Jun. 5th, 2019

highlyeccentric: A photo of myself, around 3, "reading" a Miffy book (Read Miffy!)
Currently Reading:
Fiction: The collection 'A Hand of Knaves', in which I have a story. Technically, Redwall.

I've just started The Well of Loneliness - having caught up to target in project 'read more books by poc/minority ethnic/global-non-white authors', I figured I might as well get back to project 'read more Problematic Queer Literature. Anyway. I vaguely remember owning a copy at some point in the past, and finding it tedious. I am not finding it tedious now! I'm about 1/6 of the way in! Stephen is seventeen, and Bad At Parties, but good at literature and greek and fencing and riding. Her father is feeling mostly vindicated in his principled informed-by-Kraft-Ebbing decision to let his hoydenous daughter pursue her interests. Her mother is feeling confused and threatened. I predict a Drama in the offing, and it will probably involve the prospect of Oxford or Cambridge.

Lit Mag: Still Meanjin summer 2018! Finished a couple of memoir pieces, which will show up in the link posts.
Academic: Nothing
Other non-fiction: Zip and zilch.

Recently Finished:

Let Us DreamLet Us Dream by Alyssa Cole

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This was engaging, and historically rooted. Alyssa Cole is one of the few m/f authors I reliably enjoy, and this is true to form in terms of good character dynamic, romantic and sexual tension, and not leaning heavily into over-wrought het tropes. It's a bit short (I seem to be saying that a lot lately. Clearly novellas are not my jam right now), and I'm not entirely happy with the resolution- the disparity between the two MC's social/political/immigration status, which is drawn pretty tight in the initial tension, completely disappears rather than being resolved.

Binti (Binti, #1)Binti by Nnedi Okorafor

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


I liked this! It's a nice change to see a Hero On An Outward Quest (very Joseph Campbell, at least at the start) who isn't an everyman, but a very specific girl, and one who has always been outstanding in her community context. The setting is fascinating, and I have So Many Questions. The dominant cultural group in Binti's life is not her own Himba people, but the Khoush, who are pretty obviously based on contemporary Arabs. All the other humans (and there are few of them) at the prestigious Oomza Uni (... why, when Binti's dialect is otherwise American-English inflected, and British have no apparent cultural footprint left on Earth in her day, is this school known to humans as Oomza Uni?) are Khoush. The disappearance of Europeans from Sci Fi earth seems fair enough, but what happened to China? India? South America? That doesn't strike me as a decision Okorofor took *accidentally*, but I can't find her commenting anywhere on it.

Home (Binti, #2)Home by Nnedi Okorafor

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Has Second Book syndrome. It's mostly a bridge, setting up for book 3 - it does good character work, but not enough plotwork to really support what book 3 is trying to do.



The Night Masquerade (Binti, #3)The Night Masquerade by Nnedi Okorafor

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Book 1 was a good novella. Book 2 had Second Book Syndrome setting up for book 3, and book 3 is trying to be an epic trilogy conclusion, despite neither of the previous two having been on an epic scale. All the worldbuilding and character points I liked from the first book remain, but the structure isn't great. And I remain super annoyed with one *specific* plot point, regarding ambassadorial status granted to a character who is totally unequipped for it, leading to mayhem. It just seems deeply unlikely for Mega Space Civilisations of the Future, although I realise that kind of thing happens in Star Trek all the time, and these books are in several key ways a narrative kin-type to Star Trek.

In addition, the romantic plotline was a half-baked addition, which seemed to serve only the purpose of assuring us that the Brilliant Exceptional Woman is not unattractive to men. The actual young man involved had next to no character and very little motivation. I *did* like that the eventual relationship structure was some kind of quadrilateral, though.

Flight to Coorah Creek (Coorah Creek, #1)Flight to Coorah Creek by Janet Gover

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


Having DNF'd a bunch of books on very specific ideological grounds lately, I was kind of tempted to wash my hands of this one on discovering the MC and her love interest and indeed pretty much everyone else in the story are direct employees of a uranium mine. I didn't, though, and if nothing else this book does pretty convincingly demonstrate some of the reasons northern Australian communities are so very deeply attached to resource mining - namely, the mine pays for a hospital and air ambulance service.

However. I have so many complaints. The love interest is not a good prospect! The Great Misunderstanding Plot is daft! And the book is cluelessly racist in its setting! )

This has been a negative review! And yet. I did read it straight through in one go, so, uh, it's got a reasonably tight plot?

Online Fiction

Hiromi Kawakami, trans. Alison Markin Powell, In the Grass. Kawakami's 'The ten loves of (Mr) Nishino' (title varies between UK and US editions of the English translation) is released this week, and I think I wish to read more.

Up Next:

Murderbot is on the agenda for book club later this month.




Music Notes:

Prompted, I think, by bedlamsbard, I have been listening to The Civil Wars on Spotify. I really like their cover of 'dance me to the end of love'.

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