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Books 2017: 32-34


32. Erika Lewis, Game of Shadows. Tor, 2017. Copy via publisher.

Read for review. Er. Eeep. WTF.


33. Mahvesh Murad and Jared Shurin, eds., The Djinn Falls In Love & other stories. Solaris, 2017.

Read for review for Tor.com. Really excellent anthology.


nonfiction


34. Ibn Fadhlan, Ibn Fadhlan and the Land of Darkness: Arab Travellers in the Far North. Penguin Classics, 2012. Translated with an introduction by Paul Lunde and Caroline Stone.

Ibn Fadhlan left an account of his journey from Baghdad to the court of the Bulghar khan in 921 CE. (The account of his return journey doesn't survive.) Full of precise observations and surprisingly little judgment - and a certain amount of what comes across as good-humoured honesty - this is really lovely medieval travel writing. It includes the only eye-witness description of a Viking boat funeral in the lands of the Rus.

Ibn Fadhlan's account takes up a little less than half the book. The remainder is given over to extracts from other Arabic travel writers (or compilers of geographic information) who deal with the far north or with people from the far north, such as Vikings. These are usually far less self-aware and precise than Ibn Fadhlan, but fascinating in their own right.

(I really like the Arabic literature of the medieval period, at least as much of it as I've been able to read in English translation. It'd be really cool to have a good translation of Ibn Hayyan, you know. Or ibn Rusta. Hell, Mas'udi.)
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Books 2017: 26-31


26. Thea de Salle King of Bourbon Street. Ebook, 2017.

Explicit romance. Also very funny.


27. Kij Johnson, The Dream-Quest of Vellitt Boe. Tor.com Publishing, 2016.

Read for column. Really good.


28. Ruthanna Emrys, Winter Tide. Tor.com Publishing, 2017.

Read for review. Really excellent.


29. Alex Wells, Hunger Makes The Wolf. Angry Robot, 2017.

Read for review. Really good fun space planetary Western. There's a train job!


30. John Scalzi, The Collapsing Empire. Tor, 2017.

Read for fun and maybe later review. Space opera in Scalzi's trademark breezy voice. Very entertaining popcorn.


31. Joe McDermott, The Fortress At The End Of Time. Tor.com Publishing, 2017.

Read for review. I want that hour of my life back.
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Books 2017: 18-25


18. Kameron Hurley, The Stars Are Legion. Angry Robot, 2017.

Read for Locus and for column. A fascinatingly squishy space opera, which Hurley has been promoting as LESBIANS IN SPACE (it is). It's less of a mess than her fantasy, and a lot more fun, although Hurley does sometimes confuse brutal for interesting.


19. Jacqueline Carey, Miranda and Caliban. Tor, 2017.

Read for review. A retelling of The Tempest. Honestly, I don't see the point of a novel that spends so much time dwelling on an abusive parent-child relationship that doesn't ever allow the victim of the abuse to get away. NOT my cup of tea.


20. Lara Elena Donnelly, Amberlough. Tor, 2017.

Read for column. Fascism and amoral gay boys in love. Promising debut.


21. Ada Palmer, Seven Surrenders. Tor, 2017.

Read for review. It doesn't quite succeed in living up to the promise of the first volume, which is a shame, but together Too Like The Lightning and Seven Surrenders make a very promising debut.


22. Caitlín R. Kiernan, Agents of Dreamland. Tor.com Publishing, 2017.

Read for review. Creepy Lovecraftian horror novella. Not exactly my jam. Also parasitic mind-controlling fungus.


23. Justine Saracen, The Sniper's Kiss. Bold Strokes Books, 2017.

A romance novel involving women who love women set during WWII. A Russian-speaking American clerk in the Lend-Lease programme and a Russian soldier, later a sniper, encounter each other first during international meetings about the Lend-Lease programme. Later, the American clerk gets into trouble investigating corruption on the Russian end of the Lend-Lease problem and ends up at the front, where she disguises herself as a dead Russian sniper and partners with the live Russian sniper. Saracen has done her research: the WWII setting feels believable. The characters are reasonably well-rounded, the relationships make sense in context, and the writing is better than tolerable. As F/F romances go, it's definitely in the top 10%, particularly for historical ones.

(I always feel sad judging F/F on these particular merits. But in any given month where I look at six or eight F/F books from Netgalley and at best only half of them are even readable, they are certainly the merits.)


24. Yolanda Wallace, Divided Nation, United Hearts. Bold Strokes Books, 2017.

A romance novel involving women who love women set during the American Civil War. One disguises herself as a man in order to fight for the Union, the other is trying to keep a farm running while her father and brother are fighting for the Confederacy. I finished it: it's not a particularly good novel, but it is an entertaining tropetastic mess.


nonfiction

25. Hubert Wolf, The Nuns of Sant'Ambrogio: The True Story of a Convent Scandal. Vintage, 2015. Translated from the German by Ruth Martin.

I first heard of this book via Lady Business, where it was spoken of in very complimentary terms. I can confirm that it is extremely solid history writing, clear and thorough and immensely readable: the kind of history where you keep reading in order to find out just what happened next.

Wolf deals with a particular convent scandal, one that took place in the convent of Sant'Ambrogio in Rome and was investigated as a result of a complaint made by the German Catholic Princess Katarina von Hohenzollern to the Holy Office for the Doctrine of the Faith (the office of the Inquisition). Katarina had entered the convent as a postulant and then a novice (after two marriages and a previous unsuccessful attempt to become a nun in a different convent) and came to believe that she was being poisoned by the sisters of Sant'Ambrogio, as a result of her opposition to certain practices she believed were entirely improper.

Wolf draws on several archival sources, including the Inquisition's own files and the testimony of the witnesses and defendants in the case, to illuminate the life of the Hohenzollern princess, the convent, the other nuns, Church politics, and the case itself. False saints, poisonings, political manoeuvring in the Jesuit order, the curia, and the papacy, Solicitatio by priests in confession, sexual assault of novices, female sodomy: this is history mixed with true crime, and Wolf lays it all out in fascinating detail.

Including a good deal of detail on how the Inquisition actually investigated the charges laid before it, which is fascinating in its own right.
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Books 2017: 5-17


5. Jennifer Fulton, Passion Bay. Bold Strokes Books, 2008. Ebook.

Acquired free via Kobo. F/F romance, miscommunications, tropical islands, family secrets. Mediocre.


6. Jennifer Fulton, Dark Dreamer. Bold Strokes Books, 2006. Ebook.

Haunted house. F/F romance. Sexy twins next door, one of whom consults for the FBI because dead people talk to her. Mediocre.


7. Jennifer Fulton, Dark Valentine. Bold Strokes Books, 2007. Ebook.

FF romance. Rape victim has a one-night stand with a criminal defence lawyer. Further contact results in falling in love. But oops! Criminal defence lawyer turns out to be defending her rapist. Pretty decent, I guess.


8. Jennifer Fulton, Dark Garden. Bold Strokes Books, 2009. Ebook.

FF romance. Two descendants of feuding families, secrets, lies, manipulations. Mediocre.


9. Jennifer Fulton, More Than Paradise. Bold Strokes Books, 2007. Ebook.

FF romance. Scientist meets mercenary in Papua New Guinea. Mediocre.


10. Jennifer Fulton, Naked Heart. Bold Strokes Books, 2008. Ebook.

FF romance. Scientist meets spy. Personal betrayals insufficiently addressed. Mediocre.


11. Jennifer Fulton writing as Grace Lennox, Not Single Enough. Bold Strokes Books, 2007. Ebook.

FF romance. Woman who really wants love meets single cop. Mediocre.


12. Jennifer Fulton writing as Grace Lennox, Chance. Bold Strokes Books, 2006. Ebook.

FF romance, ish. Kind of all over the place.


13. L.J. Cohen, Derelict. Interrobang Books, 2014. Ebook, copy courtesy of the author.

Read for column. Space opera, feels YA in tone.


14. Kate Elliott, The Poisoned Blade. Little Brown, 2016.

Read for column. Second book in trilogy, REALLY GOOD, I saved it for when I needed to read it most. Excellent stuff.


15. Sarah Fine, The Imposter Queen. McElderry Books, 2016.

Read for column. Solid fantasy novel, YA.


16. Jean Johnson, First Salik War: The Terrans. Ace, 2015.

Read for column. Ridiculous space opera. Fun.


Nonfiction


17. Arrian, The Campaigns of Alexander. Penguin Books, 1971. Translated by Aubrey de Sélincourt.

A fairly elderly (over fifty years old) translation of Arrian's account of the campaigns of Alexander. Straightforward, with interesting anecdotes.
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Books 2017: 1-4


1. Carrie Vaughn, Martians Abroad. Tor, 2017. Copy via Tor.com.

Read for review for Tor.com. Meh?


2. April Daniels, Dreadnought. Diversion Books, 2017. Copy via Tor.com.

Read for review for Tor.com. This is great! I like it LOTS.


3. Erica Cameron, Assassins: Nemesis. Triton/Riptide, 2017. Copy via Netgalley.

Okay. This is the sequel to Assassins: Discord which had QUEER FEMALE TEENAGE ASSASSINS in it, running thriller plot across the US. It wasn't the tightest or most sensible of plots, but it knew what kind of queer pulp it wanted to be, all right?

Nemesis moves to a couple of secondary/briefly-mentioned characters from Discord: Blake, the intersex teenage child of a murdered FBI agent, and Daelan, a nice geek-boy teenage vigilante bodyguard from a family of bodyguard-assassins. Boundaries! Murder! Saving each others' lives and maybe the world! Happy queer folks! Deliciously entertaining plot-relevant angst!

If you ever wanted queer vigilante teenage Jason Bourne, this is the book (this is the series) for you.


4. Ellen Kushner et al, Tremontaine Season One. Serial Box 2016/Saga Press 2017. Digital access via Serial Box.

Read for review for Locus. I like it. It feels like the best sort of fanfic.
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Books 2016: 184-190


184. Max Gladstone et al, Bookburners Season 1. Serial Box, 2016.

Read for review for Locus.


185. Laura Anne Gilman, The Cold Eye. Saga, 2017. Copy courtesy of the publisher.

Read for review for Tor.com. I have meh feelings. It is a very slow book.


186. Ellen Klages, Passing Strange. Tor.com Publishing, 2017. Copy courtesy of the publisher.

Wow. This is really good.


187. Ann Aptaker, Genuine Gold. Bold Strokes Books, 2017. E-ARC via Netgalley.

A novel of lesbians and crime in 1950s New York. Entertaining, if peculiar.


188. Gun Brooke, Exodus: Escape. Bold Strokes Books, 2017. E-ARC via Netgalley.

Terrible FF science fiction romance. Readable, I guess.


189. Ali Vali, The Devil's Due. Bold Strokes Books, 2017. E-ARC via Netgalley.

A novel of crime families and lesbians, set in post-Katrina New Orleans. Entertaining, if also peculiar.


190. Cari Hunter, A Quiet Death. Bold Strokes Books, 2017. E-ARC via Netgalley.

The more of Hunter's novels I read, the more I like her work. This one is a fairly gruesome crime novel with murder and sex trafficking, but it's solid crime novel.
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Books 2016: 171-183


171. Kris Ripper, The Butch and the Beautiful. Riptide, 2016.

Forgettable lesbian romance.


172. Charles Stross, Empire Games. Tor, 2017. Copy provided by publisher.

Read for review for Locus. Tight thriller.


173-174. Ana Mardoll, Poison Kiss and Survival Rout. Indie, 2015-2016. Electronic copy of Survival Rout provided by author.

Pretty solid queer poly urban fantasy/trapped in fairyland portal fantasy novels. Read for column. Recommended, mostly.


175. Isabel Yap, Hurricane Heels. Book Smugglers Publishing, 2016. Electronic copy provided by publisher.

Really awesome mosaic novel/set of linked novellas. REALLY AWESOME. Read for column. I want a paper copy.


176. Lauren Gallagher, Stuck Landing. Riptide, 2016.

Lesbian romance. AWFUL. Plot arc is basically "viewpoint character is a biphobic ass, learns to overcome biphobia in order to give love a chance," and feels like it is written for the male gaze. I dunno, like. As a person who is attracted to women but who is not a lesbian, I kept reading because it was a trainwreck but seriously FUCK OFF.


177. Lindsay Smith and Max Gladstone, et al, The Witch Who Came In From The Cold. Serial Box, 2016. Courtesy of the publisher.

AMAZING. GO READ IT. GO READ IT NOW. Hopefully will cover it in a column in the new year.


178. Seanan McGuire, Dusk or Dark or Dawn or Day. Tor.com Publishing, 2017.





Also read in draft [redacted], [redacted], [redacted], [redacted], and [redacted] novels this year, which brings the yearly total up to 183. (Maybe I will even cheat and count them again next year, when I can maybe admit to their titles.)
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Books 2016: 169-170


169. Alex Bledsoe, Gather Her Round. Tor, 2017. ARC via publisher.

Read for review for Locus. Pretty damn good.


170. Greg Rucka (et alia, Dragon Age: Magekiller. Dark Horse, 2016.

A delightful graphic novel set during the events of Dragon Age: Inquisition. It is surprisingly sweet for a piece of work with so much blood and death and demons in. (Also I liked the half-unseen romance bit. LOVELY.)
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Books 2016: 156-168


156. Hillary Monahan, Snake Eyes. Abbadon Books, 2016. Copy courtesy of the publisher.

Read for column. Damn, this is so good. Queer and funny and entertaining and great.


157. K.B. Wagers, After the Crown. Orbit Books, 2016. Copy courtesy of the publisher.

Space opera, sequel to Behind the Throne. Read for review for Tor.com. Great fun.


158. M-E Girard, Girl Mans Up. HarperCollins, 2016.

This is a gorgeous YA novel of growth and self-discovery and learning that your friends are assholes and finding new friends and just, it is disturbingly close to home.


159. C.B. Lee, Not Your Sidekick. Duet/Interlude Press, 2016.

Read for column. Really fun superhero story - in an unexpected way.


160. Alex Bledsoe, Gather Her Round. Tor Books, forthcoming 2017. Copy courtesy of the publisher.

Read for review for Locus and I need to get my damn arse in gear and review it. Grand murder-ballad of a book.


161. Dahlia Adler, Out on Good Behaviour. Independently published, 2016.

An excellently constructed romance between two college students - one of whom has a history of playing the field, one of whom is a virgin (and in the closet). Two young women, misunderstandings, sex. Well-written. Very fun.


163. Vanessa North, Roller Girl. Riptide Publishing, 2016.

A trans woman and former professional athletic joins a roller derby team and falls in love with the coach. Sparks fly. Misunderstandings abound. Well-written if unevenly paced. I enjoyed it.


164. Samantha Boyette, 18 Months. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. E-ARC courtesy of the publisher.

Allegedly YA. F/F romance with serial killer plot? Poorly constructed, thin stuff, climax and conclusion come out of nowhere.


165. Alexa Black, Steel and Promise. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. E-ARC courtesy of the publisher.

There is a reason I do not read erotica. This is alleged to be "sci-fi erotica," F/F with a very strong BDSM slant, but due to its horrible issues around meaningful consent and power exchange, particularly at the conclusion (where STAY WITH ME OR DIE is literally the option on offer) made it read more like a horror novel to me. I was deeply, deeply disturbed: I had trouble sleeping after. Should come with warning foreword maybe.


166. Carson Taite, Without Justice. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. E-ARC courtesy of the publisher.

F/F romance with mostly forgettable characters and thriller plot involving Witness Protection and local attorneys? Fun, I guess, but not at all substantial.


167. D. Jackson Leigh, Swelter. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. E-ARC courtesy of the publisher.

F/F romance also involving a) a lawyer turned rancher who is laying low until she can testify against some Bad People, and b) a political aide looking for somewhere to lay low until the news of her scandalous affair with a politician blows over. Very fun, even if the conclusion is a little pat and convenient. Strong characterisation of minor characters.


168. A.J. Quinn, Counting to Zero. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. E-ARC courtesy of the publisher.

F/F romance and thriller plot involving the NSA and terrorism-by-hacking. Fun, but largely forgettable.
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Books 2016: 149-155


149. Heather Rose Jones, Mother of Souls. Bella Books, 2016.

Read for column. Good third book in series, solid, moving further away from anything that looks like romance towards more politics and family-saga style of things.


150. Aya de León, Uptown Thief. Dafina, 2016.

Really interesting Leverage-style feminist thriller with a great cast.


151. Gail Carriger, Romancing the Inventor. E-book, 2016.

Steampunk romance novella about two women, set in Carriger's Parasol Protectorate universe. Read for column. Fun and good.


152. Karin Kallmaker, Christabel. Ebook, originally published 1997 I think.

Really terrible fantasy lesbian romance. I mean, terrible. It makes nearly no sense at all.


153. Alexis Hall, Iron & Velvet. Riptide, 2013 (ebook).

Fun romp about a queer female private investigator in a London with werewolves and vampires and all kinds of other magic. Fast, a bit on the shallow side, and a little rough, but a hell of a lot of fun.


154. Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Certain Dark Things. Thomas Dunne, 2016.

Read for column. Really excellent vampire novel. Much recommend.


155. Gaie Sebold, Sparrow Falling. Solaris, 2016.

Read for column. Fun, fast, entertaining steampunk.
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Books 2016: 140-148


140-142. Rose Beecham, Grave Silence, Sleep of Reason, and A Place of Exile. Bold Strokes Books, 2005, 2006, 2007. Ebooks.

I read these on a recommendation from a friend, and now I'm extremely annoyed that Beecham wrote no more books in this series after A Place of Exile. They're damn good, if unconventional, mysteries set in rural Colorado near the state border with Utah, starring Jude Devine, an FBI agent undercover as a Sheriff's Detective to help monitor militia activity in the area. (I don't care if this setup is plausible or not: the stories around it are compelling.) The writing is very solid and the characterisation excellent. I recommend these books wholeheartedly.


143. Courtney Milan, Hold Me. 2016, ebook.

Contemporary romance from the author of Trade Me. Very much a comedy of errors, but a sweet one and one in which several characters are queer. (The main female character is a trans woman; the love interest is a bisexual bloke.) (Neither of them are white.) It's really well put-together, as one expects from Milan, and I enjoyed it a lot.


144. Ashley Bartlett, Cash Braddock. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. Ebook via Netgalley.

Not exactly a romance novel about a drug dealer (prescription pills) who falls in love with a woman who turns out to be something other than what she seems. Amusing and well-written, as queer female romance novels go.


145. Emma Newman, After Atlas. Roc, 2016. Review copy via Tor.com.

Read for review for Tor.com. It is an excellent dystopian murder mystery, and then it jumps genres at the end, and I'm still not sure what to think.


146. Bradley P. Beaulieu and Rob Ziegler, The Burning Light. Tor.com Publishing, 2016. Review copy via Tor.com.

Read for review for Tor.com. I'm not entirely sure what the point of it is? But it is well-written.


147. Rhonda Mason, Cloak of War. Titan Books, 2016. Review copy via Titan Books.

Read for column. Ridiculous but fun, and less uneven overall than The Empress Game, to which it is a sequel.


nonfiction


148. David Potter, Theodora: Actress, Empress, Saint. Oxford University Press, 2015.

An excellently readable biography of sixth-century Byzantine empress Theodora, who began her life as the daughter of an actress and the bear-master of one of Byzantium's factions, became an actress herself, bore a daughter out of wedlock to a wealthy man, left (or was abandoned) by him, somehow met Justinian, nephew of the then-emperor Justin, and married him - in order to do this, the law barring actresses from marrying respectable men had to be changed.

She and Justinian had no children, but she was one of the pillars of his reign, though they tended to be on opposite sides of the major theological-political question of their day (regarding the outcome of the council of Chalcedon and whether Jesus Christ had one (divine) nature or two (human and divine)). During the crisis of the Nike riots, she is reported as convincing Justinian to stay and fight rather than fleeing, saying "Power is a splendid shroud."She predeceased him by more than a decade, but he never remarried.

Potter's biography is lucidly clear and eminently readable. He does great work in tying the (complex) sources together into a plausible narrative of Theodora's life and her personality. But I think more context for her later life (during the rest of Justinian's reign before her death) would have been very useful: as it stands, the biography feels very much weighted towards her rise, rather than her reign.
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Books 2016: 135


135. Greg Rucka, Stumptown Volume Two. Oni Press.

I forgot to include this in my last round-up. Excellent graphic novel about a Portland PI and a missing guitar. I would give at least a finger off my left hand to see Rucka's Stumptown adapted for the small screen, because that would be awesome.
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Books 2016: 136-139


136. Kai Ashante Wilson, A Taste of Honey. Tor.com Publishing, 2016. Copy via Tor.com.

Read for review for Tor.com. Really good.


137. Cassandra Khaw, Hammers on Bone. Tor.com Publishing, 2016. Copy via Tor.com.

Read for column. Surprisingly effective Lovecraftian noir.


138. Laurie Penny, Everything Belongs to the Future. Tor.com, 2016. Copy via Tor.com.

Read for column. Really good.


139. Becky Chambers, A Closed and Common Orbit. Hodder & Stoughton, 2016.

Excellent novel in the same universe as A Long Way To A Small Angry Planet, with a similar hopeful and comforting tone - though certain of its incidents are darker. Read for column. REALLY GOOD.
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Books 2016: 133-134


nonfiction


133. S. Frederick Starr, Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia's Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane. Princeton University Press, 2015 (first published 2013).

Lost Enlightenment is an ambitious and very readable intellectual history of Central Asia between the late 600s and the late 1200s CE. The first three chapters of this solid tome (over 500 pages, excluding end matter) set out to provide context: context for Starr's endeavour, and context for Central Asia, which had a long and vibrant history even before the Arab invasions.

Further chapters centre on specific courts or specific figures, with significant space given to al-Khwarazmi, al-Razi, ibn Sina, al-Biruni, al-Farabi, Ferdowsi, and al-Ghazali, all figures who in their own way shaped the intellectual and cultural life not only of Central Asia, but of the entire Arab-speaking world and eventually Western Europe.

Starr accompanies this history of ideas and thinkers with a reasonably comprehensive discussion of political events affecting the region across this timeframe. His narrative occasionally tangles itself in confusion, as it does not always take either a strictly chronological or a strictly thematic approach. Lost Enlightenment's achievements are also lessened by Starr's continually insistence on using comparanda from Western Europe: he assumes the reader is familiar with examples from Western Europe but not from Central Asia or the Arab world, whereas some of us (even Western Europeans!) are much more familiar with, say, Maimonides than John Locke.

For all its faults, however, Lost Enlightenment is a fascinating work and an excellent introduction to a region and a set of thinkers frequently neglected in Anglophone history writing. I don't think there's complete English translations of the works of any of the writers named above, with the exception of Ferdowsi's Shahnameh - and where there are English translations, many of them date from a century or more ago. Perhaps Starr's efforts to bring this intellectual heritage to wider appreciation will spur some press to bring to an Anglophone audience more of the primary sources on which his history depends.


134. Rachel Mairs, The Hellenistic Far East: Archaeology, Language, and Identity in Greek Central Asia. University of California Press, 2016 (first published 2014).

This slender volume is specifically concerned to discuss the Graeco-Bactrian and Indo-Greek kingdoms in the region that today is eastern Central Asia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and northern India. Mairs focuses on the archaeological remains, uncovered by excavation and by survey; the challenges posed by the evidence and the state of publication of the evidence; the difficulties posed by unprovenanced items (as a result of looting) and the interpretative challenges of investigating "ethnicity" and "identity" in a region whose inhabitants are very lightly represented in the surviving literature (Chinese and Greek) and that from the point of view of outsiders; and in a region where very little epigraphic evidence has come to light that may illuminate the self-understandings of the inhabitants of ancient Bactria in the three hundred years after the conquests of Alexander the Great.

Because of its prominence in the evidence, Mairs looks in detail at the city of Ai Khanoum, the Hellenistic urban foundation that has a Greek inscription which claims to be copied from Delphi, and posits a Bactrian architectural koine to explain some of its more unusual (as a Greek city) features. Mairs also looks at the relationship between settled and nomadic people in the region, and examines the explanations given for the fall of the Graeco-Bactrian kingdoms.

While brief, this book is really interesting, particularly from the point of view of identity in the "Hellenistic" world.
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Books 2016: 120-132


120. Leigh Bardugo, Crooked Kingdom. Henry Holt, 2016.

Read for review for Tor.com, though actually writing the review is hard as fuck.


121. Sarah Rees Brennan, Tell The Wind and Fire. Clarion Books, 2016.

Read for column. Good book. Recommend.


122. Walter Jon Williams, Impersonations. Tor.com Publishing, 2016.

Read for review for Tor.com. Lovely slim book. Excellent stuff.


123. Garth Nix, Goldenhand. HarperCollins, 2016.

Read for review for Tor.com. Meh.


124. Alastair Reynolds, Revenger. Gollancz, 2016.

Read for review for Locus. Good book.


125. Wesley Chu, The Rise of Io. Angry Robot Books, 2016.

Read for review for Locus. Fun.


126. Erica Cameron, Assassins: Discord. Triton Books, 2016.

Read for column. Rough in places but fun as hell.


127. M.E. Logan, Tempered Steele: Hard Edges. Bella Books, 2016.

Read for column. Sequel to Tempered Steele. Less problematic in its character dynamics. Set in a community of queer women in post-apocalyptic (or next best thing) USA. Pretty solid read.


128. Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, Alliance of Equals. Baen, 2016.

Not a lot of there there. Very much a series book. All middle, no beginning and definitely no end.


129. Lise MacTague, Depths of Blue. Bella Books, 2015.

Someday someone will write me queer female science fiction (planetary opera) romance that isn't shit. Today is most emphatically Not That Day. Smuggler looking for a deal, lands on planet where women are property, meets woman who joined the military while passing as a man. Honestly, "planet of the raving misogynists" is a terrible trope to start with and the book did not really go interesting places.


130. S.M. Harding, I Will Meet You There. Bella Books, 2015.

Book feels like a sequel, but I can't find anything that indicates the story started in another novel, novella, or short story. Lady sheriff up for reelection in conservative US county who always thought of herself as straight falls for old school-friend, now former marine intelligence colonel, out lesbian. Also there is US intelligence community shenanigans and a good shrink. Quite fun, if uneven, but I'd really rather have been able to read the start of the story.


131. S.M. Harding, A Woman of Strong Purpose. Bella Books, 2016.

Sequel to I Will Meet You There, now with lesbian jealousy, more US intelligence community hijinks, and a serial killer. Fun, but still uneven.


132. Audrey Coulthurst, Of Fire and Stars. Balzer + Bray, 2016.

Read for review for Tor.com. I really did not want this book to be shit, but it is.
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Books 2016: 119

nonfiction

119. Michael T. Taussig, The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America: Thirtieth Anniversary Edition. University of North Carolina Press, 2010.

Originally published in 1980, I first heard of this book as a recommendation from Max Gladstone. It is an anthropological study - one might call it a Marxist anthropological synthesis - of certain cultural and social practices present in some areas of 1960s and 1970s South America. It focuses in particular on a practice of the "devil bargain" among male agricultural workers, and on practices involving a figure known as the "Tio," or "uncle," a devil-like figure, which are carried out by Bolivian tin-miners. Taussig strives to argue from historical cultural context, and makes a strong case for the continuity (and adaptation under new pressures) of historic cultural forms.

This is a complex book, with a strong theoretical focus drawing on Marx, which is not an area in which I'm competent to say much. But it is fascinating read, if at times a difficult one to follow.
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Books 2016: 116-118


116. Madeline Ashby, Company Town. Tor, 2016. Copy via Tor Books.

Read, at long last, for Tor.com column. Interesting novel with great characters and great sense of place. But time paradoxes are cheating.


117. Cherie Priest, The Family Plot. Tor, 2016. Copy via Tor Books.

Read for Tor.com column. Modern southern gothic haunted house, which is not usually my genre. Priest is really good at 'em, though. I really liked this - well, right up until the last page, which is an ambiguous dirty trick of an ending. *grumps*


nonfiction


118. Tim Whitmarsh, Battling the Gods: Atheism in the Ancient World. Faber & Faber, London, 2016.

This is an intellectual history of atheism in Greek and Roman antiquity. It begins with the Archaic period in Greece, where traces of anti-theism (the idea that gods can be fought, or denied) can be seen in the Hesiodic Catologue of Women, among other places. From these mythological beginnings, Whitmarsh constructs a lineage of thinkers who disbelieved in the godly powers of the gods, and who theorised explanations for the workings of the natural world that relied on the principles of cause and effect.

The best parts of this book, by me, are the discussions of early "god-battlers" in the mythology, and the discussion of the various philosophical schools and their adherents. Whitmarsh made me want to read Sextus Empiricus - or at least feel mildly inclined towards doing so - which, since Sextus Empiricus's books rejoice in titles like Against the Mathematicians, is a hell of an achievement. The weakest part is post-Constantine, which is not really treated in any depth: there might not be any space left for public atheism, but the book could have used a chapter on how the texts in which the outlines of classical atheism remain were preserved.

On the whole, it's an extremely readable book, lucidly argued, and occasionally funny. Whitmarsh does sometimes like to pull out unusual words like perdurance, but that only adds to the experience. Battling the Gods is entertaining history. Which is the best kind.
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Books 2016: 96-115


96. Nisi Shawl, Everfair. Tor, 2016. Copy via Tor.com.

Read for review for Tor.com. Interesting and meaty and fascinating and magnificent.


97. Marie Brennan, Cold-Forged Flame. Tor.com, 2016. Copy via Tor.com

Read for review for Tor.com. Short and sharp and intense and fun.


98. Pol Robinson, Open Water. Bella Books, 2011. Ebook.

Lesbian romance involving the US women's Olympic rowing team and the Beijing Olympics. Sports romance, I guess? Not half-bad.


99. D. Jordan Redhawk, Broken Trails. Bella Books, 2013. Ebook.

Lesbian romance involving endurance sled racing in Alaska. Pretty fun.


100. D. Jordan Redhawk, Darkstone. Bella Books, 2015. Ebook.

Lesbian fantasy romance involving Los Angeles, music, fated chosen ones on opposite sides, and a magical gate to a realm of elves. It's better than that makes it sound, but it's really more than a little cheesy.


101. D. Jordan Redhawk, Freya's Tears. Bella Books, 2014. Ebook.

Lesbian science fiction romance. The setting and the plot reminded me a little of Firefly, only the setting isn't as well developed -- not that Firefly's setting really was -- and the plot is forgettable, because I can barely remember anything about it. (I'm not even sure if it's actually a romance. I'm guessing so, since all the author's other books tend in that direction.)


102. D. Jordan Redhawk, Lichii Ba'Cho. Bella Books, 2014. Ebook.

If this didn't start life as a Xena fanfic, I will eat my hat. (And I do not own a hat.) Post-apocalyptic biker gangs, really bad cyberpunk. Poorly developed, but the characterisation shows promise.


103. D. Jordan Redhawk, Orphan Maker. Bella Books, 2013. Ebook.

Lesbian romance. Post-disease-apocalypse where everyone post-puberty died. YA feel, somewhat underdeveloped in parts. Strong characterisation.


104. D. Jordan Redhawk, Tiopa Ki Lakota. Bella Books, 2013, originally published 2000. Ebook.

Historical "lesbian" (it may make more sense to read one of the characters as a trans man?) romance set mostly among the Lakota and partly among the white settlers of the American frontier. Pacing is an occasional issue, but the characterisation is great, and so is the cultural stuff.


105. D. Jordan Redhawk, Alaskan Bride. Bella Books, 2016. Ebook.

Lesbian romance set in the 19th century Alaskan frontier. Entertaining, solid characterisation, but there's not really enough there there to make it really work.


106-109. D. Jordan Redhawk, The Strange Path, Beloved Lady Mistress, Inner Sanctuary and Lady Dragon. Bella Books, 2012-2015. Ebook.

It's a YA lesbian not-a-vampire version of The Princess Diaries? I think? With more coming-of-age, murder, reincarnation, and magic. It's far more entertaining that it has any right to be.


110. Sheryl Wright, Don't Let Go. Bella Books, 2016. Ebook.

Lesbian romance involving a family-owned company, secrets, lies, and disability-acquired-through injury. Not half-bad.


111. M. E. Logan, Tempered Steele. Bella Books, 2015. Ebook.

Here's a peculiar beast. It's a collapse-of-society-as-we-know-it economics-of-scarcity novel, with indentured labour and anti-indentured-labour campaigners. (And lesbian relationships.) It's got an odd abuse-recovery and power-imbalance argument going on, and I'm not entirely sure what its emotional and thematic centre is... but it's an entertaining read.


112. Emily Skrutskie, The Abyss Surrounds Us. Flux, 2016.

Do you know how much I wanted to like this novel? I had it described to me as "pirates and seamonsters and lesbians" and I was SOLD. And it's a fun read, but the logic of its worldbuilding -- people train seamonsters to protect industrial shipping from pirates, but the potential for seamonsters as weapons of war is not hardly acknowledged -- is a little off. Plus, our main character trains seamonsters and gets kidnapped by pirates who want her to train one for them -- and she ends up killing joblots of people because she is in love with a teenage pirate whose life is being threatened to make the main character DO THE MURDER.

(Also the main character is more emotionally invested in seamonsters than people.)

So its moral centre is a wee bit off. I don't find killing many to save one all that justifiable.

On the other hand, seamonsters. The seamonsters are pretty great. So is the burgeoning friendship/relationship between Cas, the main character, and Swift, the pirate girl who is basically her permanent guard. The problems of the power imbalance between them are directly addressed and not glossed over, so that's good.

It's only at the novel's climax that it pisses away a really good thing with unexpected a) illogic and b) antiheroics.


113. Mary Robinette Kowal, Ghost Talkers. Tor, 2016. Copy via Tor.com.

WWI. Mediums. Spies. Murder. Death. Spirits of the dead. Ghosts. Hauntings. Explosions.

This is a fun book. The characterisation is a little bland, and the conclusion is a little rushed -- and the dénouement is a little too pat -- but it's fun. (There might be some leaps of logic.)

114-115. Jack Campbell, The Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier: Steadfast and The Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier: Leviathan. Titan Books, 2014-2015.

Space opera. Just like the other books in Campbell's series. Pretty terrible space opera, but sometimes one wants a honking great space battle and no mistake.
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Books 2016: 80-95


80. Max Gladstone, Four Roads Cross. Tor, 2016.

Reviewed for Tor.com. REALLY LIKE.


81. Foz Meadows, An Accident of Stars. Angry Robot Books, 2016.

Reviewed for Tor.com. REALLY REALLY LIKE. Love, even.


82. Fran Wilde, Cloudbound. Tor, 2016.

Reviewed for Locus. REALLY LIKE.


83. Django Wexler, The Guns of Empire. Roc, 2016.

Reviewed for Tor.com. REALLY LIKE.


84. Judith Tarr, Lord of the Two Lands. Read in ebook out of a Storybundle.

Excellent novel featuring Alexander, an Egyptian priestess, sundry Macedonians, Greeks, Persians, Levantines and Egyptians, gods and fate. I really enjoyed it.


85. Jo Graham, The Emperor's Agent. Read in ebook out of a Storybundle.

Interesting and entertaining novel set during the Napoleonic Wars. Has reincarnation and magic in. Also espionage, sex and death.


86. Geonn Cannon, The Virtuous Feats of the Indomitable Miss Trafalgar and the Erudite Lady Boone. Read in ebook out of a Storybundle.

Steampunk, really not great at worldbuilding or history, with truly ANNOYING (from an archaeologist's and historian's point of view) archaeological adventurism. However, much diverse characters, quite a bit of queer sex, great sense of batshit delight and delight in being batshit? Kind of aggressively mediocre, though.


87. Heather Blackmore, For Money or Love. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. Ebook.

It's a lesbian billionaire romance! (Sort of.) And it's well-written! And touching! And affecting! And mostly good! THIS IS SURPRISING AS ALL HELL. I recommend it.


88. Jaycie Morrison, Basic Training of the Heart. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. Ebook.

Lesbian romance. Women's Army Corps, WWII. Aggressively mediocre in terms of tension, plot, and writing. Interesting characters.


89. Jenny Frame, Courting the Countess. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. Ebook.

A modern lesbian aristocrat-housekeeper romance that really really wants to be a period novel. Meh.


90. Jaime Maddox, Hooked. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. Ebook.

Terrible lesbian romance with the Problem Of Prescription Drug Addiction thrown in for good (bad) measure. The best that can be said for it is that it's marginally readable.


91. Erica Abbott, Fragmentary Blue. Ebook.

Lesbian romantic suspense. Mostly okay.


92. Erica Abbott, Certain Dark Things. Ebook.

Sequel to Fragmentary Blue. Mostly okay too.


93. Erica Abbott, Acquainted With The Night. Ebook.

Sequel to Certain Dark Things. Kind of a hot mess, but entertaining for all that it is terribly constructed.


nonfiction

94. Joseph Roisman, Alexander's Veterans and the Early Wars of the Successors. University of Texas Press, 2013 [2012].

A thorough history of Alexander's Macedonian veterans as political actors in the years immediately following his death in 323 BCE. Unfortunately not very interested in material culture and making comparisons to other sorts of veterans, but for what it is, absolutely fascinating and well worth reading.


95. Peter Thonemann, The Maeander Valley: A Historical Geography from Antiquity to Byzantium. Cambridge University Press, 2015 [2011].

A magnificent, magisterial regional history of the valley of the Maeander river in Asia Minor. Really engaging, really good. Also well worth reading.
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Books 2016: 74-79


74. David D. Levine, Arabella of Mars. Tor, 2016. Copy courtesy of Tor.

Reviewed for Tor.com.


75. Yoon Ha Lee, Ninefox Gambit. Solaris 2016. Copy courtesy of Solaris.

This is so great. SO GREAT. Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic space opera territory, with undead generals and friendly robots and horrible people and relatively decent people doing horrible things and it is just so readable and compelling that despite the INCREDIBLY HIGH BODYCOUNT I want MORE NOW PLEASE.


76. Laydin Michaels, Bitter Root. Bold Strokes Books, 2016. Ebook.

Romance featuring queer women set in Louisiana. Dark pasts, lots of talk about food. It is okay, I guess.


77. Adrian Tchaikovsky, Spiderlight. Tor.com Publishing, 2016. Copy courtesy of Tor.com.

Read for review for Tor.com. I enjoyed this IMMENSELY, though at first I didn't expect to.


Nonfiction

78. James C. Scott, The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia. Yale University Press, New Haven CT, 2011.

This is an incredible book, part history and part anthropology. I read it in snatches, two and three pages together as time allowed. Scott argues that marginal peoples living at the edges of settled state civilisations have, in the main, made choices about the composition of their societies, their cultural toolsets, their subsistence regimes, and so on, deliberately in order to avoid incorporation into settled states.

It is a really interesting work, and a really interesting argument, and a fascinating overview of Southeast Asia's non-state peoples. I recommend it extremely.


79. Robin Waterfield, Taken at the Flood: The Roman Conquest of Greece. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2014.

The US paperback edition is coming out this autumn and I hope to get to review this somewhere. But basically it is what it says on the tin.

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