usuallyhats: River Song in her cell, looking up from her diary (river)
The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi - Shannon Chakraborty
The Legend of Korra: Ruins of the Empire Part One
Masquerade in Lodi - Lois McMaster Bujold
Can't We Just Print More Money? - Rupal Patel and Jack Meaning
A Day of Fallen Night - Samantha Shannon
Circle of Magic: Briar's Book - Tamora Pierce
Fake Law: The Truth About Justice in an Age of Lies - The Secret Barrister
Lords of Uncreation - Adrian Tchaikovsky
The Legend of Korra: Ruins of the Empire Part Two
Paladin's Hope - T Kingfisher
Island of Whispers - Frances Hardinge
The Legend of Korra: Ruins of the Empire, Part Three

S.W.O.R.D. Vol 1
Captain Carter: Woman Out of Time
Magnificent Ms Marvel: Destined
Magnificent Ms Marvel: Stormranger
Magnificent Ms Marvel: Outlawed
Ms Marvel: Beyond the Limits
Divine Might: Goddesses in Greek Myth - Natalie Haynes
The Helios Syndrome - Vivian Shaw
American Hippo - Sarah Gailey
A Theory of Haunting - Sarah Monette
The Dance Tree - Kiran Millwood Hargrave
A Power Unbound - Freya Marske
Shadow Baron - Davinia Evans
A History of the Roman Empire in 21 Women - Emma Southon
Lessons in Chemistry - Bonnie Garmus
Ace! The Inside Story of the End of an Era - Sophie Aldred and Mike Tucker
Untethered Sky - Fonda Lee
Bishop's Opening - RSA Garcia
The Madness: A Memoir of War, Fear and PTSD - Fergal Keane

I had covid in the middle there (shout out to my library for getting a ton of comics in ebook format, which kept me going when I didn't have the brain for prose), hence no post last month!

The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi (five stars), A Day of Fallen Night (two stars), A History of the Roman Empire in 21 Women (four stars), Untethered Sky (five stars), The Madness: A Memoir of War, Fear and PTSD (five stars)The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi
I loved this! It's a delightful romp with a strong thread of figuring out who you want to be, and how to balance that with the fact that your decisions affect other people. The main character, a middle aged pirate dragged out of a quiet retirement with her young daughter for One Last Job, and thereby confronted by the fact that she loves adventuring, tackles this most obviously, but it comes through for other characters too. Goodreads reckons it's the first in a trilogy (though I think it does work as a standalone) and I am EXCITED.

A Day of Fallen Night
I thoroughly enjoyed Priory of the Orange Tree, so I had high hopes for this prequel, but unfortunately it turned out to be a bit of a dud. It all felt really flat and underdeveloped, and a lot of the arcs basically went nowhere, possibly due to the constraints of it being a prequel? I also kept feeling like it was constantly swerving away from the stuff I was interested in exploring in favour of pointless runarounds. It wasn't completely without merit (I finished it, after all) - there were some nice moments and some interesting ideas, and a few characters I was at least a little invested in, but overall, a frustrating reading experience.

A History of the Roman Empire in 21 Women
OK, first of all, the US title is much better (A Rome of One's Own), this one's a bit Ronseal, but that didn't detract from my enjoyment at all. Southon charts the course of the Roman Empire via the lives of her 21 women, persuasively arguing that this is a much better way to look at it than through lists of emperors and battles. Which is not to say those things don't feature, but Southon makes the case that we can tell a lot about Rome via how these women lived and were treated. Her prose is chatty and irreverent, but I could feel the weight of scholarship behind it, and I enjoyed it very much.

Untethered Sky
This novella, about a young woman bonding with and training a roc to hunt monsters, was fantastic. Fonda Lee is great at creating characters and worlds extremely economically, so it felt dense and rich in the way novellas don't always manage for me, and the plot is exactly the right size for the length. I loved it, highly recommended.

The Madness: A Memoir of War, Fear and PTSD
As the title suggests, this is a lot, but it's also a really compelling read, with a clear and compassionate prose style that worked incredibly well. Keane doesn't belabour the horrors he experienced and encountered, because there's no need, they speak for themselves

Didn't finish:
The Surviving Sky - Kritika Rao
The Surviving Sky - Kritika Rao
This had some really cool worldbuilding and centred on a couple who've been married for over a decade, which I thought sounded interesting. When we meet this couple, their marriage is on the rocks, and we're supposed to root for them to rebuild their relationship, which could have been great if it wasn't for the fact that the husband seemed... pretty terrible. When we meet him, he's spent seven months giving his wife the silent treatment, but has decided that he just HAS to talk to her now, so he uses his magical abilities and the societal power they give him (and which she does not have) to muscle his way onto the important expedition she's about to set out on, even though she asks him not to. He then proceeds to lecture her about how busy he's been and how important he is, and how worthless her own work is. According to Goodreads their reconciliation is a big part of the rest of the book, and maybe he sees the error of his ways, but I just couldn't face it. Which is a shame, because I liked the female main character a lot and the world seemed potentially really interesting!
usuallyhats: River Song in her cell, looking up from her diary (river)
He Who Drowned the World - Shelley Parker-Chan
Hello World: How to be Human in the Age of the Machine - Hannah Fry
Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands - Kate Beaton
Into the Riverlands - Nghi Vo
The Water Outlaws - SL Huang
Band Sinister - KJ Charles
The Kingdom of Darkness - Sarah Monette
The Fox - Sherwood Smith
Perilous Times - Thomas D Lee
Desdemona and the Deep - CSE Cooney
Suradanna and the Sea - Rebecca Fraimow
Jade Shards - Fonda Lee
The Devil's Novice - Ellis Peters
The Raven Throne - Stephanie Burgis
America: Fast and Fuertona

He Who Drowned the World (five stars), Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands (five stars), Jade Shards (five stars)
He Who Drowned the World
This was incredible, Shelley Parker-Chan really stuck the landing with this one. It's frequently brutal, but not completely bleak - it's full of hurt people who now have the power to hurt others, and it doesn't shy away from the pain they cause (while still maintaining compassion and understanding for them), but it also knows and believes that there is another way and that other choices are possible, even if they're not easy and they might not last. It really grapples with ideas of power and whether it's justifiable to cause pain and suffering if it's in service of building a better world, and I really appreciated both that and the answers it found. I can't wait to see what Parker-Chan does next.

Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands
Ooof, this memoir of the two years Kate Beaton spent working on the oil sands was excellent and a lot. It grapples with a lot of big things (sexual assault and rape, the way capitalism strips away your choices) in a way that's often very bleak, but it's also leavened with a lot of the humour and warmth of people being people, and I'm really impressed that it contains both without either undermining the other.

Jade Shards
I absolutely inhaled these short stories in Fonda Lee's Green Bone universe. None of them are essential, but they flesh out the characters and world beautifully. Lee built such a rich world and characters in those books, and let them grow in really interesting and convincing ways, so it's always a pleasure to spend time in the universe - slightly bittersweet this time knowing she isn't intending to revisit it. I wouldn't recommend this as a jumping on point, but for anyone who's already read the trilogy, it's definitely worth your time.

(Content note for suicide on the second story)


I also really liked The Raven Throne and Hello World, and continue to thoroughly enjoy Sherwood Smith's Inda Quartet!

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