Apr. 6th, 2015

Books

Apr. 6th, 2015 10:35 pm
seekingferret: Two warning signs one above the other. 1) Falling Rocks. 2) Falling Rocs. (Default)
Ken Liu's The Grace of Kings has only one named female character in the first hundred pages. I'm now 140 pages in- we get another named character at page 135, and she dies on page 136.

The problem isn't even that it'd be nice to have gender balance. The problem is that this is a book about families and dynasties and legacies... the plot of this book makes no sense at all without women, and they're just missing. The prose is weighted heavily to the expository, but that's not necessarily a sin in a massive fantasy epic, and for significant periods the exposition rises above the tedious with the lyricism that marks the best of Liu's short fiction. There are several really engaging characters, particulary the one named female character, Jia, and her husband Kuni. And the world Liu lays out is an interesting geopolitical setup, exactly the kind of world I like to roleplay in.

But without women, the book just feels broken.


ETA Kat Howard's review says that around page 300, the women show up, and it becomes clear that Liu made a choice to exclude women from the early narrative as part of his subversion of fantasy tropes. This seems weird to me, but I'm willing to give Liu some more rope.




I finally finished Jo Walton's Among Others. It was my third attempt at reading it. I wanted to like it, but barely anything happens for long stretches, and not even a well executed ending could save it for me.

On the other hand, it's above everything else a book about the fellowship of the SF community. There were passages that I don't just want to quote, I want to scribe them on my skin so I can carry them with me forever. The passage where Mor contrasts the magic of books to the magic of fairies is incredibly beautiful: The magic of fairies is tied to a place, and it gets its power from that concentration, but a little piece of the magic of a book is invested in each printed copy and it spreads that magic around the world.

I may never love the book, but in the wake of the Hugo nomination fiasco, Among Others was precisely the right book for me to read.




I'm also a few hundred pages into Ramez Naam's debut novel Nexus, which is an excellent, thoughtful, and action-packed novel about the consequences of nano-enhanced brains and transhumanism. I'll try to check back in when I finish, but based on how much I've read, I highly recommend it. The two main characters are a fun oil and water combo, and it's one of those books where everyone, good guy and bad, is intelligent and has comprehensible goals, and the conflict comes from incomplete information. I love books like that.

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seekingferret: Two warning signs one above the other. 1) Falling Rocks. 2) Falling Rocs. (Default)
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