Since these reviews aren't spoilery and I am sad, no cut tags.

Elaine U. Cho, Ocean’s Godori: In a Korean-dominated space culture, a disgraced pilot tries to follow her captain, but her captain’s unwise decisions lead to conflicts with pirates and with people out to kill a scion of an important industrialist—the pilot’s old friend/partial source of her disgrace. Also, a new member of the crew comes from a death-handling caste and may have trouble fitting in. I probably could have done with more time to breathe on the worldbuilding, but if you like not-totally-cohesive crew stories this might suit.

David Ignatius, Phantom Orbit: I thought this would be more sf-y, but it’s basically a thriller about nations interfering with satellites to gain advantage, with much of the action sparked by the invasion of Ukraine.

Genevieve Cogman, Elusive: I liked this more than the first book—Eleanor continues to work for the Scarlet Pimpernel, and returns to France, but she has more agency and doubts about the work of saving aristocrats from the French Revolution. She also learns more about her powers, the mage inhabiting her head, and the relationship between mages and vampires. A cliffhanger ending rounds it out.

Shelly Jay Shore, Rules for Ghosting: Ezra Friedman is a trans man whose problems mainly stem from his complicated Jewish family, its funeral business, and the fact that Ezra can see ghosts. Although he’s been a peacemaker all his life, the stress starts to get to him when a shocking Seder announcement disrupts the family, a main source of income disappears and he has to return to working at the family business, and the hot Jewish guy checking him out turns out to be the widower of a ghost that is behaving very unusually. This is very cozy—ghosts are not evil or tangible—and it reinforced for me that I’m no longer much of a romance reader, because the Jewish specificity wasn’t even doing it for me.

Virginia Black, No Shelter But the Stars: Kyran is the princess of a people who are trying to retake their lost planet after being forced out by a brutal empire; Davia is the emperor’s daughter who has tried to renounce politics in favor of spirituality. After a battle, they crash land and are forced to rely on each other to survive. It’s enemies-to-lovers, with the more experienced Davia teaching Kyran to calm her frantic soul. I thought the description of physical recovery from the serious injuries described was a bit unrealistic, but if you really like enemies-to-lovers, this might work for you.

Garth Nix, We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord: In 70s? Australia, the protagonist and his genius little sister are being raised by quirky parents who don’t allow things like TV. When his little sister finds a mysterious sphere that can talk in people’s heads and even change their behavior, he has to turn from his D&D games to saving the world. I think I would have enjoyed it as a middle-grade reader (it naturally seems slighter now).

Madeline Ashby, vN: Conscious, self-replicating Von Neumann machines are a controversial but significant part of the world; they have fail-safes that require them to love and not harm humans. Amy Peterson is a vN whose growth has been carefully constrained by food restriction so that her mother (another vN) and her father (a human) can raise her like a human child. But when she’s five, her grandmother shows up and attacks her mother for being a traitor. Amy reacts immediately—by eating her grandmother. Now she’s a lot larger, has her grandmother living in her consciousness, and lacks the fail-safe. Interesting stuff going on here; warning for sexual abuse of vN (not of Amy) as a motivating factor for several key points.

James S.A. Corey, Livesuit: Humanity’s in a war of extermination with aliens, and so some people sign up to do Forever War journeys, but with a twist: They’re put into exosuits that make them incredibly strong and improve their senses. It seems like a worthy mission. But is something deeply, terribly wrong? Creepy novella.

Holly Jackson, The Reappearance of Rachel Price: Sixteen years ago, Rachel Price disappeared, leaving her toddler in her car. Her family consents to a documentary about the case in order to get money to take care of an elderly relative with dementia. But, while the documentary is being filmed, Rachel Price reappears. Her daughter is suspicious; they were doing fine without her. A rather gothic plot unfolds. I see why people liked it, but I don’t think this is the variety of thriller for me.

Chuck Wendig, The Staircase in the Woods: In 1998, four loser kids and one golden boy were best friends—they called the bond between them the Covenant. But one night, drinking and doing drugs out in the woods, they came across a staircase standing alone in the woods, and the golden boy climbed it and disappeared, along with the staircase. Decades later, the one who stayed in their town calls the rest of them back, and leads them to another staircase. Trapped in an apparently unending house of horrors, can they survive and maybe find out what really happened? Effectively creepy in its use of trauma and the mundane; a few typos in the eARC.

Daryl Gregory, When We Were Real: Gregory seems endlessly inventive; this novel is set in a world with irrefutable proof that we live in a simulation, including Impossibles, which are phenomena that can’t be explained using physics (as well as a weekly text reminder that we are living in a simulation beamed to everyone’s brain—not clear what happens if the recipient can’t read). Some have responded with nihilism, considering everyone else (except perhaps fellow gun-toting, Matrix-loving incels) to be bots. On a tour of seven American Impossibles, a pregnant influencer, a rabbi, a nun (and accompanying novice), two German tourists, a would-be right-wing podcaster and his feckless son, a comic book writer, and his best friend, a retired engineer, join an inexperienced tour guide and seen-everything bus driver. But the trip gets more complicated when a fugitive joins them. Her mission is mysterious but urgent. Each of the characters has a distinctive perspective—the Engineer (“The thing is ridiculously oversized and out of scale, like a Koons Balloon Dog. He also doesn’t know how he feels when he looks at a Koons Balloon Dog.”), the Realist’s Son (“Why was anyone shocked that the world was not in our control, and that nothing we did mattered? The Simulators could hit reset at any time. Or climate change would kill us all. Same difference.”), and so on. I loved it.

The Neurodiversiverse: Alien Encounters, ed. Anthony Francis: I’m not a big poetry fan, so the poems sprinkled throughout didn’t do much for me. Brian Starr’s The Interview engaged with the idea that, just because you’re not like other humans doesn’t mean that you have common interests with another entity who’s not like humans. Power fantasies (of which there were a number, where neurodiversity enables success) are fine and welcome, but I liked the challenge. Stewart C. Baker’s The List-Making Habits of Heartbroken Ships is likely to appeal to Murderbot fans for reasons suggested by the title.

Sung-il Kim, trans. Anton Hur, Blood of the Old Kings: A widow who lost her young child as well determines to rebel against the oppressive conquerors who killed them, and seeks out the defeated dragon that used to protect her country for help. Meanwhile, a young sorcerer determines to escape her fate of being used as an undead power generator for the same empire, and a young man seeks to find the murderer of his friend, no matter who he angers in the process. The widow, Loren, doesn’t spend too much narrative time contemplating what she’s lost, although she does share a few memories; she’s too busy finding out that politics are complicated even in a rebellion against a terrible enemy. Unusually for the fantasies I tend to read, there’s also no romance or really sexual energy at all.


rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Aug. 30th, 2024 02:51 pm)
Adam Higgenbotham, Challenger: A True Story of Heroism and Disaster on the Edge of Spaceminute by minute )
Alison Arngrim, Confessions of a Prairie Bitch: How I Survived Nellie Oleson and Learned to Love Being Hatedabuse and survival )
Jonathan Haslam, The Spectre of War: International Communism and the Origins of World War IIpropping up fascism to fight Reds )
Into the Desert: Reflections on the Gulf War, ed. Jeffrey A. Engel: was it a good war? )
Andrew M. Wehrman, The Contagion of Liberty: The Politics of Smallpox in the American Revolutionrecommended: inoculation is different from vaccination )
David Bellos & Alexandre Montagu, Who Owns This Sentence?: A History of Copyrights and Wrongsa skeptical history )
Monica Hesse, American Fire: Love, Arson, and Life in a Vanishing Landtrue crime )
Mark A. Noll, The Civil War as a Theological CrisisChristianity and the Civil War )
Henry Reynolds, Why Weren't We Told?Australian history )
Tony Judt, Reappraisals: Reflections on the Forgotten 20th CenturyEssay collection )
Vaclav Smil, Invention and Innovation: A Brief History of Hype and Failureagainst survivor bias )
Sarah Chayes, The Punishment of VirtueUS mistakes in Afghanistan )
Karen E. Fields & Barbara J. Fields, Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life: actively creating racism )
Marjoleine Kars, Blood on the River: A Chronicle of Mutiny and Freedom on the Wild Coasthistory of a rebellion )
Bruce H. Franklin, Most Important Fish in the Seahave some more depressing reads! )
Susan Stranahan et al., Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disasternope, not getting better )
Lauren Benton, They Called It Peacewho defines war? )
Benjamin C. Waterhouse, One Day I'll Work for Myself: The Dream and Delusion That Conquered Americaa self-employed man has a fool for an employer )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Dec. 27th, 2023 02:15 pm)
It's been a while! I've been busy with classes; didn't even manage to pick up a Yuletide pinch hit this year, sadly. I've been listening to Kesha on repeat (and Dessa and Taylor Swift with her cat chorus). And I just saw either a very large mouse or a small rat poke its head out of our basement closet, which was very unpleasant. While I wait for the pest control to call me back, have some fiction!

Alix E. Harrow, Starling Housesouthern gothic )
Jason Pargin, Zoey Ashe Is Too Drunk for This Dystopiabook three )
Christopher Golden & Amber Benson, Slayers: A Buffyverse Story: Good to hear the familiar voices, but the writing was sadly not good.

Seth Dickinson, Exordiahighly recommended )
Alexis Hall, 10 Things that Never Happenedromcom )
Martha Wells, System CollapseMurderbot! )
Rebecca Kuang, The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2023: Isabel J. Kim’s Termination Stories for the Cyberpunk Dystopia Protagonist, starring Cool and Sexy Asian Girl, is great. The others were fine but I don't really have anything to say about them.

Terry Pratchett, A Stroke of the Pennon-Discworld )
Emily Tesh, Some Desperate Gloryfascist deradicalization )
John Scalzi, Starter Villaineh )
Tobias S. Buckell, A Stranger in the Citadelbanned books )
Richard Kadrey & Cassandra Khaw, The Dead Take the A-TrainWolfram & Hart in NYC )
Shelley Parker-Chan, He Who Drowned the World:accepting self, gaining empire )
Christopher Rowe, The Navigating Foxoneiric fantasy )
Best of British Science Fiction 2022, Donna Bond, ed.: AI & environmental collapse )
Stephen King, HollyCovid horror ) Ben Aaronovitch, Winter's Giftsside quest )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jul. 17th, 2023 03:39 pm)
Anybody else watch Nimona? I enjoyed it!

Take Us to a Better Place: Storiessf-ish )
Kathryn Evans, More of Meself-cloning YA )
M.A. Carrick, Labyrinth’s Heartpalace intrigue in a multiethnic city )
Kai Butler, Cypress Ashesfae showdown )
Emma Törzs, Ink Blood Sister ScribeGood entry into magic library genre )
Charles Stross, Season of SkullsStross does romcom )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jun. 28th, 2023 02:40 pm)
Daniel Abraham, Blade of Dream: This middle book of a planned trilogy is unusual for a fantasy because there are no real fantasy elements until three-fourths of the way through. Instead, the bulk of the book is Elaine a Sal, the new prince of Kithamar’s heir, dealing with the change in her status including her tryst with a random citizen. The tryst throws both their lives off track—the citizen leaves his merchant family and joins the city guard, while Elaine starts to consider what parts of her life she actually wants, while investigating what is making her father so upset and closed-off from her. (That’s connected to the magic of the first book, as is what happens when, late in the book, the Thread of Kithamar tries to regain its control of the city’s rulers.) I’m interested to see what happens next.

M.R. Carey, Infinity Gate: Across the multiverse, a Pandominion rules hundreds of earths with an iron fist; when it discovers a set of worlds run by machine intelligence, it reacts badly. Meanwhile, a scientist from a world only slightly more deteriorated than our own discovers how to shift universes. They’ll all collide, with a denouement that is pretty exciting and also sets up the sequel.

C.S. Friedman, Nightborn: Coldfire Rising: A “how it happened” narrative creating the background for earlier novels. Human colonists land on Erna and discover that there’s something that can apparently read their minds and manifest dreams and fears, which they label “fae.” The last quarter of the book jumps far ahead in time, to characters we’ve met before, tenuously linked to the first three-fourths. It didn’t seem necessary to enjoy the earlier novels, but I guess there’s a market for this kind of filling out the narrative.

Kate Elliott, Furious Heaven: Space opera on a grand scale, with an Alexander-like hero in Sun, who is still fighting palace politics to ensure her place as heir while preparing for a war against the Phene Empire. Elliott has thought of an interesting way to use physical limitations to get the commander on the front lines, which is otherwise a really dumb thing for a mechanized army that doesn’t work by hand signals. No one is particularly good, and luck plays an important role, but it is still epic.

Nick Harkaway, Titanium Noir: Cal is a noir detective specializing in Titan problems. Titans are rich people who’ve gotten access to an expensive life-enhancing treatment that rolls back age but also makes people grow bigger—seven, eight, nine feet. They get stronger and harder to hurt, too, but somehow their hearts don’t give out—look, it’s a metaphor about wealth, ok? Anyway once you handwave the Titans, this is sf noir without much internet; after the beginning murder of a Titan, Cal pounds the street and looks at hard copy records, with the occasional file encoded into a [spoiler]. I liked it.

Mary Robinette Kowal, The Spare Man: Newlywed Tesla Crane wants to have a nice honeymoon cruise to Mars with her new spouse—a retired former detective—and her service dog. But someone keeps killing people and trying to blame it on her husband. Punctuated by cocktail recipes, this is an attempt at a classic Nick and Nora style mystery in spaaaace. I found it a bit too convoluted, but that is indeed classic, and it was interesting to have a main character with chronic pain issues (partially postponable with a deep brain implant, but only at a cost).

K.D. Edwards, The Eidolon: Apparently Edwards is planning a spinoff series focused on the kids, which seems completely reasonable though I also want to know what is happening to Rune. This book is set during the events of the previous book but focused on Max, Quinn, and Anna—the intro says it was actually begun when production limits forced the excision of a lot of material from that book. Anyway, it provides new information about what happened and what it’s like to be Quinn, who sees so many futures that he can have trouble dealing with the present.

Genevieve Cogman, Scarlet: The Scarlet Pimpernel, retold in a world with vampire aristocrats—sanguinocrats!—and maybe some leftover sorcery. Eleanor is a servant in an English vampire’s household when she’s recruited for a dangerous mission in France to rescue (she’s told) unjustly accused aristocrats. But she can’t help noticing that the Scarlet Pimpernel has a lot of assumptions about servants and nobility that don’t match her experience. And are vampires really as benevolent as she’s been raised to believe? I liked the Invisible Library series better, but this certainly has adventure and magic too.

David Gerrold, Hella: The main character is an autistic boy with a chip in his head that helps him navigate the world—which is a giant planet on which everything grows bigger than it does on Earth, though that doesn’t turn out to be as significant to the plot as you might have thought because the colonists are trying not to interact too much with the ecology for fear of disrupting it. But some colonists want to start colonizing and capitalizing, driving the conflict of the book, which also includes the protagonist starting to date and considering whether to transition back to being a girl. It felt like a bunch of interesting ideas both about humanity and about what “colonizing” really means were being squished under the YA format.

Ruthanna Emrys, Imperfect Commentaries: Short stories, including some details from her Cthulhu-derived universe, where she explains that one reason The Shadow over Innsmouth inspired her was that it starts with a government raid, meant to read as reassurance that the authorities were paying attention, but if you start talking raids and camps, “I’m going to have some default assumptions about who the bad guys are.”

Sara Beaman, Arlene Blakely, CS Cheely, K.D. Edwards, & Daniel Wood, Doom Days: After a pandemic wipes out most people, the survivors find ways to get by, mostly by scavenging or living in small farming communities. I have questions about the worldbuilding, but if you like “we have to escape the fascist enclaves and protect our small scale lives” then this is fine.

Steven Brust, Tsalmoth: Back in time, to the run-up to Vlad and Cawti’s wedding. Some of the events are surprising, because Vlad forgot them. He gets involved in a Tsalmoth conspiracy or two, runs up against a faction or two of the Left Hand, and experiences some surprising sorcerous attacks. It seemed like there were some boxes to check before the series finale, and mostly Vlad’s relative youth was shown by having him learn new words, but I still want to see how the last one goes.

Sharon Shinn and Molly Knox Ostertag, Shattered Warrior: Graphic novel about a young woman on a planet being exploited for its resources; although the loss of her family and position has left her wounded, finding her young niece as well as connections to rebels leads her to choose connection and dangerous sabotage attempts against the (larger, human-related) overlords. It’s fine but I mostly wanted new Ostertag.

Martha Wells, Witch King: Wells returns to fantasy with this story of a demon prince (aka witch king) that unfolds across two timelines: during a rebellion against the genocidal Heirarchs and long after, when some things have gone well and others haven’t. There was a lot to process—humans, witches, demons, Immortal Blessed, their constructs, and the Heirarchs were the key players, with lots of palace intrigue as well as fighting. I know it’s reasonable to fear descending into caricature when the market really likes one of your projects, but I confess I want more Murderbot instead.

Andrea Stewart, The Bone Shard War: Final volume of the trilogy that deals with magic that destroys the ecology and also allows its practitioners to control other people with engraved bone shards. Actually tries to deal with the fact that "the most powerful magician should rule" is not a great principle, though the emperor arrives at this conclusion in a fairly abrupt manner.

Audrey Schulman, Theory of Bastards: In an increasingly fragile world, a researcher arrives at one of the last sanctuaries for apes and starts studying bonobos in order to further her theories about female sexual selection. She’s also recovering from surgery from endometriosis, the pain and medical neglect of which is described in detail. And she is navigating her own recovering body and her sexuality, including her relationship with the initially offputting but increasingly attractive researcher assigned to support her work. After a dust storm cuts them off from the rest of the world, things get pretty scary; the ending is ambiguous at best but it’s sf of feminist ideas in terms of the questions it considers important (especially: what does choice mean when we have these bodies evolved in specific ways?) and I found it engaging despite the terrible romance-novel cover it has on Scribd, which was staring at me every time I opened it.
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Mar. 16th, 2023 09:49 am)
Patty Lyons, Patty Lyons’ Knitting Bag of Tricksuseful! )
Jill Lepore, If Then: How the Simulmatics Corporation Invented the Futurelearning from failure )
Opting Out: Women Messing with Marriage around the World, Joanna Davidson & Dinah Hannaford, eds.: super interesting anthropological studies )

Daniel C. Dennett, From Bacteria to Bach and Back: The Evolution of Mindswhat is consciousness for? )
Eugenia Bone, Mycophiliashe likes mushrooms )
Richard Cohen, Making History: The Storytellers Who Shaped the PastWestern historians )
Anand Giridharadas, The Persuaders: At the Front Lines of the Fight for Hearts, Minds, and Democracylearning from the best )

Peter Zeihan, The End of the World is Just the Beginning: Mapping the Collapse of Globalization:yikes )
Adrian Hon, You’ve Been Played : How Corporations, Governments, and Schools Use Games to Control Us Allagainst gamification, for pleasure )

Anat Rosenberg, The Rise of Mass Advertising: Law, Enchantment, and the Cultural Boundaries of British Modernityhow ads took over the world )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Sep. 26th, 2022 02:49 pm)
Tamsyn Muir, Nona the NinthFairly vague but still possibly spoilery? )
Stephen King, Fairy TaleVery Stephen King )
Kai Butler, More San Amaro Investigations )

Charlie Adhara, Pack of Lieswerewolf m/m murder mystery )
Rebecca Roanhorse, Tread of Angelslots of world, not a lot of building )
Best of British Science Fiction 2021, ed. Donna Bond: fine but unremarkable )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Aug. 18th, 2022 10:26 am)
Foz Meadows, A Strange and Stubborn Endurance:fantasy h/c )
M.A. Carrick, The Mask of Mirrors (book 1 of Rook and Rose):fantasy and grifting )
Gretchen Felker-Martin, ManhuntSo many warnings for this take on  )
Greg Van Eekhout, three books set in an alternate California where magic comes from eating bones )


Kai Butler, Wormwood Summercute urban m/m paranormal )
Silvia Moreno-Garcia, The Daughter of Doctor Moreaureally good retelling )
India Holton, The League of Gentlewoman Witchesmore flying houses and gentlewoman adventurers )
Tasha Suri, The Oleander Swordepic magic struggle continued )
The Starlit Wood: New Fairy Tales, eds. Dominik Parisien & Navah Wolfe: Naomi Novik, Max Gladstone, Daryl Gregory, Genevieve Valentine, and many more )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jul. 5th, 2022 10:45 pm)
Beforeigners has disappeared from HBO! Tragedy. I guess that means no S3?

Out of the Ruins, ed. Preston Grassman: apocalypse stories )
Carmen Maria Machado, Her Body and Other Parties: everyday horrors of having a body )
Robert McGill, A Suitable Companion for the End of Your Life:flattened people as methods of dying by suicide )
Tade Thompson, The Legacy of Molly Southborne: More mollies )
T. Kingfisher, Nettle and Bone: princess on a quest )

Ben Aaronovitch, Tales from the Folly:lots of non-Peter POV )
K.D. Edwards, The Hourglass Throne: Glad this is finally out! )
Isaac Fellman, Dead Collections: trans vampire archivist romance )
Charlie Adhara, m/m romance where one is a shifter )

Naked City, ed. Ellen Datlow. urban fantasy )
Seanan McGuire, Seasonal Fearsfollowup to last year's archetypes book )
Fonda Lee, Jade Citynew palace intrigue/magic series )
Justina Ireland, Rust in the RootDepression-era magic )
Carrie Vaughn, Questlandisland of tropes )
Holly Black, Doll Bonesnot magical realism, more realistic magic )
Maya Deane, Wrath Goddess Singtrans Achilles fights (with) gods )
Sunyi Dean, The Book Eatersreally, they eat books )
Katherine Addison, The Grief of Stones:not more Maia, sadly, but it will do )
Rachel Hartman, In the Serpent’s WakeTess and colonialism )
Kameron Hurley, Future Artifacts: Storiesgrim, dark )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Mar. 25th, 2022 12:23 pm)
Daniel Abraham, The Spider’s War: series ender )
Micaiah Johnson, The Space Between Worlds: not positive, sorry )
Leigh Bardugo, The Lives of Saints: short sharp shock )
K. Eason, How Rory Thorne Destroyed the Multiverse: also no )
Mercedes Lackey, a whole bunch of Valdemar books )

T. Kingfisher, What Moves the Dead:mushrooms of the House of Usher )
Classic Monsters Unleashed: New Stories of Famous Creatures, ed. James Aquilone: today's monsters )

Robert Jackson Bennett, Locklands: trilogy ender )
Francesca Zappia, Eliza and Her Monsters: fan/author romance )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jan. 21st, 2022 03:42 pm)
So, I basically took 2020-2021 off in almost every way and am slowly getting back to a new normal. And one thing I finally did was finish The 100. spoilers, unhappy )

Sheera Frenkel & Cecilia Kang, An Ugly Truth: Inside Facebook’s Battle for DominationFB is what you think it is )
Eyal Press, Dirty Work: Essential Jobs and the Hidden Toll of Inequality in Americarecommended but depressing )Behavioral Science in the Wild, Nina Mažar & Dilip Soman, eds.: collection of short pieces on making behavioral science work )

Alex Wellerstein, Restricted Datanuclear secrets )
Tyler Schultz, Thicker than WaterTheranos whistleblower )
David M. Perry & Matthew Gabriele, The Bright AgesThey weren't Dark )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Dec. 21st, 2021 03:23 pm)
Seth Dickinson, The Monster Baru Cormorant: Second volume in the series featuring Baru Cormorant, taken from her home to serve the empire that conquered it and that despises her for her racial inferiority and her tribadism. I found it violent and confusing and more interested in jerking Baru and others around than I was in following the twists of the story.

Ilona Andrews, Blood Heir: Kate’s adopted daughter, much changed by her encounter with Moloch, returns to Atlanta to save Kate’s life, followed by a prophecy that if Kate sees her then Kate will definitely die. Lots of politics and magic ensue, and a bit of romantic longing. It’s what I wanted without requiring things in Kate’s life to get undone, which was nice.

Tobias Buckell, Shoggoths in Traffic: Short stories; the zombie pandemic one where we all die because racism was a little on the nose for me, though the fact that it was written in 2018 suggests that I need to keep reading. I preferred the retelling of The Emperor’s New Clothes where the news reports on the controversy and doesn’t judge. Buckell’s interest in complicity, including complicity with destroying the world as well as in smaller crimes, shows in various ways.

James S.A. Corey, Leviathan Falls: Final novel, they say, in the Expanse series. The core characters are older and changed, especially Amos, except in the ways he’s exactly the same (he’s not very communicative on the matter). Holden and Nagata do what they do—him rigid insistence and her subtle politics—and they try to deal with the fact that old gods are trying to kill them.

Xiran Jay Zhao, Iron Widow: Zetian volunteers as a concubine for the kaiju-fighting mechs that keep her country safe; concubines are routinely killed by the male pilots who consume their minds as part of piloting the mechs. But Zetian plans to kill the man who killed her beloved older sister. Among other things, she discovers that, in a mech, her bound feet don’t make it all but impossible for her to walk. But her plans are disrupted when she’s assigned to an equally disliked male pilot—a murderer who is allowed to pilot only because he’s stronger by a lot than anyone else. When he can’t kill her either, they become central to a planned attack—but still despised. I saw someone say that this seemed very second-wave feminist, in that the bad guys are just outright willing to harm women, and the society of which they are a part, because of misogyny, and that seems correct. Enough interesting threads were left hanging that I’d pick up the sequel.

C.M. Waggoner, The Ruthless Lady’s Guide to Wizardry: Fantasy starring a gutter firewitch who’s a bit too fond of gin. In an attempt to make the rent, she joins a crew of witches protecting a fine young lady before her marriage, one of whom is a respectable clanner who might be a great meal ticket for her. But things get complicated, both murderously and romantically, and she has to somehow infiltrate a drugmaking operation and make the very stuff that her mother is addicted to, in hopes of being able to save those she loves (and some she’s not so fond of). It’s a lot of fun, and includes a skeletal mouse named Buttons who is both cuter and more horrifying than he sounds like.

Songs of Love and Death: All-Original Tales of Star-Crossed Love, ed. George R.R. Martin: Contributions from big names including Peter Beagle, Jim Butcher, Marjorie Liu, Diana Gabaldon (different time traveler than Outlander, same idea), Robin Hobb, and Neil Gaiman, but I didn’t feel most of them. The Gaiman story was a nice chilly reversal of the imaginary girlfriend trope—a man’s high school imaginary girlfriend starts trying to reconnect with him.

Jacqueline Carey, Miranda and Caliban: A retelling from the perspective of the two titular characters. I found I didn’t like it as much as her LoTR retelling; patriarchy/colonialism has and keeps the upper hand throughout the novel, so be prepared.

Charles Stross, The Traders’ War: Second book in the Merchant Princes revised series; Miriam aka Helge is not settling well into her medieval princess role, instead getting into various trouble that leaves her much more powerless than a standard protagonist. But lots of politics are happening in all three worlds and she gets caught up in all of them. Also, various wars break out and there is a forced pregnancy (via reproductive technology). It is interesting but tends in the direction of “humans inevitably screw things up one way or another.”

Hark! The Herald Angels Scream, ed. Christopher Golden: Really more winter-themed horror than entirely Christmas-themed; a number of stories using the short story format effectively to end just as or before the really awful thing happens, like Scott Smith’s Christmas in Barcelona (child death). I disliked the last story by Sarah Pinborough, The Hangman’s Bride—it’s about the ghost of a murdered Japanese woman who ends up saving a white woman to be the new bride of her widower in Victorian England, so the function of the nonwhite horror trope is to give the surviving white people a happily ever after.

Nancy Kress, The Eleventh Gate: In the distant future, humanity is scattered across a few different planets, none of them Earth; some are run by libertarians (controlled by a single family because that’s how power works) and others are run by a corporate nanny state, with only Polyglot having something like democracy. When the discovery of a new gate between worlds, promising access to a new planet, destabilizes things, war breaks out and internal dissent threatens to take down both non-Polyglot regimes. It’s got Kress’s standard pessimism about governance as well as a lot of palace intrigue and some sf on the nature of consciousness.

Eliot Schrefer, The Darkness Outside Us: Two teens on a mission to Titan to save one’s sister start to wonder if something else is going on, since the ship’s AI won’t tell them certain things and there are certain oddities in the setup. What is actually happening is disclosed midway through and the rest is working out what to do with it—this is a book largely about how to accept unmoveable constraints and plainly-seen-in-front-of-you losses. Also a teen romance, though how romantic it is to connect with the only other person in your world is perhaps debatable; the protagonists are from two contending cultures and have both mistrust and a bit of misperception to get past.

Steven Brust, The Baron of Magister Valley: On further thought, I still find the mocking-old-fashioned style of “I want to know X,” “Oh, you want to know X?” “I have hardly wanted anything else for a week now” more unpleasant to read than not. The basic story is of a young man betrayed and imprisoned in a secret jail for hundreds of years, while he learns all the skills and his fiancee and her brother, orphaned in the same course of shenanigans, struggle to survive. You may recognize the outlines from the Count of Monte Cristo, but it is very integrated into Dragaeran lingo.

Charles Stross, Halting State: In a sort-of-independent Scotland, a bank robbery in a gameworld draws the police into something far stranger, with spies, people pretending to be spies in a game, and the occasional murder. Packed with Stross’s love of tech and bureaucracy, but not really him at his best.

The Devil and the Deep: Horror Stories of the Sea ed. Ellen Datlow, authors include Michael Marshall Smith (zombie-ish horror), Seanan McGuire (not super interesting family revenge story), and Stephen Graham Jones (deserted island variant). Alyssa Wong’s What My Mother Left Me is a great variation on an old story, and Bradley Denton’s A Ship of the South Wind seems a bit of a stretch—there’s no sea, only a former sailor on the plains—but it’s a pretty good horror story nonetheless.
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Nov. 17th, 2021 03:11 pm)
Kathryn Paige Harden, The Genetic Lottery: Why DNA Matters for Social Equalitywhy a liberal researches genetic difference )Vincent Bevins, The Jakarta Method: Washington’s Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our WorldIndonesia, American policy, and right-wing terror )
Amia Srinivasan, The Right to Sexsuper interesting essays )

The Darker Angels of Our Nature: Refuting the Pinker Theory of History & Violence, eds. Philip Dwyer & Mark Micale:they're not fans )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Oct. 14th, 2021 10:29 am)
Garth Nix, Newt’s Emeraldregency/gender masquerade )
Amanda Foody & Christine Lynn Herman, All of Us Villainsteenage deathmatch )
Andrea Stewart, The Bone Shard Daughterand The Bone Shard Emperor: island fantasy )

Grady Hendrix, The Final Girl Support Groupif this goes on... )
Naomi Novik, The Last Graduatedestroying the Scholomance? )
Jonathan Strahan, ed., The Year’s Best Science Fiction, vol. 2 (2020): a mix of 2020 )
Charles Stross, three post-Singularity sf novels )

Shelley Parker-Chan, She Who Became the Sun:taking a brother's destiny )
Susan R. Matthews, Jurisdiction books )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Dec. 7th, 2020 12:39 pm)
J.D. Dickey, Rising in FlamesSherman's march ) 

Denise Pope et al., Overloaded and Underprepared: Strategies for Stronger Schools and Healthy, Successful Kidsfixing schools )
Adam Hochschild, Spain in Our HeartsAmericans in the Spanish Civil War )
Barbara W. Tuchman, Practicing HistoryEssays )
Steven Johnson, The Ghost Mapcholera )
Rebecca Solnit, Recollections of My Nonexistence: A Memoirfinding oneself )
Gene Weingarten, One DayAmerica 1986 )
Megan Kate Nelson, The Three-Cornered WarUS Civil War in the West )
Adam Hochschild, Bury the ChainsEnglish abolition )
Karl Jacoby, Shadows at Dawn: A Borderlands Massacre and the Violence of Historyan Arizona massacre )
Brian Deer, The Doctor Who Fooled the WorldAndrew Wakefield )
Joyce Lee Malcolm, The Tragedy of Benedict ArnoldArnold fan )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Dec. 2nd, 2020 02:25 pm)
KJ Charles, The Sugared Gamepost WWI spy shenanigans )
Garth Nix, Shade’s Childrenpostapocalyptic teens )
Simon Jimenez, The Vanished Birdssf magical realism )
Megan Whalen Turner, Return of the ThiefHigh King Thief )Garth Nix, The Left-Handed Booksellers of London:1980s London magic )
Malka Older, Madeline Ashby, Mishell Baker, Heli Kennedy, E.C. Myers, & Lindsay Smith, Orphan Black: The Next Chapterthe next generation )
Zen Cho, The Order of the Pure Moon Reflected in Waterfighting monks )
T. Kingfisher, The Hollow Placeseldrich holes in reality )
Michael Rutger, The Possessionlow-rent horror )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Sep. 1st, 2020 01:52 pm)
David Sedaris, Calypsoessays )
Claudia Rankine, Just Uswhiteness and power )
Janelle Shane, You Look Like a Thing and I Love YouArtificial intelligence and weirdness )

Amy Stanley, Stranger in the Shogun’s City: A Japanese Woman and Her Worldnow for something completely different )
Sarah A. Seo, Policing the Open Roadcars and police power )
Alexis Coe, You Never Forget Your FirstGeo. Washington )
J.D. Dickey, Empire of MudWashington, DC )
Slavery’s Capitalism, ed. Sven Beckert: more essays )
Beforeigners is an HBO show set in Norway, 7 years after people from earlier time periods started appearing in numbers. Meret turned me on to it and it is amazing. Not only are there a ton of witty details about what life would be like, it also has a charismatic lead and some interesting things to say both about (1) immigration/anti-immigrant sentiment and (2) how people get inured to previously unbelievable and you-would-have-thought-intolerable situations, which has obvious relevance to the current situation. People are arriving from a thousand years ago! Ugh, is that still happening? The female lead was a Viking (but we don't use that term any more) shieldmaiden, and warriors aren't supposed to become police officers, so she just told them she was a farmwife, and they had no idea how to evaluate that claim so they believed her. Does have police work, but not US police work, so I hope it's tolerable?

My daughter and I also powered through the new She-Ra, which was great (though I think I still like Steven Universe better). Next up: new season of Lucifer, then probably Legend of Korra.


Veronica Roth, The Chosen Onesafter the victory )
K.M. Szpara, Docileslavefic )
T. Kingfisher, A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Bakingweaponized dough )
Stephen King, If It Bleedsstory collection/more Holly Gibney )
The Year’s Best Science Fiction 2019, ed. Jonathan Strahan. Good stuff )
Tasha Suri, Empire of Sanddesert magic )
Edited By, ed. Ellen Datlow: prolific editor )
Best of British Fantasy 2019horror creeps into fantasy )
K.B. Wagers, A Pale Light in the Blackspace adventure with games )
K.B. Wagers, After the Crown:gunrunner turned Empress )
Joe Hill & Gabriel Rodriguez, Locke & Key: Welcome to Lovecraft:mysterious keys )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( May. 26th, 2020 04:50 pm)
Sarah J. Maas, House of Earth and Bloodmaybe jumped the shark for me )Devil’s Ways, ed. Anna Kashina: devil anthology )
John Scalzi, The Last Emperoxempire collapses )
KJ Charles, Slippery Creaturesnot fantasy, but fun )
Rebecca Roanhorse, Black Sunpre-Columbian fantasy )
Octavia Butler, Unexpected Storiesso Butler )
rivkat: Dean reading (dean reading)
( Jan. 29th, 2020 08:49 am)
KJ Charles, Gilded Cagemore Lilywhite boys )
Robert Jackson Bennett, Shorefallmagic as programming )
Nnedi Okorafor with Tana Ford & James Devlin, Laguardiaaliens not welcome )

Emily Skrutskie, Bonds of Brassspace opera with romance )

Sarah Kuhn & Nicole Goux, Shadow of the Batgirlorigin story )
Tobias S. Buckell, Mitigated Futuresshort stories and IP )
The Obama Inheritance: Fifteen Stories of Conspiracy Noir, ed. Gary Phillips.  still not pleasant )
Molly Knox Ostertag, The Midwinter Witchwitch family follies )
K.D. Edwards, The Hanged Manmy jam )
Tamsyn Muir, Gideon the NinthI disliked it, then liked it )
Rainbow Rowell & Faith Erin Hicks, Pumpkinheadsso cute )
Monstrous Affections: An Anthology of Beastly Tales, ed. Kelly Link & Gavin J. Grant: YA-ish )
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