usuallyhats: Janeway sitting at a table, smiling (janeway)
The Inheritance - Robin Hobb | Megan Lindholm
Treason's Shore - Sherwood Smith
Blue Skinned Gods - SJ Sindu
Cosmoknights, Vol 1
The Day the World Came to Town: 9/11 in Gander, Newfoundland - Jim DeFede
Cosmoknights, Vol 2
River Kings: A New History of the Vikings from Scandinavia to the Silk Road - Cat Jarman
The Sky on Fire - Jenn Lyons
The Silver Pigs - Lindsey Davis
On Vicious Worlds - Bethany Jacobs

The Once and Future Sex: Going Medieval on Women's Roles in Society - Eleanor Janega
The Bright Sword - Lev Grossman
Off-Time Jive - AZ Louise
Between Dragons and their Wrath - Devin Madson
Young Queens: Three Renaissance Women and the Price of Power - Leah Redmond Chang
The Sunforge - Sascha Stronach
Blood Sweat Glitter - Iona Datt Sharma
The Lotus Empire - Tasha Suri
Right Ho, Jeeves! - PG Wodehouse
Swordcrossed - Freya Marske
The Stardust Grail - Yume Kitasei

The Day the World Came to Town: 9/11 in Gander, Newfoundland (three and a half stars), Cosmoknights Vols 1 and 2 (five stars), The Bright Sword (four stars), Blood Sweat Glitter (five stars)The Day the World Came to Town: 9/11 in Gander, Newfoundland
I read this off the back of seeing Come From Away, which I absolutely loved. It's not the best prose ever - the author doesn't quite pull off what he's trying for with the shifting tenses, and the "mosaic of smaller stories" thing suffers slightly because the musical did it better* - but I really appreciated its dedication to telling as many stories as possible, as well as all the extra detail. The book did a particularly good job at conveying how difficult a job the air traffic control had to wrangle all these displaced planes, as well as bringing home the fact that many of the people on the diverted planes, including in some cases the crew, would have had no idea what was happening or why. (I did have a slight feeling about how many people were getting their news from the BBC, ngl.)

*of course it did, it's a musical, it has all those extra tools for that sort of thing AND it can take a few gentle liberties with the material

Cosmoknights Vols 1 and 2
This comic has everything. Space! Gorgeous art! So many women! Rescuing princesses from arranged marriages through the medium of mecha space jousts! What If Liberation Is More Complicated Than Just Rescuing Princesses From Arranged Marriages Through The Medium Of Mecha Space Jousts! Team ups for great justice! It's such a good time, I cannot wait for the next volume. And it's free to read!

The Bright Sword
In which a teenager arrives at Camelot, hoping to join the round table, only to find that Arthur and most of his knights fell at Camlann a fortnight earlier, and he and the remaining knights need to work out what the world should look like now. As a big fan of both Arthuriana and aftermath stories, this premise is very well targeted! And overall I liked this so much. At times it was a slighter more pessimistic take than I would prefer, to the point where there were moments that I wasn't sure I was actually enjoying reading it, but honestly given how well targeted to me it was, that might have been for the best, because when it worked for me it REALLY worked.

I also appreciated Grossman's sincere attempts to diversify the cast a little and give the women more to do. I didn't love
spoilersthe main disabled character getting Magically Healed
but overall a really solid attempt. I loved his Guinevere and would have liked to see more of her, and was also really fascinated by his interpretation of The Love Triangle:
spoilersLancelot is very much the bad guy and Guinevere genuinely was completely innocent!
- I don't think I've seen quite that version before, but there is so much Arthuriana I would not be surprised if it had come up before.

Speaking of, Grossman is clearly extremely well read on that front. It really felt like he knew the material really well and knew what he wanted to do with it, which is such a good feeling to have. It felt like it was particularly in conversation with The Once and Future King, but that might just be because a) it looms so large over this kind of retelling and b) I am basically always on some level thinking about The Once and Future King. I would love to read some scholarship on this book and its place within the genre.

(content note: non graphic rape and sexual abuse)

Blood Sweat Glitter
F/f roller derby romance novella! I inhaled this in one sitting. It's an absolute joy - funny, charming, with a lot of depth and substance to it. The characters, especially the main character, Eleanor, and their world, feel real and true; there's a lot going on in a relatively short word count to establish who they are and what the world they live in is like. It's beautifully grounded in its time and place - North London, early winter, after the initial horrors of the pandemic but still very much in their shadow - in a way that really worked for me.

I absolutely adored capable, lonely Eleanor, trying desperately to hold everything together. She and her love interest, Robin, are the catalyst for change in each other's lives in a way that's wonderful to see unfold. Robin too is a delight, and gradually coming to understand who she really is along with Eleanor was such a satisfying journey.

And as ever with Iona's writing, I found myself shrieking to myself in delight at some points and choking up at others - they truly are a master at subtly building to the point where you are suddenly extremely emotionally compromised and you can't quite explain why.

(Also I am very bad at roller skating, and I am scared of pain and falling over, but now I kind of want to join a roller derby team? Actually, on second thoughts, what I want is for my friends to join a roller derby team so I can cheer them on and buy all their stickers.)

Disclaimer: I received an ARC in return for an honest review, also the author is a friend.

Didn't finish:
The Weavers of Alamaxa - Hadeer Elsbai
The Weavers of Alamaxa
Sequel to The Daughters of Izdihar, which I enjoyed very much. Unfortunately this one sacrificed a lot of the things that I liked about its predecessor (character relationships! suffragettes!) in favour of a plot that would have been fine as a scaffold to hang richer worldbuilding and characterisation from, but didn't really work as the sole draw. I got about two thirds of the way through, at which point it became abruptly apparent that the dynamic I was most interested in was not going to get any more page time, so I stopped.
spoilery explanationTo recap, in the first novel, one of our heroines, the hot headed, privileged, but good hearted Nehal, ends up in an arranged marriage with Nico, who is already in a long term relationship with our other heroine, quiet but determined Giorgina. But instead of going the jealousy route or having Nico be a monster (he's a bit spineless but he cares a lot about them both, and he's Trying), Nehal immediately decides that this means Giorgina is Family and that she'd die for her if necessary (Giorgina is somewhat bemused by this), which I loved. Nehal also decides that she and Nico might as well be friends and allies if they're going to have to be married, which I also loved. I was really keen to see how the three of them were going to make their lives work, especially after Nehal turns out to be queer, but alas, Nico is unceremoniously killed off.
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (Default)
The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport - Samit Basu
Shubeik Lubeik
When Among Crows - Veronica Roth
The Sign of Four - Arthur Conan Doyle
The Iliad - Homer trans. Emily Wilson
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - Suzanne Collins
Glorious Exploits - Ferdia Lennon
Lady Eve's Last Con - Rebecca Fraimow
Winter's Gifts - Ben Aaronovitch

Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons
The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America - David Hadju
Voyage of the Damned - Frances White
The Inimitable Jeeves - PG Wodehouse
The Spear Cuts Through Water - Simon Jimenez
The Book of Witches ed Jonathan Strahan
A City on Mars: Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Really Thought This Through? - Kelly and Zach Weinersmith
Half a Crown - Jo Walton
The Wings Upon Her Back - Samantha Mills

When Among Crows (four stars), Glorious Exploits (four stars), Lady Eve's Last Con (five stars), Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons (five stars), Voyage of the Damned (three stars), Half a Crown (? stars)When Among Crows
Urban fantasy novella steeped in Polish mythology. I really enjoyed this! It didn't set my world on fire, but it was very well done and I would absolutely read anything else Roth writes in this world and with these characters.

Glorious Exploits
Two unemployed Syracusan potters attempt to stage Medea using a group of Athenian prisoners of war. The summary and the googly-eyes-on-a-statue cover make it sound like this is going to be a comedy, but it's really not, although it is funny: it's a brutal world, and a lot of awful things happen (and have happened) to characters we care about. It's very moving, and in places very hard to read.

The author is Irish and the characters talk like contemporary Irish people, which works really well both in and of itself, and in support of some of the book's themes: how far can we understand people, especially those who are very different from us? And how far are we willing to try? One of the book's strengths is that it avoids easy moral lessons, but it does believe that it's important to try.

Lady Eve's Last Con
F/f con artists in spaaaaaaace! This was an absolute delight - frothy and fun, but with enough care for the characters and their world to give it plenty of substance too.

Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons
Absolutely loved this take on the history of the Amazons. The first section was the best for me (not least because of how stunning Phil Jimenez's art is), but it was all great, I really hope DeConnick gets to do the rest of the planned volumes.

The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America - David Hadju
Really enjoyed this history of not just the moral panic around comics, but also their history more broadly - very engagingly written.

Voyage of the Damned
Definitely three stars (affectionate) rather than three stars (derogatory) here. There's a lot about this book that didn't work for me - the worldbuilding is Not Amazing being the key thing - but the main character was just so engaging that I had a great time anyway. He's a queer fat weirdo with an entirely understandable chip on his shoulder, dripping sarcasm but with an incredibly good heart; I really loved that even with the villains he would have a moment of "oh, I see how you're in pain here too, I'm sorry".

Half a Crown
I've liked a lot of things about this alt-history trilogy: they're overall absorbing and convincing, and particularly strong on how easy it is for a fascist society to back people into corners where it feels like there's nothing they can do. But WOW did this final volume not stick the landing.
full spoilersOur plucky heroine has a quick word with Queen Elizabeth, who then makes a big speech about how Fascism Is Bad Actually And We Should Just Not, everyone cheers, the bad guys are arrested and the surviving good guys released. ...really? That's what we're going for?
usuallyhats: The Second Doctor at the TARDIS console, Jamie biting his knuckles as he looks over the Doctor's shoulder (two jamie ohnoes)
The Feast Makers - HA Clarke
All That She Carried: The Journey of Ashley's Sack, a Black Family Keepsake - Tiya Miles
Have You Eaten? - Sarah Gailey
The Pilgrim of Hate - Ellis Peters
Displeasure Island - Alice Bell
Song of the Huntress - Lucy Holland
Liberty's Daughter - Naomi Kritzer
Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory - Ben MacIntyre
The Witches of World War II
Seeds of Mercury - Wang Jinkang / 水星播种, 王晋康, translated by Alex Woodend
Abeni's Song - P Djèlí Clark

Getting on with some Hugos reading now the voter packet is out! Liberty's Daughter is reviewed below, The Witches of World War II I liked but I thought needed a few more issues to flesh everything out a bit, Seeds of Mercury had some great ideas but also a fair bit of ableism, and Abeni's Song was lovely, but feels like middle grade to me, not YA.

Displeasure Island (five stars), Song of the Huntress (three stars), Liberty's Daughter (three stars)Displeasure Island
Sequel to Grave Expectations! I absolutely inhaled this. Loved the sense of humour, loved how well all the characters and their relationships were drawn, cannot wait for more.

Song of the Huntress
I liked a lot of things about this book. I enjoyed all the point of view characters very much - Aethul, Queen of Wessex; her husband Ine; Herla, former lover of Boudica, now leader of the Wild Hunt - and their relationships, especially Ine and Aethul and their struggles to connect and reconnect. And the prose was pretty good, if not quite as absorbing as I wanted it to be.

But it did feel a bit ahistorical at times, especially when it came to its queer characters. I did love that there was so much queerness (Aethul is bi, Herla is queer, there's a non-binary character, Ine is ace and it's GREAT), but the attitudes to that queerness just didn't quite ring true for me: as much as I don't want "everything is terrible in the Awful Homophobic Past", there is a lot of interesting ground between that and "everything is basically fine" that I love to see explored in fiction based in history.

ALSO. I did not love the idea of a magical power of kingship transmitted through bloodlines and originally bestowed by a being named Sovereignty. Again, this could have been interesting if explored and challenged, but as it was it was basically "divine right of kings, but it's pagan rather than Christian so it's FINE". It's still not fine!

Liberty's Daughter
This is very readable, but it also felt extremely disjointed (probably because it started life as a set of short stories), which made it hard to connect to anything that was happening, because the narrative kept making sudden swerves and failing to follow up on the consequences of previous threads. It's also RIDDLED with typos, my favourite being the secret stash of gold bouillon (and my least favourite being the mysterious disappearance of every 'd - I spent a while wondering if this was meant to indicate a Future Speech Pattern, but I think not?).
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!
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (Default)
Aristotle and Dante Dive into the Waters of the World - Benjamin Alire Sáenz
Team Queen - Tansy Rayner Roberts
Petty Treasons - Victoria Goddard
King of Scars - Leigh Bardugo
The Witness for the Dead - Katherine Addison
Lumberjanes: Parent's Day
Last Stand in Lychford - Paul Cornell
Lumberjanes: Time After Crime
The Heretic's Guide to Homecoming Book One: Theory - Sienna Tristen
Lumberjanes: Jackalope Springs Eternal
Concrete Rose - Angie Thomas
A-Force: Hypertime
Lumberjanes: Indoor Recess
The Lost Plot - Genevieve Cogman
Lumberjanes: X Marks the Spot
A Wizard of Earthsea - Ursula K Le Guin
Lumberjanes: Birthday Smarty
Amongst Our Weapons - Ben Aaronovitch
Lumberjanes: Mind Over Mettle
Vidding: A History - Francesca Coppa
Saint Death's Daughter - CSE Cooney
The Man Who Died Twice - Richard Osman
Lumberjanes: Smitten in the Stars
Spear - Nicola Griffith
Critical Role: Mighty Nein Origins: Caleb Widogast
Our Lady of Mysterious Ailments - TL Huchu
Lumberjanes: Horticultural Horizons
The Fat Lady Sings - Jacqueline Roy

Aristotle and Dante Dive into the Waters of the World (two stars), King of Scars (four stars), Concrete Rose (four stars), Saint Death's Daughter (five stars) )

I also read a ton of Lumberjanes, because my library got e-copies all of a sudden! I don't have much to say about the individual volumes, but despite the odd slight misstep here and there it remains a delight overall and I'm glad it exists.
usuallyhats: Steph carries Cass in her arms (she was my friend)
Forgot to actually post this last month so here's a bumper July-August edition!

The Jasmine Throne - Tasha Suri
Queen's Play - Dorothy Dunnett
The Middle Ages: A Graphic History - Eleanor Janega and Neil Max Emmanuel
Hawkeye: Rio Bravo
Detransition, Baby - Torrey Peters
Non-Binary Lives: An Anthology of Intersecting Identities ed Jos Twist, Ben Vincent, Meg-John Barker and Kat Gupta
Spellcracker's Honeymoon - Tansy Rayner Roberts
Shards of Earth - Adrian Tchaikovsky
The Case of the Missing Marquess - Nancy Springer
Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur: Cosmic Cooties
The Mighty Thor: Thunder In Her Veins
Riot Baby - Tochi Onyebuchi
The Mighty Captain Marvel: Alien Nation

The Flowers of Vashnoi - Lois McMaster Bujold
Three Seeking Stars - Avi Silver
She Who Became the Sun - Shelley Parker-Chan
Shadowhouse Fall - Daniel José Older
The Disorderly Knights - Dorothy Dunnett
The Folklore of Discworld - Terry Pratchett and Jacqueline Simpson
The Dark Archive - Genevieve Cogman
Drowned Country - Emily Tesh
Ghost-Spider: Dog Days Are Over

The Jasmine Throne (five stars), Spellcracker's Honeymoon (four stars), The Case of the Missing Marquess, She Who Became the Sun (five stars), The Folklore of Discworld, Ghost-Spider: Dog Days Are Over (three stars) )

Didn't finish: The Conductors - Nicole Glover )
usuallyhats: The four ghostbusters heading into battle (ghostbusters into battle)
(I definitely didn't forget I hadn't posted this yet /o\)

Fire Logic - Laurie J Marks
Cinderella is Dead - Kalynn Bayron
Black Water Sister - Zen Cho
Finna - Nino Cipri
Die: Split the Party
Upright Women Wanted - Sarah Gailey
Cemetery Boys - Aiden Thomas
Beowulf: A New Translation by Maria Dahvana Headley
A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking - T. Kingfisher
A Handful of Earth, A Handful of Sky: The World of Octavia E Butler - Lynell George

Hugo packet time! I've already read or decided not to read a fair bit of what's in it this year, mostly what's left is the comics, the novellas, a couple of Lodestars and a few other bits and pieces. I really love Hugo packet time; the ritual of downloading everything, seeing what's there and organising it all nicely is very pleasing to me.

Fire Logic (four stars), Black Water Sister (five stars), Die: Split the Party (four stars), Beowulf: A New Translation (four stars), A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking (three stars), A Handful of Earth, A Handful of Sky: The World of Octavia E Butler (four stars) )

Didn't finish: Ring Shout - P. Djèlí Clark )
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (Default)
Borderline - Mishell Baker
The Game of Kings - Dorothy Dunnett
Square Haunting: Five Writers in London Between the Wars - Francesca Wade
Fireheart Tiger - Aliette de Bodard
The Space Between Worlds - Micaiah Johnson
Sal and Gabi Break the Universe - Carlos Hernandez
Death Sets Sail - Robin Stevens
Magic for Liars - Sarah Gailey
Tales from the Folly - Ben Aaronovitch
This Golden Flame - Emily Victoria

If It Makes You Happy - Claire Kann
Rocket Girl: Only the Good
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl: I Kissed A Squirrel And I Liked It
Superior: The Return of Race Science - Angela Saini
Loveless - Alice Oseman
Lazarus: Lift
The Library of the Unwritten - AJ Hackwith
The Pale Dreamer - Samantha Shannon
Last Night at the Telegraph Club - Malinda Lo
Liquid Crystal Nightingale - Eeleen Lee
The Mask of Mirrors - MA Carrick
A Line in the Dark - Malinda Lo
The Library of the Dead - TL Huchu
The Unbroken - CL Clark

Rocket Girl: Only the Good (one star), Loveless (five stars), Last Night at the Telegraph Club (five stars), A Line in the Dark (? stars) )

Didn't finish: Queen of Coin and Whispers - Helen Corcoran )
usuallyhats: The four ghostbusters heading into battle (ghostbusters into battle)
Deeplight - Frances Hardinge
Critical Role: Vox Machina Origins II
The Wicked + The Divine: Okay
Minor Mage - T. Kingfisher
Catfishing on Catnet - Naomi Kritzer
Paper Girls Vol 5
Paper Girls Vol 6
Riverland - Fran Wilde
Gideon the Ninth - Tamsyn Muir
Monstress vol 2: The Blood
Monstress vol 3: Haven
Monstress vol 4: The Chosen
LaGuardia - Nnedi Okorafor and Tana Ford
Mooncakes - Suzanne Walker and Wendy Xu
Middlegame - Seanan McGuire
The Haunting of Tram Car 015 - P Djèlí Clark
The Deep - Rivers Solomon with Daveed Diggs, William Hutson and Jonathan Snipes
Exhalation - Ted Chiang
Dragon Pearl - Yoon Ha Lee
Silver in the Wood - Emily Tesh

(hello yes I am doing my Hugo reading)

The Wicked + The Divine: Okay (five stars), Gideon the Ninth (four stars), Middlegame (two stars), The Haunting of Tram Car 015 (three stars) )

Didn't finish: The City in the Middle of the Night - Charlie Jane Anders )

Short stories I enjoyed this month:
Away with the Wolves - Sarah Gailey: This was a lovely, hopeful story about friendship, chronic pain and building the life you want, not the life you've been told you should have.
usuallyhats: River Song in her cell, looking up from her diary (river)
Rosewater - Tade Thompson
Rivers of London: Night Witch
On a Red Station, Drifting - Aliette de Bodard
How To: Absurd Scientific Advice for Common Real-World Problems - Randall Munroe
The Rosewater Insurrection - Tade Thompson
Girl, Woman, Other - Bernardine Evaristo
The Floating Brothel - Siân Rees
Pet - Akwaeke Emezi
The Night Tiger - Yangsze Choo
Desolation Island - Patrick O'Brian
The Future of Another Timeline - Annalee Newitz
Critical Role: Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting - Matthew Mercer with James Haeck
The Rosewater Redemption - Tade Thompson
Tarnished Are the Stars - Rosiee Thor


Rivers of London: Night Witch (three stars), The Night Tiger (four stars), The Future of Another Timeline (four stars), Tarnished Are the Stars )

Didn't finish: The Rage of Dragons - Evan Winter )


Short stories I enjoyed this month:
Kin, Painted by Penny Stirling: a weird, very queer, offbeat story of someone trying to find their place in the world. I enjoyed it very much.
Seonag and the Seawolves - M. Evan MacGriogair: absolutely spellbinding.
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (Default)
A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe - Alex White
The Thirteenth Doctor: Hidden Human History
Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking: A Memoir of Food and Longing - Anya von Bremzen
Die: Fantasy Heartbreaker
The Mortal Word - Genevieve Cogman
Planetary: All Over the World and Other Stories
Astounding: John W. Campbell, Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, L. Ron Hubbard, and the Golden Age of Science Fiction - Alec Nevala-Lee
Doctor Who: The Dimension Riders - Daniel Blythe
A Duet for Invisible Strings - Llinos Cathryn Thomas
Do You Dream of Terra-Two? - Temi Oh
Ms Marvel: Time and Again
Arthur Ransome and Captain Flint's Trunk - Christina Hardyment
Otherbound - Corinne Duyvis
Strangers at Court - Seanan McGuire

A Duet for Invisible Strings (five stars), Do You Dream of Terra-Two? (three stars) )

I also really loved Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking, but couldn't seem to muster up any words about it? I recommend it though. Die: Fantasy Heartbreaker was also extremely good, but I'm reluctant to fully recommend it without knowing more about where it's going: five issues is really not a lot. Fully recommend Stephanie Hans's art though.
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (how do you want to do this)
The Girl with the Dragon Heart - Stephanie Burgis
The Raven Tower - Ann Leckie
The Unkindest Tide - Seanan McGuire
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry - Rachel Joyce
The Adventure Zone: Here There Be Gerblins
How Long 'til Black Future Month? - NK Jemisin
The Mabinogion trans. Sioned Davies
Jingo - Terry Pratchett
The Thirteenth Doctor: A New Beginning
Lumberjanes: The Infernal Compass
Circe - Madeline Miller
The Wicked + The Divine: Mothering Invention
The Priory of the Orange Tree - Samantha Shannon
The Wicked + The Divine: Old is the New New
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe - Benjamin Alire Sáenz

The Raven Tower (? stars), The Adventure Zone: Here There Be Gerblins (five stars), The Mabinogion, The Priory of the Orange Tree (four stars), Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe )
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (silk)
Take Courage: Anne Brontë and the Art of Life - Samantha Ellis
Binti - Nnedi Okorafor
A Larger Reality / Una Realidad más Amplia ed. Libia Brenda
The True Queen - Zen Cho
Doctor Who: Blood Heat - Jim Mortimore
This Is How You Lose the Time War - Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone
The Cloud Roads - Martha Wells
The Serpent Sea - Martha Wells
The Siren Depths - Martha Wells
Stories of the Raksura vol 1 - Martha Wells
Midnighter: Hard
The Edge of Worlds - Martha Wells
The Harbors of the Sun - Martha Wells

Take Courage: Anne Brontë and the Art of Life (four stars), The True Queen (four stars), Doctor Who: Blood Heat (probably three stars), This Is How You Lose the Time War (five stars), Martha Wells's Raksura books (four stars), Midnighter: Hard (three stars) )
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (how do you want to do this)
Built: The Hidden Stories Behind Our Structures - Roma Agrawal
Dread Nation - Justina Ireland
The Calculating Stars - Mary Robinette Kowal
Gods, Monsters and the Lucky Peach - Kelly Robson
The Black God's Drums - P. Djèlí Clark
Nimona - Noelle Stevenson
Saga vol 9
Dungeons and Dragons Art and Arcana: A Visual History - Kyle Newman, Jon Peterson, Michael Witwer, Sam Witwer
Abbott
Good Omens - Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman
Strong Poison - Dorothy L Sayers
Have His Carcase - Dorothy L Sayers
Gaudy Night - Dorothy L Sayers
Ms Marvel: Teenage Wasteland
Busman's Honeymoon - Dorothy L Sayers
The Cruel Prince - Holly Black
Artificial Condition - Martha Wells

(this month's "I've forgotten how to like books and I need resetting" rereads: Good Omens and all the Harriet Vane books)

Dread Nation (four stars), The Calculating Stars (two stars), Gods, Monsters and the Lucky Peach (three stars), The Black God's Drums (four stars), Dungeons and Dragons Art and Arcana: A Visual History (four stars), Ms Marvel: Teenage Wasteland (five stars) )


Didn't finish: Infomocracy - Malka Ann Older )
usuallyhats: River Song in her cell, looking up from her diary (river)
A Red-Rose Chain - Seanan McGuire
Once Broken Faith - Seanan McGuire
The Brightest Fell - Seanan McGuire
Night and Silence - Seanan McGuire
Trail of Lightning - Rebecca Roanhorse
Paper Girls vol 1
Paper Girls vol 2
Paper Girls vol 3
Paper Girls vol 4
Lies Sleeping - Ben Aaronovitch
Kingdom of Copper - SA Chakraborty
Black Panther: Long Live the King

Trail of Lightning (four stars), Paper Girls (four stars), Black Panther: Long Live the King (three stars), Kingdom of Copper (five stars) )
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (alicia books)
Assassin's Quest - Robin Hobb
Thornbound - Stephanie Burgis
Faith: Hollywood and Vine
Not Your Villain - CB Lee
City of Brass - SA Chakraborty

Rereading some Robin Hobb turned out to be a very successful reset button, I seem to have remembered how to enjoy books again. Or at least how to trust my own reactions to them and not go into a spiral of "oh no I don't know how to like books anymore I will NEVER LOVE AGAIN" any time I read something I'm not 100% into.

Faith: Hollywood and Vine (four stars), Not Your Villain (three stars), City of Brass (four stars) )
usuallyhats: The Ninth Doctor, Rose and Jack (nine/rose/jack)
Landmarks - Robert Macfarlane
The Seventh Bride - T Kingfisher
Han Solo - Marjorie Liu
Night and Silence - Seanan McGuire
Tiny Titans: Welcome to the Treehouse
Tess of the Road - Rachel Hartmann
Doctor Who: Mission: Impractical - David A. McIntee
Cream Buns and Crime - Robin Stevens
A Seditious Affair - KJ Charles
A Case of Possession - KJ Charles
Doctor Who: Time and Relative - Kim Newman
The Wicked and the Divine: Rising Action
The Wicked and the Divine: Imperial Phase, Part 1
The Wicked and the Divine: Imperial Phase, Part 2
The Ninth Flame - Jen Williams
Spectred Isle - KJ Charles
Hamilton's Battalion - Alyssa Cole, Courtney Milan and Rose Lerner
Things A Bright Girl Can Do - Sally Nicholls

(I briefly experimented with cross-posting these to Goodreads, but then the editor of the Critical Role comic I read last month commented on my review to tell me my opinions were wrong, so definitely don't want to do that anymore.)

Han Solo (five stars), Tiny Titans: Welcome to the Treehouse (three stars), Tess of the Road (three stars), Doctor Who: Time and Relative (four stars), Things A Bright Girl Can Do (four stars) )
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (hermione hearts books)
Cryoburn - Lois McMaster Bujold
The Lost Steerswoman - Rosemary Kirstein
The Language of Power - Rosemary Kirstein
The Third Nero - Lindsey Davis
The Underwater Ballroom Society ed Stephanie Burgis and Tiffany Trent
La Belle Sauvage - Philip Pullman
Brit(ish) - Afua Hirsch
When I Hit You: Or, Portrait of the Writer as a Young Wife - Meena Kandasamy
Patsy Walker aka Hellcat: Hooked on a Feline
Supergirl: Reign of the Cyborg Supermen
Star Trek: Waypoint vol 1

La Belle Sauvage
This gets its own cut, because I want to talk about something in the last 20% of the book, and I can't be bothered to find the code for the spoiler bars. not actually that spoilery, I don't think? ) So overall I'm not sure what I thought of it - some of it I definitely loved, other stuff not so much.

Cryoburn (three stars), The Underwater Ballroom Society (four stars), Star Trek: Waypoint vol 1 (four stars), Patsy Walker aka Hellcat: Hooked on a Feline (four stars), )

Didn't finish: The Golden Legend - Nadeem Aslam )
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (shocking)
All Systems Red - Martha Wells
The Bone Readers - Jacob Ross
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child - JK Rowling, Jack Thorne and John Tiffany
A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal - Ben MacIntyre
Assassin's Fate - Robin Hobb
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Enigma Tales - Una McCormack
Station Eleven - Emily St. John Mandel
The World of Arthur Ransome - Christina Hardyment
Swallowdale - Arthur Ransome
Black Panther: Worlds of Wakanda
The Voyage of the Basilisk - Marie Brennan
Snowspelled - Stephanie Burgis

All Systems Red (five stars), Assassin's Fate (five stars), Station Eleven (five stars), Black Panther: Worlds of Wakanda (three stars), Snowspelled (four stars) )
usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (alicia books)
Honourable Friends? Parliament and the fight for change - Caroline Lucas
The Thing Around Your Neck - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Orangeboy - Patrice Lawrence
Black Panther: A Nation Under Our Feet vol 2
Sister Mine - Nalo Hopkinson
The Dark Lord of Derkholm - Diana Wynne Jones
Giant Days vol 1
Phonogram: The Immaterial Girl
The Glass Universe: The Hidden History of the Women Who Took the Measure of the Stars - Dava Sobel
Fool's Quest - Robin Hobb
The Magpie Lord - KJ Charles

Giant Days vol 1 (four stars), The Magpie Lord (five stars) )

Short stories I enjoyed this month:
Beauty, Glory, Thrift - Alison Tam: contained SPACE and WOMEN, so off to a good start, but also an interesting plot and a world I wanted to see more of. Plus quietly optimistic when it could easily have gone a different way.

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usuallyhats: The cast of Critical Role sitting round a table playing Dungeons and Dragons (Default)
incorrigibly frivolous

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