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YMtC Pro Tour Champion |
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Joined: Sep 22, 2013 Posts: 14369
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Finally got around to the last couple books of Saga of the Seven Suns. Book six was a kinda slow intermission, though it really introduced us to the Klikiss. Book 7 did a great job at being the climax for such a massive story. In the end, I'm not under any delusion that the series is great literature, but it was fun. I can't think of anything else I've read that tells, essentially, a single cohesive story over that many pages and still avoids really bogging down. It really is technically impressive in how large of a cast and how many plot arcs the whole thing juggles.
Read Mistborn, and it... turned out better than I had feared from the early bits. Vin seemed to be going down a really annoying road at first, but she actually learned things and grew as a character rather than getting caught in tough-abuse-victim stasis. Sazed was great. The facts of the Lord Ruler were really interesting, and used information we knew but probably hadn't correlated to make something that was certainly a twist but also pretty well executed.
Read Awake in the Night Land, a collection of four novellas/short stories set in the Night Land setting of William Hope Hodgson. Awake in the Night was pretty good and Cry of the Night Hound had some REALLY interesting stuff. The Last of All Suns still took Hodgson's conceits but swerved hard into something between Shadow out of Time and the ending of 2001: A Space Odyssey. It was pretty awesome, though it had its weaknesses. The third story (last I've to mention), Silence of the Night, was competent, but its tone was at odds with the rest, since it was the only one to defy the basic precepts of the setting in ways that didn't quite sit well: I mentioned a Lovecraft story in Last of All Suns, but that one still owes far, far more to Hodgson. Silence, however, seems more to present Hodgson's future history of earth through the lens of Lovecraft's view of the universe (it even drops a mention to the Hounds of Tindalos), which is very much at odds with Hodgson's that is otherwise used throughout. I'd probably think less of it if it weren't followed by Last of All Suns, which in its own way bridges the Hodgson-Lovecraft gap created by Silence.
Read The Servant Lord by Aneeka Richins. It's good, but it's also the second book in a series so I've some trouble talking about it without excessive spoilers for book one. This one... it's YA fiction, technically, though as with most good YA fiction when you're in the meat of the story it would not be easy to know: when I say this bit of "Young Adult" fiction compares in interesting ways of tone and theme to All the Windwracked Stars, that doesn't mean it's lighter and softer. Both books present a bleak struggle, are dark in the right places, and feature the right amount of redemption to be the light at the end of the tunnel of suffering to get there. The characters have to go through a lot for the promise of a happy ending to their story (And that simply as much as one can be had, given all that's come before), and sometimes it looks like all their struggles are for the impossible, even if the laws of narrative say that you won't have a shaggy dog story just yet (and that applies equally to Muire and Ki).
Rapid Fire Round: Clockwork (Phillip Pullman) and The El Dorado Adventure (Lloyd Alexander). Both kids' books. I can defend YA as not being qualitatively different from "Adult" books, but books for younger readers such as these are a different matter. All the same, the good among them don't talk down to their audience, which means they are still enjoyable at a multiple of the intended age. Clockwork is one I read first as a kid, and I have to say on rereading it there's a surprising lot in there that would, frankly, go over the head of a reader of 8 years. For The El Dorado Adventure... It's no secret that Lloyd Alexander is one of my all-time favorite authors, and reading the Vesper Holly series just reaffirms why. He tells a story first, and it usually feels like he just happens to tell it in such a way that it's suitable in content and linguistic considerations for younger readers.
I've also read The Dreamer, by EJ Mellow, lately, but I've talked about that at length in its own thread. I've also also read Dark & Day, by Israel Grey, lately, but I think I'm going to talk at length about that one, too...
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"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I have a blog. I review anime, and sometimes related media, with an analytical focus.
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
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