sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
This is the second book in James Alan Gardner’s new series of modern-day superheroes in southern Ontario. Still don’t care about superpowered fight scenes and vampires and train heists and stuff, still have FIVE MILLION FEELS ABOUT THESE CHARACTERS AAAAAA.

The first book, All Those Explosions Were Someone Else’s Fault, was the origin story about four roommates who become superheroes. This one takes place ten days later, as they’re all working to get used to what it means to be superpowered. Each book is from a different one of their POV’s, and I believe the author intends to write one book for each character.

K, who was the POV character of the first book, is very self-analytical and interested in ideas on the nature of constructed identity. Also ze is genderqueer and I love zir very much.

Jools, who’s the POV character of this book, is…..a lot less self-analytical and a lot more of a hot mess. BUT I LOVE HER TOOOOOO!

Um. Yeah okay no I have nothing else to say about this book. I love the characters to a ridiculous degree, I want to keep hanging out with all of them, I can’t wait till the next book comes out (hopefully we do get a next book!), the end.
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
I picked this book up not because the premise intrigued me (it really didn't) but because it is a NEW NOVEL BY JAMES ALAN GARDNER. I've been a fan of Gardner's works since I was a teen, and he hasn't put a book out in twelve years, and his old books are all out of print and available only as ebooks these days, and I was half-convinced he was never going to publish another book again, but HEY. NEW BOOK BY JAMES ALAN GARDNER. Obviously I was going to be there.

I always particularly admired Gardner's writing for his excellent characterization work. He is great at writing characters you care about and who seem like real and complicated people, and his first-person POV does the best I've ever seen of making the POV matter, with the characterization of the POV character really affecting the way the story is being told and what the narrative is paying attention to.

So I grumbled to myself about this new book being about superheroes vs vampires/werewolves/etc (I don't particularly care about superheroes OR monsters or for that matter fights) but I knew that if I picked it up I would care about the characters.

And having read this book....yep, I definitely care about the characters! You got me again, James Alan Gardner.

PLUS. The main character is GENDERQUEER oh dang and I really relate. cut for spoilers )
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
Back in the days after I'd started keeping a list of all the books I read each year but BEFORE I started posting reviews of them, I kept desultory personal notes (ranging from a single word to quite a few paragraphs) on some of the books. And I always vaguely forget I have, and forget where exactly to find them, and I'd like to just have them on my dw so they're FINDABLE again for me. And also some of you might find these interesting/amusing? (N.B. some of these contain what I would now classify as INCORRECT OPINIONS.)

SO HERE'S THREE YEARS' WORTH OF BOOKS IN ONE POST, OKAY GO.

expand this cut to see nested cuts listing all the books )
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
okay so I'm still pretty egregiously behind on comments (both making and replying to) but what the heck. BOOK POST TIME.

Trapped, by James Alan Gardner

The problem is that I read this book enough times as a young person that I take all the stuff that's really good about it more or less for granted and the stuff I don't like is suddenly glaring because I never noticed it when I was a teenager.

Such as: I do not appreciate the comment about how ladies of the night who actually look female when you take off their clothes are the better class of ladies of the night. Or spoiler ) Or just Phil in general? idk, I just find him way too much of a dude and his pov annoys me.

So idk. Mostly it is a very good book and there is a great deal I like about it!
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
List ten books that have stayed with you in some way. Don’t think too hard — they don’t have to be the “great” works, just the ones that have touched you.


Les Miserables, by Victor Hugo

Okay like did you take a look at my blog at all last year? Aaaand this year too though to a lesser extent? OH DUDE LES MIS. Like: a) pardon me while I cry about everything in this book, b) omg the in-your-face commitment to social justice, c) the optimism that WE CAN DO THIS, we can make the world better, humanity can be good, and d) AUGH I LOVE EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS BOOK. And it's one of those books that as you delve deeper there's always more to notice (and have feels over). Where has it been all my life? Why did I never think to try reading it earlier?


Terry Pratchett's entire oeuvre

I can't specify any one Terry Pratchett book. I grew up on Terry Pratchett. Terry Pratchett's books are in my soul. Cut me apart and I will bleed Terry Pratchett. TERRY PRATCHETT YOU GUYS. His books (and I read ALLLLLL of them; yes, even Dark Side Of The Sun and Strata, unfortunately) were just so deeply formative for me.


Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, by Susanna Clarke

The first time I read this book I accidentally read the entire thing, all ~1,000 pages, in two days flat. I have tried in the past to explain why this book means so much to me and why I am so flipping gone on it and I can never quite get there. But. THIS BOOK. THIS BOOK. I JUST.


Trapped, by James Alan Gardner

Okay so picture me and Essie at like 14 years old or something like that. I was staying over at Essie's place for a sleepover and Essie's parents had a hot tub. While we were sitting in the hot tub that evening, Essie began telling me about this really amazing book she'd read recently. I was fascinated, so she recounted for me the entire plot of the book from beginning to end over the course of the whole evening. It was awesome.

I later read the book myself (later that year, maybe?), and it was super great - and it remains super great, though there are other James Alan Gardner books I would say are even better. But I have an inexpressible additional fondness remaining for this book because of Essie's impassioned teenage explanation for why and how this book was just so brilliant.


Swallows & Amazons, by Arthur Ransome

Children going camping by themselves on an island using a sailboat and having adventures! Hell yeah! Swallows and Amazons forever!


Where There Is No Doctor: A Village Health Care Handbook for Africa, by David Werner

This book was directly relevant to my family's life when I was a wee kidlet - doing what it says in the title, giving information on how to deal with health challenges when you're in a situation with no doctor or a poor health care system, speaking specifically to an African context.

But the way it has really affected me was the fact that it continued to sit on my parents' bookshelves after we moved back to North America. And here's the thing about being the parent of a book-loving child: she WILL go through your bookshelves and find everything of interest on it.

And this book is illustrated throughout with very matter-of-fact illustrations about a wide range of dire (and not so dire) health problems and treatments, and it was EXTREMELY COMPELLING. I spent a lot of time as a kid sitting on the floor by the bookshelves just paging through this, reading or skimming or looking at the illustrations as I felt moved.

When I flip through it today, everything about it looks so, so familiar.

And it was educational too! I remember clearly that it was from this book that I first learned about the placebo effect, for example. And I'm quite sure that lots of the other information seeped in as well, even if I don't remember various bits of information or ways of looking at the world as coming from this book specifically.

Anyways: god I love this book. It is REALLY GREAT.


Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus, by Orson Scott Card

Oh dear I am kind of embarrassed about this because Orson Scott Card. But this was my ABSOLUTE FAVOURITE book back in my high school days. I reread it approximately a million times and it never got old. I loved Pastwatch, this organization that was all about studying history, the reality of history instead of what history books said. I loved Tagiri, watching her family history backwards, back and back and back through the Pastwatch machines to see the causes of everything. I kind of identified with her, actually, and dearly wished that more people knew this book to so that I could use Tagiri as a reference for explaining why it was NOT cheating for me to read the last chapter of a book first so I would know how it ended going in.

I loved that all these deeply caring people came together to change the past and make it better, I loved that Columbus was a good man underneath the influences of his culture and society, I loved that the main characters were a whole mix of races and that there were plenty of women as well as men, I loved that it was ultimately such a hopeful book. I loved all of the characters. I loved how the book thought about history. I loved EVERYTHING, OKAY?

But I haven't reread this book in maaaany years at this point and I kind of don't ever want to reread it again. Because these days I know Orson Scott Card holds a lot of opinions about a lot of things that I REALLY don't agree with and I'm pretty sure a bunch of that stuff pervades this book as I'm told it does with his other books. (eg: racism, gender essentialism, homophobia, and probably more.) I've always been rather too good at being oblivious and I'm quite sure my younger self wouldn't have noticed any of that sort of crap. And I don't trust that I could reread this book without getting angry at it and at Card and ruining it. So I would much rather just let my teenage self enjoy the book in my memory and not discover the ways in which it is actually terrible.

I really really love the book in my memory.


The Homeward Bounders, by Diana Wynne Jones

Gosh this is a powerful book. And pretty dark, for a younger-end-of-YA novel. I don't remember how old I was when I first read it, but it really stuck with me - especially the end, the life that Jamie has given himself to.


The Enchanted Forest Chronicles, by Patricia C Wrede

Awww, charming and (mostly) feminist approach to fairy-tale-land! Everything I ever loved when I was younger! Rereading these days I definitely notice the flaws, but there's still a lot the series does right. And I just love Cimorene and Kazul and Morwen. And the whole world of the Enchanted Forest and so forth!


The Blue Castle, by LM Montgomery

The ultimate comfort read for me. It's a story about deserving nice things no matter how much people tell you that you don't matter, and a story where those nice things are BOOKS and NATURE and GOOD PEOPLE WHO LOVE YOU. *happy sigh* I generally end up rereading this at least every year and sometimes more often.
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
Apparently James Alan Gardner had intended this book to be entitled "Haunted" and it was all a big mix-up that it's called "Hunted" instead. I've thought of it as Haunted ever since I found this out, because the name "Hunted" makes actual zero sense for this book, whereas Haunted is a good name for it.

cut for lots of spoilers for Hunted, and also some spoilers for Ascending but not much more than Oar gives you herself on the first page )
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
Okay here is a book review of a book I just finished yesterday! Even though I still have a backlog of previously-read books to post about! Because WOW. This book: WAY MORE QUEER THAN I REMEMBER IT BEING. And TEXTUALLY queer, even! I was such an oblivious teenager.

Vigilant, by James Alan Gardner )
sophia_sol: photo of a 19th century ivory carving of a fat bird (Default)
I think this year I need to write a pimp post for the things I am going to be requesting for Yuletide. Because none of them have any fannish activity to speak of. I have no experience writing pimp posts, so we'll see how this goes!


Fandom One: Three Hearings on the Existence of Snakes in the Human Bloodstream, by James Alan Gardner )


Fandom Two: Robinson Crusoe, by Daniel Defoe )


Fandom Three: Sir Richard Francis Burton RPF )

Most Popular Tags

Page generated Jul. 11th, 2025 03:10 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios