lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
( Jul. 10th, 2022 09:18 pm)
Hey, I've never posted a Six Sentence Sunday before, so why not start now?

[Untitled]
(The Goblin Emperor series)


Azhanharad had only just returned from overseeing the execution of one of Amalo's more vicious footpads when the courier brought word that his mother had died. He saw to the remainder of his duties at the Chapterhouse and then fled to the Vedriveise Gambit where he sat for the better part of the night, the letter crumpled in one hand as his tea cooled on the table before him, untouched.

The news was not, strictly speaking, unexpected, nor was it an unalloyed grief. His mother had been failing for years; had not even known who he was the last three seasons he had visited. But his duties in Amalo--to the city and to the Brotherhood--were many, and his visits were thus far less frequent than he would have wished.

Still, he had not been with her in the end and for that he could not forgive himself, no matter how hard he tried to pretend otherwise.


これで以上です。
What I Finished Reading This Week

The Grief of Stones – Katherine Addison
I liked this one a lot. It finds Addison on much surer footing with her protagonist and setting than with its predecessor, The Witness for the Dead, which was a much thinner read for me (although one I did enjoy more during my second read-through). Part of this is because Addison has an overarching theme for this novel; namely, the ways society fails to protect vulnerable women, compared to the previous volume, whose theme one might sum up as "Opera is awesome (also some murders)." Part of this is because my copy of the novel finally arrived this Friday, making said theme far more resonant than it would have been a week ago.

Much of this is because while The Grief of Stones is packaged as the second entry in a trilogy of books, it's really just the middle section of a single novel, and so the setting, lore, and cast of characters are finally coming into their own. (Don't believe me? Imagine how much less compelling The Goblin Emperor would have been had Tor published it as three independent volumes, with the first concluding after "Dinner with the Goblin Ambassador.") We finally start to see enough of characters like Anora, Azhanharad, and Ulzhavel, and Celehar's interactions with them, that they begin to feel like individuals in their own rights. (And oh how I love the deft hand with which Addison writes Celehar-the-unreliable-narrator.) Ditto the buildings, locations, and subcultures of Amalo. Ditto the Hill of Werewolves. The newly introduced secondary characters--particularly Tomasaran, but also the scholars--are freaking awesome, much more three-dimensional from the outset than were many of the newly introduced characters in Witness.

Having sufficiently established these elements, Addison is now free to have fun with them...and she does, as evidenced by the frequent sly humor and snappy dialogue. She's also taken more care to avoid sloppiness with linguistic registers and retcons of the original Goblin Emperor world than she did in Witness. (And, on a purely personal level, as one of a very few genres of music that leaves me absolutely cold, I did not bemoan this volume's lack of endless descriptions of opera.)

Grief does a much better job of blending its major plot arcs (which are also better developed here than those in Witness) with its slice-of-life and set piece vignettes. Its noir genre conventions (expository recaps, summaries of off-screen interactions or traveling from A to B to investigate C, etc.) are less obvious as such. In short, this is a much smoother, surer, and more entertaining read than its predecessor. It made me excited for the characters and the world they inhabit, and I want the next volume now, please.

Upright Women Wanted – Sarah Gailey
Gailey’s stuff is always a weird mixed bag for me: there are elements that I really like and elements that absolutely do not work for me, and very little in between; Upright Women Wanted continued that experience.

It’s basically a novella-length version of Anna North’s Outlawed: female protagonist fleeing the patriarchy in a post-apocalyptic Wild West dystopia joins traveling band of queer woman outlaws. Gailey’s descriptive language and dialogue really did it for me: they have the ambiance of the Great Plains and the vernacular English of the time period down pat. But the obligatory romance and overall plot were both rushed, to the novella’s detriment. There’s no chemistry between the leads (to say nothing of the fact that falling in instalove with someone you've just met, on the strength of their superficial characteristics, a few days after your long-term partner is murdered by the state? Not a good look for a main character). Additionally, the protagonists do several nonsensical things because that’s the fastest way for Gailey to get them from A to B. Final verdict: I liked some parts of this one. It had potential, but it couldn't capitalize on it due to its abbreviated length.


What I Finished Reading One Week Ago

Triangle – Mac Barnett and Jon Klassen
How much do I love this book? As much as Square is afraid of ten million snakes!


What I Finished Reading Two Weeks Ago

Monstress vol. 5 – Marjorie Liu & Sana Takeda
The art remains stunning, stunning, stunning, and the reason why I read this series. I found the plot to be slightly more comprehensible than in earlier volumes, largely because much of it happens on an individual level (e.g., by depicting individual characters' experiences of a major battle, or flashbacks to their pasts). I’ll move on to volume six, but man, I need a robust Wikipedia page to help me figure out what is going on with the overall plot, and said page does not exist.


What I Finished Reading Three Weeks Ago

Lucifer: Book 1 – Mike Carey et al.
This volume collects the first 16 issues of this Carey-authored Sandman spinoff series. I’m sure the plot and execution would have been mindblowing to 15-year-old boys in the late 90s when said issues were originally published. Readers in 2022 are likely to find them dated and boringly predictable.


What I Am Currently Reading

Holly Black – The Book of Night
I pick it up, get really into it while I’m reading it, and then put it down and don’t feel any urge to return to it.

White Mare, Red Stallion – Diana L. Paxson
I’m really loving the prose in this one.

Dracula – Bram Stoker
The plot is getting a wee bit ridiculous by late June.

Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World – Jack Weatherford
I’m about 2/3 of the way through this one.

Artificial Condition – Martha Wells
I’m really enjoying this one.

Imbibe – David Wondrich
Much more engagingly written than I would have anticipated. That said, I’ve just not been in the mood for nonfiction the past week or so, so this one is on pause.


What I Still Have Left To Review: Seraphina – Rachel Hartman


What I’m Reading Next

This week I picked up (and finished) Katherine Addison’s The Grief of Stones, Melissa Albert’s Our Crooked Hearts, The Widow Queen by Elzbieta Cherezinska (courtesy of Tor), Elektra by Jennifer Saint, and Threads of Awakening by Leslie Rinchen-Wongmo. Two weeks ago, I picked up The Fallen Stones by R. J. Grove and The Land of the Young by Will Robinson.


これで以上です。
...so many things have happened, good, bad, and dystopian. I will endeavor to write more about them at some point in the coming days. In the meantime, I acquired and inhaled The Grief of Stones this weekend. I will endeavor to write a proper review of that for Wednesday. But ahead of that: )

これで以上です。
Well. One of the two goals I set for myself in Challenge #15 was to complete all my outstanding Snowflake Challenge entries by the first week of February. And I may be 6 days behind schedule, but I've done it!


Snowflake Challenge promotional banner with image of ice covered tree branches and falling snowflakes on a blue background. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.

Challenge #6

In your own space, Create something. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.

Fool’s Errand, The Goblin Emperor series, Thara Celehar/Subpraeceptor Azhanharad, 766 words, rated teen and up

Subpraeceptor Azhanharad writes a letter, and then must deal with the consequences.



Snowflake Challenge promotional banner with image of gingerbread Christmas trees, a silver ball, a tea light candle and a white confectionary snowflake on a beige falling-snowflakes background. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.

Challenge #10

In your own space, rec a fanwork (fic, art, vid, playlist, anything!) you did not create. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.

Some favorites from the 2022 Winter Round of [community profile] seasonsofdrabbles:

The Importance of Flair by Puimoo
Not all of Loki's plots work out., Thor (MCU), 300 words
- This powerhouse of a triple drabble is a diabolically good character study that had me cackling by the second sentence.

mead with venom (no ale to pour) by UniqueChimera
Loki watches his brother battle the Hulk , Thor (MUC), 104 words
- A subtle interpretation of a moment from Thor: Ragnarok.

Taste Test by Leldorai
“It’s a surprise, Bait. Be a little patient!”, Dragon Prince, 200 words
- This delightful slice-of-life double drabble features a perfect Bait. (And how can anyone resist Bait?)

Classical Reception by Ermingarden
Help, help, Arthur's being repressed! (Sexually.), Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 700 words
- This is unique, ambitious, and a ton of fun to read.



Snowflake Challenge promotional banner with image of gingerbread Christmas trees, a silver ball, a tea light candle and a white confectionary snowflake on a beige falling-snowflakes background. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.

Challenge #11

In your own space, Interact with someone. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.

Done during and after the challenge!



Snowflake Challenge promotional banner featuring an image of a chubby brown and red bird surrounded by falling snow. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.

Challenge #12

In your own space, tell us who you would recast in a film, tv series or webseries, or maybe someone voicing a cartoon or videogame. Or who would you cast to play a character in a book, comic or maybe even your own fiction! Leave a comment in this post saying you did it. Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so.

I’ve kept mulling this one over during the last two three weeks, but my answer hasn’t changed: I would absolutely bring back Okawa Toru as Roy Mustang’s voice actor in Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood. I love Miki Shinichiro too (I have slightly fewer than a bazillion drama CDs and PC games in which he’s starred), but for me, Okawa is the voice of Roy Mustang. The only voice. The fact that he didn't voice Roy Mustang in Brotherhood is the reason why I have yet to watch Brotherhood. I'm not often this attached to specific individuals in specific roles, but in this case I absolutely am and I would love for there to be a third FullMetal Alchemist remake in which he reprises this role.


これで以上です。
I've read nearly 20 books cover-to-cover since the last time I posted a WAIRW, and have easily as many in progress. My plan from here on out is to review the books I've finished each week while working through the backlog of previously finished books, which are:

Breathe ・ Burnt Sugar ・ The Colour of Magic ・ Experience the Mystery of Tarot ・ Girl, Wash Your Face ・ Gold Diggers ・ The Light Fantastic ・ How to Build a Girl ・ How to Make a Bird ・ The Inspired Houseplant ・ The Kingdoms ・ The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet ・ Magic for Liars ・ The Silver Bough vol. 2 ・ Thick as Thieves ・ A Thousand Ships ・ The Westing Game ・ The Witness for the DeadYearning for the Sea

So without further ado:


What I Finished Reading This Week

How To Build A Girl - Caitlin Moran
It's late and I have a ton to say about this amazing book, so: proper review to come at a later date.

Mongol Zurag - N. Tsultem

Published in 1986, this book is written in Russian, English, Spanish, and French; unsurprisingly, the Russian text goes into far more detail than the other languages. Still, the English text is far more natural and free of grammatical errors than similar offerings published in China, Japan, or Korea, so kudos to you, Mongolia. Mongol Zurag opens with an overview of Mongolian art from the prehistoric period through the date of publication, followed by over 150 pages of full-page, full color illustrations of Mongolian art--largely thangkas and appliques--that I can only describe as lavish. No exaggeration: I've spent hours staring at this book. In addition, the book also features Mongolian portraiture, cartography, modern (i.e. Soviet-style) art, and my personal favorite: several pages reproducing Mongolian playing cards. It's very, very cool, and I will definitely seek out other books that go into further depth on the subject.


What I Finished Reading At Some Point In The Past Four Months

The Witness for the Dead - Katherine Addison

The Witness for the Dead is not an excellent book, but it’s a decent one and I liked it a lot more than The Angel of the Crows. I preordered it months in advance, and admit to feeling pretty cheated when I picked it up: This cost me twenty-six bucks? Because make no mistake, this book is short.

In fact, The Witness for the Dead isn’t a novel so much as the first arc of a novel presented as a stand alone; Addison has said two more volumes are in the works. This is probably because Tor has figured out that it can sell one 450-page novel for $30, or one 450 page novel split into three volumes for $25 each. It’s good for Addison’s bottom line and Tor’s, but less so for readers’.

There are indications that The Witness for the Dead was published somewhat expeditiously. Characters regularly say “I” or “me” in situations where the social norms established in The Goblin Emperor would call for the first formal’s “we” and “us,” for instance. Seeing as Addison explains other discrepancies between the worldbuilding in the two books (such as the introduction of ghouls in Witness) but not the linguistic discrepancies, I get the sense the latter are due to lazy editing versus authorial intent (and there are other examples).

The world and worldbuilding of Witness seems, in general, looser than that of The Goblin Emperor, largely owing to Addison’s inclusion of more of her standard narrative elements: proliferating cults, tours through the various districts of a fantasy city where magic and industrialization coexist, labyrinths, terrifying ghosts that can't hurt you and terrifying ghouls that can, theaters and the foibles of the individuals that perform in them.

Addison uses a murder and several other mysteries to knit these elements together. It’s well done and allows for some excellent scene-setting and set pieces, particularly the town of Tanvero and the Hill of Werewolves. There’s also the potential for a budding love story (although knowing Addison, this might not reach its conclusion without some complications). These elements don’t feel abruptly incomplete, but neither do they feel as rich as the storytelling of The Goblin Emperor.

In summary, I found The Witness for the Dead an engaging (if overly quick) read. It does not achieve the narrative sublimity of The Goblin Emperor; whether it will manage that after the follow-on volumes are published remains to be seen.

A Thousand Ships – Natalie Hayes

A Thousand Ships is the story of the Iliad and the Odyssey as told through the perspectives of the female characters who play tertiary or bit roles in the originals. Some narrators appear in just one or two chapters others tell their stories across multiple chapters interspersed throughout the volume.

This didn’t entirely work for me, largely due to personal preference. I much prefer novels told from the perspective of one or two characters, versus dozens. The profusion of POV characters in this novel requires Hayes to set the scene from square one in almost every chapter, to the detriment of digging deeply into the thoughts, motivations, and psyches of said characters.

Many reviews compare A Thousand Ships to Pat Barker’s The Silence of the Girls and Madeline Miller’s Circe and The Song of Achilles, so I suppose I will too. I found Miller’s retellings more effective in conveying nuance, depth, and character growth, largely due to their limited POVs. Barker’s novel, however, was a complete failure in that it purports to be a feminist retelling but still focuses entirely on Achilleshis desires, his pain, how the saga's events affect him. By contrast, A Thousand Ships succeeds in keeping the focus firmly on the female characters; Erato’s disgust with Homer’s entitled pleas for inspiration and Penelope’s simmering, subconscious resentment of Odysseus and ambivalence over his return are exceptionally well done. This ultimately puts Hayes’ Ships squarely in the middle for me in terms of modern reexaminations of the Iliad and Odyssey; despite some weaker elements, it’s still a pretty good read.

The Colour of Magic – Terry Pratchett

I remembered literally—in the actual definition of the word—nothing about this book beyond the fact that it contained the Great A’Tuin, a wizard named Rincewind, Rincewind’s annoying sidekick and foil (Twofeather, although I’d forgotten his name) and the Luggage. That’s it.

I thought Unseen University made an appearance. It didn’t.

I thought the Librarian made an appearance. He didn’t.

I thought Cohen the Barbarian made an appearance. He didn’t.

It’s a light read. It’s a fast read. It’s on par with (even somewhat better than) the majority of paint-by-numbers genre offerings purporting to be Serious Fantasy Literature.

But as far as the evolutionary stages of the Discworld are concerned, it’s the equivalent of primordial ooze.

The Light Fantastic – Terry Pratchett

I remembered virtually nothing of this book, either; indeed, elements that I recalled as occurring in The Colour of Magic actually took place in this novel. Again, this was a function of my not particularly caring about any of these characters or the novel’s very early-80s fantasy sensibility and humor (the hur-hur, wink-wink of “Seventeen-year-old-virgin falls in love with toothless, geriatric man” being a particularly cringeworthy example).

And so I had the experience of essentially reading the novel for the first time again while vaguely recognizing certain scenes as I came to them: Oh yeah, doesn’t Cohen get a set of diamond grills from the trolls? Doesn’t the red star turn out to be good? Huh, this edge-of-the-world scene probably inspired Grossman all those years later.

The trolls, the gnomes, and the edge of the Discworld are the highlights, but The Light Fantastic is still more a series of mildly amusing vignettes than a proper Discworld novel.

Yearning For The Sea - Esther Seligson

I really love the premise of Yearning for the Sea: that Penelope was anything but pleased to spend ten years of virtuous chastity fending off unwanted suitors with a smile by day and undoing the previous day's labor by night...all while her husband took his sweet time getting home so he could rack up martial glory and sexual conquests on the way.

Seligson's Penelope, by contrast, mourns and seethes with sexual frustration and resentment at the once-devoted husband who finds it so easy not to come back. I very much liked this aspect of the book. But the introduction to this translation speaks of "Seligson's version" of the "epic tale," and therein lies the source of my disappointment. Yearning for the Sea is not epic; it's not even a retelling, but rather four short interior monologues delivered by Telemachus, Eurycleia, Penelope, and Ulysses. There's rumination but no action, and any reader without prior familiarity with the Iliad and the Odyssey will have precious little idea what's going on. I, however, wanted (and had expected) a bona fide retelling of the story from start to finish a la Madeline Miller's novels, or even a short story treatment along the lines of Stephen Fry or Natalie Haynes' recent works. Instead, Yearning for the Sea is a series of short character studies-by-way-of-ruminations set after all the action's concluded. It's a shame, because Seligson's portrayals are intriguing, and I would have loved to have seen them fleshed out in proper story format.

The translation itself is very well done, and the introduction and translator's note left me eager to learn more about Seligson's life and other writings. My reaction to this book is obviously colored by the expectations I had going into it; readers who pick the volume up knowing what it is and is not are in for an excellently pointed take on Penelope's treatment by Ulysses and millennia of readers who've not questioned the idea of a blindly devoted wife putting her life on hold to wait ten years for a husband who's not very interested in hurrying home.


What I Am Currently Reading

Atrix Wolfe - Patricia McKillip
Try as I might, McKillip always leaves me cold.

Equal Rites - Terry Pratchett
Embryonic Granny Weatherwax.


What I'm Reading Next

This week I acquired a copy of The Book of Spells by Jamie Della.



これで以上です。
And now for the better stuff.

Acquiring the overpriced, POS laptop (now dubbed Oppos) meant I was able to join one of my two regular D&D groups for last night’s session. I always look forward to these sessions, and even more so now that they are the main social event left to most of the players. Read more... )

In other news, Charles Yu has a new book!


I can’t believe I only found out about this the other day—especially since it’s been out since January 27th, and Yu’s How To Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe is one of my all time favorite books. I have been eagerly awaiting another volume from him, and I am super excited to finally get to read one.

In other book news, a very good friend became the first person I know well to catch coronavirus; they have spent the last few weeks isolated in their bedroom while their partner leaves them meals and other necessities outside the door. This is objectively awful and could not have happened to someone who deserved it less. On the bright side, I sent them The Goblin Emperor to read, so here comes one more into the fold.

In televised entertainment, AEW has steadily moved in to fill the wrestling void since I—for Reasons—abandoned WWE for good in 2018, to the point where I finally gave in to the inevitable and started watching Dynamite. I have not been disappointed. And then came THIS. )

Keep cutting those promos, Brody Lee, because I will keep eating them out of your hand.

And finally, Castlevania season 4 is confirmed!


これで以上です。
lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
( Aug. 3rd, 2018 09:20 pm)
Hello, Author or Artist! I’m super excited to be participating in this exchange again. I can’t wait to see what you’ve written or drawn from me, and I love this canon and fandom, so feel free to mix and match tags, characters, or prompt details, or add additional characters or elements not listed here. I like to read stories without knowing much about them before diving in, so aside from my DNWs below, you can’t really go wrong.

Read more... )

Thank you again for ficcing or arting for me. I can't wait to see what you create!
lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
( Jan. 2nd, 2017 03:23 am)
I got two (two!) amazing fics this year

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Cetho by DachOsmin in The Goblin Emperor fandom. Oh man, this gift. Social mores! Earnest-and-conflicted-and-grumpy Beshelar! Cala being badass! Oblique backstory! Loyalty! Devotion! Like Addison, the author does a bang-up job of hinting at things and letting the reader work through the implications. So good.

Shine by Cerch in the Captive Prince fandom. What I love especially about this fic is the look we get at Our Heroes learning how to be hopeful and content after everything they've been through, but without glossing over the lingering uncertainties and concerns. And there's some ripping good banter into the bargain, too.

And for those who are interested, my Goblin Emperor story, "A Tale Concerning the Emperor's Wedding," is here.

これで以上です。
lebateleur: A picture of the herb sweet woodruff (Default)
( Jan. 1st, 2017 10:40 pm)
I got two (two!) amazing fics this year

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Cetho by DachOsmin in The Goblin Emperor fandom. Oh man, this gift. Social mores! Earnest-and-conflicted-and-grumpy Beshelar! Cala being badass! Oblique backstory! Loyalty! Devotion! Like Addison, the author does a bang-up job of hinting at things and letting the reader work through the implications. So good.

Shine by [livejournal.com profile] cerch in the Captive Prince fandom. What I love especially about this fic is the look we get at Our Heroes learning how to be hopeful and content after everything they've been through, but without glossing over the lingering uncertainties and concerns. And there's some ripping good banter into the bargain, too.

And for those who are interested, my Goblin Emperor story, "A Tale Concerning the Emperor's Wedding," is here.

これで以上です。
I wrote a Goblin Emperor drabble to celebrate.

Title: Songs of Solace
Fandom The Goblin Emperor
Summary In the days following Dach'osmer Tethimar's treachery, Cala Athmaza and His Serenity turn to popular music for comfort.
&c. Mid-canon, 100 words, rated G. Answers the prompt, "What does your favorite character—or your favorite pairing—get fannish over?"

これで以上です。
I wrote a Goblin Emperor drabble to celebrate.

Title: Songs of Solace
Fandom The Goblin Emperor
Summary In the days following Dach'osmer Tethimar's treachery, Cala Athmaza and His Serenity turn to popular music for comfort.
&c. Mid-canon, 100 words, rated G. Answers the prompt, "What does your favorite character—or your favorite pairing—get fannish over?"

これで以上です。
.

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