Anonymous wrote:Just finished Daughters of Shandong, The Alice Network and now My Friends - all good but My Friends a step above, IMO
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:Just finished Daughters of Shandong, The Alice Network and now My Friends - all good but My Friends a step above, IMO
Anonymous wrote:I am PP who was looking for something lighter and started “I hope this finds you well” which I heard about on here (can’t remember which thread). It’s ok so far. Not my favorite though to be fair I don’t typically like a super unrealistic plot device, which I knew was the whole point of the book so the fact I am even reading it is a recommendation I guess. About a quarter of the way through.
Anonymous wrote:DNF Flashlight, by Susan Choi, at 25%. The story was dragging and the characters were all unlikable, with no signs of redeeming themselves.
Now reading Circe…. Liking it so far.
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).