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This is a book about SWORDS and DRAMATIC BISEXUALS.

This book came out at a time in my life when I was plenty old enough to understand what I was reading, but young enough to still be pretty naive and easily shockable. Anyway I found this book pretty shocking at the time! (The main character also finds the things that happen pretty shocking. #relatable)

These days I find it less shocking, and although I don't love everything it's doing, it's still fun.

The Privilege of the Sword is the 15-years-later sequel to an earlier book with a different protagonist, and it shows. Alec was the protagonist of the earlier book, and Alec's niece Katherine is the protagonist of this one. And this book definitely assumes that you are coming in already understanding Alec and caring about him, which I don't, which makes all the sections focused on him and his priorities a boring distraction from the main thrust of the book. Like, you could cut so much of Alec and his crowd and lose nothing that's important to the things that this specific book is doing. I think having this book be a sequel is actually a disservice to the book. (Fans of Swordspoint might feel differently. But I've never read Swordspoint.)

Anyway the actual protagonist! Katherine's 15 years old, naive and fresh to the city when she comes to live with her uncle Alec at his whim and learn how to swordfight. And she is extremely much a dramatic and intense teenager, who meets a girl at a ball and instantly wants to be best friends, and rereads her favourite book so often she has all the dialogue memorized (and then has a crush on the actress who plays the lead in the stage adaptation), and wants to stab people who do bad things, and whose main hobby with her best friend is to spy on someone else's private affairs.

She's very believably teenaged, and I enjoyed watching her growth over the course of the book (while still remaining extremely teenaged). The end is not very......conclusive of a lot of things. Some stuff felt kind of out of sudden and out of nowhere, though it might have felt less out of nowhere if I paid more attention in the bits of the book focusing on Alec? So the end didn't really feel satisfying to me, but eh, I had fun reading the book regardless.

I also would have enjoyed it more, I think, if more of it were about Katherine learning to be a swordswoman, because those bits were the best bits - and if you cut out more of Alec like I suggested, there'd be plenty of room for more focus on that!

And I did appreciate that the book was making efforts towards having Themes, about the role of women and who's allowed (and able!) to provide for women's safety, but this theme ended up kind of ignored in the ending sequence instead of being reinforced, which kind of undermined it a bit.

So. Not a work of deathless literature, but an enjoyable enough way to spend an afternoon.

(Content note: rape of a secondary character is an extensive plot point.)
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I'm about....85% sure I've read this book before. I only started keeping track of all books I read in 2009 and I read a LOT of books in the years before that and have a terrible memory. A lot of things about this book seemed familiar, but that might just be because I read reviews of the book when I first added it to my TBR list years ago? But it also seems fairly likely that it's because I actually read this book before!

At any rate it's a book that is well worth a first read OR a reread so it doesn't really matter in the end.

It's a story of an orphan girl, Maud, in the 19th century who is adopted by three elderly sisters on the condition that she remain a secret. She's perfectly willing to abide by this because the orphanage is not all that great and she desperately wants to be loved and belong with someone.

Read more... )
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Series consists of: Pagan's Crusade, Pagan's Exile, Pagan's Vows, Pagan's Scribe, and Babylonne aka Pagan's Daughter

This is a series of children's books about a Templar knight (Roland) and his Palestinian-born squire (Pagan) and, eventually, Pagan's scribe and Pagan's daughter. The books are written in an extremely distinctive style - it's like, the most immediate possible version of first-person, the first three books especially - and it's very effective at making things feel in the moment, but I do not actually like it. BUT I care about the characters enough that I don't care. And the period feel and the earthy historic details are wonderfully well done too. The author is apparently a medieval scholar and it shows in the best possible ways.

The degree to which Roland and Pagan care deeply about each other, and work to take care of each other, despite the two of them being very different people who often do not understand each other, is wonderful. And it's a main focus of the series, their relationship with each other.

spoilers for the fourth and fifth books )
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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 )
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I've been intending to read this book for just about forever, I think? I mean, Alison Bechdel is so well known in feminist/queer sorts of circles. But it was just a sort of vague intention, until I came across a bootleg of the Fun Home musical (which I watched because there is literally no other way I am at all likely to be able to see this musical, more's the pity) and it was SO GOOD and then I really definitely needed to read this book.

And it was also SO GOOD. Different from the musical in some respects, of course, since it is inevitable that using a different medium to tell a story will have different results, but it feels the same. It's clear the Fun Home musical people did a remarkable job translating this narrative into a different format.

I was riveted by this book. I read it over the course of two lunchtimes at work, and at the end of the first I had SUCH trouble putting the book down! I felt a lot of affinity for Bechdel, even while her life and identity don't actually have a lot in common with mine. But there's still something there.

I'm not really sure how to talk about this book? In part because it's so different from the sorts of things I usually read - it's nonfiction, a memoir, a comic, with nonlinear narrative structure. But Bechdel uses the tools of her art (narrative and pictorial) with strength and great ability, and it all really works together to create a wonderful whole.

Highly recommended.

(in completely irrelevant thoughts about this book, Alison is a BECHDEL from PENNSYLVANIA and basically I am extremely curious whether she has Mennonite ancestry because I mean really.)
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Occasionally one just needs to reread the Queen's Thief series. I didn't bother with Conspiracy of Kings since I wanted to end on the high note of my favourite book in the series. Of course because I'm me, at one point in King of Attolia, DESPITE me having read it multiple times before and knowing exactly what happens, one bit got too stressful for me and I had to put the book aside for like three weeks before I could continue. *facepalm*

Anyways, I don't really have a lot else to say about these books that I haven't said before. I like them a lot!
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Butch is a Noun, by S Bear Bergman

Huh. I wasn't expecting to bounce quite so hard off this one. Bergman is clearly a good writer, and with interesting things to say, and I enjoyed reading about hir experiences of gender, but I did not click with anything ze said at all. I guess it's how clearly ze connects with having a gender. Ivan Coyote and Rae Spoon felt much more relatable to me in their book Gender Failure.

And also how Bergman connects gender with behaviour/actions, like how to hir, being butch is strongly associated with being gentlemanly, which I find kind of offputting actually? idk, maybe that's a generation thing. The whole thing with pulling out chairs for femmes and always walking on the outside of a sidewalk and all that, it just really rubs me the wrong way.

At any rate, I continue to appreciate reading books about gender outside the gender binary. I've got a third one sitting by my bed to read at some point (....along with at least a dozen other books, whoops).


Neurotribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity, by Steve Silberman

REALLY good book covering the history of autism. Features a lot of child harm (physical and emotional abuse as well as murder!), but does a great job of covering how autism has been seen in popular understandings and who/what has shaped that. I think the ending is a little too optimistic, given the amount of crap that is still done and believed, but it is pointing in a helpful direction at least.
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As evidence of the way my brain's been taken over by the Queen's Thief series over the last few days: last night I dreamed that the next book in the series (book #5) had been released in August and somehow the entirety of the fandom had managed to miss this fact. The book was called "King" and I was super excited that I would actually get to read it. (Too bad the internet is giving NO HINTS as to when we might expect the next one. And Megan Whalen Turner has a tumblr, but it's all photos of her daily coffee, inspirational photos of Greece, and reblogs of fanart. Super cute but less than actually helpful on this point.)

At any rate. In the last few days I reread all four extant Queen's Thief books. FOLLOWING ARE MY (SPOILERY) THOUGHTS. I will note first though for people who have not read this series and are possibly interested: this is a series that the vast majority of people seem to agree is best enjoyed unspoiled. So if you tend to be on the fence about whether to spoiler yourself for things or not, that might be a useful data point to keep in mind.

I will just begin by saying I SUPER LOVE THESE BOOKS. As I told twitter the other night: books about fantasyworld politics plus a sneaky trickster of a main character = THE TRUE WAY TO MY HEART. What a great series. Despite the bits below where I'm complaining about various aspects, I really love these books.


The Thief, by Megan Whalen Turner )

The Queen of Attolia, by Megan Whalen Turner )

The King of Attolia, by Megan Whalen Turner )

A Conspiracy of Kings, by Megan Whalen Turner )
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I AM BACKKKK! Well actually I returned late sunday night but then I was exhausted and also I have work and also catching up on the real life things I wasn't doing while on vacation, so. I am still exhausted but I am at least nominally kind of here! AND I COME WITH LOTS OF BOOKS.

Look, my vacation was CANOE TRIPPING, which when you do it right (which obvs I do) leaves you lots of time to hang out in the beautiful wilderness with a book. So. I read NINE BOOKS while on vacation! Plus I had a couple I didn't post about from before the trip. Plus I read a book yesterday. So. Let's go!

Wired Love: a Romance of Dots and Dashes, by Ella Cheever Thayer )

Mable Riley: A Reliable Record of Humdrum, Peril & Romance, by Marthe Jocelyn )

Monks-Hood, by Ellis Peters )

Complete Fairy Tales of George MacDonald )

The Confession of Brother Haluin, by Ellis Peters )

The Android's Dream, by John Scalzi )

The Wisdom of Father Brown, by GK Chesterton )

Psmith, Journalist, by PG Wodehouse )

A Matter of Oaths, by Helen S Wright )

Murder Must Advertise, by Dorothy L Sayers )

Strong Poison, by Dorothy L Sayers )

Princess Academy, by Shannon Hale )

Gaudy Night, by Dorothy L Sayers )

Poor Yorick, by Ryan North, William Shakespeare, and YOU )

Attolia

Sep. 16th, 2012 02:39 pm
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HMM LET'S HAVE SOMETHING MORE CHEERFUL HERE NOW. Time for more book reactions! Of books I read months ago because I keep forgetting to actually POST them!

Today it is the first couple Attolia books, because I've been told for years that they're amazing and I should read them, and I'm finally getting around to it.

The Thief, by Megan Whalen Turner )

The Queen of Attolia, by Megan Whalen Turner )

The King of Attolia, by Megan Whalen Turner )


And now all that's left is for me to read A Conspiracy of Kings! Which is sitting on my shelf right now, actually, waiting to be read, but I have a book I borrowed from a coworker and two books I borrowed from a friend and a book I have out from the library and another library book I intend to borrow from my mom, all of which are higher priority right now because they have restricted time-frames. So. I'll get to it at some point, I assume!
sophia_sol: Hamlet, as played by David Tennant, reading a book (Hamlet: Hamlet reading)
I have RETURNED FROM TAIWAN. Er. I forgot to mention that's where I was going, didn't I. So. I was in Taiwan! And now I've returned! It was fun!

And that means now I get to go look at how long my f/rlist's gotten and weep. And also attack all the comments I've been meaning to respond to....

In other news, I just read The Odyssey for the first time ever. And it's, like, good or something. Shocker! Wait, should this get a spoiler cut? Sure. Have one. )

[personal profile] sentientcitizen can attest that it is pretty hilarious the way, if you get me started about The Odyssey, I will swing wildly back and forth between earnest-academic and squeeful-fan in my expressions of enjoyment. I GO BOTH WAYS, OKAY. Except that I think this post ended up being more of the latter than the former? It wouldn't take much to get me nattering academically though, I think!

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