aka @kingrat@sfba.social. I'm following a lot of bookwyrm accounts, since that seems to be the only way to get reviews from larger servers to this small server. I make a lot of Bookwyrm lists. I will like & boost a lot of reviews that come across my feed. I will follow most bookwyrm accounts back if they review & comment. Social reading should be social.
In this all-new tale, published here for the first time, World Fantasy Award winner K.J. …
Uninspired short story
2 stars
I've already forgotten the name of the protagonist, but the gist is: prominent noble in standard fare fantasy world is jailed for killing his wife. Son doesn't know what happened, but vows to get father out of jail except he's first being sent to the front lines of an unwinnable war. He draws up plans like a Pepe Silvia meme, wins the war in hours, then high-tails it back to the homeland for poorly written Machiavellian political intrigue to get his dad out of jail. Dad is mad at getting out, confesses to killing wife because she nagged, and then father & son are on opposite sides of more political intrigue.
Retired private eye, Red Bailey, is finally happy in Nevada, spending most of his time …
The setup baffled me
3 stars
Once the story gets past the beginning chapters and gets into the criminal element in New York, Red Bailey being lined up as a murder suspect there, and then on the run in the Sierra Nevada, it's all fun twists and turns and deception upon deception packed into a mere 153 pages.
The entire setup feels flimsy & convoluted to me. I don't understand what's so special about Mumsie McGonigle that he'd let her go or change his life for her or murder for her, but also not so special that when they split up it's no big deal. Or that he'd not take steps to get rid of evidence that she knows about so that associates of hers can blackmail Red Bailey a decade after the split. But hey, women are mysterious and wiley creatures who magically make men do dumb things, am I right?
In Brandon Sanderson's riveting "Firstborn," a Tor.com Original short story, much glory is expected of …
Doesn't really stick the landing
3 stars
Content warning
vague booking about the ending
Dennison is a younger noble raised, unbeknownst to him, to face his brother Varion in battle. Varion has nearly finished conquering the rebellious parts of the empire. The emperor expects Varion to turn and try to become emperor. Thus, Dennison, who is a screw up that can't win any of his battles.
The whole thing is reasonably interesting, except for the abrupt end. One failure should not result like that.
Why do we remember the past and not the future? What does it mean for …
I listened to it twice through
5 stars
Something beautifully multifaceted arising from complex relations, a quantum theorist writes a clear and compact dissolution or eulogy of our understanding of time in artful conversation with ancient poets and thinkers.
When Robin wakes up in a clinic with most of his memories missing, it doesn't …
You know, I think I first read this right when it came out in 2006 or 7, and I distinctly remember its unreliably-gendered narration being a key point in my enlightenment about gender and identity — I also remember that I was uncomfortable around trans people and unexpected gendered pronouns before this book, and after it (and ANCILLARY JUSTICE) I was much less concerned.
Also, it's a wild bit of Twilight Zone plus Truman Show plus any generic prison break plus a story of revolutionary anarchists plus Memento mind-editing (voluntary and involuntary) and dysphoria (many flavors) and consent (and what it means under all that)
I'm sad that this novel didn't receive wider acclaim, but I'm sorta not surprised, because every single character here is a genocidaire, even the heroes, and it's hard to sit comfortably with that
Katie Price is known in every living room in America. A small-town Wisconsin girl who …
Perfect people falling in love
4 stars
Wil & Katie are high school friends who haven't talked for 13-ish years because Katie got discovered by Hollywood the summer right after high school. They finally reconnect and sparks immediately fly. But can they overcome a) the residual pain from a decade-long disconnect and b) the publicity of a relationship where one of them is a Hollywood A-lister and one is not?
On the one had, I really enjoyed a story where literally everyone is super intelligent & uses their words. This is not a story where the conflict is based on people doing something stupid and/or miscommunication that they are afraid to say what they mean to other people. The stakes are real though. Wil is finally looking to move on from a mental space triggered by her father's death; she is considering law school that she put off when her dad was dying. Katie is looking to …
Wil & Katie are high school friends who haven't talked for 13-ish years because Katie got discovered by Hollywood the summer right after high school. They finally reconnect and sparks immediately fly. But can they overcome a) the residual pain from a decade-long disconnect and b) the publicity of a relationship where one of them is a Hollywood A-lister and one is not?
On the one had, I really enjoyed a story where literally everyone is super intelligent & uses their words. This is not a story where the conflict is based on people doing something stupid and/or miscommunication that they are afraid to say what they mean to other people. The stakes are real though. Wil is finally looking to move on from a mental space triggered by her father's death; she is considering law school that she put off when her dad was dying. Katie is looking to start a production company after a decade of acting accolades, and getting derailed by a relationship with someone outside Hollywood.
However, I can't give this my top rating for a couple of reasons. Wil & Katie and the story around them are too perfect. Everyone including the background characters has perfect motives. Everyone (except Katie's ex) is perfectly accepting of everyone else. And the manner of the ending feels like everyone's wish fulfillment on what happens to shitty exes. At least what I would want to happen to my famous ex who does shitty things. And secondly, at times the pacing is really slow because the protagonists talk through everything first. At times I wanted to yell at the characters, GET ON WITH THE BANGING YOU'VE TALKED ABOUT IT ENOUGH.
Spring, 1875, in the Cherokee Nation West. A baby, a black hired hand, a bay …
Good, but sprawling
3 stars
Check, matriarch and soon-to-be-widow, attempts to keep friends and family safe while living in the Cherokee Nation in 1875.
A fine read, but a little too sprawling and unfocused for my tastes. I found Verble’s “Stealing” a much more intimate and compelling read. Partly because “Cherokee America” isn’t written in first person, but also because its wide-ranging portrayal of a time and place which touches upon many characters and situations lacks the sensitive depiction of a single protagonist I so appreciated in “Stealing”.