Nov. 4th, 2007

hawkwing_lb: (Default)
Books 159-160, Fiction 150-151:

150. A Companion to Wolves, Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette.

Wow.

I will say this again: wow.

There is so much in this book I don't know where to begin. [livejournal.com profile] matociquala's books - especially her fantasy - always leave me lost for breath and lacking words. [livejournal.com profile] truepenny isn't far behind. What they've done together...

It's as sharp and as icy and as brutal as the Norse mythos in which it feels so very firmly rooted. It's a coming of age novel, but not in the usual way. It's a novel about losing innocence and finding something more. It's violent, and bloody, and very, very, compassionately human.

Read this book.

Seriously.

151. Black Sun Rising, C.S. Friedman.

Dense, complex, thinky book that straddles the line between science fiction and fantasy and does it well. It's the first book of a trilogy, and I'm certainly tempted to read the next, though I found Black Sun Rising to be somewhat fatiguing in its density.

But. Maybe I should read some of these other books first? The ones that have been sitting on my shelf for months and months...


Okay, having watched the first two episodes of the original Mission: Impossible, I may be developing a fondness. Despite the utter, utter ridiculousness of the acting, plot, and setting (Russian prisons do not have giant windows! The Soviet Union might have been sprawlingly corrupt, inefficient, and in certain aspects even evil, but individuals were not all incompetent, evil or stupid!), and certain cultural artefacts that do not please, I fear I am... interested. Perhaps even compelled.

I have the weakness for the caper and the ticking clock.


It's autumn at last. No wonder I keep wanting to curl up and hibernate.
hawkwing_lb: (Default)
Books 159-160, Fiction 150-151:

150. A Companion to Wolves, Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette.

Wow.

I will say this again: wow.

There is so much in this book I don't know where to begin. [livejournal.com profile] matociquala's books - especially her fantasy - always leave me lost for breath and lacking words. [livejournal.com profile] truepenny isn't far behind. What they've done together...

It's as sharp and as icy and as brutal as the Norse mythos in which it feels so very firmly rooted. It's a coming of age novel, but not in the usual way. It's a novel about losing innocence and finding something more. It's violent, and bloody, and very, very, compassionately human.

Read this book.

Seriously.

151. Black Sun Rising, C.S. Friedman.

Dense, complex, thinky book that straddles the line between science fiction and fantasy and does it well. It's the first book of a trilogy, and I'm certainly tempted to read the next, though I found Black Sun Rising to be somewhat fatiguing in its density.

But. Maybe I should read some of these other books first? The ones that have been sitting on my shelf for months and months...


Okay, having watched the first two episodes of the original Mission: Impossible, I may be developing a fondness. Despite the utter, utter ridiculousness of the acting, plot, and setting (Russian prisons do not have giant windows! The Soviet Union might have been sprawlingly corrupt, inefficient, and in certain aspects even evil, but individuals were not all incompetent, evil or stupid!), and certain cultural artefacts that do not please, I fear I am... interested. Perhaps even compelled.

I have the weakness for the caper and the ticking clock.


It's autumn at last. No wonder I keep wanting to curl up and hibernate.

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