Book life in 2024 by Alexandra_book_life ;) - part 2

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Book life in 2024 by Alexandra_book_life ;) - part 2

1Alexandra_book_life
Mar 22, 2:08 am

180 messages in the thread, and 20 books read so far this year. I think this is a good time to start a new thread :)))

2Alexandra_book_life
Mar 22, 2:11 am

My current book is The Great Passage by Shion Miura. I am enjoying it a lot.

Blurb

A charmingly warm and hopeful story of love, friendship, and the power of human connection. Award-winning Japanese author Shion Miura’s novel is a reminder that a life dedicated to passion is a life well lived.

Inspired as a boy by the multiple meanings to be found for a single word in the dictionary, Kohei Araki is devoted to the notion that a dictionary is a boat to carry us across the sea of words. But after thirty-seven years creating them at Gembu Books, it’s time for him to retire and find his replacement.

He discovers a kindred spirit in Mitsuya Majime—a young, disheveled square peg with a penchant for collecting antiquarian books and a background in linguistics—whom he swipes from his company’s sales department.

Led by his new mentor and joined by an energetic, if reluctant, new recruit and an elder linguistics scholar, Majime is tasked with a career-defining accomplishment: completing The Great Passage, a comprehensive 2,900-page tome of the Japanese language. On his journey, Majime discovers friendship, romance, and an incredible dedication to his work, inspired by the bond that connects us all: words.

3Sakerfalcon
Mar 22, 8:21 am

>2 Alexandra_book_life: I haven't read this one but I love Miura's books set in Kamusari. They are delightful!

4Karlstar
Mar 22, 8:54 am

Happy new thread!

5clamairy
Edited: Mar 22, 12:02 pm

>4 Karlstar: ⬅️ What he said!

6Alexandra_book_life
Mar 22, 1:13 pm

>3 Sakerfalcon: Thank you! This is my first book by Miura, and I am more than willing to read others.

7Alexandra_book_life
Mar 22, 1:14 pm

8humouress
Mar 22, 2:13 pm

Happy new thread!

9Alexandra_book_life
Mar 22, 5:31 pm

>8 humouress: Thank you! :)

10Alexandra_book_life
Mar 23, 5:48 pm

I really liked The Great Passage, this is a book that is good for your soul.

Some thoughts:

“A dictionary is a ship that crosses a sea of words.”

Here is a book about people who are in love with words, here is a book about the making of a dictionary. It’s heart-warming, geeky, poignant, funny. There are lots and lots of cool details about Japanese language, meanings of various words, and the process of editing and publishing a dictionary. My inner geeks and nerds were very happy.

When Aroki the editor has to retire and needs a successor, he knows that “my task is to find someone who loves dictionaries as much as I do – no, more.” Enter Majime, a walking definition of nerdiness and geekiness. Here he is, at a welcome dinner with his new colleagues:

“What’s your hobby, Majime?" Nishioka boldly asked, searching for a friendly ouverture.
“If I had to pick something, I guess it would be watching people get on the escalator.”

Silence descended on the table.

(There is an excellent explanation for this fascination with escalators, don’t you worry.)

For Majime, this is a story of finding his calling, his agency, a life he loves. Watching it happen is a pleasure. The romance is understated and cute. When it turns out that there is a potential love interest for Majime (Kaguya – she is a chef, and she is not letting anyone “interfere with her world”), the editorial team has to go and check her out. What if she doesn’t understand the lifestyle of dedication that lexicography needs? I really don’t know what this says about these people… ahem. By the way, Majime, when a girl you adore asks you out, you don’t start thinking about the deeper meanings of two similar verbs so that you forget to answer. Just a thought.

I like it when an annoying and obnoxious character becomes someone you can root for, just because the author switches POV.

“Majime was incapable of flattery. Since Majime had said it, Nishioka could believe it: he was needed. He wasn’t a deadweight after all. He felt a burst of joy and pride.
Majime had turned back to his desk with an unconcerned look on his face, little suspecting that he had been Nishioka’s salvation.”

Of course, there are deeper things at play here than just the process of dictionary-making. Words and language define us, connect us, define the world around us, and influence how we see the world. In the end there is sadness and joy, tragedy and a sense of accomplishment, and work that has neither a beginning nor an end.

“Words gave things form so they could rise out of the dark sea.”

5 stars!

P.S. Three five star books in a row, amazing! Not that I am complaining...

11humouress
Mar 24, 1:45 am

>10 Alexandra_book_life: Ooh. You're tempting me.

12Alexandra_book_life
Mar 24, 2:05 am

>11 humouress: Good to know :)

13Alexandra_book_life
Mar 24, 4:28 am

I think is time for Persuasion. According to my digital records, this is my fifth time reading it, but I suspect it's closer to the tenth...

Sir Walter never learns, does he? It's been over two hundred years, and his favourite book it still the Baronetage!

14Alexandra_book_life
Mar 27, 5:17 am

I finished Persuasion, and it was wonderful yet again. Naturally ;)

Some thoughts:

Persuasion is a novel of memories and regrets, a novel of second chances. The feeling is autumnal; and then, there is an unexpected Indian summer. While reading, I wondered – how many books about second chances for women have been written in the 19th century? There are the Brontes, of course, but I can’t think of anything else. This makes me love Jane Austen and Persuasion all the more.

“Men have had every advantage of us in telling their own story. Education has been theirs in so much higher a degree; the pen has been in their hands.”

Ah, the layers of classics :)

When I open the book, the author takes my hand, gently but firmly, and drops me right in the middle of Kellynch Hall – and it’s as though I never left.

Jane Austen is merciless towards her characters, especially Sir Walter and Elizabeth, there are sentences that drip with delicious word poison. The satire is toned down here, though, compared to earlier novels. Persuasion is less exuberant, more mature.

Anne is an introvert in a family of extroverts who do not have wisdom enough and love enough to appreciate someone who is different from them. I just realized that Jane Austen was writing about found family long before the expression was invented. The Crofts! The Harvilles! They went right into my heart on this reread, and I loved them together with Anne.

There is so much more to enjoy: Anne keeping her cool in a crisis and everyone looking to her for guidance; everyone taking her into their confidence and complaining about each other – exhausting and hilarious; Anne talking poetry with Captain Benwick and recommending a larger dose of prose, for emotional health reasons – priceless, really. “...like many other great moralists and preachers, she had been eloquent on a point in which her own conduct would ill bear examination.” Ha. Mrs Smith’s info dumps are probably too long and way too convenient. But I do like a mental image of her as a lady spider (she is knitting in bed!) in her web, waiting for the juicy, juicy gossip to come to her.

Show me a person who doesn’t love Anne and Captain Wentworth! Every conversation they have after the events in Lyme is fantastic, there is so much emotional turmoil and delight.
Theirs is the love that has stood the test of time, it has matured, it has grown stronger. This is a romance for grown-ups. This is why Mr Eliot has neither the charisma of the likes of Wickham, Willoughby or Frank Churchill nor the dangerous potential to charm the heroine. Anne is not fooled by glamour and glitter; Wentworth can stop, think, and ask.

“She had been forced into prudence in her youth, she learned romance as she grew older: the natural sequel of an unnatural beginning.” (This sentence is genius, in its truth, its sarcasm, and its structure.)

I have yet to find a more amazing love letter than Captain Wentworth’s…

“I can listen no longer in silence. I must speak to you by such means as are within my reach. You pierce my soul. I am half agony, half hope. Tell me not that I am too late, that such precious feelings are gone forever. I offer myself to you again with a heart even more your own than when you almost broke it, eight and a half years ago.”

A perfect conclusion of a perfectly crafted novel.

5 stars, of course.

15Alexandra_book_life
Mar 27, 8:02 am

Starting Kokoro, a Japanese classic. It's all because the characters in The Great Passage talked about it. Yes, I've taken a BB from fictional characters!

16clamairy
Mar 27, 8:24 am

>14 Alexandra_book_life: Excellent review. This isn't my favorite Austen, but I completely understand why others love it so much. I suspect I need to revisit it, perhaps as an audiobook this time.

17humouress
Mar 27, 8:34 am

>14 Alexandra_book_life: 💖 I love Persuasion. It may be my favourite Austen - but it's hard to tell because I find it difficult to be objective about Pride and Prejudice.

18clamairy
Mar 27, 8:36 am

>17 humouress: Hahaha. I can't be objective about that one either!

19Sakerfalcon
Mar 27, 9:08 am

>15 Alexandra_book_life: I haven't read Kokoro but I really enjoyed Botchan and Sanshiro by the same author. I'm going to have to try and get hold of The great passage now!

20Alexandra_book_life
Mar 27, 9:21 am

>16 clamairy: Thank you. I think that every Austen novel can be revisited numerous times.

21Alexandra_book_life
Mar 27, 9:23 am

>17 humouress: I would say that it's impossible to be objective about Pride and Prejudice. As for a favourite Austen, I don't think I have one. It's usually the one I am reading/have just finished ;)

22Alexandra_book_life
Mar 27, 9:27 am

>19 Sakerfalcon: Oh, that's great to hear! I've read a few pages in Kokoro, and I like the writing very much already. It would be nice to read Natsume Soseki's other novels, too. I hope you enjoy The Great Passage

23Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Mar 30, 5:55 am

I finished Kokoro and liked it very much.

Some thoughts:

The writing is like looking at the sea, seeing the waves come and go. The rhythm lulls you and you follow along, almost despite yourself. It feels both light and heavy, simple and very intricate.

This short novel has 110 chapters. The reader can take a breath in between, reading slower, reflecting, letting thoughts settle for a moment. I liked that.

There are three stories here:

📖 The unnamed young narrator who meets and comes to admire an older man he calls Sensei. “Admire” is the wrong word, though, it is more of an intellectual obsession born out of loneliness and an undefined youthful longing for “something else”. A very strange, yet compelling, friendship dance follows, with the narrator always wanting more, and with Sensei always drawing back.

“...whenever some unexpected terseness of his shook me, my impulse was to press forward with the friendship. It seemed to me that if I did so, my yearning for the possibilities of all he had to offer would someday be fulfilled.”

There are hints of tragedy and dark secrets in Sensei’s past, and his marriage is a melancholy thing. Sensei seems to fear the young man’s admiration.

“The memory of having sat at someone’s feet will later make you want to trample him underfoot. I am trying to fend off your admiration for me, you see, in order to avoid your future contempt.”

📖 The narrator coming to his parents’ home to be with his dying father. These are harrowing chapters. Young man’s time with Sensei has corrupted him somehow, I feel, made him less of who he should be. The decision he makes at the end of Part 2 is impulsive and rash. We never see its aftermath, making it all the more tragic.

📖 The third story is Sensei’s letter, his confession. The love story has a lovely beginning. “Whenever I saw her face, I felt that I myself had become beautiful.” I found the portrayal of romantic love in a misogynic society interesting. How does a clever, sensitive man reconcile romantic love with his contempt for women in general? (He tries. He doesn’t, not really.)
With the love triangle in place, the story turns ugly. It is about people unable to express their feelings and talk to each other about them. This evolves into an emotional impotence and an inability to act when you need to (it gets tedious for the reader, though).Words said and words unsaid destroy everyone involved.

“Words are not just vibrations in the air, they work more powerfully than that, on more powerful objects.”

Sensei does a vile, dishonourable thing. After that, his life is but an imitation of one.

It’s interesting how things authors don’t show you can still be powerful – we never see the young man’s reaction to the letter, but just thinking about it hits you hard.

I feel melancholy after finishing, but I liked the experience of reading this classic.

4.5 stars.

24Alexandra_book_life
Mar 31, 9:05 am

I've got an ARC, it's the latest novella by Nnedi Okorafor, She Who Knows: Firespitter. It's due to be published in August. I enjoyed it!

Some thoughts:

This novella is the back story of one of the characters from Who Fears Death. I haven’t read it, but She Who Knows stands perfectly well on its own.

The world is post-apocalyptic, afro-futuristic and fascinating. There is technology, but also strange spirits, strange creatures and things that feel like magic. The vibes are reminiscent of Binti, but the story is less emotionally wrenching (it’s not a criticism, I just mean that it has a calmer feel).

Najeeba is of the Osu-nu, the “untouchables” of the Okeke peoples. Osu-nu harvest salt, and their salt caravans travel on paths forbidden to anyone else. People Know when to go on the salt path. It’s the men who do this (because tradition!), but then the girl Najeeba Knows as well. This is the path that will lead her towards other strange talents.

The writing sparkles with sunshine, salt crystals, and mystery. Nnedi Okorafor, thank you for yet another good story.

Thanks a lot to NetGalley and the publisher for the free e-book!

25Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Apr 2, 5:25 pm

I happened to see A Man Called Ove on a book exchange shelf. So now I have read it, and I am happy I did.

Some thoughts:

A Man Called Ove – it was great to meet you

Here is a book about love, loss, grief, depression, perseverance against all odds, friendship, finding new purpose in life, and more love. This is all wrapped up in humorous writing – and by this I don’t mean laugh-out-loud funny, but writing full of absurd situations and descriptions.

Grumpy old men can have all the best reasons in the world to be grumpy, they have seen it all. I really liked how Backman slowly unveils Ove, page after page. The writing is so, so simple, done seemingly without effort, but this is deceptive, of course. It takes skill to make the reader enter the world of your book and stay there, see the characters, here them speak. Ove’s story is both beautiful and incredibly sad. I ended up loving him, and I loved his wife, Sonja.

“Loving someone is like moving into a house," Sonja used to say. "At first you fall in love with all the new things, amazed every morning that all this belongs to you, as if fearing that someone would suddenly come rushing in through the door to explain that a terrible mistake had been made, you weren't actually supposed to live in a wonderful place like this. Then over the years the walls become weathered, the wood splinters here and there, and you start to love that house not so much because of all its perfection, but rather for its imperfections. You get to know all the nooks and crannies. How to avoid getting the key caught in the lock when it's cold outside. Which of the floorboards flex slightly when one steps on them or exactly how to open the wardrobe doors without them creaking. These are the little secrets that make it your home.”

I rarely cry over books, but this time I had tears in my eyes. More than once. More than twice. More than three times. Thank you, Ove, thank you, Fredrik Backman.

P.S. There is a cat, too. The cat is wonderful.

5 stars.

26humouress
Apr 4, 1:36 am

>25 Alexandra_book_life: That sounds like a lovely book. I'll put it on the 'maybe' list.

27clamairy
Apr 4, 8:40 am

28ScoLgo
Apr 4, 4:09 pm

>26 humouress: I enjoyed A Man Called Ove. The movie is pretty good too, (the Swedish one with subtitles* - I have not watched the American re-make starring Tom Hanks).

* Being a Swedish speaker, the subtitles are amusingly inaccurate in places.

29MrsLee
Apr 4, 6:28 pm

>28 ScoLgo: I really liked the American movie. Haven't read the book or seen the Swedish movie.

30Alexandra_book_life
Apr 5, 1:05 am

>26 humouress: >27 clamairy: I hope you will enjoy it! I can recommend it wholeheartedly.

31Alexandra_book_life
Apr 5, 1:07 am

>28 ScoLgo: I have yet to see the movie - the Swedish one, that is. I might give the Tom Hanks version a try after that.

32Alexandra_book_life
Apr 5, 2:40 pm

I've reread Brave New World for my book club.

Some thoughts:

A reread for my book club 😉

I first read this book as a tween/teen, with the reverence appropriate when reading an Important Classic. Thankfully, I don’t do this any more. I also have to confess that the vicious satire flew right over my teen head (not surprising, really).

The satire aspect was what I enjoyed the most this time. (What does this say about being an adult?😆) Henry Ford worship? Hilarious. Both polyamory and chaste monogamy get crucified, and so do religion and atheism. This world’s Solidarity Services with their Solidarity Hymns read like a pimped up version of a corporate team building exercise. (“Orgy-porgy!”) Naturally, we will go to a darker place with this by the end.

Otherwise, this book is a thought experiment that is trying to be a novel. Sometimes it succeeds (I liked the description of John’s childhood, for example). The dystopian society, with its castes, genetic predestination and conditioning, is quite horrifying. Everyone is happy, though (oh, the irony), they love their place as this or that cog in a society’s machine. They also get soma, the happy drug (I thought of our social media fixes).

I do have questions:

🤔 Giving your entire population access to a happy drug that apparently can kill you if you overdose enough is a bad, bad idea. Sure, the government controls the access, but has the author ever met a drug addict? How is this dystopia still functioning?

🤔 People are conditioned not to have close relationships with anyone, no intense emotions. Considering what we know about humans as social animals and emotional support that children need growing up, this should be a society of psychopaths. Ouch. I do like my dystopias to be more realistic, you know.

The “brave new world” has taken sexual freedom to extreme. Monogamy is a very very weird thing, nobody does this, “everyone belongs to everyone else.” Fair enough. But guess what, women are sex objects, they are ready to jump at any and every man, and they enjoy it, too, because conditioning. (Also, only the men seem to fly those helicopters the characters are always swishing about in. Women don’t have the skills, I suppose.) This dystopia is every macho’s wet dream, my friends! Please don’t ever use the word “pneumatic” in conversation with me. Those who have read the book will know what I mean.

As is usual in thought experiment books, the characters are not very interesting. They are vehicles that take the author’s ideas forward.

Since Brave New World was written in the 1930’s, some things have aged badly. Apparently “Negro ovaries” produce way more clones than the Caucasian ones. Gaah. Someone is described as an “octoroon”. What is that? I consulted a dictionary – “a person who is one-eighth black by descent.” Ouch.

So, it was a thought-provoking reread, but there is no love lost between the book and me. I did get some cool quotes out of this:

“And being contented has none of the glamour of a good fight against misfortune, none of the picturesqueness of a struggle with temptation, or a fatal overthrow by passion or doubt. Happiness is never grand.”

“But I don’t want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.”
“In fact,” said Mustapha Mond, “you are claiming the right to be unhappy.”


3.5 stars.

33jillmwo
Apr 5, 2:41 pm

>14 Alexandra_book_life: Slow to respond, but yes, Austen's Persuasion is unsurpassed. Completely aside from the romance angle, I have always thought that Mrs. Smith was an interesting and well-rounded character all on her own.

34MrsLee
Apr 5, 9:59 pm

>32 Alexandra_book_life: After numerous tries, I have never made it through A Brave New World. I didn't try it until I was an adult, and dystopia is decidedly not my thing.

35Alexandra_book_life
Apr 6, 12:13 am

>33 jillmwo: Unsurpassed is the right word! As for Mrs. Smith, I agree with you, she is an interesting character.

36Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Apr 6, 3:50 am

>34 MrsLee: I can certainly understand why ;) Dystopia is not my favourite genre, exactly. But I do find dystopias intriguing - in small doses.

37Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Apr 6, 4:01 am

Another day, another book. I finished a (very short) sci-fi novella by Victoria Goddard, The Seven Brides-to-Be of Generalissimo Vlad

Some thoughts:

This is the only sci-fi novella Victoria Goddard has written. Naturally, the fangirl has to try it.

Fun, snarky space opera detected! I am getting Lois McMaster Bujold vibes (in particular, A Civil Campaign and Captain Vorpatril's Alliance ). The author knows what she is doing, and there are very clear nods to Bujold.

Some genre tropes get dissected – in school, people of this universe are told that spaceship faster-than-light engines run on “magic”. I think these teachers were probably lying shamelessly, but this is how we roll. Do I dare suppose that Victoria Goddard had read some sci-fi? 😉

Her name is Portia. The name, the name! This is such a clever and lovely literary allusion from Goddard, you’ll see why later in the story.

Portia runs a galactic courier service, sometimes off the radar, but nothing illegal, mind. She is tough – of course. She is competent – of course. She is a great pilot – of course. Also, her hobby is making spaceship engine models – origami ones. Portia, I think you have my heart.

Now she is going to a wedding of a childhood friend. “I promised Vlad I’d be at his wedding when I was ten.” Portia keeps her promises.

There are some complications on the way, such as black holes, event horizons, and Lovecraftian monsters that attack spaceships (yes!). But she makes it, no worries.

Do you want some nice quotes? Here you go:

“Portia, how did you get here?”
“By spaceship. Yourself?”

“I couldn’t think what Trev’s interests were – drinking, I’d thought.”

“...when the Generalissimo came in surrounded by a pack of leaping puppies – sorry, young men of rank and station and good clothing…”


Do you think this story will end just like it’s supposed to? Can you guess? There was one very nice little twist that I didn’t see coming, though. Awwwwww.

Yes, it's 5 stars.

38tardis
Apr 6, 4:35 pm

>37 Alexandra_book_life: Direct hit! Must get hold of The Seven Brides-to-Be of Generalissimo Vlad.

39Alexandra_book_life
Apr 7, 3:10 am

>38 tardis: Good, good, good. I'm happy to oblige :)))

40Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Apr 7, 4:36 pm

I've been meaning to read Thornhedge by T. Kingfisher for a while, and finally, I did.

Some thoughts:

I liked the feel of the writing, it was a slow-moving river, taking its time to tell a fairy tale. This is Sleeping Beauty, set in a world somewhat like ours, but with a different history. So Sleeping Beauty becomes a very different story.

Toadling the fairy is adorable! It’s nice to have amazingly competent characters in fantasy and sci-fi - and it is also nice to have characters who are doing the best they can. Toadling is just trying to keep people away from the tower behind the thornhedge. Hundreds of years pass. Then someone who refuses to go away comes along. Halim should be in “The Nicest Knight in fiction” contest, he would probably win a prize of some kind. Toadling and Halim are very likeable together.

“The fairy stared down at the hand on her wrist, and her thought was not that she was caught, but that someone was touching her.
It has been many years since a living being had touched her.”

“Apologies made it worse. She had long experience with unkindness, but apologies undid her.”

“And you’re… um.” He shrugged. “Interesting. And sad.”
Toadling had been sad for a long time, but she was not used to being interesting.”


I liked the idea of changelings as aliens, exiles, who don’t know how to be in the world of mortals.

The characters in this novella didn’t have the depth of characters in Nettle & Bone (still my favourite Kingfisher book), and the narrative structure of Thornhedge was simpler; things were resolved too quickly and easily. Still, T. Kingfisher knows how to tell a good story and I am always ready for more from her :)

4 stars!

41Karlstar
Apr 8, 9:40 pm

>32 Alexandra_book_life: I've been thinking about giving Brave New World a re-read, it has been decades since I read it last and the only thing I remember about it is that it was dull. Given your description, I'll likely push it to the end of the TBR pile.

42Alexandra_book_life
Apr 9, 1:42 am

>41 Karlstar: It was interesting to reread it, but I do think there are better thought-provoking books out there.

43Karlstar
Apr 9, 11:10 pm

>42 Alexandra_book_life: Absolutely, Animal Farm is near the top of my list this year.

44Alexandra_book_life
Apr 10, 1:04 am

>43 Karlstar: Ah, that's a good one!

45clamairy
Edited: Apr 10, 8:30 am

>32 Alexandra_book_life: & >41 Karlstar: I started Brave New World as an audiobook a couple of years ago and it wasn't grabbing me. I read it 40+ years ago and have no memory of it. I really should try again. As you both say, Animal Farm might be a better book to revisit.

46jillmwo
Apr 10, 10:05 am

>41 Karlstar: and >42 Alexandra_book_life: I find that Brave New World has stuck with me for far longer than Animal Farm or Nineteen-Eighty-Four. Perhaps it's just that I don't find George Orwell enjoyable. But bits and pieces of Brave New World still surface in the brain -- the drug, Soma, and the various means of programming each of the sectors of the population in order to minimize their discontent overall.

I don't think I remember much detail (if any) of either of Orwell's dystopian novels. Was the pig in Animal Farm actually named Napoleon? Or am I making that up in my own head?

47Karlstar
Apr 10, 2:42 pm

>46 jillmwo: This is why I need to re-read Animal Farm. I should be able to answer the question, but I can't. :(

48ScoLgo
Apr 10, 4:01 pm

>45 clamairy: et al...

I first read BNW in 2011 and, while I liked it, probably won't read again. One thing that made the book work for me was that, while the setting is clearly dystopian, it is a utopia for every character in the book except one; Johnny is the misfit, while everyone else is perfectly content within their soma-bubbles.

49pgmcc
Edited: Apr 10, 4:32 pm

This message has been deleted by its author.

50MrsLee
Apr 10, 4:43 pm

>48 ScoLgo: clamairy recently shared this quote from Wyrd Sisters by Pratchett in Narilka's thread which seems oddly congruent with this book.

"There was something here, he thought, that nearly belonged to the gods. Humans had built a world inside the world, which reflected it in pretty much the same way as a drop of water reflects the landscape. And yet…and yet… Inside this little world they had taken pains to put all the things you might think they would want to escape from—hatred, fear, tyranny, and so forth. Death was intrigued. They thought they wanted to be taken out of themselves, and every art humans dreamt up took them further in."

51Alexandra_book_life
Apr 10, 5:21 pm

>46 jillmwo: The pig is indeed named Napoleon ;)
I did find that I remembered quite a lot of things in Brave New World on rereading. I guess it is one of those books that sticks with you.

52Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Apr 10, 5:26 pm

Finished my latest read, Upgrade by Blake Crouch.

Some thoughts:

A book club pick 😉

After two books, I knew what I was getting into with Crouch – a fast-paced sci-fi thriller that is sure to entertain, in one way or another. I really liked Recursion; I liked Dark Matter a lot less; this one falls somewhere in between.

It’s a near future setting, and the climate change is slowly wrecking everything. Also, scientists have been very naughty with genetic engineering, and now this kind of thing is banned, banned, banned. (Me: stupid, stupid, stupid.) There is a Gene Protection Agency in the US, hunting rogue scientists and other disobedient citizens who want to do gene therapy, create new life forms etc. Logan is a GPA agent – one day, he walks into a trap and gets infected with an influenza virus. The virus is carrying stuff that is going to alter Logan’s genome in exciting ways. Don’t you just hate it when this happens?

Logan starts getting smarter, stronger, etc. There is a conspiracy, of course. We get fugitives on the run, secrets revealed, cat-and-mouse games, lots of action. Stuff keeps happening!

The books asks some interesting questions. What does humanity deserve? Or doesn’t deserve? What price would you pay to “save everyone”?

“Being smart doesn’t make people infallible. It just makes them more dangerous.”

But we don’t go very deeply into these themes. So I think I would have preferred less philosophy and more sci-fi thriller candy.

The body count is high, people die in gruesome ways. It’s all very “technical”, like a video game. It bothered me.

Also, this is the third book by Crouch featuring a man forcibly separated from his family/loved ones. This is getting old…

By the end of the book, the plot moves too fast to make sense at times. Maybe Logan had gotten so smart that I couldn’t keep up?

I liked the ending, but I am not sure how I feel about it.

3.5 stars.

53Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Apr 12, 5:57 pm

I'm done with Clarkesworld issue 207

Some thoughts:

A wonderful issue – mostly because of “Eight or Die” by Thoraiya Dyer. But other stories were good too :)

“Morag’s Boy” by Fiona Moore - I have read about Morag before, in “The Spoil Heap”, issue 198 of Clarkesworld. I wasn’t too impressed, and didn’t review it. This is the same dystopian universe, but the story is so much better. Morag adopts Cliff, and begins to understand that her post-apocalyptic world can be different. 4.9 stars.

“Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Cyborg” by Samara Auman - crows are mourning their cyborg friend. This one is virtually plotless, it’s poetical and philosophical. Nice, but I was left wanting more. 3.8 stars.

“In Memories We Drown” by Kelsea Yu - some people are living in an underwater station after some kind of catastrophe. They find a strange plant. It’s a beautiful story. It felt too short and somewhat incomplete, though. 3.9 stars.

“Waffles are Only Goodbye for Now” by Ryan Cole - in a war zone, a little boy befriends a smart refrigerator. Awww. 4.0 stars.

“The World’s Wife” by Ng Yi-Sheng - there is a body that becomes a whole world… Fun! 4.0 stars.

“The Last Gamemaster in the World” by Angela Liu - Here is the grandest online game ever! Interesting, but it didn’t quite move me. 3.9 stars.

“Kill That Groundhog” by Fu Qiang - three people are trying to escape their Groundhog Day, in various ingenious ways. So much fun! Hilarious. 4.4 stars.

“Eight or Die”, Part II by Thotaiya Dyer - continued from issue 206 of Clarkesworld. We are still on a mission on an alien world. It’s weird, it’s quirky, it’s fun, it’s tragic, it’s magic, it’s humane. It’s very unlike “regular” sci-fi (whatever that is). The writing is great. The characters are great. Everything is great. I’m fangirling. Here are 5 stars.

54Alexandra_book_life
Apr 15, 5:37 pm

Phew. Here is to finishing a mystery novel. I have heard good things about KJ Charles, but since I don't read a lot of romance, I haven't done anything about it. Then she published a historical mystery, Death in the Spires, and it looked promising.

Some thoughts:

“He was frightened, and, once he recognised that, he realised he’d been frightened for a very long time, at a level so deep he hadn’t known it. One of the people he most loved had become a murderer, and he’d never trusted anyone again.”

They were students at Oxford, they were shining bright, clever and brilliant. There was friendship, there was love and longing. (Of course, they staged a play. Of course, it was Shakespeare.) Everything was so lovely and beautiful – on the surface, that is.

“He’s determined to make a reputation as the rudest man in Oxford.”
“No determination required. It’s effortless.”


Then there was a murder that was never solved, a murder that destroyed lives and loves and friendships.

This book is not really about the whodunit, it’s about the trauma, about living with loss of many things, about grief and a web of secrets and lies. (It also has a bit of romance and a possibility of second chances.) There is a smooth readability to the writing, and something very humane between the lines.

Ten years after the murder, one of them decides to investigate. Jem is an unlikely amateur sleuth – poor and broken. But he is stubborn, he is still clever, he can see patterns and think. And he is tired of being frightened. “That was a foul thought, planning to trap his friends into admissions, but they weren’t his friends any more, and one of them had murdered Toby.”

Ugly, foul things come to the surface. Yes, of course they do. Everyone’s emotional turmoil was very well written, I flew and flew through the last chapters. I hope the characters will heal and find peace. I really liked Jem, I’d like him to have many more evenings by the fire with his rediscovered friends, making tea and toasted cheese.

4 stars!

55Karlstar
Apr 17, 4:57 pm

>54 Alexandra_book_life: Glad you enjoyed it, that is an excellent write-up.

56Alexandra_book_life
Apr 18, 11:00 am

>55 Karlstar: Thank you! It was a very, very nice book.

57Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Apr 19, 12:37 am

I felt like reading more short stories, so I finished another issue of Clarkesworld, Clarkesworld issue 208

Some thoughts:

It was a nice issue, with both nice and meh stories. There weren't any outstanding, 5 star ones, though.

"Nothing of Value” by Aimee Ogden - Humanity has invented teleportation, so now you can jump around the solar system. This is a story about both the impact of technology and very human emotional dead ends. 4 stars.

“Down the Waterfall” by Cécile Cristofari - Yet another take on time travel, roads not taken and moments you wished you had had. Very poetic, but it left me cold. 3.5 stars.

“Binomial Nomenclature and the Mother of Happiness” by Alexandra Munck - An engineer makes a machine that lets you see physical manifestations of emotions. I liked the world building and the characters. 4.2 stars.

“Stars Don’t Dream” by Chi Hui - Maybe it’s a dystopia, maybe it’s a utopia. Anyway, everyone is in the metaverse. Space exploration, what space exploration? But some people dream… Very nice hard sci-fi! 4 stars.

”Just Another Cat in a Box” by E.N. Auslender - Someone is trapped on post-apocalyptic planet, different versions of the protagonist awake one after another. It was pretty bleak and I did not like it. 2.5 stars.

“Rail Meat” by Marie Vibbert - Two con artists in a world it would be interesting to see more of. Very enjoyable! 4.3 stars.

“You Dream of the Hive” by C.M. Fields - what kind of existence do you want? The regular human one or… something else? Interesting! 3.9 stars.

”You Cannot Grow in Salted Earth” by Priya Chand - space exploration that had gone wrong. It felt more like a fragment than a story. 3 stars

I guess I will go with 3.5 stars.

58Alexandra_book_life
Apr 23, 5:17 pm

I am done with Locklands

Some thoughts:

What I should have done, of course, was to read the conclusion to The Founders’ Trilogy in the autumn of last year, after the first two books. It was a mistake to read The Divine Cities in between… It made me realise what Robert Jackson Bennett is capable of, and this book is not quite it.

Anyway. I couldn’t quite remember what happened at the end of book 2 (a bad sign), but I got my bearings quickly (a good sign). Eight years have passed, the characters are still battling the new enemy from Shorefall. It was cool to see Berenice as a great general – but why on earth does her team keep addressing her as “Capo”? Yes, sure, the word might not mean the same thing in this universe as in ours, but I jumped every time it appeared on the page and I imagined Berenice as a mafia boss, lol. Sorry, I digress.

The mind magic is wondrous, I liked what RJB did here – a new kind of society and a different way of being human. The “cadences” are awesome, and I wish all these ideas had been explored deeper. They got lost in the action and dark places, though.

Naturally, we are on a mission to save the world.

“But there is no dancing through a monsoon, my love.”

Does it make sense when I say that the plot did not bore me, but the endless action did? The book is almost 550 pages long, and I felt like celebrating when I got to page 300. The characters run, hide, shoot at things, use magic, things go awry, things go awry again, someone has a new desperate plan. Repeat. There is lot of screaming as well, I lost count of “oh no no no oh god no no no’s”. I should have had a drinking game with this, really. Also, the dialogues and the characters’ reactions to events seemed very YA. I grew tired of them all.

Crasedes, the villain from book 2, makes things more exciting when he appears. (It’s “the enemy of my enemy” trope.) He is too entertaining at times, so that the I felt guilty about having fun, considering what happened in the previous book. A false note, I’d say.

Clef’s and Crasedes’ backstory, when it was completely revealed, was interesting and emotional. Yet this got lost in the action too, so it wasn’t interesting and emotional enough.

I liked the epilogue!

P.S. I am still looking forward to reading more books by Robert Jackson Bennett :)

3 stars!

59ScoLgo
Apr 23, 7:06 pm

>58 Alexandra_book_life: Yeah, Locklands fell a bit flat for me too, and for the same reasons you describe.

RJB seems to like musical instrument terms for character names. Every time I heard 'capo', I pictured a stringed instrument clamp and Clef, well... he was just bass-ically treble... ;-)

I have The Company Man and The Tainted Cup both waiting on my TBR shelf but plan to hold off on starting TTC until sequels are published.

60jillmwo
Apr 23, 7:33 pm

>58 Alexandra_book_life: I am not familiar with this particular author, but I do like the line about not dancing in a monsoon! And, yes, non-stop action (from my perspective) is not always a good technique in writing. I keep remembering Dan Brown and the fact that no one ever had either the need or the time for sleeping or a bathroom break in either The Da Vinci Code or Angels and Demons. But they were best-sellers.

61Alexandra_book_life
Apr 24, 9:12 am

>59 ScoLgo: I have high expectations when it comes to The Tainted Cup! And it's nice to see that we agree ;)

62Alexandra_book_life
Apr 24, 9:14 am

>60 jillmwo: No, action doesn't always work in books - I like when there is a change of pace, actually. RJB did that very well in Divine Cities, though.

63Karlstar
Apr 24, 9:58 pm

>58 Alexandra_book_life: I've absolutely read books where it felt like there was an action scene on every page. It is too much.

64clamairy
Edited: Apr 25, 11:02 am

>60 jillmwo: I felt that way about The Road to Roswell, by Connie Willis. I got tired just reading the non-stop shenanigans. (I still enjoyed it.)

>59 ScoLgo: "...he was just bass-ically treble..." I'm dying here... 😆

>58 Alexandra_book_life: Thank you for the reminder to bump City of Stairs up the TBR list.

65Alexandra_book_life
Apr 25, 1:03 pm

>63 Karlstar: An adrenaline overdose! Yes, it can get annoying.

66Alexandra_book_life
Apr 25, 1:03 pm

>64 clamairy: You are most welcome! I hope you will enjoy it :)

67ScoLgo
Apr 25, 3:02 pm

>64 clamairy: I'm just chuffed that someone got my terribad dad joke.

I will second The Divine Cities trilogy. It was one of my top reads of 2019 and is coming due for a re-read soon.

68Alexandra_book_life
May 5, 11:09 am

I just finished the third book in Time Traveller's Guide series, Time Traveler's Guide to Restoration Britain. It's lengthy and slow, and very much worth your time :)

Some thoughts:

Ian Mortimer has taken me on yet another journey, and what a journey it was. The non-fiction books of this series feel like an adventure – of course they do, because I am traveling back in time!

“the past is best viewed close up and personally - in contrast to traditional history, which emphasises the value of objectivity and distance.”

The setup is familiar from the earlier books: descriptions of cities, people, their way of life, what to wear, what to eat and drink, how to travel, where to stay, what laws to obey, how much to pay for things.

This is more than a guidebook, of course. Ian Mortimer’s writing is intimate, humane, at times sarcastic; there is always sympathy for our ancestors, they are neither weird nor ignorant, they just are.

Second half of the 17th century in Britain is a time of great change: the beginnings of rationalism and science as we know it, there is a sense of wonder and discovery; the end of an absolute monarchy and the first imaginings of the social contract. With the restoration of monarchy and the fall of the Puritanical Commonwealth, people can go to the theatre again, listen to music more freely… and not get executed for adultery. (Hmmm… why does this sound familiar to me, a traveler from the 21st century?)
But women still get burned alive for killing their husbands – because it’s treason, even if he is an abuser and it was self-defence. And they hang students that ridicule religion after too many drinks.

This book is full of details, details, details. I think every reader will find things to love and be especially interested in, especially moved by. These are mine, in no particular order:

📖 The descriptions of London are lovely. The rebuilding after the Great Fire of London in 1666 was impressively fast. Also, this was then people in Britain started getting fire insurance. (Sensible.)

Here is some advice on how to preserve your inn while the rest of the town is on fire:
“He told me, by the help of some friends hoisting some hogsheads of beer out of the cellar and, being very diligent to cool those parts of the house that were very hot, they did preserve it.”
“Surely this is one of the greatest events in the annals of British fire-fighting,”
comments the author.

📖 The child mortality rates are simply staggering. “37 per cent of all the children born in England do not make it to the age of fifteen.”

📖 The inequality between the sexes “amounts to sexism on a scale that you will barely be able to countenance.”
And legally, as a woman you can’t do anything at all unless your husband/father/some other dude with power over you says yes.
“What matters is that the law justifies the husband’s actions against his wife so completely that it makes him arrogant and uncompromising.”
Still, contemporary travelers note that women in Britain have more liberty than in other countries - they go places! by themselves! Amazing, right? And women begin to act on stage; to earn money as professional painters; to publish more books and plays.

📖 Servants:
“If you want to know what life in service is like for many women, think in terms of Cinderella’s daily grind of scouring, scrubbing, washing and polishing from before dawn to late at night - and having to comb the lice out of the hair of a man who beats you and forces you to have sex with him.”

📖 POC:
The concept of racism as we understand it does not exist yet. There are preconceptions about POC that are “deeply unpleasant”. I’m guessing that people are aware that there is slavery overseas that is financing their fine lifestyle, but they’d rather not think about it – and besides, they are not “like us.” There is debate on whether slaves should be considered free once they come to England (since there is no slavery there officially). What about those POC that have been baptised? Surely it’s wrong if a Christian enslaves another Christian. Interestingly enough, there are recorded legal cases with judges thinking like that, so that slaves are freed. Yes, sometimes there is hope for humanity...

📖 Don’t get me started on duels! It’s a miracle there were any earls and dukes left alive in Britain.

📖 Law and justice:
“If it is fairness you want from your legal system, I suggest you visit a period of history that prioritises the person over property, reality over religion, science over superstition, equity over influence and fairness over the process of law. In finding such a time, I wish you luck.”

📖 Beauty products:
“Puppy-oil” is distilled dog. No, I am not kidding. Girls, you are supposed to put that on your face and you’ll be beautiful. No comments.

📖 Cool new stuff:
Champagne! Fountain pens! Public transport! Coffee houses! Tea! First museums! (The museum geek says: this section should have been longer.) First public concerts!

This review is getting way too long, time to wrap up… I am kind of sad that I only have one book left in this series.

I love the closing lines of the last chapter, as the time traveler prepares to go to bed: “But therin lies a question: what does the day ahead hold? So many things, so many.”

And this last from the author:
“If you listen carefully at the door to the past, what you hear most - above all the distant sounds of daily life and death - is the beating of the most unstoppable heart.”

5 stars, naturally.

69hfglen
May 5, 3:41 pm

>68 Alexandra_book_life: "37 per cent of all the children born in England do not make it to the age of fifteen".

I'm inclined to consider that a remarkably low rate of attrition. I've been working on my family tree, and discovered that up to about 3/4-way through the 19th century, my lot had only about a 50% chance of making their 10th birthday, and rarely did more than two (of 8, 12 or more children) manage to have children of their own. Which makes sense, come to think of it: it means that the overall population remained roughly constant.

70Alexandra_book_life
May 5, 4:14 pm

>69 hfglen: There are many factors that influence child mortality rates, so I can imagine it being higher than this in other times/places...

71clamairy
May 6, 9:10 am

>68 Alexandra_book_life: I'm glad you've gotten so much enjoyment (I'm not sure if that's the right word) from of these books. I've been thinking about starting this series with Audible. I need to work through my backlog a bit before deciding.

72Alexandra_book_life
May 6, 3:46 pm

>71 clamairy: Thank you! Enjoyment is probably not the right word, I agree - but it certainly was a very emotional experience paired with nerdy satisfaction ;)

73Alexandra_book_life
May 8, 5:40 pm

Just finished Fresh Water for Flowers It was a bit of a mixed bag, but I did like it.

A book club pick 😊

Here is a story that grows slowly, putting its threads together – love, grief, loss, trauma, finding yourself again, learning to let the light in.

We meet Violette, a cemetery keeper. My favourite parts of the book were the descriptions of her daily routines, her colleagues (the funeral parlour owners and the gravediggers), the speeches at the funerals that Violette wrote down, the people who come to talk to her. There was a quiet, kind rhythm to the writing that was very pleasant.

“These folks who visit graves daily, they’re the ones who look like ghosts. Who are between life and death.”

“They never say that a man of fifty-five can die from not having been loved, not having been heard, getting too many bills, buying too much on credit, seeing his children grow up and leave home without really saying goodbye.”

One day, a police captain, Julien Seul, arrives - his mother, Iréne, wanted to be buried in Violette’s cemetery, her ashes laid to rest besides a man called Gabriel, a man who was not her husband. Julien wants to know why, and events are set in motion that uncover the past and rebuild the present.

I really enjoyed the first half of the book, yet struggled with the second. I believe that this novel is trying to do too much, in too many pages. Things got tangled. There were too many voices that rang false. I usually appreciate when POV’s change so that horrible characters become… not less horrible, bur human. It didn’t quite work this time. Besides, the only voice I wanted to listen to was Violette’s. The story of Iréne and Gabriel went on forever – it was touching at first, but then it descended into a melodrama with French clichés that was mostly exasperating. I wished they were done already.

Violette’s story also gets a bit lost among the tangles. Still, there were harrowing, heartbreaking pages there that were cruel and true. They hit me very hard.

The ending was touching, though, and it made me happy!

3.7 stars, rounded up to 4.

74MrsLee
May 8, 11:24 pm

>73 Alexandra_book_life: I have a soft spot for books about cemeteries and those who are in them, having worked at one for a time. My favorite job ever, aside from raising/ schooling my kids. However, I think I will give this one a pass based on your reactions. Love the quotes you posted though, especially the first one. That thought crossed my mind while I was observing at the cemetery.

75Alexandra_book_life
May 9, 1:57 am

>74 MrsLee: Thank you for telling me. Those who work at a cemetery are very special people, I think...

I don't regret reading this book, but I won't be recommending it to everyone. So do give this one a pass, yes :)

76Alexandra_book_life
Edited: May 18, 5:15 pm

Paladin's Strength - done!

Some thoughts :)

Yay, this series is all about pairing off those paladins! Well, of course it is, their god is dead, they are still traumatized, they need good things in their lives.

Thus Istvhan the paladin meets Clara the nun (lay sister - not sworn to celibacy – what a relief). They are sort of kind of compelled to travel together, while Clara is on the trail of her kidnapped sisters. Isvhan doesn’t really have time for this, he is hunting the supernatural mass murderers from the previous book, but...
“And if he did not turn aside and help a nun, his maternal relatives for nine generations would rise from their graves and come to his dreams to box his ears, with his mother at the forefront.”

Look, it’s instalove! Usually, I’m allergic to this kind of thing, but Kingfisher makes it cute and makes it work. But they shouldn’t! They have secrets! This is not the time! Let’s be very silly! Mwahaha, said the omniscient and experienced reader. (I do wish Istvahn would stop thinking about FMC’s breasts, though, I lost count of all the times he thought about them ;) Also, the “they keep getting interrupted” trope showed up way too many times – once is enough.)

Bandits show up.
“Protect the nun!” roared Istvhan, yanking his sword free. “Protect your own damn self!” Clara roared back.
Then she finds herself a weapon. So, she is a warrior nun! Yes, I know, it’s “lay sister”. It just doesn’t sound as cool. Clara’s secret is pretty awesome (This kind of thing only happens in a Kingfisher book, I tell you).

Interactions between Istvhan and Clara when Clara is … um …. her other self are hilarious.
Their “regular” interactions are entertaining as well.

“Making a bit of a mess of things, he observed internally. “Keep talking though. I’m sure you can make it worse.” Me: chuckle, chuckle, chuckle. Here is some excellent relationship advice, by the way: “Don’t assume she knows what you’re thinking.”

I make it all sound hilarious and fun, and it is. At the same time, this book is much darker than the previous one. There is a lot of grief and trauma, and the story behind the decapitating killers is dark, tragic and really sad.

The latter part of the book is full of adventure and danger, desperate battles. desperate escapes and sacrifices. The ending gets a thumbs up (naturally).

4.25 stars (or thereabouts)

77Alexandra_book_life
May 13, 5:24 pm

Silent Parade - done!

Some thoughts:

First things first: it was nice to meet the familiar characters again. Yukawa, Kusanagi, Utsumi. As the series progresses, the detectives are getting better and better at their jobs. This is shown very well. Kusanagi certainly knows how to interrogate a suspect! Yukawa is still the smartest person in any room, though.

I really liked the police procedural parts, and conversations between Yukawa and Kusanagi, Yukawa and Utsumi.

“What’s all this about? Come on, tell me.”
“It’s so blindingly obvious, I really shouldn’t need to.”

“You shouldn’t be the one to decide if your idea is stupid or not. And you certainly don’t want to rush to judgment about something being impossible. Buried inside a crazy idea, you can often find useful hints for solving problems. You should come out and say it, and see what a third party has to say.”

As for the mystery itself, there are two missing person cases that seem to be connected. There is grief, trauma, perseverance in the face of grief and dreams of revenge. The investigation proceeds, and the case becomes more and more convoluted. Reader: I understand what happened! Author: No, you don’t. Reader: Well, I understand now. Author: Trust me, you don’t. Reader: Oh. Now I know what happened. Author: You don’t, I told you!”

Putting the puzzle together is very interesting, but gets too convoluted. I lost track of all the characters who were not the detectives and wasn’t emotionally involved, except in the end – unlike other books by this author I had read. The story is very dark, but I was more interested in the solving of the mystery than in feeling things.

Flawed Keigo Higashino is still better than many other things out there.

P.S. I am still planning to read everything by Keigo Higashino that had been published/will be published in English.

I think I am left with 3.7 stars rounded up to 4.

78clamairy
May 18, 4:51 pm

>76 Alexandra_book_life: I'm glad you're enjoying these. I will definitely be going back to this series, especially for the humor.

79Alexandra_book_life
May 18, 5:17 pm

>78 clamairy: Thank you :) The first two books made me happy, so I'll be going back for more as well.

80Alexandra_book_life
May 19, 9:53 am

I just found out that John Scalzi's new book is coming out next year :) Apparently, it involves the Moon (yes, that's our Moon) turning into cheese. That's a lot of cheese! It sounds fun.

81Karlstar
May 19, 9:57 am

>80 Alexandra_book_life: I just picked up Starter Villain, so at least I'll be caught up when that book arrives. But, uh, cheese?

82Alexandra_book_life
May 19, 10:35 am

>81 Karlstar: Yeah, I know. Is it sci-fi? :)))

83clamairy
May 19, 10:45 am

>80 Alexandra_book_life: Oh my!!! Cheese!!! That could be hilarious.

84Alexandra_book_life
May 19, 12:42 pm

>83 clamairy: I am looking forward to it, I think.

85Narilka
May 19, 3:46 pm

>80 Alexandra_book_life: I just saw the blog post too. I'm looking forward to it :) Come on March 2025!

86Alexandra_book_life
May 19, 4:55 pm

>85 Narilka: Come on March 2025!

Yes, exactly :)

87Alexandra_book_life
May 19, 5:04 pm

My next book club discussion will be about Alien Clay :)

Some thoughts:

All right, this was very interesting. It’s probably one of the more interesting “Tchaikovskys” I’ve read so far. I liked it a lot, with some reservations that I have so far had trouble articulating. Writing things down usually helps, so here we go.

The totalitarian state of this universe has labour camps on planets it wants to explore. Convicts are shipped there, as cheaply as possible. (Me: labour camps on Earth are cheaper.) The author obviously knows about sharashkas of the Soviet Gulag – and the main character is to help the research into the alien artifacts of Kiln. (The research findings need to confirm to the state doctrine, of course.) The artifacts are creepy and fascinating and seem to have been made by a vanished civilization. I like this kind of mystery.

The labour camp dynamics and horrors were written well, yet there was a sarcastic detachment that bothered me. It is a legitimate narrative choice; it has been done before. It is just that in this particular case I had trouble feeling, experiencing, diving in. Things were happening, I wanted to know what would happen next, so on I read, that’s it. It also made the characters more puppet-like, and the beginning of the book had led to me to expect a more character-driven story…

I really liked the subversive nods to the French Revolution, as parts 1, 2, and 3 are Liberté-Égalité-Fraternité. As you read, it becomes more and more subversive and twisted. I loved that!

The world of Kiln is fascinating and amazing, truly alien, with frighteningly different (to conservative humans, that is) genetics and ecology. The references to Hieronymus Bosch are the loveliest things. I didn’t know I wanted a Boschian alien world in my books, but suddenly, there is was, and I happily ate it all up. The true nature of Kiln wasn’t that much of surprise, but Tchaikovsky is doing ambitious, ambiguous stuff here, so kudos to him. Is our narrator reliable, by the way? Ha! But I am always eager to see another take on the “there are many ways of being human (post-human?)” theme. (Also me, screaming: doesn’t anyone in this labour camp have an immune system??? Me, having caught my breath: ok, so Kiln stuff is good it adaptation, so maybe it fools the human immune system. But do mention it specifically, please?) The ending is not unexpected. Is it satisfying or horrific? It depends.

Quotes that I liked:
“Just because the tyrant dresses like a clown doesn’t mean he’s funny.”

“The greatest privilege of power is being able to overlook the fact that you’re even wielding it.”


4.25 stars!

88Alexandra_book_life
Edited: May 21, 11:58 pm

Finished Mammoths at the Gates!

Some thoughts:

Oh. I think I have just read the best story in The Singing Hills series. Lovely! I am sorry to have read it so fast, too fast.

Yes, please, give me even more focus on Chih as a protagonist – thank you. They are coming home.
(And there are indeed mammoths at the gates. This is not a story about mammoths.)

Coming home is hard. Some things stay the same. Some things don’t. Your friends change. And some people are gone forever.

“The Divine says people change, remember? No one is as they were five years ago, or two years ago, or a week ago, or a moment ago. If you love somebody, you must let them change.”

“...growing up, growing older, was always a kind of loss, even if what was gained repaid it all and then some.”


How are we transformed by grief and loss? What form can justice take? What stories do we tell about each other, what stories do we know?

I loved the twist at the end – strange, poignant, and unexpected, but so right.

5 stars :)

89jillmwo
May 21, 8:01 pm

>80 Alexandra_book_life: >83 clamairy: Well, a structurally divergent novel about cheese certainly qualifies as something to look forward to. I feel like there should be a bad pun there somehow, but nothing is springing to mind...

90clamairy
May 21, 10:06 pm

>88 Alexandra_book_life: This is good news. I will probably be getting to this soon.

>89 jillmwo: I am sure there is, but nothing is springing to mind.

91ScoLgo
May 21, 11:42 pm

>88 Alexandra_book_life: >90 clamairy: I just read the fifth installment this past weekend. The Brides of High Hills is probably my favorite after The Empress of Salt and Fortune introduced us to Cleric Chih and Almost Brilliant. I really enjoyed Into the Riverlands too but really, every one of these short stories have been a delight.

92Alexandra_book_life
Edited: May 22, 12:04 pm

>89 jillmwo: Agreed!
I can't think of a bad pun either... I am sure it'll come to me... No.

93Alexandra_book_life
May 22, 12:02 am

>90 clamairy: I hope you will enjoy it a lot :)

94Alexandra_book_life
May 22, 12:04 am

>91 ScoLgo: This is great to know!
Singing Hills is a wonderful series and I enjoyed all of the stories. I am looking forward to the fifth one!

95hfglen
May 22, 6:27 am

>80 Alexandra_book_life: to >89 jillmwo: I am irresistibly reminded of the Wallace and Gromit piece where they travel to the moon and find it's made of cheese -- I think it's A grand day out.

96Alexandra_book_life
May 22, 12:04 pm

>95 hfglen: Oh, but of course! How lovely :)))))))

97Alexandra_book_life
Edited: May 24, 12:16 pm

Rose/House - finished!

Some thoughts:

“When the house laughed, it sounded like the ripple of a storm, the hush and shudder of leaves and sand trickling down a dune.”

Shiver. Shiver. Shiver. What a creepy locked-room murder mystery! There is a haunted house, Rose House, that is also a ghastly AI.

I liked the sci-fi world building here, it is sparse, but the reader can easily fill in the blanks and paint a bigger picture. The world has a dystopian feel, but it’s not a dystopia. It’s just a version of the future, with good things and bad all mixed together. Sci-fi stories rarely wake my sense of wonder nowadays (I have read too much sci-fi, perhaps). This one did!

There are three POV’s in 120 pages, and they were masterfully done. This is not easy to write, I am very impressed. (Oliver’s POV was a respite from all the creepiness.)

How do you explain a dead body in a house to which only one person has access after the owner’s death; and that person has an alibi? The search for answers is very dark and kept me turning the pages.

I do hope that our future AI’s are not going to be like Rose House. This is during its phone call to the police to report a dead body:

“Cause of death,” said Maritza.
“I’m a piece of architecture, Detective. How should I know how humans are like to die?”


Maybe trying to come in is a bad idea, Detective…

“What is a building without doors, Maritza?” Rose House asked her, blandly inquisitive. “Have you opinions?”
“A prison”, Maritza thought, and went back to her car.”


The story grows more and more claustrophobic, you feel like you are getting lost in Rose House and mental fog. I have mixed feelings about the ending: it was anticlimactic and not quite clear, but it did seem fitting.

4.25 stars!

98Sakerfalcon
Edited: May 24, 7:00 am

>97 Alexandra_book_life: This sounds very good! I like a good haunted house book and adding in the AI sounds like it adds a new twist on the genre. The touchstone, however, points to something completely different!

ETA Ah, it's by Arkady Martine. I'd expect good stuff from her!

99Alexandra_book_life
May 24, 12:18 pm

>98 Sakerfalcon: I like this novella even better after I've had time to think about it.
Thank you, I've fixed the touchstone :)

100Alexandra_book_life
May 27, 5:12 pm

I've had a wonderful weekend, but Monday was pretty horrid. We're going through a conflict resolution process at work, and I don't think it's going well. It seems to me that we are treating the symptoms instead of the disease. I am tired of drama and all my colleagues right now.
Does anyone have a good book about coping strategies to recommend? I want to be happy at work again...

Also, my current book is not very good. Hopefully. I will rant about it tomorrow, maybe I will feel better then...

101clamairy
May 27, 5:30 pm

>100 Alexandra_book_life: Oh no. I hope it's all sorted out soon.

102jillmwo
May 27, 5:57 pm

>100 Alexandra_book_life: Human Resources would likely express concern, but I'd be happy to loan you a few titles on useful techniques of administering poison.

More seriously, no organization is able to offer a paycheck that is sufficient in making up for having to deal with workplace drama.

103MrsLee
May 27, 10:43 pm

>100 Alexandra_book_life: I have never understood why people cannot just go to work, work, then go home. Why does it all have to get blown up and exaggerated? Perhaps you need a book on how to direct a drama? Give them a stage?

104Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Yesterday, 1:16 am

>101 clamairy: >102 jillmwo: >103 MrsLee:

Thanks a lot, everyone! You made me laugh a little, and this means a lot.
I wonder if my employer will like it if I mention all this drama in my next salary negotiation? I do want compensation, lol.
Directing a drama? I'd love to, actually. Some of my colleagues would be amazing in it.
I do wish people would leave more of their feelings at home when they go to work. No such luck, though. Anyway, I hope it will all get sorted out soon, it's been going on for months already, without getting better.

105reconditereader
Yesterday, 1:17 am

Maybe time to look around and see what the job market is like in your area.....

106Alexandra_book_life
Yesterday, 12:57 pm

>105 reconditereader: The thought had crossed my mind, but I'll see what happens...

107Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Yesterday, 4:57 pm

Navola - done!

Some thoughts:

Done, done, done, I am done! Oh joy.

This was not the reaction I was expecting when starting this book. I enjoyed Ship Breaker, and then NetGalley had a fantasy novel by the same author, so here I am.

We are in a kind of Renaissance Italy, a Venetian republic/Florentine republic of sorts, with hints of magic. There are nobles and merchant/banking houses that embrace the mafia lifestyle. Backstabbing is a feature, not a bug. Sounds like fun, right? I liked the very first pages, and how Davico (a very unwilling heir to the most powerful mafia family, sorry, it was banking house) talked about his father.

“He liked to say that he traded in goods, but more in promises, and he never failed to collect.”

After that, the further I read, the more annoyed I became:

😡 There is a lot of fake Italian/Latin/whatever. I had no trouble understanding the stuff, but it felt grating, annoying, pretentious. This sort of thing went on and on: “He sought to play in politics, where the art of faccioscuro is both sword and shield, and he held neither. He imagined he could sit parlobanco with your father.” Me: please stop already.

😡 There are many irritating editing errors, the most I’ve ever had in an ARC. I had to reread certain sentences several times before they made sense.

😡 (They drink a lot of tea. Is it a nod to all the tea-drinking in modern sci-fi? Anyway, why are we drinking so much tea in fake Renaissance Italy? And why are their cheeses always described as “bitter”? This is a crime against cheese, that’s what it is!!!)

😡 Davico, I am sorry, you lack depth, which means that you are not well-written. (This goes for all the other characters as well.) You are also annoying. The constant self-doubt, a naïveté that is almost aggressive, the “I don’t want this destiny, poor little meeeeee”, and being very juvenile in general… I got tired of them all after almost 600 pages. Davico grows a bit of spine ca 80% into the book – too little, too late.

😡 Infodumps! We are bombarded with endless descriptions and exposition: the ancient philosophers of this world; pages and pages of their mythology; a lot about their herbs and mushrooms (because Davico likes them). Last but not least: immediately after a Red Wedding wannabe event we are treated to several pages of the history and workings of this world’s banking system. But why?

😡 So the narrative stutters, loses momentum, gets lost, doesn’t go anywhere. It’s a bad sign when the reader asks “is anything at all supposed to happen in this book?” about 30-40% through.

😡 Sex, sex, sex. Sex? Sex, sex, sex! I’m no prude, but the whole society seems to be obsessed. Davico is a horny teenager, but when everyone behaves and talks like teenagers, it gets annoying. The one steamy sex scene makes a dirty voyeur out of the reader, it feels like pornography. I did not feel the characters’ passion. I wanted to go wash my eyes. How was this done? I am mystified.

😡 As the plot finally (finally!) thickens a bit towards the end, there is a lot of blood, gore, torture, humiliation, as well as blood, gore, torture, humiliation. The book gets as obsessed with those as with sex. Ouch.

😡 I wondered why so many Checkov’s guns failed to fire in this book. Then I came to the end, and it was written in a very clear “let’s have a sequel, maybe?” way. Where is my closure?

My reasons for that extra star:

👌The dialogues were very well-written, I enjoyed them.

👌Celia was interesting. We should have followed her instead.

👌The magic stuff was cool. When it did appear, I felt that I was reading a different (better) book.

👌When Davico goes to a neighbouring kingdom to negotiate, his hosts decide to cruelly test him. The test involved a vicious war horse. That was a good scene.

Judging by other reviews, I seem to be an outlier. You might want to check if you agree or not ;)

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the free e-book!

2 stars...

108MrsLee
Yesterday, 5:25 pm

>105 reconditereader: & >106 Alexandra_book_life: I was going to mention that my tolerance level for drama in the workplace seems to be about 6 years. That is the longest I could stay at my last two jobs (I'm not counting the job at the cemetery as I left that unwillingly due to health concerns). I didn't want to be a downer though! Starting around year five is when I would realize it isn't going to get any better, and by the end of that year I realized that my presence was not going to make anything better either, so for my own peace of mind, I moved on.

109Alexandra_book_life
Yesterday, 5:32 pm

>108 MrsLee: 6 years is a high tolerance level! I am glad you could move on :)