of Star Trek & similar spaceship-heavy worlds; the resource constraints, risks and human psychology at sea transfer easily to space. This book, which chronicles Hornblower’s earliest days at sea, is good clean fun, though chock full of British prejudices towards the French and the Spanish. Hornblower is a little too self-deprecating for my tastes, though he gives good angst.

Elizabeth Moon, The Speed of Dark, is a fascinating, unpredictable book about an autistic man in the midterm future, forced by his penny-pinching company to choose whether to take a treatment that may cure his autism but that may (also) destroy him as he exists now. Moon creates a plausible world, with bureaucratic and legal rules that ring sometimes disturbingly true, and the narrator is incredibly interesting. He does have a Temple Grandin-like feel (Moon has an autistic child and apparently did a ton of research) and the story makes his constraints, and his choices, feel real and important.

And now, the first lines/paragraphs meme, in no particular order. These are books I reread, which is as good a criterion as any:

Read more... )
Knowing that weapons-grade uranium was just being driven around in Turkey makes wondering what BtVS was doing setting a scene in the same country seem a bit trivial. Though I probably have more influence on Buffy than on uranium-selling, cash-hungry lunatics.

Things that have stopped working while my husband was away: (1) my beloved iBook, possibly because of hardware damage caused by my indiscriminate use of the hard restart; (2) my Palm Pilot, making me think that I'll just go back to a paper address book; and (3) the TV-entertainment-industrial complex, twice, victim of apparently faulty wiring. At least the last can be fixed by flipping the circuit breaker, although its first demise did mean that I missed TiVoing the second episode of Firefly.

I'll be computerless at home for at least a week, while I ship the iBook to Texas. I do a full mirror backup each night, fortunately, and though there are a few files that don't back up properly (including, for some reason, a song by REM) it should be mostly okay even if they have to replace the hard drive. And when Z. gets back tonight, I'm going to ask him to dig through the mirror drive so I can send my Clex stories to work & continue with them there.

I just finished Patricia Briggs' The Hob's Bargain, and was dissatisfied. I loved Dragon Bones, the first fantasy of hers that I read, which has a character who's pretended to be profoundly stupid for years to avoid his father's rage and jealousy, and who inherits a whole new set of problems when his father dies, leaving him the family holdings, complete with family ghost. Naturally, everyone else thinks he's stupid, too, so they don't exactly trust him to run the place. What I liked about the book was that people weren't bad guys just for the plot's sake, but because they had understandable human agendas. The good guys weren't necessarily the hero's allies, either, because they were trying to do the right thing and they weren't sure that leaving an idiot in charge was the right thing. Things were tied up a bit neatly, to be sure, but after years of vomitously long five-book epics, a one-book story is a welcome diversion. So if you like character-driven fantasy, Dragon Bones is a good buy.

The Hob's Bargain, however, was frustrating, and I'm not even sure I can explain why. I was distracted by what seemed to be unbalanced POV shifts -- I sure don't mind multiple POVs, but if you're going to shift between first and third, you have to be very careful, and it doesn't hurt to give both equal time, which this book didn't. And, in one of the third-person sections, the titular hob thinks a very cold, calculating thought, which I thought would be an interesting plot point, and then at the end the first-person narrator blithely asserts that the hob's motivations are completely different, and much less complicated, than that thought indicated. Now, this could be extremely interesting, if that were the beginning of a clash of narratives. But it's the end of the book, and the happily ever after is simply announced, as if it happens by the author's fiat. As between the two characters, who am I supposed to believe?

Anyway, I was going to look for other Patricia Briggs books, which sell for surprisingly high prices if you look at bookfinder.com, which you should if you're ever looking for new or used books (it's an aggregator engine, and searches Amazon and Half and many, many other sources). But now I doubt I'd pay the premium prices, though I'd still give her a chance if I could get another book for a couple of dollars.
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