Nov. 7th, 2005

Test post

Nov. 7th, 2005 07:05 pm
ellarien: Blue/purple pansy (Default)
My package actually arrived this morning, strangely enough. It consisted of a 19x13x5 inch box with four small books and a free sample of men's deodorant carefully arranged in a single layer on the bottom, with the rest of the space full of those inflated plastic pillows.

This has been a test of the e-mail post system. If it works, I can try with the phone.
ellarien: Blue/purple pansy (Default)
Being able to post from the phone might be useful sometimes.
ellarien: bookshelves (books)
Yes, I did read some books in October! Comments and reactions below, with some spoilers under the cuts.


Michelle Sagara, Cast in Shadow
The author is [livejournal.com profile] msagara, also known as Michelle West, author of the Sun Sword series. This is a much shorter and simpler story, but hardly slight. Published under the Luna imprint, it's a story about many different kinds of love, with the romantic sort only barely in evidence. The first few chapters set up an intriguing society while deftly playing with reader expectations, and the story goes on swiftly and engagingly from there.
Read more... )
I look forward to the sequel, due next year.


Steven Brust, The Lord of Castle Black
Middle volume of the Viscount of Adrilankha trilogy. I thought it suffered rather from middle-book syndrome, and was not nearly as much fun as The Paths of the Dead, but that may just be my lack of appreciation for Brust's battle scenes, of which there are several. (I'm getting on much better with Sethra Lavode.)

China Mieville Iron Council
Read more... )

Robert Jordan, Knife of Dreams
It's strange to think that when I started reading this series the Web barely existed and the endless September of Usenet had not yet begun. It was, I must admit, the cover art that caught my eye as I browsed the new Waterstones in Birmingham. The first six books came out in the space of four years, and I eagerly snatched up each one as soon as it came out in paperback. This was fantasy a cut above the ordinary, with a huge and detailed world and a cast of thousands; even in the early days, though, I could have wished for a little less description of clothes and furnishings. After 1994, sadly, things slowed down a lot, with a book coming out maybe once every couple of years and less and less happening in each book, to the growing frustration of what was by now a huge and vociferous online community. This is book 11, and the author has promised faithfully that the next will be the last; after the almost total non-event of the last volume, it was hard to imagine how things could speed up that much, but I was intrigued to see Jordan try. I wasn't entirely disappointed.
Read more... )


Rachel Manija Brown, All the Fishes Come Home to Roost: An American Misfit in India
I doubt I would ever have heard of this book if [livejournal.com profile] rachelmanija hadn't been on LJ and on the flist of some people on mine. If there's anyone reading this who hasn't heard of it yet, I hope I can pass on the favour. The memoir of a traumatic childhood in an Indian ashram and at a dreadful Catholic school, this book is funny and beautiful and brutal by turns, full of vivid imagery and references to books both familiar and unfamiliar.


Jane Lindskold, Wolf Captured
This begins what is presumably planned as a new Firekeeper trilogy, following on from the one that ended with The Dragon of Despair. It's well up to the standard of the earlier books, introducing another intriguing society, filling in some of the gaps in Firekeeper's background, and telling an entertaining story in its own right.
Read more... )

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Reading, writing, plant photography, and the small details of my life, with digressions into science and computing.

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