Reviews and Comments

Dysmorphia

dys_morphia@sfba.club

Joined 11 months, 3 weeks ago

I like to read science fiction, fantasy, poetry, philosophy, romance, and sometimes big-L literature. I'm on Mastodon at sfba.social/@dys_morphia I have a blog where I sometimes write book reviews rinsemiddlebliss.com/tags/book-review/

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Robert Hass: Sun under wood (Paperback, 1998, Ecco Press) 3 stars

Review of 'Sun under wood' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Uneven, and missing diacritics in Polish place and people names, which as Miłosz’s translator he should know enough to include and insist on. It may be an odd thing to fixate on but a poet should be careful with borrowed words, and treat them well. How can I know the borrowed Korean, Spanish, and Native American names and stories aren’t equally awry? So I lose trust in the work and have very little patience to indulge its self indulgence.

Anne Brontë: The tenant of Wildfell Hall (1996) 3 stars

Review of 'The tenant of Wildfell Hall' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Tiresome, moralistic Jane Austen fan fiction. The worst of the Brontes. Still better than a lot of nonsense that's out there, but I was honestly waiting for it to come together somehow, or surprise me, or do anything than being this bizarrely morally didactic marriage plot. The long-suffering heroine would be perfectly at home in a de Sade story, including getting punished for all her stupid good deeds, but there's a happy ending.

Unless you're really into Brontes don't read this. Read Vilette, Jane Eyre, and Wuthering Heights first, in any case.

Angela Carter: The  Sadeian woman (2001, Penguin Books) 4 stars

Angela Carter turns concepts and assumptions about love and sex inside out with an original …

Review of 'The Sadeian woman' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book of critical essays about de Sade’s writing from a feminist point of view starts off extremely strong with “Polemical Preface: Pornography in the service of women” which offers such provocative ideas as revolutionary pornographers, and that romantic notions of mother goddesses are a mystification of women’s actual situation in the world (and thus keep us from an honest analysis that might lead to liberation).

The next two essays analyze the diptych works of Justine and Juliette and offer detailed textual analysis that expands on the ideas introduced in the polemic.

The third essay, “The School of Love: The education of a female Oedipus” analyzes de Sade’s short story “Philosophy in the Bedroom” through Freud’s Oedipal theory. This essay is weakened by its nearly complete reliance on Freud and seemingly unquestioning acceptance of the Freudian model as scientifically accurate. That’s ironic given a central premise from which other ideas …

Becky Chambers: The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (EBook, 2015, Hodder & Stoughton) 4 stars

Follow a motley crew on an exciting journey through space-and one adventurous young explorer who …

Review of 'The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

A character driven, episodic space opera with comedic elements that's lots of fun to read.

Rather than having a major over-arching plot that drives the entire novel, The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet is structured more like a television show with a running story. Each chapter is a compact episode that focuses one of the crew members, and serves primarily to move that character's story and character development further. Each chapter, while depending on the whole for continuity and depth, presents a complete narrative. It's a somewhat unusual structure for a novel and I think is probably the reason why some readers say this book doesn't really have a plot. Which is definitely not true! Each story is exciting and fun; sometimes funny, sometimes touching, often both.

Like a good space opera it explores a lot of the classic questions of the genre: in a conflict of values …

Tiffany Reisz: The Red (Paperback, 2017, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Createspace Independent Publishing Platform) 3 stars

Review of 'The Red' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

A mysterious man offers to save the main characters gallery business if she is willing to engage in bizarre erotic role play with him about once a month for a year. Each scenario is based on a famous painting. I can almost see the writing exercise this arose out of. Sounds like a promising variety of stuff, but it didn't really work for me. Solid writing, but that's all.

Samuel R. Delany: The Jewels of Aptor (Paperback, 2000, Gollancz) 3 stars

Delany's first novel, written when he was about 19. The story follows a small group …

Review of 'The Jewels of Aptor' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

This piece of Delany juvenilia reminds me above all of Andre Norton's sciencefictional fantasy. Think Forerunner Foray or Witch World. Incarnations of Goddess and Gods run around, advanced technology left over from an apocalyptically ruined world looks like magic, telepathy, mutants, evil priests, and young adventurers. It's lots of fun and the characters and motivations are interesting. It's hard not to compare this to what Delany would later become and if you read this after say Dhalgren or Stars in My Pocket of Grains of Sand, expecting more like that, you will not be satisfied. On the other hand if you like your pulpy scifi/fantasy adventure, then you will like it.

It's out of copyright and you can get it free from the Gutenberg Project