Books to Read While the Algae Grow in Your Fur, November 2014
Three-Toed Sloth 2015-07-01
Summary:
Attention conservation notice: I have no taste.
- Kathleen Tierney (= Caitlin Kiernan), Blood Oranges
- Mind candy: it's hard out there for a hustler on the fringes of Providence's supernatural demi-monde.
- Nicole Peeler, Jinn and Juice
- Mind candy; frothy contemporary fantasy, mostly picked up because it's set in Pittsburgh, and written with obvious, affectionate local knowledge. Improper use of plural nouns as singular (e.g., "Magi") set my teeth on edge; the larger problem is that the narrator simply does not come across as someone born a thousand years ago in Khorasan. (Though I did like [ROT-13'd] gur frpbaq gvre ivyynva orvat n grrantr Nstuna tvey, jvgu gur fnzr anzr nf zl nhag.)
- Robert C. Richardson, Evolutionary Psychology as Maladapted Psychology
- Rather to my surprise, my few notes about this little book are growing into a full review. More later.
- Robin Sloan, Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore
- Mind candy literary fiction, secret-histories-in-books flavor. Going into it without having read any plot spoilers, I was a bit disappointed that the bookstore and the weird books turned out to be (ROT-13'd) zreryl n praghevrf-byq frperg fbpvrgl frnepuvat sbe gur xrl gb vzzbegnyvgl, naq abg, zber vagevthvatyl, cneg bs n pelcgbtencuvp flfgrz pbzovavat obbx pvcuref jvgu bar-gvzr cnqf.
- Gail Simone and Jim Calafiora, Leaving Megalopolis
- Comic book mind candy, grimdark superheroes flavor. I rather hope this happened because Simone got tired of writing life-affirming stories, and just wanted to smash stuff for a while.
- K. B. Spangler, Digital Divide and Maker Space (purchase links from Spangler's webpage)
- Mind candy science fiction. The technological enhancements are not believable, but then Gibsonian cyberspace never made a lick of sense as a user interface (as opposed to a form of shamanism). They're spin-offs from Spangler's web-comic, but I read them without having first read the comic, and some of the loopier elements of the comic are, wisely, suppressed here.
- Katherine Addison, The Goblin Emperor
- Mind candy fantasy: ugly duckling as absolute monarch.
- Jenny White, The Abyssinian Proof and The Winter Thief
- Mind candy historical mysteries, sequels to The Sultan's Seal; more local color for late 19th century Istanbul, from the perspective of a progressive, privileged believer in the Ottoman Empire.
- Kameron Hurley, Infidel
- Mind candy. Sequel to God's War, so more science fiction set on a world where (at least) two rival descendants of present-day Islam are fighting it out on a world where advanced technology is based on genetically engineered insects. (There are also elements which look supernatural, but I hold out hope for a rational pseudo-scientific explanation.) Since Nyx and much of her crew re-appear from the first book, there is a lot of profanity, brutality and heartbreak. ROT-13'd so as not to spoil one of the best bits: Ubyl fuvg gung fprar jvgu gur jryy .
- Gail Simone and Walter Geovani, Red Sonja, 2: : The Art of Blood and Fire
- Comic book mind candy, of course, but perfectly respectable as such.
- Joseph Conrad, Lord Jim
- I wish I had something intelligent to say about it, beyond "read it".
- — It's remarkable how entirely the whole plot depends on everyone's accepting a premise of white superiority, and yet almost all of the white characters