2015 Sales

I actually have some publishing news for once!

Thunder of War, Lightning of Desire: Lesbian Historical Military Erotica will be out in October 2015 from Lethe Press, edited by Sacchi Green. I ended up with two stories in the anthology.
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“Delivery” is set during World War One (try to contain your shock) and takes place during a very long ride in an ambulance through unsafe territory. The ambulance driver is tough and tomboyish, from the American West, and the English engineer is realizing how stifled she feels by society.

My Civil War story “Found” was actually submitted for a different anthology, as a reprint, but the editor decided it would be better in this one. Originally written for an electronic-only charity anthology, Her Private Passion: More Tales of Pleasure and Domination, “Found” was the result of me having recently read They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the Civil War by De Anne Blanton and Lauren M. Cook. In the extensive documentation of female soldiers in that book, I was struck by the mention of at least one African-American woman who served, her real name unknown. My story in no way explores that historical fact with the depth it deserves, but I decided a pragmatic soldier would make a great foil for a woman who’s suffering because of what she’s had to do to save herself.

Finally, “Measure of a Man” will be out in in April 2016 in Me and My Boi: Queer Erotic Stories from Cleis Press, also edited by Sacchi Green. It’s loosely a Regency England setting, the first time I’ve tried that, despite all the Regency romances I’ve read.

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July 2015 Reading Log

Fiction:
I re-read Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman in order to moderate a Readercon discussion on the book, for which I volunteered at the last minute.

I also read Persona by Genevieve Valentine for a Readercon discussion. It’s not that long. Set in a future where international politics takes place (nominally) through the medium of national celebrity diplomats – Faces – and the freelance press is underground, sometimes in the guise of paparazzi (Snaps), it follows one Face (Suyana Sapaki) and one Snap (Daniel Park) through a series of dangerous events. It’s essentially a thriller but with a lot of excellent characterization and worldbuilding. I would love to read a sequel to this, with more on the Snaps as well as the Faces.

Another re-read for Readercon: A Hat Full of Sky by Terry Pratchett. I thought about excavating for my print copy, but decided against it partly because that would be a pain, partly because the e-book meant I could carry it more easily. Also, with an ebook it was really handy to be able to highlight relevant passages. I was impressed anew by what an excellent book it is. There is so much going on thematically: growing up, going out into the world, learning social responsibility, deciding what shape your life will take. When I first read this, the fourth book in the Tiffany Aching series wasn’t out yet, so it was a pleasant little shock to encounter the phrase, “I shall wear midnight.” I haven’t actually read that book yet, though I bought it when it first came out; I’ve been saving it, at that point knowing my unread Pratchett books would be limited in quantity. It makes me sad to think about reading it, but it would be sadder never to do so.

Power and Majesty by Tansy Rayner Roberts, first in the Creature Court trilogy, was recommended to me years ago. I’d started it a while back, while riding the bus, but had only read the first chapter or so. I got back to it this week (again on the bus!) and determined to finish it this time, so I could move forward in the Terrifying TBR. It’s fantasy, the world seemingly loosely based on the Roman Empire; at least the religion is very Roman, as are the names of people and things. The magical source is called animor, and if you have it, you can see things others can’t, and are able to fight beings? forces? that attack through the sky at night, and can remove whole cities from reality and memory. The characters are complex and intriguing, and I especially like the main female character, Velody. I could read a whole novel just about her and her two female friends and their couture business.

Comics:
Avengers Assemble: Science Bros (Marvel Now), written by Kelly Sue DeConnick. Thanks to this story, I bumped up her Captain Marvel run on my list of things to read. The dialogue is terrific.

All-New X-Men, Vol. 1: Yesterday’s X-Men, written by Brian Michael Bendis. Gripping! Weird! Timey Wimey! I’ve bought the next volume of this.

Black Widow Volume 1: The Finely Woven Thread by Nathan Edmondson. I felt this volume was mostly a love story between Natasha and the cat that has decided she is hers. A bunch of things blew up, also. I will go on to the next volume, as I laughed in appreciation a couple of times while reading.

Winter Soldier: The Bitter March by Rick Remender is neat because it’s a period piece, set during the 1960s; it’s hardly a spoiler to say the Winter Soldier does not, however, manage to free himself at that time. I wasn’t really into the retro elements of the story, and wanted more Winter Soldier, less S.H.I.E.L.D.. I probably wouldn’t seek out anything else by this author.

Daredevil: The Devil, Inside and Out and Daredevil: Hell To Pay by Ed Brubaker were meh. I feel a bit more caught up on Daredevil continuity after reading these, but I didn’t love them all that much. All of the female characters would have been much better off had they departed to do their own thing. I mean, there’s a history of the female characters being angst-fodder in this series – recall Elektra – but still. Enough already. I had a volume of Kevin Smith’s run as well, but it looks like the one where they kill off Karen Page, so I decided I didn’t want to bother with it.

Captain Marvel Volume 1: Higher, Further, Faster, More by Kelly Sue DeConnick was a lot of fun – excellent dialogue, and a surprisingly complex storyline, as in the characters (the aliens as well as Carol Danvers) had to make a lot of decisions, all of which would have both good and bad results. Basically, Carol has gone out into space to take an alien back to her people, and ends up embroiled in a conflict between an empire and a planet full of refugees from a wide range of planets. The Guardians of the Galaxy have a story role, as well. I recommend this if you’re interested in superhero/sf comics and don’t want to struggle with decades of old continuity.

Vengeance by Joe Casey is, I believe, the first appearance of America Chavez. The storyline is a bit crowded and confusing, so I don’t think I’d recommend this to anyone new to comics or new to the Marvel Universe. But I am enjoying figuring stuff out, and also being reminded I used to like Daimon Hellstrom as a character, back in the day when I read Ghost Rider and Defenders and a bunch of other random titles.

Fanfiction:
All For One by ironychan is a fanfiction novel that starts out with Steve Rogers and Sam Wilson looking for Bucky Barnes, but almost immediately veers into an adventure story involving Natasha Romanov, S.H.I.E.L.D., Hydra, lots of clones, a talking bird, trust issues, an eventful trip to South America, and a monkey. I highly recommend this one.

hey good looking, what’s cooking by Beatrice_Otter is a lovely Peggy Carter missionfic with bonus Angie Martinelli.

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June 2015 Reading Log

Fiction:
Archivist Wasp by Nicole Kornher-Stace starts off violent and world-weary and continues to be gripping but painful. It’s set in a post-apocalyptic world (isn’t everything, nowadays?) in which human cruelty and desperation take center stage. Wasp, the protagonist, is weary of it, and tries to do a good thing, but her attempt fails miserably and results in more hopelessness. …I’m not making this sound very appealing, am I? But the writing is great and it kept surprising me. I backed away twice but then couldn’t resist going back in. The plot got more intriguing after the story took an unexpected turn that brought two subgenres together. My one wish is that the ending had been more complex. I don’t think institutional change of that nature would have been very easy.

Nonfiction:
I read numerous issues of The Economist, to which I have a year’s subscription (using airline points). I utterly failed to read them in order, which was kind of interesting, actually, when I read analysis of a projected event after it had already happened and compared the two. I mainly chose this magazine for its outsider perspective on the US, and the way its world coverage is biased in a slightly different direction from American press. Also, free.

Fanfiction:
Written in Blood and Bone by Sholio is a really great adventure story with Steve Rogers, Natasha Romanoff, and Bucky Barnes, who is beginning to come in from the cold. Also there are mountains and a monster in a cave.

A Fistful of Steves: This Town Ain’t Big Enough by Raikishi and teaberryblue is mostly an Iron Man story with a plethora of Captain Americas from more sources than I can describe here. Highly recommended for the longtime Marvel geek or anyone who wants to see exactly what decades of continuity can yield. There are some slashy elements.

Even if you think you’re tired of Marvel Cinematic Universe Captain America and Bucky stories, read Sparked Up Like a Book of Matches by Sena. It made me laugh several times with its clever turns of phrase and pacing. It was written before Age of Ultron came out, incidentally, so uses Comics!Clint who watches “Dog Cops.” Read this one! Read it! By the same author: Heart, Have No Pity on this House of Bone by Sena is basically Bucky In the Pacific Theater, and Also He Is Gay. It takes place before Captain America: The First Avenger, and I think the author did some research on what it was like to serve on Guadalcanal.

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May 2015 Reading Log

Nonfiction:
A Companion to the Fairy Tale edited by Hilda Ellis Davidson and Anna Chaudhri is what is says on the tin. The introduction and the first couple of essays gave me a pretty good grounding in fairy tale scholarship as it stood at the time (2006), at least so far as I can tell. I had fun comparing arguments about how tales should be recorded with similar arguments I remember from my anthropology background about how ethnography should be recorded, and how methods of recording data affect the scholarship that follows.

Even though I remember being somewhat distressed by some of the stories of Hans Christian Andersen when I was a kid, an essay on his work has made me want to give him another try, particularly if I can find a library copy of the recommended translation (by R.P. Keigwin). Maybe not all of them will traumatize me? Also, I would now like to read the tales of Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav, which sound fascinating, and which were new to me.

In the chapter about cumulative tales, the author has a lot of fun with language while exploring the nuances of “The Pancake,” “The Gingerbread Man,” etc.. I especially enjoyed the chapter on helpers and adversaries, which gave me a lot of Thoughts about these figures in genre fiction. “Finding the First Fairy Tales” also gave me a lot to think about, and reminded me that one day I want to get back to reading Classics in translation. “Unknown Cinderella: The Contribution of Marian Roalfe Cox to the Study of the Fairytale” by Pat Schaefer was really interesting from a historical perspective – I’d like to read more about Cox at some point.

Poetry:
In the same fairy tale vein, I read and enjoyed Shadowskin, a poem by Shveta Thakrar at Strange Horizons.

Fiction:
The Half-Back by Ralph Henry Barbour was published in 1909, and features a Big Football Game between thinly disguised Harvard and Yale. Interesting historical bits: “some pumpkins” was still in use as an expression; “cars” were streetcars, and the sound of their bells was frequent and distinctive; “coach” was still used for a horse-drawn vehicle.

I don’t remember this from other Barbour I’ve read, but this time athletics were touted several times as being good to clear the mind for intense study; one of the virtues of the protagonist, Joel, is that he convinces his dedicated golfer friend that he needs to study more, and the friend’s class standing improves. However, the boy who reads adventure tales and wants to be a writer turns out to do a Bad Thing. The chief ‘villain,’ who begins the book by insulting the hero, later shows his badness further through petty revenge and cowardice, but by the end appears humble and redeemed; his redemption happened entirely offstage.

Comics:
I’d been saving Hawkeye Vol. 3: L.A. Woman by Matt Fraction for a special occasion. This collection is All Kate Bishop, All the Time, something I’d been wanting. Kate gets annoyed at Clint and takes off for California, bringing Pizza Dog/Lucky with her to enjoy some fun in the sun. Alas, she ends up fighting Madame Masque and her bellboy goons, but makes friends with a nice gay couple and some weird noir guy she meets in the catfood aisle. The artist has changed more than once in this series, but the clean, open, artsy style has mostly remained consistent throughout. This is the first time I’ve seen work by Annie Wu, and I really liked her take on the characters.

Fanfiction:
A Finely Honed Talent for Self-Deception by Sholio offers excellent Wanda Maximoff pov, in conversation with Tony Stark, post Avengers: Age of Ultron.

Domenika Marzione’s Black Widow story The Velveteen Spider incorporates events from Age of Ultron.

The Dud by nimmieamee is another take on how Bucky met Steve when they were kids, and Steve was a newsboy. I loved the historical detail in this one.

Of Questionable Character by thecompanystore pairs up a pre-Daredevil Matt Murdock with Natasha Romanov, in a series of enjoyable encounters. I really wish this story was longer: The Goldilocks Principle, also by thecompanystore is a brief, pitch-perfect encounter between Daredevil and The Winter Soldier.

hold me until we crumble by queenklu: Captain America uses his obsession with Antiques Roadshow to explore his depression about being adrift in the future.

Subjective Histories by Odsbodkins: Captain America’s biography keeps getting delayed by S.H.I.E.L.D. due to certain revelations about the exact relationship between Steve and Bucky.

The Hand-me-downers by Vehemently: a Dark Angel/Supernatural crossover which cleverly makes use of Jensen Ackles’ roles in both shows. A middle-aged Dean Winchester believes Alec is his son. Alec knows otherwise.

Amateur Cartography by worksofstone: Hermione Granger appears to be having a summer fling with Draco Malfoy; she’s in denial that to Draco, it’s more.

I absolutely loved Life Sentence by astolat, a Fast and Furious slash story with prisons and soul bonding. Trust me, it’s excellent, even if you don’t normally like the Bonding trope.

Worried about banana extinction? Try this (mostly) humorous story with Bucky Barnes and Clint Barton, If I Knew You Were Coming I’d’ve Baked a Cake by OddityBoddity. It has background slash, but is a gen adventure story.

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April 2015 Reading Log

Fiction:
Lone Wolf (Bluewater Bay Book 4) by Aleksandr Voinov and L.A. Witt is a male/male romance. I’d read one book previously in this series, which focuses on the creative personalities surrounding a series of werewolf books and the television series that follows (based on the two I’ve read!). This was the werewolf series author’s book, and it was great fun for me in particular because aside from the romance, it was all about fandom! And writing! The author, to relax, hangs out anonymously on a forum for his series, and is careful to never, ever read the fanfiction, except by one guy who is his chat buddy, because he just can’t stop reading it; he’s even read some of his buddy’s slash and thinks it is delicious. And then chat buddy has a novel, which has the solution to author’s problem of being horribly stuck on book eight, and then it heads directly into “this is the awesomest fantasy ever, do not pass go, but do collect your several million dollars.” I will admit to skimming over most of the erotic scenes to get to more stuff about the awesome deal the two writers got with the publisher, and the writer mentoring, and the convention, and all that. There was a romance, and some conflict, but whatever. Fandom! Fanfiction! Awesome publishing deal and vast amount of editing that works out perfectly! That’s the real fantasy.

The original author (Hunter) is a silver fox in his 40s. Chat buddy author (Kevyan) is in his mid-twenties, is Syrian/Italian, and has adorable geek glasses; a tiny bit of plot happens related to his ethnicity and name. There’s some discussion of panic attacks and near-panic attacks, if that’s an issue for you.

Uprooted by Naomi Novik is a first-person fantasy novel with Polish folklore for underpinnings. I really, really enjoyed it; I stayed up late two nights in a row to finish it. The heroine, who never felt she was as special as her best friend, turns out to have amazing magic, but that does not make her life easy in the least. Sometimes, it makes it worse. I felt Novik handled that trope brilliantly. It’s a pageturner not only because the narrator is so engaging, but because things keep getting worse in more and more interesting, unexpected ways. Also, I really loved the creativity and realistic feel of the magic system.

A Gentleman’s Game: A Queen & Country Novel by Greg Rucka was essentially a modern-day Bond novel. The protagonist, Tara Chace, is, well, Bondish, though unlike a Bond novel, the antagonists have some point of view sections to demonstrate that they are antagonists rather than cartoonish villains. I probably won’t read another one of these, but it kept me involved, mostly through resonance with real-world events.

The Bride Wore Size 12 (Heather Wells Mysteries Book 5) by Meg Cabot has a breezy, first-person tone. It’s set at the fictional New York College and involves a murder in the residence hall where Heather, a former teen pop star, works, linked to another mystery I won’t spoil here. This author is light reading for me; I read it while home sick. I think I might have missed book four.

Second Position by Katherine Locke is all about recovery from trauma. I read it because I recently met the author, and because I like romances about performers. It’s a New Adult romance about ballet dancers reconnecting years after a terrible car accident caused the male protagonist (Zed) to have his leg amputated and the female protagonist (Aly) to miscarry their child. Aly continues dancing professionally while dealing with anxiety, depression, and anorexia; Zed is in recovery from alcoholism and teaches music and drama to high school students. The characters were complex and satisfying, though I wanted a little less interiority and more of their lives outside of their heads. This will be a feature for most readers, I suspect. I have read very, very little New Adult, but I liked this.

Cherry Pie (Mercury Rising Book 1) by Samantha Kane is a contemporary small town male/male romance. I think it was in my TBR because the author has also written historical romance. As usual when I read small town settings, I felt almost as if I was visiting a fantasy world, but I enjoyed the characters, which to me is the whole point of reading a romance. I especially liked the way a past romance came into the story.

Kitty Goes to War (Kitty Norville Book 8) by Carrie Vaughn – I enjoyed this series quite a bit, particularly the intense volume 7, Kitty’s House of Horrors (Book 7). This entry was…okay, I think mostly in comparison with my memories of the previous volume, which would be hard to top for emotional intensity. There were some interesting issues raised about werewolf soldiers, and I wouldn’t mind reading a spinoff about them, should Vaughn ever write one.

Fanfiction:
Trust Fall by AlchemyAlice is a sweet probably pre-slash Steve and Tony story. It’s AU; Tony is there when Steve is found, and things fall out differently. Low conflict, pleasing resolution.

For fans of historical Steve and Bucky, there’s a new story in hansbekhart’s Kings County series that’s all about the Barnes family on the home front.

Domenika Marzione wrote some inventive Marvel Comics Alternate Universes. Recursive is a “Life on Mars” homage, in which Captain America is thrown back in time to the period just after Bucky’s death, when he (now) knows Bucky is a captive in Poland. Preserved takes place in the 1950s; Bucky survived but Steve was lost, except now Peggy Carter thinks Steve is The Winter Soldier, and needs Bucky to help her find him.

Team-Building Exercises by Owlet is a series of interconnected one-shots in her post-Winter Soldier universe, with a lot of mission-assists and awww-quotient, plus an appearance by Cat Eleanor.

The Mutant Games by TurtleTotem places characters from X-Men: First Class into an alternate universe version of The Hunger Games. Warning for many character deaths, as you might expect, though some might not be as dead as you think. Despite guessing the likely outcome of the story, I was gripped from beginning to end (and I wasn’t quite right about the ending).

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March 2015 Reading Log

Fiction:
Bring On the Dusk by M. L. Buchman – I’d read and enjoyed a previous book in this series, but this one ended up being a DNF, despite having a female military helicopter pilot as protagonist. I liked the neepery about flying and about climbing giant redwoods, but the romance bored me because it was too easy, and both characters were just too awesome, and they had too many awesome friends around from previous books in the series. I think you have to be in the mood for that sort of thing, and I wasn’t. I still recommend the author because female military pilots! The Night Is Mine was the one I liked – it had cooking neepery as well as the military setting.

Nonfiction:
Hidden Anxieties: Male Sexuality, 1900 – 1950 by Lesley A. Hall was right up my alley so far as research material goes. Social history! Sex! The turn of the century! It made me think about how weird it is that for such a long time, and even today, information about sex is so censored and obfuscated and fraught with tension. No wonder our society is such a mess. Aside from that, the book gave me many, many ideas for historical erotica plots. A lot of men were worried about impotence or premature ejaculation, and what to do about it…clearly, they were in the wrong genre of story at the time. *ahem*

Fanfiction:
Fair Winds and Homeward Sail by Ione is a story about the Crofts, beginning long before Persuasion but incorporating some of it from their point of view. Highly recommended, even if you don’t usually read fanfiction; the author beautifully captures the feel of the period and of Austen’s prose.

If you like exploring the universe of Captain America and Bucky Barnes in the 1940s, hansbekhart’s Kings County series includes two stories so far, one about Pearl Harbor and its fallout in Brooklyn, and the second all about the Barnes family on the home front.

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February 2015 Reading Log

Fiction: Partner by Lia Silver, the sequel to Prisoner; I know this author, though mostly online. I got an advance copy and read it all in one evening, and my only complaint was that it was not longer (it didn’t really need to be, I just wanted). Adventure! Angst! Music, some of which I suggested (in particular, Filipino artist Gloc-9)! I am especially happy that there are so many interesting secondary characters who could get their own books, because I am enjoying this series.

While I was waiting for the book to come out, and knowing only a bare outline of the plot, I did this mix:
1. “Bigtime,” Baihana
2. “Riding on the Wind,” Judas Priest
3. “Prakatumba,” Cabo Snoop
4. “Benzin,” Rammstein
5. “Dito tayo sa dilim,” Pedicab
6. “Buti Na Lang,” Gloc-9 featuring McCoy Fundales
7. “Trakterna,” Labyrint
8. “Amazon,” M.I.A.
9. “Hot Mami,” Kamikazee
10. “War Pigs,” Opium Jukebox (Black Sabbath cover)
11. “Upright Come,” Patti Smith
12. “Varvulven (Werewolf),” Garmarna
13. “When They Come for Me,” Linkin Park
14. “Hollow,” Cloudeater
15. “Shake It Out,” Manchester Orchestra
16. “Wake Up,” Slapshock
17. “Ils ont peur de la liberte,” Keny Arkana
18. “Pink 5ive,” Silent Sanctuary

Nonfiction: High on the Hog: A Culinary Journey from Africa to America by Jessica Harris, whose work I already knew I loved from The Africa Cookbook: Tastes of a Continent, which I bought many years ago. She synthesizes a lot of historical information to show how African foods and cooking influenced the cuisine of the United States. It made me want to read more about a number of different topics. I especially enjoyed reading about famous black caterers in Philadelphia and New York City. I didn’t find the last sections as entertaining as the earlier ones, even though they were informative. I think it was because as the time period got closer to the present, the narrative got more generalized. I mean, the whole book was an armchair journey, but I felt like there were more interesting facts and intriguing historical connections in the earlier chapters. I think the later chapters probably needed a book of their own, unless it’s just that I’m biased towards less recent history.

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January 2015 Reading Log

Fiction: Bone Rider by J. Fally features a romance between a human and alien symbiotic sentient armor…well, actually the male human’s romance is with another male human, and there is a plot involving the U.S. Army and the Russian mafia, but I was more into it for the sentient armor, which was totally cool. Really, do you need any more recommendation than that?

Nonfiction: The Regency Underworld by Donald Low – if you’re looking for a fairly short overview of this topic, this seems to be a good choice.

Fanfiction: This, You Protect by owlet follows Bucky Barnes after the events of Captain America: the Winter Soldier as he resets his mission objectives to keep Captain America safe. It has realistic angst mingled with Bucky’s sardonic humor and a lot of sentimental punch. It’s hard to describe, but a greatly entertaining story.

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Readercon 2015

I’ll be at Readercon in Burlington, MA next weekend.

Guests of Honor: Nicola Griffith and Gary K. Wolfe.

Memorial Guest of Honor: Joanna Russ.

Friday, July 11, 11:00 AM. G
Drift-Compatibile Fictional Characters.
Amal El-Mohtar, Victoria Janssen, Nicole Kornher-Stace (leader), A. J. Odasso, Navah Wolfe.
The film Pacific Rim created the idea of two people who are “drift-compatible,” able to live inside each other’s minds and memories without sustaining massive psychic damage. Let’s use this as a metaphor to explore our favorite speculative fiction duos—whether they’re friends, traveling companions, siblings, or spouses—and talk about what makes those deeply intimate pairings work.

Friday, July 11, 6:00 PM, F
From the French Revolution to Future History: Science Fiction and Historical Thinking.

Christopher Cevasco, Phenderson Clark, Jonathan Crowe, John Crowley, Victoria Janssen (leader).
Arts journalist Jeet Heer wrote, “It’s no accident H.G. Wells wrote both [The] Time Machine and The Outline of History (one of the most popular history books ever), [and] it’s no accident that science fiction writers are also often historical novelists: Kim Stanley Robinson, Nicola Griffith, etc.” For Heer, science fiction, fantasy, historical fiction, and horror can all be grouped under the meta-genre of fantastika, and all emerged from the “epistemological rupture” of the French Revolution, which “forced us to think of history in new way, with new emphasis on ruptures and uncontrollable social forces.” Is Heer right to see these commonalities? Is it useful to think of historical fiction in fantastika terms? And how do speculative genres borrow from historical ones?

Friday, July 11, 7:00 PM, ENL
Recent Fiction Book Club: Persona.

Victoria Janssen, Kate Nepveu (leader), Fran Wilde.
In a world where diplomacy has become celebrity, a young ambassador survives an assassination attempt and must join with an undercover paparazzo in a race to save her life, spin the story, and secure the future of her young country in this near-future political thriller. For author Genevieve Valentine, restraint is a mode of composition, both in the beautifully understated sparsity of her prose and in her protagonists’ taut, tense stillness. In Persona, where the degree to which one has or has not smiled reveals or conceals a wealth of information, restraint is crucial to a Face’s survival. Persona brings up questions of identity and celebrity, managing to be a tense, carefully wrought thriller while still nodding and winking at the camera. You’ll never look at a red carpet the same way again.

Saturday, July 12, 9:00AM, ENL
Classic Fiction Book Clu: Herland

Ken Houghton, Victoria Janssen (leader), Sarah Langan.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, a prominent social critic and lecturer at the turn of the 20th century, is perhaps best known for her short story “The Yellow Wallpaper,” a chilling study of a woman’s descent into insanity, and Women and Economics, a classic of feminist theory that analyzes the destructive effects of women’s economic reliance on men. In Herland, a vision of a feminist utopia, Gilman employs humor to engaging effect in a story about three male explorers who stumble upon an all-female society isolated somewhere in South America. Noting the advanced state of the civilization they’ve encountered, the visitors set out to find some males, assuming that since the country is so civilized, “there must be men.” A delightful fantasy, the story enables Gilman to articulate her then-unconventional views of male and female roles and capabilities, motherhood, individuality, privacy, the sense of community, sexuality, and many other topics.

Saturday, Jul 12, 1:00PM, ENL
In Memorium YA Book Club: Hat Full of Sky

Stacie Hanes, Victoria Janssen, Shira Lipkin, Rachel Steiger-Meister, Emily Wagner.
The second book in the Tiffany Aching series sees Pratchett’s young heroine ready to begin her magical apprenticeship, which goes nothing like she expects and leads to trouble, especially with other young witches-in-training. What she doesn’t know is that something insidious is coming after her, and none of the other witches can help. We wanted to do something to mark the death of genre giant Pratchett, and while any of his books would be worth talking about, the Tiffany Aching series is some of his most thoughtful work. The adventures of a young girl learning what it means to be a witch speak deeply to readers, as she demystifies some aspects of witchery and finds deeper mysteries of life and magic in others, all while learning to be clever, kind, and brave. Readers of all ages are welcome to join the conversation.

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December 2014 Reading Log

I was on vacation for part of December, so I got to read more than usual!

Fiction: Love Waltzes In by Alana Albertson – Contemporary romance in which the description of life as a dancer on a celebrity ballroom dance show, and the associated soap opera plot, was much more compelling than the romance, which totally failed to grab me. Heroine is a professional dancer who wants to have a family; hero was her partner and first love when they were teenagers, before he left the sport to become a marine.

Breaking the Rules (Troubleshooters Book 16) by Suzanne Brockmann – Excellent travel reading, even though it had been a long while since I read book 15. So far as I can tell, this is the last of the series. Various romances and romantic issues mingle with a human trafficking case and a custody battle, so I kept turning pages.

A Man to Die For by Eileen Dryer featured an ER nurse who realizes the hot new doctor is a serial killer. A cat-and-mouse thriller with lots of terrific ER detail (the writer was a nurse). There’s also a low-key romance with the nurse and a cop. Fun!

Thankless in Death (In Death, Book 37) by J.D. Robb was a rather lackluster entry in this long-running series, but it kept my attention while in airports.

Dreaming Spies by Laurie R. King (galley) – latest in the Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes series. Russell and Holmes go to Japan in the 1920s and then have an adventure in Oxford. I have no idea how accurate the historical detail was, but I enjoyed it.

True Pretenses (Lively St. Lemeston Book 2) by Rose Lerner, which made sense even though I haven’t read book one in the series yet. It’s a historical romance in which a Jewish con man falls for a political hostess, which doesn’t really tell you anything about the characters, who are complex and engaging and don’t always know their own minds. Bonus points for the lack of the standard arrogant dominant male and a heroine who knows what she wants and is not ashamed of wanting. One of the author’s sources was almost certainly The Regency Underworld by Donald Low. I enjoyed the book a lot.

Nonfiction: Ernie Pyle’s War: America’s Eyewitness to World War II by James Tobin. It is well-regarded for good reason, I think, and made me want to read more of his work. It’s a vivid picture of Pyle as a person.

Posted in nonfiction, reading, romance novels, suspense/thriller | Tagged | Comments Off on December 2014 Reading Log