Anonymous wrote:The Everlasting is crazy short for Alix! It's just over 300 pages. It has the beautiful prose you're used to getting from her, but it's somehow very compact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Recently started the Once and Future Witches; I’m 70 pp in, it’s an easy read with some pretty prose yet also very tropey and trauma-laden; it might be a DNF (which is rare for me), but it is the bookclub select and I’m guessing everyone else will have loved it—so may see it through so I can have full perspective for the discussion.
I get that the tropes are partly related to fairy tale archetypal journeys, but some used here are just heavy-handed. And the book also has a pet peeve of mine: when authors go through the trouble of embedding a metaphor or allusion, but then they (or their editor) don’t trust you to connect the dots, so they go ahead and tell you what they meant just to be sure. I am curious about some of the new characters, though, and also don’t want to be cranky about the book so may try to get to part 2 (~20% in).
I read one of Alix Harrow's books at the end of last year and was surprised at how fresh her voice was--and the book was well-plotted and imaginative. But, ITA, that she could use an editor to pare back the "over-writing" & statements of the obvious and prevent her
(apparent) tendency to descend into overly precious storytelling.
I know that "cozy fantasy" is having its moment these days, but basically feel like she could be better than that!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just finished Heartwood by Amity Gaige. It was a really compelling page-turner about a nurse recovering from her hospital covid experience by hiking the Appalachian Trail. In Maine, she goes missing. The book is about the search and is told from multiple POVs.
I really liked this. It isn't perfect, but it is a page turner and I was all in while reading it.
Oh I really liked this.
Anonymous wrote:Recently started the Once and Future Witches; I’m 70 pp in, it’s an easy read with some pretty prose yet also very tropey and trauma-laden; it might be a DNF (which is rare for me), but it is the bookclub select and I’m guessing everyone else will have loved it—so may see it through so I can have full perspective for the discussion.
I get that the tropes are partly related to fairy tale archetypal journeys, but some used here are just heavy-handed. And the book also has a pet peeve of mine: when authors go through the trouble of embedding a metaphor or allusion, but then they (or their editor) don’t trust you to connect the dots, so they go ahead and tell you what they meant just to be sure. I am curious about some of the new characters, though, and also don’t want to be cranky about the book so may try to get to part 2 (~20% in).
Anonymous wrote:My Year of Rest and Relaxation.
Unlikeable narrator. Really unlikeable. There’s some satire and feminist critique in there. It’s hard to pinpoint halfway through, but I’m understanding it as a chronicle of grief and loneliness in a society that provides people with few tools to manage either.
Anonymous wrote:Lula Dean's Little Library of Banned Books -- it's about a woman who goes on a book banning crusade and sets up a little free library with what she considers appropriate books, but someone swaps out all the books with banned books (leaving the wholesome dust jackets). It's very light and so far all the bad people are getting their comeuppances and the good people are triumphing and it's kind of what I needed to read right now.
I still have 14 people in front of me for The Black Wolf.