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L. A. Hall's Comfortable Courtesan series: these were the perfect travel stories for me! I read the first three novels, The Comfortable Courtesan, Rustick Exile, and A Change of Station while exploring Oxford and London. The fictional memoirs of a Regency era courtesan, Madame Clorinda Cathcart, who gradually enters into a stable triad with her two darlings, the Scottish F-s, helps a number of her circle out of troubles via social contrivances, has need of a contrivance or two herself, and records these incidences and others in a delightful and unique voice that was very appealing when I was both enjoying and afflicted by travel brain. I wanted to bawl when [spoiler] [redacted] in the most sudden and shocking fashion. It was excellent! The fourth and fifth novels, Old Enemies, New Problems and Dramatick Rivalry, I read once I was back in the States. I'm holding off on the rest of the series until I'm in need of a soothing and relatively sensible read. The series was (is?) posted as a serial at [personal profile] the_comfortable_courtesan; if ebook is more your speed, DRM-free copies are cheaply available.

My hold on an electronic copy of Rogue Protocol, the third Murderbot novella (2018), came in while I was traveling, and thanks to the miracle of wifi, I was able to download and read it on the way home. A month later, Exit Strategy (2018) (Martha Wells) came to me in hardcover. Rogue Protocol features Murderbot exploring another sketchy GrayCris site, and interacting with humans who had a human bot; Exit Strategy has Murderbot trying to deliver the info it's found to Dr. Mensah and the humans of Preservation.

Because I am predictable, I will share my favorite exchange in Exit Strategy:

That was Gurathin. I don't like him. "I don't like you."
"I know."
He sounded like he thought it was funny. "That is not funny."
"I'm going to mark your cognition level at fifty-five percent."
"Fuck you."
"Let's make that sixty percent."


Ah, Gurathin, continuing my long tradition of "funny sarcastic fictional characters who I would hate in real life."

If you haven't read the first two novellas, I would start with All Systems Red. The four novellas are fast reads, and if you like the first, it's very likely you'll like them all. If you are all caught up, it's reliably stated Wells has been signed for a Murderbot novel, so watch for that sometime down the road.

My search for a romance novel I like, versus a story with a romance on the side, continues with a stop for In for a Penny (Rose Lerner) (2010). Well! That was certainly a 21st century take on the Regency romance. Young woman of the merchant class marries the first impoverished rake who asks. The author tries to convince me a previously repressed young woman is discovering sensuality in her marriage, while the rake strives to reform. The Evil Village Vicar, the Rake's Former Mistress, Benthal Green, and a number of other Regency romance hallmarks make an appearance. If you like regency romances, but find this unpolished, apparently Lerner's later novels improve.

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Parts One and Two: The Official Playscript of the Original West End Production (J. K. Rowling, Jack Thorne, and John Tiffany) (2017): the time-tripping adventures of Harry and Draco's sons, who are touched by the ongoing grief of Amos Diggory, get their hands on a super-Time-Turner, and resolve to fix Cedric Diggory's death. It does not go to plan; not the boys', not the person using them for their own family ends; and not the parents who struggle to give their children what they need (or, in Harry's case, what they think they need). Reading the playscript satisfied my completionist streak and did not ignite in me a great need to see the five hours of live performance. I am certain the onstage special effects are amazing, but five hours is a lot of theater time.

Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic (Alison Bechdel) (2006): Coming out, closeted parent... the title is a play on the obvious and on a shortening of "funeral home", the author's father's family business. The narrative loops around Alison Bechdel's father's death, strongly felt by most around him to be suicide; bouncing back to the author's childhood, and up to college, and through themes of gender, identity & etc along the way. This was recommended to me way back in the day, and given my own experiences with complex family relationships, I can see why, but this didn't speak too directly to my own family challenges. Rather, it powerfully illuminated one specific family and one experience of identity.

Intensive Care: A Doctor's Journal (John F. Murray, MD) (2000): Nonfiction. A diary of one month of morning rounds in San Francisco General Hospital's Intensive Care Unit. AZT is a thing, but HIV's still a killer. Electronic medical records are a thing of the future, as indirectly nodded to by an anaphylaxis screwup. Lack of advance directives is a challenge. Drug use among the marginal members of society is a problem. ICU patients are intubated and extubated; sometimes reintubated. Infections start, spread, are battled with antibiotics; sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. And more often than anyone would like, patients die, sometimes after drawn-out interventions. The matter-of-fact tone interspersed with extended thoughts from the author on the cases he sees mixes his observations with his feelings about the patients and families he cares for and interacts with; the nurses, residents, interns, and volunteers he works with; and the state of the hospital, and health care in general. It's a mashup that makes me want to reread the book with more attention to how medical decisions helped and didn't help patients. I did appreciate the contrast of surgeons ("often wrong, but never in doubt") with internists ("don't just do something, stand there"). The brief history of the medical ventilator - linked to polio outbreaks, and paralyzed lungs - was enlightening to me, as I'd never thought to ask about the development of ventilators, or their impact on intensive care.

Redefining Realness: My Path to Womanhood, Identity, Love & So Much More (Janet Mock) (2014): Memoir of a Hawaiian trans woman of color. Mock's journey through transitioning is the frame of this memoir, but the narrative is woven through her experiences as a mixed-race Hawaiian, growing up in poverty, moving between different parents and homes, and the relationships that she experienced. There's a striking compassion for a younger Janet Mock, and for the people around her, trying to make the best of their own sometimes difficult situations. It's intelligently written, though I took my sweet time getting through it, which makes me wonder whether Mock's gift might be essay length. I'm excited to read more of her work and find out.

Book Log

Sep. 18th, 2018 02:05 pm
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Paired reading suggestion: All the Birds in the Sky and The Goblin Emperor, yes?

Fool Moon (Jim Butcher) (2001): Second Dresden Files novel, in audiobook narrated by James Marsters. Harry's woman issues something werewolves something something mafia boss trussed up for werewolf bait something Harry's savior complex something. The gender politics are antiquated, but Butcher is a born storyteller.

Spinning Silver (Naomi Novik) (2018): By women, about women. )

The Traitor Baru Comorant (Seth Dickinson) (2014): Bogs down in collaboration and sacrifice. )

Since I also finished the Machineries of Empire trilogy this summer, which I felt also bogged down in the collaboration question, I'm a little burned out on protagonists tortured by their choice to sacrifice people on the pyre of a Greater Cause. It's particularly notable in contrast to my other recent fiction: I tripped and fell into rereading Jo Walton's My Real Children (2014), which is one of those very Walton "let's have an interesting idea and run it a couple of hundred pages" novels. Family matters a lot, suffering for the sake of suffering is generally avoided (though suffering because of your terrible marriage, well, sometimes you are young and commit to obnoxious guilt-ridden gay closeted Catholic men). It's not a big sweeping novel, but it doesn't want to be.

"The Levin-Gad" (Diane Duane) (2018): ~20k novelette in the Tale of the Five series. Herewiss goes out to nurse a quiet drink and pick a fight with the Shadow, as you do. This isn't a standalone: an attentive reader can probably pick up the essential backstory from context, but the story thoroughly spoils the closing action of The Door Into Sunset, and will take a lot less puzzling-over to understand if you've read the three novels that precede The Levin-Gad.

"Lior and the Sea" (Diane Duane) (1986): Standalone Middle Kingdoms novella about a Rodmistress who falls in love with the sea. The sea falls in love right back. That's it, that's the story.

Artificial Condition (Martha Wells) (2018): Second Murderbot novella. )

Skin Game (Jim Butcher) (2015): Meh. )
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1.) Baru Comorant and Earl Horseriver would be a fascinating crossover.

2.) If all Seth Dickinson's novels end with dead lesbians, I'm making someone else prescreen for me.
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The Magician King (Lev Grossman) (2011): Quentin something something Julia! I knew how Julia's story would end because I had watched the TV show first, but wow, Quentin is so... so... he frames every woman in terms of bangability! I want less Quentin in favor of magic and Fillory and other people's stories. There's some smart concepts floating around, and the prose is as good as the first novel, but... Quentin. Meh.

The Magician's Land (Lev Grossman) (2014): Readers who also have read C. S. Lewis' The Last Battle may recall how it collapses under the weight of the Book of Revelations. The Magician's Land avoids that by playing Quentin's third fictional outing dead straight. Spoilers. )

Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder (Caroline Fraser) (2017): A new biography of the "Little House" author. As a reader not steeped in Little House scholarship, this didn't seem to add a lot of new info to our knowledge of the series, or of Wilder's life, but it put known information in one place. The Ingalls were very poor, Federal land management of the West was not that great, the novels' attitude toward non-whites was being questioned not long after their initial publication, etc. Rose Wilder Lane was kind of a disaster of a human being, sadly.

Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup (John Carreyrou) (2018): Or, how not to run a startup; and in later chapters, how not to run a lab that claims to be FDA- and CLIA-compliant. Late in the book, Carreyrou describes a meeting with a Theranos exec, and the lawyers that accompany him, with language that makes me wonder how many drafts it took to tone the sense of journalistic detachment peeling away under the blasts from the Theranos legal team down to something that the editors would okay. Because all indications suggest that the Theranos C-suite was a hot mess who spent more on lawyers than science, then used the lawyers as bully-sticks against anyone who dared suggest they needed to do more science. It's easy to kick the company now that it's down, but there are lessons about fraud and how to avoid people trying to mislead you (and your money).

Revenant Gun (Yoon Ha Lee) (2018): Third in the Machineries of Empire trilogy. The alternative title could be "Kujen Must Die." Though, "And You Thought Ari Emory Had an Ego Problem" might work too. RG opens with a disoriented Garach Jedao Shkan wondering what he and Ruo have gotten up to this time. For the players paying attention, Ruo has been dead for more than four hundred years, so there's your first hint Something Is Going On.

Many spoilers, discussion of consent, tread with caution. )

If you can get past that, the servitor characters are a delight; Brezan and Tseya needed about fifty pages more of their engagement negotiations (and huh, how does Tseya really feel about this marriage deal?); various groups teaming up against Kujen is the sort of thing that is right up my alley. I wish we'd gotten more Cheris, but don't I always.

Storm Front (Jim Butcher) (2000): Wisecracking wizard-for-hire Harry Dresden solves a murder and does magic. I'm only here because of the fandom occasionally leaks into my friends-of page, and because summer reading happens.

There is no way to take this on its own merits, because Harry is That Guy. You know, the one who thinks that holding doors for women is "chivalrous" (can holding doors be gender-irrelevant common courtesy? Please?) and can't see a woman without commenting on her attractiveness, even if the woman is gruesomely dead when he first sees her. The one who is a self-taught expert and will bend every room party conversation back to their area of interest. That guy.

On the plus side, Butcher is compulsively readable. Some people are gifted with storytelling talent, and figure out how to write later, if ever; Butcher's one of them.
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Spoilers abound! Novel comments to follow separately if/when I finish the nominees.

Best Novella: Gailey, McGuire, Okorafor, Pinsker, Wells, Yang )

Tentative voting order: All Systems Red (Wells), Binti:Home (Okorafor), Sticks (McGuire), N-1 (Pinsker), Teeth (Gailey), Black Tides (Yang), No Award. Though No Award may get bumped up a bit, the not-death in Teeth annoyed me a lot.

Best Novelette: de Bodard, Lee, Palmer, Pinsker, Prasad, Szpara )

Tentative voting order: Steaks (Prasad), Children (de Bodard), Extracurricular (Lee), Bots (Palmer), Wind (Pinsker), No Award, Small Changes (Szpara)

Best Short Story: Nagata, Prasad, Roanhorse, Vernon, Wilde, Yoachim )

Tentative order: Fandom (Prasad), a long gap, Carnival (Yoachim), Sun (Vernon), another gap, Authentic (Roanhorse), Martian (Nagata), Clearly Lettered (Wilde), No Award. Though I may bump No Award up a bit.

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