st_aurafina: Rainbow DNA (Default)
st_aurafina ([personal profile] st_aurafina) wrote2021-11-25 05:24 pm
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Reading Wednesday that is not really Wednesday where I am

Oh hey, I can do the actual reading post instead of (as well as??) playing catch-up this time...

Just finished A Darker Shade of Magic by V E Schwab, narrated by Steven Crossley
- what a great world/set of worlds
- what a great collection of characters
- what a terrible choice of narration for Lila
- Stephan Crossley does a lot of classical lit, a lot of... ship lit, I guess? Naval adventures?
- he did not do Lila proud
- she can sound scruffy without sounding like... like a comedic cockney urchin

- Anyone else get a 'cesty vibe from Kell and his brother?
- The Dane twins were definitely fucking
- The worlds were delightfully different and similar
- it was very pleasing to me as a comic book and fic reader, used to AUs
- V E Schwab really put in the legwork to build those worlds
- Audible reviews say that the narration for this series gets worse??
- Oh, well. This was good enough for me to actually pick up a paper book for the sequel


Also just finished (because ADHD)
Tea and Murder: Stories of the Xuya Universe by Aliette de Bodard, voiced by Stefan Rudnicki and Kate Orsini

- oh!
- this is a beautiful universe
- narration is fantastic, voice are lovely, very suited to the world
- the author describes it as ...a timeline where Asia became dominant, and where the space age has Confucian galactic empires of Vietnamese and Chinese inspiration: scholars administrate planets, and sentient spaceships are part of familial lineages.
- I do love me a sentient ship

- the ships are literally part of the family
- somehow a human is involved in the carrying of a baby ship??
- a birth is described as smelling of blood and engine oil
- I was never sure whether this meant BSG style human at the core of the ship
- or something Borgier???
- you never find out, to my relief but also my chagrin because how does it worrrrkkkk???

- first up is The Citadel of Weeping Pearls
- it's a mystery, with a tiny baby sentient ship (so good! I love the ships!)
- and the Imperial family having regular family issues while a war looms
- It was a good solid story to introduce me to the world
- leaving me free to fully appreciate story #2, The Tea Master and the Detective
- A GENDERFLIPPED HOLMES AU where Watson is a traumatised sentient warship
- Her name is The Shadow's Child and now she makes bespoke tea blends
- IT IS ALL FUCKING MAGNIFICENT
- where are my 5 seasons and a movie


Catching Up on Past Reads
An Unkindness of Ghost by Rivers Solomon, narrated by Cherise Boothe
- Look, this is an amazing book
- I can't overstate how wonderful and creative and amazing
- but it's a generation ship set up like an antebellum plantation society
- the main character is Aster, she's intersex, neurodivergent and brilliant
- I love her

- she weaponises her neurodivergence as much as she can
- and I love that about her
- the generation ship is wonderful and terrible
- there are so many cultures formed by living in cramped surrounds and rigid social structures
- the science fiction of it is classical and clever, and I loved it
- the writing is beautiful, visual, framed often by Aster's point of view
- it's incredibly familiar to me
- honestly, this should be a classic
- Narration is top notch
- Cherise Booth needs 5 seasons and a movie of something because she seems wonderful
- just read with care
- it's worth it, if you're able



The Last True Poets of the Sea by Julia Drake, narrated by Tavia Gilbert
- got this for free, and downloaded it
- even though it pitches young for YA, the main character has led a wild life
- with lots of sex, drugs and musical theatre
- the language and vibe of the story still felt very adolescent
- but I've watched a whole season of Sex Education
- So I'm getting used to the idea that some teenagers have incredibly wild sex lives

- totally bluffed me out as a traditional het romance story for the first few chapters
- some content warnings for suicide attempts (by a sibling)
- also teenagers dealing with the death of a friend
- her brother is neurodivergent
- I liked how they dealt with this?
- Reviews on Goodreads are less positive about it though, so your mileage may vary
- bi representation, though! Plus a lot of casual queer rep amongst the townspeople.



Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko, narrated by Weruche Opia
- oh, wow. This was a wild ride!
- a west African inspired fantasy world
- lots of different nations and cultures
- wonderful narration
- I'm always on board when the reader sings the songs of the story
- magic and spirits and fairies and demons and genies and pretty much everything?
- a fantastic, tropey rulership system
- just a really solid fantasy story
- I will be rolling on to the sequel very soon


Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold, narrated by Grover Gardner
- finally getting to this
- it's been there on my TBR for literally a decade???
- I think I was hesitant because really smart people love these books
- behold my imposter syndrome
- I really liked it?
- I see those Trek bones
- I have a plan c/o [personal profile] branwyn for reading order
- next is Barrayar, then I'm skipping to Brothers in Arms
- this may be controversial to purists, idk


Catching Teller Crow by Ambelin Kwaymullina and Ezekiel Kwaymullina, narrated by Miranda Tapsell
- retitled in the US as "The Things She's Seen"
- I don't know why, and it doesn't work as well
- so if you buy it in the US, please think of it as "Catching Teller Crow"
- maybe change it with marker

- Beth Teller was killed in a car accident, but she's sticking with her dad to help him keep it together
- and by the by, help him work his first case since her death
- beautiful, lyrical writing
- emotive, symbolic, but still accessible, if you know what I mean
- amazing narration by Miranda Tapsell
- she can switch from child voice to adult easily and convincingly
- this has content warnings, for child death, for grieving, for colonial atrocities, for sexual assault, for mistreatment and murder of indigenous people
- that's a lot
- is it weird to say this is a really hopeful story?
- give me all the powerful teenage girls who can change the world
- your heart will break but in a good way


Fly by Night by Frances Hardinge, narrated by Lesley Sharp
- I didn't want to like this
- I didn't like the voice Lesley Sharp chose for Mosca
- I didn't like Eponymous Clent, he seemed creepy and predatory
- Damn it! She won me over. Or wore me down, which is a better fit for both Mosca and Clent
- In the end, I wouldn't have chosen a different voice for either of them

- there's a Discworld-esque feel to this
- That feeling of bedlam and movement in a busy, busy world
- with a good pinch of absurdity that works really well
- would make a great gift for your 12-15 year old reader of fantasy
- So many heroes in this
- and the goose was the greatest of all



Wylding Hall by Elizabeth Hand, acted by a bunch of people
- if you read this one, do it in paper, don't audiobook it
- they tried to make it into an audio drama
- but one voice would have been better
- so it didn't break that dreamy, creepy feeling, like Picnic at Hanging Rock
- it's a good and spooky story
- about a folk band
- a perfect afternoon in the seventies
- and why you shouldn't step in fairy rings

Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki, narrated by Cindy Kay
- LISTEN UP
- THIS IS THE BEST THING I'VE READ ALL YEAR
- I'M CALLING IT AS MY FAVE FOR 2021
- trans protagonist
- queer characters every-fucking-where
- aliens run the donut store
- there's a Faustian bargain
- there's music theory and instrument making
- there's universal philosophy
- the professional reviews say "Pratchett!!!" and "Becky Chambers!!"
- but they don't need to
- this book is its own wonderful brand of amazing
- give it to everyone

Currently Reading
The Animals at Lockwood Manor by Jane Healey, narrated by Sarah Lambie
- set immediately pre-WWII
- Hetty is overseeing the evacuation of the mammalian collection from the Natural History Museum
- The daughter of the grand house is very mysterious and beguiling
- not sure if this is sapphic or just fraught
- there are lots of gentle touches and smelling of the other woman's skin, you know?
- very gothic
- has big Rebecca vibes so far


Phew. Made it! All caught up! CAN YOU BELIEVE???

Happy thanksgiving, my USian friends. Travel safe, be safe.
alessandriana: (Default)

[personal profile] alessandriana 2021-11-25 04:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Strongly concur with not skipping Warrior's Apprentice. Or Cetaganda. It's not a purist thing, it's just that they provide necessary context for Brothers in Arms, without which I don't think it'll be as impactful.
frith_in_thorns: Better Butter Bugs for a Brighter Barrayar! (V Butter bugs)

[personal profile] frith_in_thorns 2021-11-25 04:52 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree with the above, I'm honestly really struggling to see the logic of skipping over so many books like this. Not because I'm a "purist", just... I genuinely think it would be massively confusing and you'd be missing SO much context for literally every part of the plot. (I agree that it's where the best books start, but... no, I'm still confused by the rationale of it.)
Edited 2021-11-25 16:54 (UTC)
likeadeuce: (Default)

[personal profile] likeadeuce 2021-11-25 06:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm not a completist but Warrior's Apprentice in particular feels pretty critical (and I'd argue at least read Mountains of Mourning and the Borders of Infinity shorts)
realpestilence: (Default)

[personal profile] realpestilence 2021-11-27 02:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes.