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TheRatsAttic@bookwyrm.social

Joined 5 months, 1 week ago

A tentative reviewer, slowly but surely getting through a Neverending TBR.

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BlueSky: bsky.app/profile/theratsattic.bsky.social Substack: substack.com/@theratsattic GoodReads: www.goodreads.com/user/show/101760873-the-rat-s-attic

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The Rat's Attic's books

Currently Reading

2025 Reading Goal

29% complete! The Rat's Attic has read 7 of 24 books.

Guy Gavriel Kay: The Lions of al-Rassan (2005, Eos)

The ruling Asharites of Al-Rassan have come from the desert sands, but over centuries, seduced …

Even the sun goes down.

Guy Gavriel Kay continues to be an author of rare talent, with a voice which is very much his own.

As with many of GGK's works, we find ourselves in a setting analogous to real world history, but twisted so as to allow him the freedom to develop the story whichever way he wishes. In this stand-alone novel the setting is reminiscent of the end days of Al-Andalus and Muslim-ruled Spain, and that idea of "the end days" is at the centre of it all.

That theme - "the end days". This idea of moments of beauty which cannot last, no matter how we try, permeates every aspect of the book from start to finish, whether it be in a larger, more historic scale, or even when relating to the relationships formed. Moments of wonder, made bittersweet by their ephemeral nature, but cherished all the more for it. "The deeds …

reviewed Witches Abroad by Terry Pratchett (Discworld, #12)

Terry Pratchett: Witches Abroad (Hardcover, 1998, Gollancz)

Be careful what you wish for...Once upon a time there was a fairy godmother named …

The Witches, Three, Go on a Tourism Spree

Book 12 of Discworld.

Sadly didn't do much for me. I love much of Pratchett's work, and in no way am I done with my eventual goal of getting through the 40-odd Discworld novels, but some of his earlier books unfortunately just don't speak to me.

This time round we've got Nanny Ogg, Granny Weatherwax and Magrat Garlick heading to Genua, and they wonderfully embody many stereotypes about older tourists as they experience travel though these "foreign parts", en route to stopping the big bad of the story from forcing people into becoming vessels of stories.

The jokes, though, just didn't land for the most part. For the most part they made the titular witches look less wise, and more petty, than they do in another appearances later in the series (the Tiffany Aching books, for example).

Happy I have read it, won't be coming back to it.

Guy Gavriel Kay: The Lions of al-Rassan (2005, Eos)

The ruling Asharites of Al-Rassan have come from the desert sands, but over centuries, seduced …

Guy Gavriel Kay continues to be an author of rare talent, with a voice which is very much his own.

As with many of GGK's works, we find ourselves in a setting analogous to real world history, but twisted so as to allow him the freedom to develop the story whichever way he wishes. In this stand-alone novel the setting is reminiscent of the end days of Al-Andalus and Muslim-ruled Spain, and that idea of "the end days" is at the centre of it all.

That theme - "the end days". This idea of moments of beauty which cannot last, no matter how we try, permeates every aspect of the book from start to finish, whether it be in a larger, more historic scale, or even when relating to the relationships formed. Moments of wonder, made bittersweet by their ephemeral nature, but cherished all the more for it. "The deeds …