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betty

betty@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 3 months ago

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reviewed The Dawnhounds by Sascha Stronach (The Endsong, #1)

Sascha Stronach: The Dawnhounds (EBook, 2022, Saga Press)

The port city of Hainak is alive: its buildings, its fashion, even its weapons. But, …

A different kind of future

The Dawnhounds is a book that is doing so many different things that any comparison will be a misrepresentation. I think people will mostly point to the way that the technology has been mostly replaced by biology; most obviously, the city is built of fungi, but this isn't a soft solarpunk fantasy; cnidocytes have also been adapted to use as weapons by the police, who as always work to keep the underclass under control.

This world is so radically different that the only clues we are not dealing with a secondary world fantasy are a few words in Maori and some Mandarin dialogue. The history recounted does not resemble the history readers know. Unhappily, some of the repression does.

The protagonist, Yat, is someone who grew up from a disadvantaged kid, to a discriminated against cop with a drug habit and not a lot of introspection. She knows she gets …

reviewed Fortunate Fall by Cameron Reed

Cameron Reed: Fortunate Fall (2024, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

Can't believe this is from the 90s

I was reading Cyberpunk in the 90s when this was first published, although I never encountered it. Cyberpunk in the 90s was, as I encountered it, slick and cool and flashy. Dystopian, but the charismatic and capable protagonist made it look sexy. To be honest, I was a teenager, and it felt like it was calculated to appeal to a teen.

It seems difficult to believe this was grown from the same soil. This is dystopian, but the dystopia doesn't serve to underline how cool our protagonist is. Maya, our protagonist, is a reporter whose job and life is constrained by an event in her past which has put her under the suspicion of the political police in totalitarian Russia. It is simplistic to say she is a reporter, rather, she is a camera: one whose job is to experience things and transmit her experience; sight, sounds, sensations, and thoughts. …

Iona Datt Sharma: Blood Sweat Glitter

The Primrose Glitter Girls play ROLLER DERBY and they’re here to DESTROY YOU!

Well, they’re …

The romance I needed

Sometimes you don't want to read anything too grim. If you've ever read a romance and enjoyed it, you will probably enjoy this one; it does a very good romance that avoid the main ways romances fail (for me.)

Although the romance is real and compelling, and you believe that the two characters are falling for each other, and can be good for each other, the main attraction for me was the portrait of queer community. Many books described as "cozy" miss the mark for me because they fail to portray the hard work and irritation of building community. If queer community just happens magically when the right people are in proximity, then we are given no tools for what to do when one person in the community is, for example, incredibly annoying, or keeps borrowing things and not returning them or spreading malicious gossip.

I feel I am getting …

reviewed Metal from Heaven by August Clarke

August Clarke: Metal from Heaven (2024, Kensington Publishing Corporation)

Ichorite is progress. More durable and malleable than steel, ichorite is the lifeblood of a …

Like if Roger Zelazny was Samuel R Delaney

This book is aggressively, in your face queer in a way that is hard to come by. Reading it was mildly hallucinatory, partly because the protagonist has a disability that causes her to hallucinate, and the prose echoes this, becoming disjointed when she is experiencing this. (The book is extremely written, and the prose required a little bit of alertness from me.)

This book is about a child whose world is detroyed by capitalism when her family and loved ones are gunned down at the factory they are striking at. She survives this to become a train robber, and when she grows up, the only way to give the people who took her in and gave her a new life a chance at survival is going undercover in a society of rich capital class lesbians, all of whom have been trained from birth to viciously claw their way to the …

C. E. McGill: Our Hideous Progeny (Hardcover, 2023, HarperCollins Publishers)

gay lovechild of Charlotte Bronte and Mary Shelley

This is a book that grabs you in the same way Bronte and Shelley grab you, although the voice is more Bronte. A clever, fierce woman who looks around her and sees how limited her options are is definitely Bronte's influence, but the novel is a direct response to Shelley's Frankenstein.

The novel is interested in how we permit people to make their way in the world, and what it means to pursue immortality, either through children, fame, or work. This sounds tedious, but even when the narrator is moping or grinding away at thankless labour, it never is. The novel's charm is (again, Bronte) the voice of the narrator, a woman who is a little ghoulish, a lot clever, and very frustrated by what she is permitted by society and the men around her.

The writing is tight and competent, the historical research is never obtrusive but just gives …

The Four Profound Weaves (2020, Tachyon Publications)

Wind: To match one's body with one's heart

Sand: To take the bearer where they …

a strange and wonderful tapestry

This book will occasion comparisons, I think, to Peter S Beagle or Patricia A. McKillip, if either of them were interested in transing the genders. The world feels like a strange and wonderful tapestry, and the characters within it feel like they have been produced by that world.

This is a story about two people later in life whose lives seemingly have left them at loose ends. One character has finally been freed by the death of his partner to make the change she made him promise not to make. The other character, Uiziya, has been betrayed by her aunt and mentor who as going to pass on the Four Profound Weaves she had spent her life hoping to learn. The man, who calls himself nen-sasaïr, (no name) because he doesn't know how to name himself as a man, doesn't know how to order his life. The culture he comes …

Penny Aimes: For the Love of April French (2021, Harlequin Enterprises ULC)

Sexy romance that delivers

Content warning Spoilers for another book, Detransition, Baby, by Torrey Peters

reviewed Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters

Torrey Peters: Detransition, Baby (Hardcover, 2021, One World)

A whipsmart debut about three women--transgender and cisgender--whose lives collide after an unexpected pregnancy forces …

An excavation of the crevices of the human heart

I feel a need to start out by explaining that this is not my sort of book. Usually when books are not my sort of book, I simply do not read them. This one, however, engaged me sufficiently to pull me effortlessly through all the bits that were not shaped in a way familiar to me, which is very much to its credit.

The general shape of this book is as follows. Ames is living a somewhat boring (to me? But also to him, I think) job at an ad agency and having somewhat thrilling (to him, mostly) sex with his boss. (Probably the fact that this is self-evidently a bad idea adds to the thrill.) Until his boss calls him into her office to ask why she is pregnant when he had assured her he could not get her pregnant. He had been under the impression he could not, …