rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jun. 28th, 2023 02:40 pm)
Daniel Abraham, Blade of Dream: This middle book of a planned trilogy is unusual for a fantasy because there are no real fantasy elements until three-fourths of the way through. Instead, the bulk of the book is Elaine a Sal, the new prince of Kithamar’s heir, dealing with the change in her status including her tryst with a random citizen. The tryst throws both their lives off track—the citizen leaves his merchant family and joins the city guard, while Elaine starts to consider what parts of her life she actually wants, while investigating what is making her father so upset and closed-off from her. (That’s connected to the magic of the first book, as is what happens when, late in the book, the Thread of Kithamar tries to regain its control of the city’s rulers.) I’m interested to see what happens next.

M.R. Carey, Infinity Gate: Across the multiverse, a Pandominion rules hundreds of earths with an iron fist; when it discovers a set of worlds run by machine intelligence, it reacts badly. Meanwhile, a scientist from a world only slightly more deteriorated than our own discovers how to shift universes. They’ll all collide, with a denouement that is pretty exciting and also sets up the sequel.

C.S. Friedman, Nightborn: Coldfire Rising: A “how it happened” narrative creating the background for earlier novels. Human colonists land on Erna and discover that there’s something that can apparently read their minds and manifest dreams and fears, which they label “fae.” The last quarter of the book jumps far ahead in time, to characters we’ve met before, tenuously linked to the first three-fourths. It didn’t seem necessary to enjoy the earlier novels, but I guess there’s a market for this kind of filling out the narrative.

Kate Elliott, Furious Heaven: Space opera on a grand scale, with an Alexander-like hero in Sun, who is still fighting palace politics to ensure her place as heir while preparing for a war against the Phene Empire. Elliott has thought of an interesting way to use physical limitations to get the commander on the front lines, which is otherwise a really dumb thing for a mechanized army that doesn’t work by hand signals. No one is particularly good, and luck plays an important role, but it is still epic.

Nick Harkaway, Titanium Noir: Cal is a noir detective specializing in Titan problems. Titans are rich people who’ve gotten access to an expensive life-enhancing treatment that rolls back age but also makes people grow bigger—seven, eight, nine feet. They get stronger and harder to hurt, too, but somehow their hearts don’t give out—look, it’s a metaphor about wealth, ok? Anyway once you handwave the Titans, this is sf noir without much internet; after the beginning murder of a Titan, Cal pounds the street and looks at hard copy records, with the occasional file encoded into a [spoiler]. I liked it.

Mary Robinette Kowal, The Spare Man: Newlywed Tesla Crane wants to have a nice honeymoon cruise to Mars with her new spouse—a retired former detective—and her service dog. But someone keeps killing people and trying to blame it on her husband. Punctuated by cocktail recipes, this is an attempt at a classic Nick and Nora style mystery in spaaaace. I found it a bit too convoluted, but that is indeed classic, and it was interesting to have a main character with chronic pain issues (partially postponable with a deep brain implant, but only at a cost).

K.D. Edwards, The Eidolon: Apparently Edwards is planning a spinoff series focused on the kids, which seems completely reasonable though I also want to know what is happening to Rune. This book is set during the events of the previous book but focused on Max, Quinn, and Anna—the intro says it was actually begun when production limits forced the excision of a lot of material from that book. Anyway, it provides new information about what happened and what it’s like to be Quinn, who sees so many futures that he can have trouble dealing with the present.

Genevieve Cogman, Scarlet: The Scarlet Pimpernel, retold in a world with vampire aristocrats—sanguinocrats!—and maybe some leftover sorcery. Eleanor is a servant in an English vampire’s household when she’s recruited for a dangerous mission in France to rescue (she’s told) unjustly accused aristocrats. But she can’t help noticing that the Scarlet Pimpernel has a lot of assumptions about servants and nobility that don’t match her experience. And are vampires really as benevolent as she’s been raised to believe? I liked the Invisible Library series better, but this certainly has adventure and magic too.

David Gerrold, Hella: The main character is an autistic boy with a chip in his head that helps him navigate the world—which is a giant planet on which everything grows bigger than it does on Earth, though that doesn’t turn out to be as significant to the plot as you might have thought because the colonists are trying not to interact too much with the ecology for fear of disrupting it. But some colonists want to start colonizing and capitalizing, driving the conflict of the book, which also includes the protagonist starting to date and considering whether to transition back to being a girl. It felt like a bunch of interesting ideas both about humanity and about what “colonizing” really means were being squished under the YA format.

Ruthanna Emrys, Imperfect Commentaries: Short stories, including some details from her Cthulhu-derived universe, where she explains that one reason The Shadow over Innsmouth inspired her was that it starts with a government raid, meant to read as reassurance that the authorities were paying attention, but if you start talking raids and camps, “I’m going to have some default assumptions about who the bad guys are.”

Sara Beaman, Arlene Blakely, CS Cheely, K.D. Edwards, & Daniel Wood, Doom Days: After a pandemic wipes out most people, the survivors find ways to get by, mostly by scavenging or living in small farming communities. I have questions about the worldbuilding, but if you like “we have to escape the fascist enclaves and protect our small scale lives” then this is fine.

Steven Brust, Tsalmoth: Back in time, to the run-up to Vlad and Cawti’s wedding. Some of the events are surprising, because Vlad forgot them. He gets involved in a Tsalmoth conspiracy or two, runs up against a faction or two of the Left Hand, and experiences some surprising sorcerous attacks. It seemed like there were some boxes to check before the series finale, and mostly Vlad’s relative youth was shown by having him learn new words, but I still want to see how the last one goes.

Sharon Shinn and Molly Knox Ostertag, Shattered Warrior: Graphic novel about a young woman on a planet being exploited for its resources; although the loss of her family and position has left her wounded, finding her young niece as well as connections to rebels leads her to choose connection and dangerous sabotage attempts against the (larger, human-related) overlords. It’s fine but I mostly wanted new Ostertag.

Martha Wells, Witch King: Wells returns to fantasy with this story of a demon prince (aka witch king) that unfolds across two timelines: during a rebellion against the genocidal Heirarchs and long after, when some things have gone well and others haven’t. There was a lot to process—humans, witches, demons, Immortal Blessed, their constructs, and the Heirarchs were the key players, with lots of palace intrigue as well as fighting. I know it’s reasonable to fear descending into caricature when the market really likes one of your projects, but I confess I want more Murderbot instead.

Andrea Stewart, The Bone Shard War: Final volume of the trilogy that deals with magic that destroys the ecology and also allows its practitioners to control other people with engraved bone shards. Actually tries to deal with the fact that "the most powerful magician should rule" is not a great principle, though the emperor arrives at this conclusion in a fairly abrupt manner.

Audrey Schulman, Theory of Bastards: In an increasingly fragile world, a researcher arrives at one of the last sanctuaries for apes and starts studying bonobos in order to further her theories about female sexual selection. She’s also recovering from surgery from endometriosis, the pain and medical neglect of which is described in detail. And she is navigating her own recovering body and her sexuality, including her relationship with the initially offputting but increasingly attractive researcher assigned to support her work. After a dust storm cuts them off from the rest of the world, things get pretty scary; the ending is ambiguous at best but it’s sf of feminist ideas in terms of the questions it considers important (especially: what does choice mean when we have these bodies evolved in specific ways?) and I found it engaging despite the terrible romance-novel cover it has on Scribd, which was staring at me every time I opened it.
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Sep. 2nd, 2012 05:46 pm)
Free/nearly free Andre Norton books via Kindle, and apparently elsewhere.

Calorie science )
I didn’t build that: “Over the years, I’ve encountered a few successful people who believe they did it all themselves and achieved success because they are just better than their fellow human beings. Some were bankers; some were writers; some were lawyers. Some male, some female. Some rich, some not. Some were born into privilege, some weren’t. I guess they’re a pretty diverse crowd. They only have one thing in common, really: They’re all assholes.”

White dudely thinking:
The company was hiring more women in managerial jobs, and while he had no problem with that in general, he said that some of these women hadn’t started out hauling cotton as he had and didn’t know the business from the ground up. But the company felt pressure to hire them, Charles told me, “to keep up with the times.”… Charles was always pretty handy, so he considered starting a construction company [after he quit], even though he had never run a business. Working with trucks and piles of wood was a “humbling experience,” especially after having been a head of national sales. He said that he knew he would be competing with men who were in the business a long time or with younger men who once worked for him.
Now, this dude is not to blame for America’s economic woes. But JFC that’s some entitled, hypocritical bullshit!  

poetry by Dessa, apocalyptic policeman, shapeshifter love, Janis Ian's songs, gumshoe exorcist, robot zombies )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( May. 1st, 2012 08:58 am)
Eureka: Spoilers are still in the Matrix )

A Softer World: this could work for so many of my fandoms!

Rec: Pairing Pendragon/Merlin: Meta, really, in which BBC Merlin characters are Starz Camelot fans. I have rarely felt more directly hailed by a text! (As Sady Doyle once said, this must be what guys feel like all the time.) The embarrassing stuff is there, along with the love.

Interesting article on Foreign Policy’s gender issue (pun, sadly, intended).

space opera and Stephen King's daddy issues )
Independent of one another, thankfully.

I signed up for [livejournal.com profile] kamikazeremix. This ought to be interesting.

Usage/typographic conventions question: Italics for non-personal name proper nouns like band names and restaurants in RPF--is this some convention borrowed from entertainment reporting? I’m seeing it in RPF a lot. Did it come from bandom maybe? I can’t lie, it freaks me out because it feels like one more trick trademark owners have pulled, convincing people that their words are super-special and must be treated differently, like they’re untranslated non-English words or something. And now it’s in my fiction.

Bad nonfiction about Angel the series and fiction about ethnocentric space explorers and the savages they save )
Subject line from "Your Pearly Whites," by These Arms Are Snakes. Cool line. Another good one in my recent playlist: "Carved your name/across my eyelids/You pray for rain/I pray for blindness," from "Crown of Love" by The Arcade Fire. Also, for Tori Amos fans, check out Michelle Cross, who has an album's worth of mp3s for free download at her site. My favorites: "Cold Light," "Cinderella," and "Sushi Queen."

Before the books, I need to ask for help: I need beta readers/viewers for (a) what I'm pretty sure is the most pornographic story I've ever written, SV of course, about 25 pages, futurefic/AU; (b) a SV vid, sadly not pornographic in the slightest; and (c) a Buffy vid, which I suppose marks my switch from SV fan who vids to vidder. Let me know here or drop a note to RivkaT at aol if you're interested.

David Gerrold, Jim Butcher, Orson Scott Card, Year's Best SF, Laurie Marks, John Ridley )
Many, many thanks for all the Evil Overlord suggestions thus far. Please feel free to leave more, if you think of them.

Cicada update: almost all dead. The sound is like an electric hum, like having your ear pressed to a generator the size of a house – though with more dying every minute, maybe the generator is now only TV-sized. There are so many, coating trees and grass and cars and doors, that it reminds me of that Star Trek: TOS episode, "The Omega Glory," the one with the Yangs and the Kohms – "They sacrificed hundreds just to draw us out into the open. And then, they came, and they came. We killed *thousands*, and still they came!," the bad captain Tracey says. I don't know how the species survives, given that the individual cicadas get themselves killed in every possible way, from flying into doors to landing on pools of water and drowning. They are profligate with their lives, that's for sure. Perhaps they only become stupid after they've mated and laid eggs. A friend of mine says their existence is proof that there is no God, but maybe they're just proof that God has an inordinate fondness for cicadas.

Lots and lots and lots of fiction and a dab of comics and poetry )
I'm going to be on a panel at the International Communications Association early next year, whose theme is "Borderlands," and of course I decided to talk about concepts of copyright, plagiarism, creativity and ownership in fan cultures, inspired in part by [livejournal.com profile] bonibaru's recent comments. I want to use as examples some good fan vids. I've got some great SV ones I could use, but what I really need are Star Trek or Star Wars (or something else of equal cultural fame) so that most of the audience will recognize them. Ideally, the vids will be either slashy or funny, and set up so that I can show a 30-second clip and then talk. "Kid Fears," for example, is a very nice Star Wars vid that just won't work for this purpose because you need to watch the whole thing to get the story. I really need suggestions -- I can buy videotapes if necessary -- isn't a research budget a beautiful thing? -- but any format is good.

Reviews ahead: Tori Amos, Susan R. Matthews, David Gerrold, Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, and Kembrew McLeod, not in that order.

Kembrew McLeod, Owning Culture: One of the book's major points is that the concept of intellectual creations as property inflicts further harm on marginalized groups whose contributions (spirituals, tribal medicinal knowledge) never count as property and get appropriated by powerful interests that know how to make property out of the raw stuff of culture. Additionally, ownership of intellectual property allows corporations like Disney to censor and control the public discourse about Disney properties. The book has some nice examples, and piss-poor followup -- for example, one case he lists as undecided was settled two years prior to the book's publication date, as I found as my first Google result. The book is too jargony for my taste; McLeod's "articulation theory" is a label, not an explanation, and I don't think it does the work he wants it to do, unless all he wants to say is that intellectual property works in different ways in different contexts. Sometimes theory-talk is a substitute for insight.

McLeod's lack of knowledge of the law is a major problem in a book about law's interaction with culture. He says there's no "fair use" concept in trademark, which is just not true. The federal trademark statute defines fair use, and the Ninth Circuit has established a separate kind of fair use that courts around the nation now use. He doesn't know the difference between a denial of certiorari by the Supreme Court (which expresses no view on the merits; it just means the Supreme Court won't hear the case) and an affirmance (which makes the lower court's ruling the law of the land, instead of just the law in some geographic subunit). He even confuses the Ninth Circuit -- the Court of Appeals for Hollywood, as well as some other, less important places like Alaska and Hawai'i -- with the Supreme Court. I know Judges Kozinski and Reinhardt, not to mention others, would like to think that, but it just ain't so. (Side note: for whatever reason, the federal judiciary now spells the Aloha state "Hawai'i," so I'll follow that convention.)

To a certain extent, McLeod's harmed by the fact that the legal system increasingly shares his concerns about censorship, at least in trademark and copyright. Many of the important decisions postdate his publication date, but some of the key ones don't, and his argument is weakened by failing to acknowledge in law the discontinuities and spaces for opposition he insists we recognize in culture. Oh, and his argument that 2 Live Crew's appropriation of Roy Orbison's "Pretty Woman" was clearly a parody of the original song is mystifying -- check it out for yourself here (scroll down to the appendices for the two sets of lyrics) and shows how his ideological position affects his interpretations of the law. Yeah, like my former boss, I can see how a parodic character may reasonably be perceived, but that's a far cry from, say, Weird Al's "This Song Is Just Six Words Long." Now that's clearly a parody.

Bottom line: If you want an introduction to how rap got commercialized, how collage art exists in relation to art photographers, how pharmaceutical companies perceive native medicinal knowledge, or things like that, he's got good source material. But there's nothing else here, and you'd be wise to follow up with some extra research once he gets you started.

Now for the fiction:

Susan R. Matthews, "The Devil and Deep Space." Another adventure of Andrej Koscuisko, the reluctant torturer who enjoys his work too well for his own comfort. Nothing could really match the impact that "An Exchange of Hostages," which introduced Jurisdiction and its policy of legally sanctioned torture, had on me, but this book is a satisfying continuation. Unfortunately, like "Hour of Judgment," it ends at what seems to be the midpoint. I'm not disappointed in the structure, I'm just sad I can't find out what happens. I like the character of Jennet ap Rhiannon, the creche-bred woman who finds herself in command of the Ragnarok -- in command in name, but her story is about whether she'll be able to command it in fact. I didn't particularly need to know more about Andrej's homeland, but the parts of the story set on his planet were interesting. I didn't like "Avalanche Soldier," so I'm pleased to see Matthews return to this complex, fast-changing universe.

Sharon Lee & Steve Miller, "Agent of Change." Meh. Two uberpeople fall in love and get in trouble, not necessarily in that order, helped at critical moments by the intervention of -- I kid you not -- the Great Turtle. Not the one from Stephen King's "It," but still. It's not incompetently written, but it's not particularly interesting, either. The worst part is that the protagonists -- the guy a former planetary scout and current superspy, the girl a hardened mercenary -- are repeatedly described as looking around 25 and 18 years old, respectively. Without either some mention of plastic surgery (and the guy probably has had some), or some non-Earth counting of years, that's just preposterous. Even the cover artist couldn't buy it, as you can see.

David Gerrold, "Yesterday's Children" (rev. ed.). The author rewrote the ending about 8 years after first publication, and it's still a problem. The story is about a decrepit, poorly crewed ship in the middle of a grueling war. The ship was patrolling a supposedly quiet sector of space until it caught an enemy ship on its sensors. Or did it? A lot of technobabble about a de-Trekified (this was originally supposed to be a Star Trek script) warp drive, with no real payoff. The book says something about war -- long stretches of boredom punctuated by moments of terror -- but it's less fun to read about the boredom than you might think. Near the end, the book veers into a weird theory of "psychometrics" or some such nonsense, which is bizarre, not well set up early on, and makes the main viewpoint character seem paranoid and, at best, lucky. Maybe this is also a truth about war -- the made-up quotes that open each chapter suggest Gerrold thinks so -- but I just didn't get it. Gerrold's "War Against the Chtorr" series is much more enjoyable; in fact, I'd recommend it if you like Earth invasion stories.

Tori Amos, "Scarlet's Walk" (with bonus DVD). This disc continues in the vein of the studio disc of "To Venus and Back," with Amos's unique idiolect. I've always loved the interiority of her songs, the sense of meaning that flits alongside the bizarre lyrics and allows you to pour your own emotional content into a song. The music on "Scarlet's Walk" is more contemplative, not as angry as that on "Little Earthquakes" or "From the Choirgirl Hotel" or even "Boys for Pele." "Sorta Fairytale" is a good first single; although Amos is never predictable (who'd've thunk she'd cover Eminem?), it does reflect the overall tone of the album. There's no Cruel, Iieee, Caught a Lite Sneeze, or Hotel. Since those are my favorite songs, it's clear that this isn't going to be my favorite album. Nonetheless, the songs hold up to several listens thus far, and people who like her shouldn't skip it. I found the DVD unnecessary; I'd got myself convinced that there were real extras on it, but it's just 3 songs, 2 set to the same video footage (cut differently, but still the same) and 1 to a slide show from the same shoot. Not worth your money. I was amused by the little plastic frog that came in the package, and bemused by the stickers.
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