Book Day...

Apr. 22nd, 2025 08:54 am
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This is quick, as things have been fraught, with a sick family member who doesn't do well with sickness.

 

Dobrenica 3: Revenant Eve

 

BVC e-book | Kindle | Kobo | Nook |
Amazon paperback | Ingram paperback

Re-edited and reissued: 

It’s now 1795, the rise of Napoleon, and Kim finds herself a guardian spirit for a twelve-year-old kid who will either become Kim’s ancestor . . . or the timeline will alter and Kim will vanish, along with the small, magical European country of Dobrenica. 

Kim hates time travel conundrums, and knows nothing about kids. How is she going to spirit-guide young Aurelie, born on Saint-Domingue, with whom she has nothing in common?

From pirate-infested Jamaica to mannered England to Revolutionary Paris in the early 1800s, Kim and Aurelie travel, sharing adventures and meeting fascinating people, such as the beautiful and charming Josephine, wife of Napoleon. 

 

Books read, early April

Apr. 16th, 2025 03:15 pm
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[personal profile] mrissa
 

Chaz Brenchley, Radhika Rages at the Crater School, Chapters 23-24. Kindle. Catching up on the latest installment, the rage is back, don't start here, obviously.

P.F. Chisholm, A Chorus of Innocents. Back to the Scottish borderlands, and I am relieved--the books in this series that were in the London area were fine, but they lacked a lot of my favorite elements of the series. Which have come roaring back here, with more ahead promised. Hurrah. But yeah, don't start here, this one expects you to know who's who and what's what.

Agatha Christie, Cards on the Table, Crooked House, Death in the Clouds, Murder on the Orient Express, Taken at the Flood, and The Body in the Library. It's not that these are indistinguishable from each other--there's a reason Crooked House and Murder on the Orient Express were on the author's favorites list. I'm skipping the ones that are appalling on page one, I'm being appalled by the ones that are appalling on the last page only (seriously, Agatha, you can get through a whole book and then--!!!). But for the most part I'm just reading them as a continuum. They deliver what it says on the tin. I did this with Georgette Heyer when Grandpa died, and now with Grandma gone it's apparently Agatha Christie. Nor am I done yet.

David C. Douglas, The Norman Fate, 1100-1154. Counterbalancing the urge for reliable mystery, I have had very little urge to read nonfiction lately. This also happened when Grandpa died, it went away, it'll go away this time, it's fine. This was one of the few pieces of nonfiction this fortnight, and I was disappointed in it, because it wanted to talk about the Norman spheres of influence in this era but not what the Normans brought to those areas culturally, what was concretely different because a particular region or island was ruled by a Norman ruler instead of someone else. Ah well.

Dan Egan, The Devil's Element: Phosphorous and a World Out of Balance. Egan's previous book about the Great Lakes was on my list to give several people a few years back, and he's quite good about phosphorous and its social and ecological implications as well. Hurrah.

Penelope Fitzgerald, At Freddie's. About the vaguely squalid adults involved with running a theater school for children. If you feel like you're still a little starry-eyed about child actors from reading Noel Streatfeild's children's books and you would prefer not to be, well, here you are.

Amity Gaige, Heartwood. If there's a third mainstream thriller that has a cover and title to make it look like a fantasy novel, this can be a genre with that and Liz Moore's God of the Woods. In any case I liked it for what it is rather than resenting it for what the cover made it look like. This is a book about a woman lost hiking the Maine section of the Appalachian Trail, and about the people searching for her, and about mothers and daughters, and a number of other things. It's quite well done, but my absolute favorite character is Santo, everyone else can sort of make there be enough book to be a book but Santo was my reason for wanting to go on with it.

John Green, Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection. This is basically a TED Talk about why you should keep caring about tuberculosis and how it affects real, vivid people. There's historical background, sure, but it is very much a call to arms--or, as Grace Petrie puts it, not a call to arms but a call to helping hands. It's short and, for its subject matter, quite light.

Elly Griffiths, Now You See Them and The Midnight Hour. Two more in the mid-century British murder mystery setting with the characters who were stage magicians and dirty tricks people in the Second World War. One of the things I'm noticing about mystery series is that the ones that are attempting to be contemporary seem to have to scramble to stay put in time, but the ones that are consciously historical are extremely likely to skip blithely forward through time, changing their characters' personal as well as social circumstances. I think that's great, I love it. But I see how it's easier when you have control over the thing.

Christina Lynch, Pony Confidential. This is a murder mystery with two main POVs, one of which is a vindictive pony. Team Vindictive Pony all the way. The ending made me roll my eyes a little, but honestly, once you've signed on for an entire book of vindictive pony, sure, yes, do the thing. I had a lot of fun with this.

Rose Macaulay, The Shadow Flies. A novel about early 17th century English poets and their turbulent world. Its ending was not cozier or more comfortable than any of Macaulay's other stuff. Gosh I love her.

Colleen McCullough, The Ladies of Missalonghi. As though someone wanted to write The Blue Castle set in Australia, with some historical distance from the period they were writing about. And with the triumphant ending shared out more generally, and...honestly with a better mom, which was a surprise. I still think The Blue Castle is on the whole a better book, but this is worth having too if you like that sort of thing.

Edna St. Vincent Millay, Collected Poems. I have loved her since I was four, and somehow I have not ever read the Collected? Inconceivable. It was time. There were some wonderful things I'd never read before and some wonderful things I've had memorized for decades. There were also...let's say that long public occasion poems were not her forte. But I'm still glad I read the whole thing.

Naomi Mitchison, Beyond This Limit: Selected Shorter Fiction. This is a lesser Mitchison collection. It was put together as an introductory sampler of her work for teaching, rather than because she really loved these short stories and thought they formed something wonderful as a whole, and you can tell--there's a sense of outtakes from her more famous novel work. Did I still generally enjoy reading it, sure, but it's not going to become a go-to Mitchison rec.

Sebastian Purcell, Discourse of the Elders: The Aztec Huehuetlatolli, a First English Translation. This is a translation of Aztec philosophy recorded by a Spanish monk very early in the Conquest. The discourse in the title is very literal: this is discussion of various philosophical questions about life, in a framework that is very much not the Western one. Very cool thing to have and read and think about.

Emily Yu-Xuan Qin, Aunt Tigress. Extremely syncretic Chinese-Canadian fantasy, and prairie Canadian specifically. Love to see a completely different frame on some elements of story I've enjoyed before. Will definitely be adding this to several gift lists.

Tom Stoppard, The Coast of Utopia Parts I-III (Voyage, Shipwreck, and Salvage). A trilogy of plays about Russian utopianism in the mid-19th century, featuring Bakunin, Marx, Turgenev, all sorts of familiar names. This sequence is not my favorite of Stoppard's historical plays, but it still has some classic Stoppard moments.

Adrian Tchaikovsky, Days of Shattered Faith. The third in its series, and by far the most conventional: this is a political fantasy of a type that I like very much but have also read before. As compared to the previous book in the series, which was not quite like anything else. Ah well, still very readable, not sorry to have gone on with the series.

Wishing...

Apr. 12th, 2025 02:28 pm
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All those who celebrate a joyous Passover, in these difficult times.

Other People's Books

Apr. 9th, 2025 09:06 am
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I had a gas reading this book.

Brenda Clough maintains she writes historical SF, maybe too confining a label? She has set a number of her novels in the past–including this one, set in the late seventies. It’s loosely connected to her Marian Halcombe series, which takes Wilkie Collins’s once-famous heroine farther into a long and remarkable life.

One of the features of these novels, including His Selachian Majesty Requests, is their sheer unpredictability, pulling in ideas and tropes of fantasy and SF and mainstream as needed. Her philosophy seems to be “follow the action,” but that action is always character-driven, and finding the tension point between character and plot is one of the elements that make a book for this reader. That and the narrative voice.

I thoroughly enjoyed the entire book, but my favorite part happens somewhere in the middle, when the protagonist gets kidnapped and has to use his wits to try to escape. Clough has created a vivid island in Southeast Asia, I believe from where her family stems, and the contrasts of life there with the rest of the world contributes a lot of the fun. And the, ah, bite. (If you understand the Latinate ref to "selachian" you'll get my attempt at a pun).

Anyway, I took my largely inchoate thoughts to the author, who graciously took the time to respond. Here’s our exchange:

ME: There are some who maintain that Marian is one of the more interesting characters written during the 19th century, especially by men. She’s very different from the generic Victorian heroine (though there’s one of those provided by Collins!) What inspired you to start this series?

HER: I’m with everybody else — Marian Halcombe is definitely a more attractive heroine than her unfortunate sister Laura. The work was published serially, and you can put your finger on the place in the novel where the editor said, “Wilkie, the woman’s taking over the plot. Wasn’t the hero supposed to be Walter Hartright?” So Collins gave her typhus and sidelined her, so that Walter could pick up the ball.

It’s obvious that there should be more, much much more, about Marian Halcombe. The novel was a tremendous best seller, Marian so popular that the publisher received letters addressed to her proposing marriage. Why on earth didn’t Collins capitalize on this and write a sequel? (The answer is that he was busy inventing the mystery novel, writing the foundational novel THE MOONSTONE.)

Well, when you want something done, you have to do it yourself. I began and it was like getting on a toboggan at the top of the slope.

ME: How much research did you need to do?

HER: Oh, tons. I went to Britain and France to take pictures. I delved into period marriage manuals. I copied out recipes for Victorian invalid dishes. I made smoking bishop and served it at Christmas. I watched YouTube videos about Victorian ballroom dancing. And I accumulated masses of books!

ME: No writer can remain in a static time or place, alas: years pass while an author writes a series, and their own life undergoes transitions. So does their storytelling. Did the series change on you as it evolved?

HER: I was able to keep the Marian novels purely historical for a long time, but eventually the cloven hoof of the fantasy writer peeped out from under the hem of the petticoat. If we asked her, Marian herself would energetically deny that she is anything other than a Victorian matron. But I have made her in truth an angel, one of many messengers from the divine. All of this is delved into in a novel, HIS SELACHIAN MAJESTY REQUESTS, about her great-great-grandson.

ME: What did you learn in the course of writing this series?

HER: I have always thought of myself as a science fiction and fantasy writer. After writing a dozen novels set in the 19th century, I realize I am a historical SF and F writer. Everything I write has a historical angle in it.

ME: There are many readers who want period verisimilitude, and other readers who prefer modern people in period clothes for their historical fiction fix. Your Marian books hew much closer to the period and the tone of the “sensationals,” though I find them a beguiling blend of the period and modern sensibilities, which heightens their appeal. Who is the audience you aimed for?

HER:I wish I knew! You’ll enjoy my work if you value originality and dislike boredom. I like books where stuff happens! I try to make each novel like a roller coaster. Maybe uphill at the beginning, but it gets steeper and faster and by the time you get to the end you’re hanging onto the bars and your knuckles are white!


You can find the book here

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