September 2020 books: Lee and Miller, Burgis, Ottoman, Turner, Hall, Wells, Thomas
A set of Sherry Thomas books – Claiming the Duchess, Beguiling the Beauty, Tempting the Bride, and Ravishing the Heiress – Late 19th century historical romances. I liked them enough to read the set about the related characters, but didn’t like them enough to keep the author on my check-out-her-other-works list.
reread – Edge of Worlds and Harbors of the Sun by Martha Wells – finishing up the Raksura series.
Frostgilded by Stephanie Burgis – a short story in the Harwood Spellbook series – a treat for her Patreon and which will be released to the public soonish, if I remember correctly.
Documenting Light by EE Ottoman – Wyatt is struggling with a sick mother, underemployment, and stronger and stronger feelings about their gender and how its expressed. Wyatt finds an early 20th century photo of two men and wants to know more about it. Wyatt asks a local historian, Grayson, to do some research on it. Grayson is trans and has lost most of his family because of it. Can they help each other? A lovely romance story. Part of its premise (that I may be misunderstanding) is that historians and others shouldn't assume that historical documents and photos are necessarily het/cis just because.
best of month – The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner – I’m rereading the series to be ready for the latest, and last book in the series, Return of the Thief, which is being released in October. YAY! It’s also a giant, compared to the others–480 pages.
There will be Phlogiston by Alexis Hall – alternative universe, roughly late 19th century about two aristocrats and a rich-but-from-the-gutter industrialist (kinda) who find love. I didn't feel this was as strong as many of Hall's other books. I doubt I'll ever reread this one.
Early September 2019 books: Shinn, Lee, Miller, Randall
The e-ARC (electronic advanced reviewer copy) of Accepting the Lance by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller was released, with official publication occurring later this year. The latest story in the Liaden Universe, we get updates on a bunch of ongoing story threads. Yay!
The sequel to Mapping Winter, The River South by Marta Randall was released. This time the protagonist is Iset Kievesdaughter (yep), who was left in the care of the guild when Kieve took off into the wilderness. She's not been treated well, and suddenly people start trying to kill her. One of Kieve's comrades, who owes her, decides to help Iset. Interesting story with an ending that I didn't foresee.
I then read books 2 and 3 of Sharon Shinn's Uncommon Echoes series: Echo in Emerald and Echo in Amethyst. The second book starts near but before the end of the first and focuses on a minor character from the first book. Chessie was abandoned by her father and her mother died young. After her guardian died, she headed to the capital city. She's made a life for herself as an errand-runner and, through her echoes, a bar maid and a laborer, respectively. No one realizes that the echoes are not just friends as they have a little autonomy and Chessie is able to change bodies to allow them to speak (echoes don't ever speak). She ends up entangled with Lord Dezmen who is investigating the killing of a noble in the city.
In the third book which is also almost contemporaneous with books 1 and 2, we follow Hope and Elyssa. Elyssa is the original, daughter to a western lord. The western provinces have been agitating for autonomy for years, but the fate of Lady Marguerite (book 1) has brought everything to a boil. Lady Elyssa is bored and bitter, ignored by her parents except that she might bring an advantageous marriage. She's tortured her echoes for years, and one has actually become sentient. I really expected a different ending, and spent some time trying to figure out how everyone could end up happy.
May 2019 books: Roanhorse, Duane, Davis, Turner, Lee and Miller
Diane Duane has released the second novella in the Tale of the Five, The Landlady, during her run-up to finishing/releasing The Door into Starlight. This one focuses on Segnbora and her new duties as head of her family. Meanwhile there's several kids and at least two locations for the large, polyamorous household.
I then read another novella (I think) by Lindsey Davis called Vesuvius by Night. I'm actually sorry that I read this. I didn't feel it was up to her usual standard, and, as you might imagine, it's not a happy ending. The main character is related to Falco.
A Conspiracy of Kings by Megan Whalen Turner was next. In this book, Sophos, the heir to Sounis, is kidnapped during a civil war. He has to decide whether to stay where he ends up, somewhat happy, or try to take the kingdom from the rebels.
Sharon Lee and Steve Miller put out a second novella/novelette, "Shout of Honor". It's a side story with characters whose story they thought could be told in the novels, but there just wasn't quite room. It involves an Xtrang ambassador and a mercenary captain. Quite good!
I'm currently reading Thick as Thieves.
April 2019 books: Kirstein, Hodgell, Ottoman, Leckie, Lee and Miller, Whalen Turner
I read books 3 and 4 of Rosemary Kirstein's Steerswoman series: The Lost Steersman and The Language of Power. It continues to enthrall, and I *really* want book 5. Rowan continues to hunt for answers which is leading her to a greater understanding of her world and the 'wizards'.
I read an advanced review copy of By Demons Possessed by P.C. Hodgell. I am amazed at how these books just flow together. It will be very interesting when the series finishes to go and read the entire saga of Jamethiel.
Based on a recommendation, I picked up E.E. Ottoman's The Craft of Love about a silversmith who meets and falls in love with a seamstress. Both own their own businesses. Historical fiction.
I next read The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie. It was very interesting although I didn't glom onto any of the characters like I have in her other books. It's patterned after Hamlet and a Norse saga. The characters aren't straight out of the play, but you can figure out the analogues. There's also a big rock. A sentient rock which can do magic in a limited fashion, maybe.
Sharon Lee and Steve Miller put out a chapbook, Fortune's Favors. It's mostly a novella about a "Luck" who finds his way to a Low Port establishment (orphanage) that we've seen before. In addition, there's a short story about Daav, Aelliana, and Kamele. Yeeeee!!!!
I then ripped through The Thief, The Queen of Attolia, and The King of Attolia by Megan Whalen Turner. Twisty and turny with marvelous characters. I'm both dreading and looking forward to the publication of the last book in the series in August 2020--The Return of the Thief. I'm now debating between A Conspiracy of Kings and Thick as Thieves OR A Storm of Locusts by Rebecca Roanhorse. Hmmm.
A year and a half of books - May 2018
I'm not going to bother to really write up stuff now, but just list what I can remember. If anyone wants more information (hollow laughter), feel free to comment and I'll try to remember what I thought of the book. Without further ado, and in roughly latest to oldest order. Peters is interwoven, Wells has been read and read in this time frame...
Martha Wells, Murderbot: All Systems Red, Artificial Condition, Rogue Protocol (ARC)
Martha Wells, Raksura books (Stories of the Raksura volumes 1 and 2, The Cloud Roads, The Serpent Sea, and The Siren Depths, The Edge of Worlds, The Harbors of the Sun, and Fall of Ile Rien (The Wizard Hunters, Ships of Air, Gate of Gods) novels
(of the less than novel length, I adore "The Tale of Indigo and Cloud")
Lois McMaster Bujold, "Penric's Fox", "Mira's Last Dance", "The Prisoner of Limnos", "The Flowers of Vashnoi"
Elizabeth Peters (reread): Crocodile on the Sandbank, The Ape Who Guards the Balance, Children of the Storm, The Snake, the Crocodile, and the Dog, The Hippopotamus Pool, Lord of the Silent, He Shall Thunder in the Sky, The Falcon at the Portal, Lion in the Valley, The Mummy Case, Curse of the Pharaohs
(Now reading The Ape Who and finally hit the scene where the romance became public--so wonderful! I have a soft spot for Ramses)
Elizabeth Peters and Joan Hess, The Painted Queen (posthumously finished, meh)
Cecelia Grant, "A Christmas Gone Perfectly Wrong" (fine, but not enough to make me read her other books)
Melissa Scott, Point of Sighs, Fairs Point
Jessica Day George, The Rose Legacy
Underwater Ballroom Society anthology
Stephanie Burgis, "Spellswept"
C.S. Pacat, "Pet", The Captive Prince, Kings Rising, "The Summer Palace", Prince's Gambit (still not sure why I found these so compelling--two princes of neighboring kingdoms are fighting for their crowns. One ends up the slave of the other, many shenanigans and it turns out to be a love story in a roughly greek vs persian world)
Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, "Degrees of Separation", Local Custom, Mouse and Dragon, "Heirs to Trouble", Neogenesis, "Cultivar", Scouts Progress, "Due Diligence"
C.J. Cherryh, Emergence, Convergence
Diane Duane, "Lior and the Sea"
Faye Kellerman, Bone Box - I really liked the first few books in the this series. Main characters have since relocated from southern California to upstate NY. Practically anyone who was of note in the series showed up in this book--how conveeenient. I'm not going to try to catch up but will likely reread the early ones at some point)
D.M. Quincy, Murder in Mayfair: An Atlas Catesby Mystery. Eh.
Helen S. Wright, A Matter of Oaths (originally published in 1990, finally released on ebook)
Melissa McShane, Pretender to the Crown, Guardian of the Crown, Abounding Might, Wondering Sight
David Pagel, The Forever Girl - love story of a G.I. who falls in love with a Japanese woman (post WWII)
Charles De Lint, The Wind in His Heart
Ann Leckie, Provenance
F.M. Busby, Renalle Kerguelen (story of Rissa's clone daughter, compelling because I like this series, but ultimately eh, only for completists)
Stephanie Burgis, Snowspelled, "Shadow Duet", "Forbidden Magic", "Flying Magic", "House of Secrets", The Dragon with a Chocolate Heart
P.C. Hodgell, The Gates of Tagmeth
SJ Rozan, "Prosperity Restaurant", "Heartbreak", "Body English" (short stories in the Lydia Chin/Bill Smith series)
Nevil Shute, The Far Country (problematic handling of natives, but I found the love story very compelling and the information that various countries took in refugees from WWII very interesting and surprising)
Megan Whalen Turner, Thick as Thieves (Pretty sure I reread the rest of the series during this period--probably at least twice)
Jo Graham, The Marshal's Lover
Jo Graham and Melissa Scott, Lost Things, Steel Blues, Silver Bullet, Wind Raker, Oath Bound
I may be mislabeled some novellas as novels and vice versa. List also omits a bunch of stuff started but not finished.
July and August 2016 books: Bujold, Lee and Miller, Smith (5 times)
Sharon Lee and Steve Miller also released the new e-chapbook, Sleeping with the Enemy, which contains two stories: "Chimera" and "Friend of a Friend". Both are set of Surebleak and fill in some side stories within the main sequence. Both are good, solid work--recommended.
I then went on a re-read spree of Kristine Smith's Jani Kilian series: Code of Conduct, Rules of Conflict, Law of Survival, Contact Imminent, and Endgame. Jani is a colony girl in a time when being of a Family is vastly important. Jani becomes one of the first enrollees at the idomeni Academy. One of the idomeni high religious leaders believes the only way forward for idomeni and humans is to blend via hybridization. After graduating, she's joins the military and is stationed there. A civil war breaks out among the idomeni. After the war, Jani ends up on the run from...everyone. The first book begins when she is tracked down after 20 years by a former lover--who's now in trouble and wants her tenacity and smarts. Of course, it's helpful that she's a fugitive and will have to depend on him to keep her safe.
Probably the only series where the main character is a forensic accountant.
Books 2016, February/March: McShane, King, Lee and Miller
I did manage to finish Agent of the Crown by Melissa McShane. It was enjoyable but I didn't like it as much as the first book in the series. I also found that the pace slowed down for me between 1/3 and 3/4. Then everything fell apart and I found myself compulsively reading to finish it. I wouldn't read it without having read at least the first book, Servant of the Crown. A young princess was recruited to act as a spy. Her public persona is flittery, social darling, but she's actually a deviser (magic/inventor). Her current job sends her undercover as a deviser to a small town on the edge of the kingdom and right into several mysteries. All the books have significant romances in them.
I then read the electronic advance reader copy of Alliance of Equals, the latest Liaden novel from Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. This book focuses on Padi yos'Galan (Shan's daughter), Shan yos'Galan, Priscilla Mendoza y Delacroix, Hazenthull, with some visits to Daav yos'Phelium and Aelliana Caylon.
I also read The Marriage of Mary Russell by Laurie R. King. It's a short story (maybe longer) about her and Holmes actual marriage. It ends up taking place in his ancestral home's chapel--the problem is that the property is currently in the hands of estranged relatives. There's a sample from the new novel (out in early April) at the end.
I'm now sampling Simon Morden's The Petrovich Trilogy based on a review of book 4. Writing style seems a bit simplistic, but that may cure itself. Discussion of book 4 made me think of Samuil Petrovich as a Miles-gone-bad, so I'll likely buy it ($9.99 for the 3 books) and give it a serious go.
Next week, the new C.J. Cherryh book is out (Visitor), Martha Wells (already read in ARC form, Edge of Worlds) and The Murder of Mary Russell by Laurie R. King. Yea!!!
2015 January and February books - Peters, Walton, Bujold, Lee and Miller, Vaughn, Scott and Graham
I was waiting for a few books to come out, and none of the new books sitting around were enticing so I ended up (re)reading a few Elizabeth Peters books in the Amelia Peabody-Emerson series. Both were later books, set after Ramses is an adult: Children of the Storm and The Golden One. I enjoyed the later books, after Ramses (Amelia's son) became an adult and had more control over his own destiny. These are set in and around WWI. This series can be an acquired taste. I liked the first book when I read it, somewhat of a pastiche on the old Haggard / romance novels, but Amelia, Emerson, et al. really grown on you, and I've wildly enjoyed almost all the books. I'll shall likely continue to acquire the ebooks and re-read the rest of the series this year. Oh, the Peabody-Emerson clan are British archaeologists in Egypt who end up tangling with a Master Criminal, tomb robbers, spies, and other nefarious characters.
It was definitely a short novel, but I managed somehow to finish Jo Walton's My Real Children over a weekend. It's the story of a woman relegated to an Alzheimer's unit who has confused days, and really confused days. So confusing that sometimes she remembers having 4 children and sometimes remembers having 3 children. The book tells both stories which led out of her having to answer 'yes' or 'no' to her boyfriend about whether she would marry him. Both stories had good and bad parts, so there's no answer as to which answer was correct. I found it very haunting and sad, and very difficult because I'd had a hard week, and it made for a hard weekend too. The ending though, wow. Also hard because my father lost his facilities before he died (as his mother did but hers was gradual and his more abrupt), and my maternal grandfather had also had problems before he died.
I definitely needed an upper after that, and settled on A Civil Campaign by Lois McMaster Bujold. Miles Vorkosigan has fallen in love...he has a plan! I'm still not sure about the very visceral fight near the end (a bit too slapstick for my liking), but the Council of Counts scene, and of course, the dinner party earlier--priceless! Although someone could read this as their introduction to the Vorkosiverse, reading the rest of the series adds quite a bit to understanding the undercurrents and comments that occur in the book.
The eARC (electronic advanced reader's copy) of Dragon in Exile by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller was released either late in January or early in February. It continues from I Dare, Dragon Ship, and Necessity's Child. It opens a new five book series. Set mostly on Surebleak, it reveals that DoI is definitely still after Korval, and that there are likely other enemies of the clan heading to Surebleak to have their revenge, or to revel in Korval's downfall (as they think). Not a good place to start in the Korval Universe.
I then happened to see a reference that the Cormac and Amelia book was out, Low Midnight. This is a side book to the main Kitty Norville series, featuring Cormac, her husband's cousin, and his resident magician/wizard, Amelia. Cormac was convicted of manslaughter (I think) and has to spend several years in prison. While there, he's taken over by a ghost or spirit of a woman who had been convicted of murder and witchcraft a hundred years earlier. They combine forces to kill a supernatural creature, and Cormac agrees to Amelia's continued presence in his life. In this book, they take on a few mysteries trying to help Kitty and her battle against an ancient vampire who plans to take over the world. I like Cormac and Amelia a lot so was quite happy to read this book.
Meanwhile, the latest Order of the Air book, Wind Raker, by Melissa Scott and Jo Graham was released. Yeaaaa!!! These books deal with a set of aviators in Colorado, Gilchrist Aviation, a medium (she can see and talk to ghosts), and an archaeologist. They're also part of a lodge (magical). In this book, the archaeologist has been given a job on Oahu to prove that he can handle a dig. If it works, he'll be able to work on a dig in Alexandria, where they may have a lead to Alexander the Great's mausoleum. Why is it a problem? Jerry lost part of a leg in WWI, and it's the 1920s so getting around can be difficult. Meanwhile, Gilchrist Aviation is asked to test the new Catalina sea plane, also in Hawaii. At the same time, one of the aviators, Mitch and his wife (the medium), Stasi have custody of the three kids of a laborer/mechanic who left the kids and hasn't returned. Everyone ends up in Hawai'i, where they encounter Pelley again, a woman under a curse, and some early German shenanigans. Lots of fun.
2014 books, late April: Wells (3) and Lee and Miller
Ile-Rien is set in a secondary world, where magic and Fae exist. The main capital is Vienne (like Paris or Vienna). In this trilogy, Ile-Rien's world has been under attack by the Gardier who have overrun a few neighboring countries and are now about to conquer Ile-Rien. Tremaine Valiarde, a young playwright and novelist, is caught up in an investigation and research started by her father and foster-uncle, Nicholas Valiarde and Arisilde Damal. Nicholas was a master criminal, and morphed into a government agent (sort of) as a young man. Arisilde Damal was an extremely talented sorcerer who had frittered a lot of it away as a drug user, but had recovered when Tremaine was young. They had been investing early incursions by the Gardier but had disappeared. Anyway, this is about trying to fight the Gardier and to discover what is driving them to war.
I think Wells is great at well-put together worlds--there's always a lot of scope for more stories--and great characters. I end up caring about the secondary and tertiary ones, not just the primary ones and can remember them easily. A commenter on the Elliott post called it competence porn, which I've seen before in relation to Wells's works. It is so nice to have characters who may make mistakes, but are rarely stupid, and really pull through (usually by their wits) when put to it. I would love to see Miles Vorkosigan and Nicholas Valiarde paired up, except Nicholas would probably murder Miles!
A new story, "Rites of Passage", was released a week or so ago. Wheeee!!!
Sharon Lee and Steve Miller also released a new short story on their Splintered Universe site, "Roving Gambler", about Pat Rin yos'Phelium's son, Quin.
2013 books mid- to late October: Strahan (ed), Lee & Miller, Wells
I also finished Razor's Edge, a Star Wars novel, by Martha Wells. The second half really picked up steam and I charged through it.
Currently reading Neil Peart's Ghost Rider. He's the drummer of the band, Rush, and begins when he starts off on an epic motorcycle journey. The journey is a reaction to the death of his daughter, then his wife within a year or so. He decides that he can't do anything else but to keep moving. The first several chapters detail his trip from near Quebec to upper Alaska, then down to Vancouver and over to Glacier National Park in Montana. It will continue with him traveling down into Central America.
November 2012 books: Lee and Miller and Graham
The first book is Necessity's Child by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. I read this as an electronic advanced reader's copy (eARC) from Baen books. This is not the final state of the book, but the draft send to Baen for copyediting/publishing (it's had any editorial changes done). It's set on Surebleak after Korval takes residence. One of the main characters is Syl Vor, Nova yos'Galan's child. He's somewhere around 8-10 years old and is rather solemn and without any playmates after the events of Plan B/I Dare. It's decided to send him to a new local school for that reason and to show that Korval trusts in the safety of the schools. A young girl called Anna (actually Kezzi) becomes entangled with Syl Vor and ends up adopted temporarily (fostered) with Korval. Kezzi is of the Bedel, a gypsy-like group. They practice the fleez (fleece?) and regularly steal from the gadje (anyone not one of them). A third viewpoint character awakens near one of the entrances to the Bedel's homes and is rescued by one of them. He turns out to be Liaden and a DoI agent. So it's their adventures. I liked it. It's not one of my favorite books by them, but interesting characters and a relatively quick-moving plot, as normal for a Lee/Miller book.
I then got to start The General's Mistress by Jo Graham. It's adapted from the real life person, Ida St. Elme, who was a courtesan and adventuress in Napoleonic France. This book chronicles Ida's life from the age of around 19 to 24. She's leaves her husband and escapes to France, where she ends up the mistress of General Victor Moreau first, and then General Michel Ney. Much of Graham's works fall into her Numinous World where the same people are re-incarnated and meet again. I need to re-read her books again, as I don't have a strong grasp on most of the character and don't always recognize a particular 'soul.' I'd have to call this books a bit racy; definitely adult, with some adult themes. I'm looking forward to the next book which is scheduled for next year sometime.
2012 early May books: Lee & Miller and Bechdel
We will get several other Lee and/or Miller books in the meantime including the sequel to Balance of Trade and a side book that was originally codenamed "George" and is now called Necessity's Child.
Back to Dragon Ship. Theo takes on a shakedown cruise researching markets for Shan. Meanwhile, the ship Bechimo is teeing to decide if Theo is the destined captain or not. Win Ton (badly damaged by department of the interior) ends up in Bechimo's catastrophic healing unit.
A few other threads from Ghost Ship are continued, and we get good news on several characters.
I was very happy to see several reviews for a new book by Alison Bechdel called Are You My Mother? Her previous book, Fun Home, detailed her relationship with, and the hidden world of her father. This book focuses on her mother and Bechdel's ongoing therapy and analysis. I'm not that interested in psychoanalysis so some of the more advanced theories and digressions were lost on me. Still a very powerful and revealing book. By the way, it's actually a graphic novel.
Some 2011 World Fantasy Convention comments
I went to several panel sessions (crystal ceiling, worlds of Islam, some young adult sessions, the year in review). Several sessions where I hoped for some good recommendations hardly had any so that was a bust. I follow enough blogs now that I had at least heard of almost everything mentioned in the year-in-review session which definitely helped when writing down suggested books and authors!
I went to several readings. Sharon Shinn who has a new series starting next year. I had a problem with some timeline issues in the excerpt she read. Main character is a shapeshifter and its stated that as he's gotten older, he spends more time in nonhuman (animal) form to the point that he's only in human form for a few days a month. He shows up at main character's house after an absence of a few weeks. Based on her statement that she had to go to work for two days, it was probably on a Wednesday. She asks him about weekend plans, and he announces that they have to visit his sister on Sunday. Um, we're already getting past a few days there. The funnest was Ysabeau Wilce's. The first Flora book is coming out next spring! Hooray! Hip hip hooray! She had pictures of the cover, and chocolates. Really yummy chocolates. I also attended Alaya Dawn Johnson's reading. She had been recommended at either last years WFC or this year's worldcon so I thought I would see whether I would look up her stuff after the reading. I've done that before with unknown-to-me authors, but usually decided not to buy anything. This time the series did sound intriguing and I have the first book ordered.
I'm impatient enough now (due to a personal issue) that I actually asked a neighbor to be quiet. She was typing on a laptop most of the session--fine, maybe she's blogging--but then would quit to hold long (minutes long) whispered discussion with her neighbor. Worked okay when panelists were speaking, but once audience members started commenting, it was very difficult to hear them. She was quite surprised, quieted down for the rest of the session and apologized when we broke up. Thank you, unknown colleague!
Another session, the moderator brought in statements from what she called 'ghost panelists'. I understand the reasoning. She prepared well, and asked for statements from some well-known names in field. However, I thought it short-changed the panelists because she insisted on reading the statements verbatim. Briefly summarizing them would have left more time for the other panelists and audience members to comment. Sessions were only 55 minutes long (before the lost of the first minute or two for everyone to settle down).
I didn't have any problems with the convention hotel/site except trying to make my around the first day. It is a confusing layout. I think there were originally some two story room blocks. Later, hotel tower blocks, more restaurants, and the convention center buildings were added. Everything's a bit shoe-horned in, and that makes it difficult to get around. People with mobility issues were having a difficult time. I'd noticed one blatant problem. Readings were on the second floor of the conventions center. The women's bathroom had two stalled. The 'handicapped' stall was the same size as a regular stall, but had a rail installed. The stall door opened inwards! I could hardly maneuver enough to get the door shut.
Had some very good food. The hotel restaurants were fine. But, Boudin's, here's looking at you! Yum, yum. And, I was able to hit Boston Market on the way home and had yummy leftovers for several days. Nom nom, meatloaf, mashed potatoes, nom nom.
On the reading side, I was waiting for some books to arrive so I re-read Sharon Lee and Steve Miller: Plan B, I Dare, and Ghost Ship.
2011 Books: Walton
Anyway, after many years on one of the to-read bookcases, I finally read Jo Walton's Tooth and Claw. I'm trying to read several of her books that have languished on the to-read shelves after reading Lifelode last year and the amazing Among Others this year. Walton has said that Tooth and Claw is modeled after Anthony Trollope, who I've never read. It feels similar to Jane Austen as it has the same focus on British country life among the upper middle and upper classes complete with some snarky asides by the 'author.'
Walton is a fantasy author. So what makes Tooth and Claw fantastical? The society are dragons. While they can survive on animal meat, only eating dragon meat enables a dragon to grow large and gain powers like fire. Servants are forbidden dragon meat and have their wings bound as well. The family patriarch dies, and although he had left most of his hoard to his younger children (who weren't established yet), a brother-in-law says that the will doesn't specifically include the body and proceeds to eat or feed most of it to him, his wife, and dragonets.
The story then follows the younger children as the son decides to sue, and the daughters are split up among two households.
I would have to say that like Austen, it's mostly a domestic story, focused on small happenings, and perhaps a romance, as there are several (both established and new) in the book. There are hints that there are humans or at least some sort of humanoids elsewhere in the world.
I quite enjoyed it, and wish there was a sequel.
Walton has several interesting, long-running blog posts on tor.com. One set has reviewed the Hugo nominees and award-winners up to 2000, while the other is Walton re-reading older works.
I'm currently re-reading Sharon Lee and Steve Miller's Plan B, and will probably follow it with I Dare. I'm also pulling books to get signed to take to World Fantasy this week. It's within driving distance for me, so I don't have any weight or space limits! Several authors that I really like are going to be there, that have never been at a convention that I've been at. So it's a great opportunity. Plus, after several years of multiple worldcons and other conventions, I probably won't get to any for close to two years (at least) due to some coming life changes.
2011 Late September books: King, Lee and Miller
How does Mary Russell get involved? After earlier productions, crime goes up after the filming ends and it's related to the film's subject. For instance, if the movie included guns, they were found on the market. Before the latest filming could get started, a young secretary/production assistant disappears. Mary is hired for the job and tasked to find out what's going on. After hiring a group of English actors for most of the parts, they head to Lisbon to hire some fisherman for the 'pirate' roles.
I think the entire book is supposed to be a big farce/joke. "Russell" even states early on that she can't imagine anyone actually believing the story. I had a very difficult time getting into the story and just didn't really care about it. So much so, that I dropped it around halfway and re-read two other books: Saltation and Ghost Ship by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. When I started reading, there was a plot twist that made me shout, and the story went back two weeks to in-fill some previous events. Argh! Dropped it again for several days. When I started again and got through those two sections, it went much faster. Having Holmes on hand certainly helped, and the pace definitely picked up. There are a lot of moments that I think were supposed to be laugh-out-loud funny, but most fell flat for me. It made me wonder what the same story would have been in the hands of Lois McMaster Bujold.
I think this is the weakest book in the series and definitely do not recomment it as a starting point. The book also states that King's working on her next book, a historical mystery, which doesn't sound like a R/H story, darn it.
So in the midst of Pirate King, I decided to read books 2 and 3 of Theo Waitley's story. We met Theo at the end of I Dare, the last published book for the main Korval sequence. The first book in this sub-series is Fledgling which details her growing up, the awkward daughter of two academics, on a 'safe' world called Delgado. In Saltation, she's enrolled at a pilot's academy. Theo's awkward in a lot of ways. She's somewhat socially awkward because of her upbringing on close-minded Delgado and later is so goal-oriented (graduating with the best pilot's license she can) that she doesn't hang out with her fellow students. They mainly think she's stuck up and always spoiling for a fight. It's implied that she's beautiful with people always hitting on her, but she doesn't understand it.
In Ghost Ship, she's been thrown out of pilot's academy for starting a riot (it wasn't actually her) but she does have a license and gets hired as a courier co-pilot by a conglomerate that has an on-planet presence near the pilot's academy. The plot gets more complicated after this. Ghost Ship ties together Theo's story with the main Korval sequence as she makes her way to the Delm of Korval to put her problems to him. She had been told by her father to go to the Delm of Korval if something really bad happened. She had thought it was just a tale, but as her situation gets worse, she finds out that the Delm is a real person. It turns out that she's more closely tied to Korval than she knows.
[more for people who's read the all the Liaden books]
Theo is prickly, but has her good points. She doesn't mean to be misunderstood, it just happens! I see her as a throwback to Cantra yos'Phelium (one of the founders of Korval) in her personality and abilities. The tree seems particularly pleased with her.
Not sure what I'll read next. I'm again waiting for books: Cold Fire by Kate Elliott and Ghost Hero by S.J. Rozan.
2011 Mid June book: Lee and Miller
The actual contract hasn't been signed yet, and as Jethri is wild to find another berth, the captain gives he leave to try to find one. Before doing so, he gets involved with a scam and comes to the attention of a Liaden ship's Trader. Jethri needs to learn not only trading skills but how to make his way in the highly ornate Liaden culture. Old tech has a place too, so this book links the Crystal Variation duology to the later ones in the overall timeline.
Like most Lee and Miller stories, there are some mighty lucky coincidences. Personally, I don't feel this is the strongest L&M book, and although Jethri is an appealing character, I like others more. I can't decide if that's a bit due to the age of the character, although I like Theo (from Fledgling and Saltation) better. It is a worthy addition, and interesting in seeing a transitional period in human and Liaden history.
I'm not sure what my next fiction book will be. I do want to read The Dervish House which is a Hugo nominee. I borrowed two books from my work's library so I'll likely skip around in them next. One is about Eratosthenes (he did a credible job of measuring the earth's circumference before 200 BCE, off between 2% and 16%) and the other about the Great Arc (the traverse of India which also determined Mt Everest's elevation).
2011 Mid-May books: Lee & Miller
I believe someone could read these books without having read other Liaden books. The story is complete in itself, but oh, you miss seeing the true story behind the hints and fragments we'd had up until them.
We see Jela find the Tree (a sapling) on a dead world. Jela is a 'M' strain solder, a generalist. There's a war on against the sheriekas, post-humans who's decided that a wiped clean universe is preferable. We meet Cantra, smuggler, who used to be a deep cover assassin. We meet 'X' strain soldiers, who become the Xtrang race in other Liaden books.
The story is really the struggle against the sheriekas which ends by staging an excape to a pocket universe...or maybe the other way 'round. Getting all the pieces in place is what the books are about.
I haven't often reread these. I like some of the other characters better. Jela is a dear though and I found tears in my eyes late in the second book. Cantra is more prickly and harder to warm to.
In the upcoming book, the Tree pictures Theo Waitley (Fledgling, Saltation) as a blazing glory of a dragon when she blasts off planet. I wondered if the tree pictured other members of Korval that way. Of course, the answer is yes. The Trees seemed to have a symbiotic relationship with a race of dragon-analogues on their original planet. Members of Korval have taken their place so Cantra is a golden dragon and Jela a black one.
Anyway, I really should read this duology more often!
Three-quarters April: Traveling, e-arcs, Baen, and Lee and Miller
I traveled to Houston this week. Traveling usually derails reading but there was an exception this time. I'd started a reread of Trickster's Choice by Tamora Pierce, but didn't want to carry the hb with me. Instead I took Aaronovitch's Moon over Soho and got about a third of the way through.
Sharon Lee posted that the e-arc of Ghost Ship was going to be available at http://www.webscription.net this week. An e-arc is an electronic advanced reader's copy. Normally an arc (cheaply published) is sent out to reviewers a few months before the publication date. The text is a beta version--it may or may not have been through copy-editing and will often contains typos and other mistakes. Although they're not supposed to be sold or passed on, there's always been a market for them, and if the book is anticipated...Prices can get into the hundreds. I've bought several over the years, usually for around $10-$40 (usually $15-$20), but I always buy the hardcover as soon as it's out as well.
Jim Baen found that rabid fans were willing to pay for an electronic version, $15. It's also possible to buy a webscription for a particular month. It contains 6 or so books, 3-4 new ones, the rest already published. For the new ones, in the months coming up to publication, another portion of the books can be downloaded. For the July 2011 webscription, the first halves of the new books are now available.
Ghost Ship went live on Tuesday. Due to work commitments, I couldn't get access to it until that evening. I probably got about halfway before I collapsed, then finished it the next night. I'm not going to say much about it and definitely no spoilers. It joins the main I Dare storylines to Theo Waitley's (Fledgling, Saltation). It's closer in feel to Plan B or I Dare--a lot of plotlines and viewpoint characters--than to Conflict of Honors or Fledgling. My thoughts at the end consisted of--Argh! I have to wait for the next book! I want to read more of these people!
So I may be rereading some of the books. I particularly want to read Crystal Soldier and Crystal Dragon again.
On the plane ride home, I should have picked up Moon over Soho. I instead read a good chunk of Justice Hall by Laurie R. King on my android phone. Which kills the battery like crazy.
I've picked up Trickster's Choice again and should finish it today.
Early April books: Lee and Miller, Leon, and Cherryh
The latest chapbook from SRM Publishers, Skyblaze, finally arrived. It's by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller and is part of the Korval/Liaden series. Sharon and Steve originally started publishing the chapbooks many years ago. They enable some back/side stories to be printed and the chapbooks are treats for their fan base.
I wouldn't suggest reading this unless you've read I Dare at least and preferably Carpe Diem, or was it in Plan B?, as well.
It stars the cab driver to took Cheever to Trealla Fantrol and who turns out to have had a role in the final battle against the Department of the Interior on Liad. For her trouble, she was removed as Delm from her tiny clan and banished. She ends up on Surebleak, the planet that Korval has now settled on.
I enjoyed it, although it seemed a little strange to me that she didn't try to connect with clan Korval. Because Liadens are presented as all about connections, and trades (favors), it seems like she would have a good case. On the other hand, Liaden society is cutthroat so perhaps you don't want to try to negotiate from an apparently weak position.
Happily, shortly after finishing Skyblaze, I soon received two anticipated books: Drawing Conclusions by Donna Leon and Betrayer by C.J. Cherryh. I decided to read Drawing Conclusions first as I knew it would be a quick read. It's the 20th novel of the Guido Brunetti mystery series. Brunetti is a Commissario (like chief detective inspector) in the Venice Questura (police department). Leon's books have very good sense-of-place. She's lived in Venice for a number of years and always includes some peculiarly Venetian or Italian issues.
In this book, she looks at retirement homes and women's shelters. Neither one is delved into very deeply and I had the same feeling about the last book--that they're not as...thoughtful or complex as earlier books in the series. We also got less detailed descriptions of the food and drink (there's a reason that Brunetti's Cookbook has been published). Brunetti is a wonderful character. He actually happily married which is vanishingly rare among the contemporary mystery series I read, is an excellent boss, and has a strong sense of justice. So I feel it keenly that he appears to be compromising himself in the last few stories. There are good reasons for it, but I feel like he's giving up a little. I wonder if this is a reflection of how Leon feels about contemporary Italian society.
Betrayer by C.J. Cherryh is book 12 in the Foreigner series. The back story is that a human colony ship gets really, really lost. They build a space station above an inhabited world. The ship personnel want to stay in space and explore while the colonists want to land on the planet. There's a schism and some colonists do land on a large offshore island. They make contact with the natives, called Atevi, and it seems to go well at first. Then a cultural (hard-wired) breakdown occurs and the humans almost get wiped out. A peacefire is arranged. The humans will be allowed to live on the island in exchange for technology. The island's atevi inhabitants are settled on the mainland in some sparsely populated areas. A human translator/mediator/diplomat position is created and is called the paidhi. The paidhi learns the atevi language from a young age and lives on the mainland as a low-level functionary in the aiji's (ruler) court. The paidhi mediates the technology transfer and tries not to destabilize atevi society. He also does onsite research into the language and the society.
In the first book, Foreigner, we meet Bren Cameron, the current paidhi. He's become friendly with the current aiji, Tabini. Early in the book he's almost assassinated and things get messy. He spends the first book being acted upon and trying desperately to figure out what's happening. I didn't like it too much the first time I read it for that reason. After the first book, Bren becomes more knowledgeable and powerful although fully enmeshed in a lot of political shenanigans. The series is pretty much a long continuous book, and I wouldn't suggest starting anywhere except the beginning.
Betrayer is the end of the 4th trilogy. In the previous book, Tabini regained his position after an attempted coup. In this book, members of the coup have retreated to the restive west (south?) and are looking to cause more trouble just as Bren has retreated to his seaside estate which is in the area. While many of the books have had Bren as the only viewpoint character, later ones have used Cajeiri, Tabini's heir, as well, and this book is split between them. The first half is very heavy into the politics--who's related to whom, who was or wasn't involved in the coup attempt--and I really enjoyed it. I wish a map had been included (some of the other books have one) to make it easier for me to picture where all the clan territories are. As usual, Bren and his bodyguards end up on a cross-country trek with Bren injured. This is practically a Cherryh trope (main character injured and under stress), but I still enjoyed it. It's a nice addition to the series.