pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
Karl Kesel, et al. Harley Quinn: Preludes and Knock-Knock Jokes

In progress
(anthology). Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files 01

Non-fiction books
David Fromkin. A Peace to End All Peace

In progress
Chad Orzel. How to Teach Physics to Your Dog

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Tamora Pierce. Page
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
Tamora Pierce. First Test

In progress
(anthology). Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files 01

Non-fiction books in progress
David Fromkin. A Peace to End All Peace

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Tamora Pierce. Page
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
Maurice Broaddus. King Maker
Frances Hodgson Burnett. A Little Princess
Kelly Sue DeConnick, et al. Captain Marvel: In Pursuit of Flight
Warren Ellis, et al. Global Frequency
Kathryn Immonen, Kelly Sue DeConnick, Kevin Shinick, et al. Avenging Spider-Man: The Good, the Green and the Ugly
Chip Kidd, Dave Taylor. Batman: Death by Design
Mike Mignola, John Byrne. Hellboy: Seed of Destruction (re-read)
Mike Mignola. Hellboy: Wake the Devil
Mike Mignola. Hellboy: The Chained Coffin and others
Tamora Pierce. Realms of the Gods
Adrian Ramos. Some One to See the Emperor (re-read)
Charles Stross. The Apocalypse Codex
Syd of the Funny Hat. Q de Grace

Non-fiction books in progress
David Fromkin. A Peace to End All Peace

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Tamora Pierce. First Test
pedanther: (cheerful)
1. I once considered doing a blog where I'd post about events from fictions set in the future, on the dates they supposedly occurred. If I'd done it, there would have been a post due last Monday for Marty McFly's visit to the future in Back to the Future part II. If you've noticed it's taken me almost a week to mention this, you've discovered one of the reasons I decided not to go ahead with the blog. [ETA: And if you've noticed that I have no idea when Back to the Future part II is set, and will believe any munchkin with a doctored screencap without checking a reliable source as backup, you've discovered another reason.]


2. I've now read two novels on the Kobo. I'm finding it quite a comfortable reading experience, although I'm still having a bit of trouble with the page-turning. It's a touch-screen device, so instead of there being a Turn Page button, you tap on the screen, and it moves forward a page -- except when it moves forward two pages, or decides you really wanted a dictionary definition of the word nearest where you tapped.

One of the small but satisfying features is a result of the e-ink display, which only uses power when it is being changed. That means that when you switch the device off, the display doesn't have to go blank; displaying an appropriate image uses no more power. If you switch the device off while you're part way through a book, it displays the book's cover.


3. One of the two novels was A Little Princess, by Frances Hodgson Burnett, the author of The Secret Garden. It's got some really nice scenes, mostly those featuring the protagonist's interactions with her various and sometimes-unlikely friends, but I think on the whole I prefer The Secret Garden. The latter book also has really nice scenes featuring a protagonist interacting with various and sometimes-unlikely friends, and in addition it has the exploration of an interesting setting, and an ending that doesn't rely on a huge and improbable coincidence.


4. Mark Reads Tortall is coming to the end of the Immortals Quartet. I had been undecided about whether I would follow on when Mark got to the Tortall novels I've never read before, but since Tamora Pierce is coming to Swancon next year it seems like a good idea to continue. Anyway, it appears I'm already into the novels I've never read before: book four of the Immortals Quartet has been completely unfamiliar apart from the cover illustration, and I've got a strong suspicion I never actually got around to reading it the first time I read the series.

(Mark is also reading Mira Grant's Newsflesh trilogy, and watching Friday Night Lights, The West Wing, Dead Like Me, and Stargate SG-1. He keeps busy.)


5. A confluence of circumstances recently led me to ponder the idea of a crossover between Sherlock and Global Frequency. I came to two conclusions: First, and almost immediately, that Mycroft would not be out of place as one of the shady government figures who cause the messes that the Global Frequency Rescue Organization exists to clean up; and second, that if there is any of the regulars whom I would not be surprised to learn was on the Frequency, it's Molly.

(I'm not sure they'd want Sherlock, despite his talents, and I'm pretty confident he wouldn't want to be part of any hierarchy he wasn't at the top of. John knows how to take orders, but now that he's found his place by Sherlock they've got nothing he wants -- though having put it that way, it's interesting to speculate about what might have happened if they'd found him before Sherlock.)
pedanther: (cheerful)
1. So, the National Band Championships? To our utter, utter astonishment, we won our division, and are now the Australian D Grade Champions. Discussions are underway about the practicality of going to next year's championships (which will have returned to the far side of the continent) to defend the title.


2. My hotel room number for the weekend (assigned entirely without any input from myself) was 42.


3. I got to more of Swancon than I'd feared, if less than I'd hoped (and in the process usefully expanded my working knowledge of the city's public transport options). I enjoyed what I got to, and caught up with the usual suspects, including [livejournal.com profile] leecetheartist and [livejournal.com profile] rdmasters, who as usual introduced me to several games I was not previously familiar with. (I particularly liked Winter Tales, where the movement of the pieces on the board is just the skeleton of the game, and the emphasis is on collaboratively spinning a story about what the characters represented by the pieces are up to. I like collaborative storytelling. Other games I was introduced to included King of Tokyo, a silly but fun game in which giant monsters slug it out for the chance to trash Japan, and Roll Through the Ages, which had a bit too much number-crunching and not enough story for my taste.)

The guests at next year's Swancon are to include Tamora Pierce and Isobel Carmody.


4. I have a new gadget, a Kobo ebook reader. I haven't really used it much yet, because when I'm at home I prefer to make inroads on the enormous pile of unread dead-tree books in my living room, and save the ebooks for when I'm travelling. (I had intended to put it to work on the trip back, but it turned out I couldn't actually activate it and load it up until I got home.)


5. Too many people dying lately. I particularly regret the loss of Richard Griffiths, who played one of my favourite fictional detectives, Henry Crabbe, in the TV series Pie in the Sky. If that doesn't ring a bell, his film credits include wicked uncles in both Withnail and I and the Harry Potter series. He also had a noteworthy stage career. By all accounts he was a really nice guy, and will be missed.
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
Robert Bolt. A Man For All Seasons
Dorothy Hewett. The Man From Mukinupin
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Local Custom (e) (re-read)
Anne McCaffrey. Black Horses for the King
Tamora Pierce. The Emperor Mage (re-read)

Non-fiction books
Peter Macinnis. Mr Darwin's Incredible Shrinking World

In progress
David Fromkin. A Peace to End All Peace

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Maurice Broaddus. King Maker
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
Alexis Deacon. Croc and Bird
Tamora Pierce. Wolf-Speaker (re-read)
JR Poulter, Sarah Davis. Mending Lucille

In progress
Tamora Pierce. The Emperor Mage (re-read)

Non-fiction books in progress
Peter Macinnis. Mr Darwin's Incredible Shrinking World

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Robert Bolt. A Man For All Seasons
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
John M Ford. The Final Reflection (re-read)
John M Ford. How Much For Just the Planet? (re-read)
PC Hodgell. Honor's Paradox (e)
Sharon Lee. Carousel Tides (e)
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Mouse and Dragon (e) (re-read)
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Necessity's Child (e)
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Scout's Progress (re-read)
Tamora Pierce. Wild Magic (re-read)
George Bernard Shaw. Caesar and Cleopatra
Patricia Wrightson. The Nargun and the Stars

In progress
Tamora Pierce. Wolf-Speaker (re-read)

Abandoned
Rosemary Sutcliff. Sword at Sunset

Non-fiction books
TA Shippey. The Road to Middle-Earth 2nd ed.

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Peter Macinnis. Mr Darwin's Incredible Shrinking World
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
Justine Clark, Arthur Baysting, Tom Jellett. The Gobbledygook is Eating a Book
Mij Kelly, Mary McQuillan. Have You Seen My Potty?
John Masefield. Odtaa
John Masefield. The Taking of the Gry
Tamora Pierce. Lioness Rampant (re-read)
Ryk E Spoor. Phoenix Rising (e)

Non-fiction books, abandoned
Rossiter, Heather. Lady Spy, Gentleman Explorer: the life of Herbert Dyce Murphy

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Patricia Wrightson. The Nargun and the Stars
pedanther: (cheerful)
1. From the "I always assume everyone has heard about these already" department: Neil Gaiman's novel Neverwhere is being adapted into a six-part radio drama, with a cast that's wall-to-wall British acting talent, led by James McAvoy as Richard Mayhew, Benedict Cumberbatch as the angel Islington, and Anthony Head & David Schofield as Messrs. Croup & Vandemar. More details are on his blog.

Also forthcoming from Neil Gaiman: his second Doctor Who episode. Details are not on his blog, except this one: that it guest stars Warwick Davis.


2. A recent discussion at Ana Mardoll's blog got onto the subject of the loaded term "Mary Sue", and started trying to come up with more descriptive alternatives. Two terms have gained traction at the time of writing: "Magic Goose Hero" (so implausibly irresistible that all the characters want to grab on despite it making no sense for them to want to do so) for the character, and "Protagonist Centred Everything" for the problem. And this is the thing which came out in the discussion that I hope catches on, even if none of the actual terms do - that when a story revolves around an impossibly awesome protagonist, the protagonist and the problem are not one and the same. When the plot and other characters exist only to showcase how awesome the protagonist is, they're all part of the problem too.


3. Still reading along with Mark Reads Tortall. Nearing the end of the last book in the Lioness Quartet now, and things are starting to really come together. It's not as easy to stick to the one-chapter-at-a-time schedule as it used to be.


4. One of the nice things about the new washing machine is that it has a delayed start function, which means that I can load it up before I go to bed and wake up to newly-washed clothes in the morning. In theory. In practice, I need more work on getting the timing right - I got up on Saturday morning and went to see if the laundry cycle was finished, and arrived just in time to see it start.

(Also in washing machine news: I don't need a new stool after all, because the existing laundry chair - which the laundry basket sits in while I'm taking clothes out and hanging them up - is a good height for the job.)

(Yes, it's an exciting life I lead. I've learned to live with it.)


5. If somebody had told me Casino Royale opens with Freddy Fisher going down for treason, I might have watched it much sooner. (Or perhaps not. But it did provide a nice unexpected moment of interest. As did Alan Jackson's brief and ill-fated stint in MI6 a bit later, though him I admit I couldn't place until the credits.)

I don't think I'm really the target audience for this sort of thing, though; most of the big bravura action sequences had me, well before they ended, muttering "Yes, very nice, but can we get back to the plot now?"
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
(anthology). Kitties
(anthology). Liavek
Lois McMaster Bujold. Captain Vorpatril's Alliance (e)
John Masefield. Sard Harker
Tamora Pierce. The Woman Who Rides Like a Man (re-read)
Bram Stoker. The Jewel of Seven Stars

In progress
John Masefield. Odtaa
Tamora Pierce. Lioness Rampant (re-read)

Non-fiction books
Alain de Botton. The Consolations of Philosophy

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
John Masefield. The Taking of the Gry
pedanther: (cheerful)
Fiction books
Padraic Colum. The Golden Fleece and the Heroes Who Lived Before Achilles (e)
Tanith Lee. The Dragon Hoard (re-read)
John Masefield. The Midnight Folk (re-read)
Tamora Pierce. In the Hand of the Goddess (re-read)
Gene Luen Yang. American Born Chinese
Roger Zelazny. A Night in the Lonesome October (re-read)

In progress
(anthology). Liavek
Bram Stoker. The Jewel of Seven Stars

Non-fiction books in progress
Alain de Botton. The Consolations of Philosophy

In hiatus
Barbara Sher, Barbara Smith. I Could Do Anything If I Only Knew What It Was

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
John Masefield. Odtaa
pedanther: (cheerful)
1. I have four books simultaneously in progress. This is unusual for me; my normal process is to pick a book, read it until it's done, then move onto the next one. The main reason for the current fragmentation that I'm involved in two separate paced re-reads; of the other two books, one has established itself as a carry-in-pocket-and-read-at-odd-moments book, and the last is a short story anthology.

The read-at-odd-moments book is The Golden Fleece and the Heroes Who Lived Before Achilles by Padraic Colum, the first (and so far only) book to get full marks at Read All the Newberys. It's the read-at-odd-moments book partly because it's an ebook, so I'm going to have it with me anyway when I get trapped in a doctor's waiting room or whatever, and partly because, although I'm enjoying reading it, I'm not in a particular hurry to get back to it when I'm not. It has to be admitted that, although I've not read this version before, I do have a pretty good idea how it's going to end.

I'm re-reading Tamora Pierce's Alanna series in synch with Mark Reads Tortall. Early Tamora Pierce has a somewhat clunkier prose style than I remember her later work having, and the pacing is oddly episodic. So far I'm finding them pleasant enough, but not so gripping that waiting between chapters is a trial.

I'm re-reading A Night in the Lonesome October according to internal chronology (the prologue is set at some point in September, then there are 31 chapters headed "October 1" to "October 31"). There's not a formal re-read community for this, but I know people who have done it (and even people who do it every year), and I decided to give it a try. Doing two re-reads at once may turn out to be pushing it, but if I'd waited for Mark to finish the Tortall books, he would probably have been reading something else interesting instead. Too early yet to tell if I'm going to regret having to stop at the end of each chapter.


2. Speaking of Mark, he recently started a new blog called Mark Plays, which is the same thing as Mark Reads but with video games. He started with Portal, right now he's nearing the end of Portal 2, and he's just announced that next week he's going to start on Dragon Age: Origins.

This has nothing to do with why I finished Portal 2 this month, which I'd already done before I read Mark's announcement, but the timing was good. I'm so used to the idea that everybody knows all the big plot twists in Portal (or at least their associated quoted-to-death catchphrases) that I was surprised and entertained that he was surprised and entertained by all of them. He is continuing to be caught off-guard by every plot twist in Portal 2, including the one that gives "Chapter Four: The Surprise" its title, which I would have sworn nobody would have actually been surprised by. But then Mark never sees any plot twist coming. It's a big part of his blogs' appeal.


3. I have finished my first-pass read-through of I Could Do Anything, If I Only Knew What It Was; it's only taken me nine months. (Finishing it at all is a victory; if I didn't have procrastination issues, I probably wouldn't have been reading it in the first place.) The book is now full of bookmarks marking the bits I could benefit from going back over in more detail, and actually doing the exercises instead of just skimming past them. (Reading Chapter Nine made me sad; it was exactly what I needed ten years ago. Though whether I'd have heeded it if I'd had it is another question...)


4. Did we really just blow through the entire year's complement of Doctor Who episodes in a single month? Apparently we did. Huh.


5. If you are interested in one or more of the following: Muppets, Doctor Who, The Avengers (the movie with Mark Ruffalo and Robert Downey, Jr. and some other dudes in it, not any of the other things with that title), The Hunger Games, and/or Aaron Sorkin's The Newsroom, this video has something for you.
pedanther: (Default)
Fiction books
Sean E Avery. All Monkeys Love Bananas
Tamora Pierce. Alanna: The First Adventure (re-read)
Jo Walton. Among Others
Greg Weisman, Karine Charlebois. Gargoyles: Bad Guys (re-read)

In progress
(anthology). Liavek
Padraic Colum. The Golden Fleece and the Heroes Who Lived Before Achilles (e)
Tamora Pierce. In the Hand of the Goddess (re-read)
Roger Zelazny. A Night in the Lonesome October (re-read)

Non-fiction books
Douglas A. Anderson, Verlyn Flieger. J.R.R. Tolkien On Fairy-stories

In progress
Barbara Sher, Barbara Smith. I Could Do Anything If I Only Knew What It Was

short, screen, and stage )
books bought and borrowed )

Top of the to-read pile
Bram Stoker. The Jewel of Seven Stars
pedanther: (Default)
After listening to Frankie Valli's song "Oh, What a Night", it occurred to me that it's crying out to be filked as a tale of chivalry. My first thought was of Lancelot du Lac (possibly with some mention of his interactions with Guinevere); then it occurred to me that, approached from another angle, it could be used to tell the tale of, say, Alanna of Trebond. It all depends what you make of the line "What a lady! What a knight!"

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