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Fiction books
Ben Aaronovitch. Winter's Gifts (e)
Mary Robinette Kowal. The Calculating Stars (e)
Dave Luckett. Rhianna and the Castle of Avalon
Dave Luckett. Rhianna and the Dogs of Iron
Dave Luckett. Rhianna and the Wild Magic (re-read)
Kim Newman. The Hound of the D'Urbervilles (re-read)
Robert Newman. A Puzzle for Sherlock Holmes (re-read)
Martha Wells. All Systems Red (e) (re-read)
Martha Wells. Artificial Condition (e) (re-read)
Martha Wells. Exit Strategy (e) (re-read)
Martha Wells. Fugitive Telemetry (e) (re-read)
Martha Wells. Network Effect (e) (re-read)
Martha Wells. Rogue Protocol (e) (re-read)
Martha Wells. System Collapse (e)

In progress
Anne Brontë. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (e)
Alexandre Dumas. The Count of Monte Cristo (e) (re-read)
Robert Louis Stevenson. Kidnapped (e)

Non-fiction books in progress
Neil Gaiman. Adventures in the Dream Trade (e)
AC Grayling. The Good Book

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

Top of the to-read pile
Patricia A. McKillip. The Riddle-Master of Hed
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Fiction books
Ryk E Spoor. Shadows of Hyperion (e)
Vernor Vinge. Marooned in Realtime (re-read)
Vernor Vinge. The Peace War (re-read)
Martha Wells. Fugitive Telemetry (e)

Non-fiction books
Adrian Goldsworthy. Philip and Alexander (e)

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

Top of the to-read pile
Andrew Cartmel. Script Doctor: The Inside Story of Doctor Who 1986-1989
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Fiction books
Alexandre Dumas tr. Robin Buss. The Count of Monte Cristo (e) (re-read)
Rudyard Kipling. Kim
Martha Wells. Exit Strategy (e)
Martha Wells. Network Effect (e)

In progress
(anthology). Batman Black and White, volume 3 (re-read)

Non-fiction books in progress
Ron Chernow. Alexander Hamilton (e)

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

Top of the to-read pile
Sharon Lee, Steve Miller. Trader's Leap
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Fiction books
Martha Wells. Rogue Protocol (e)
Roger Zelazny. A Night in the Lonesome October (re-read)

In progress
(anthology). Batman Black and White, volume 3 (re-read)

Non-fiction books in progress
Ron Chernow. Alexander Hamilton (e)

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

Top of the to-read pile
P Djeli Clark. A Dead Djinn in Cairo
pedanther: (Default)
. The wait time for the library system's copy of the second Murderbot Diaries book turned out to be three weeks instead of the estimated two-three months, which I suppose makes sense since the estimate is probably based on assuming people will have the book for the full loan period but it's quite a short book and I, for instance, had it back to the library within a few days.

Reading these is an interesting experience: normally I really don't enjoy stories where a likeable character is stuck in socially awkward situations, and Murderbot is getting stuck in socially awkward situations all the time, but -- it's like, you know how in a series where the protagonist is being put in physical peril all the time, no matter how bad it gets in a given moment you can take comfort from knowing that the author's not going to go too far? In this series, arguably Murderbot's emotional stress has at least as much dramatic weight as the physical peril, and to me it feels like it comes with the same kind of implicit promise that no matter how bad it is in the moment, it's never going to be too much.


. I don't usually start reading long fanfics until they're complete, because I don't like worrying about the possibility of being left hanging if the story is never finished (note scribbled in margin: also why never watch TV now? hmmm), but after I devoured Like Fire in Our Bones, I wanted to see what happened next so much that I started reading the sequel immediately even though it's still in progress. So far, that's paid off; new chapters are being published often, and the story is still great. It does, however, mean that the story and its characters are continuing to take up space in the part of my brain that holds information about my ongoing reading, which may be why I haven't attempted anything else this month that couldn't be read in a single sitting.


. Another thing taking up space in the mental filing cabinet of ongoing reading is Batman: The Adventures Continue, the latest comic book series spun off from Batman: The Animated Series. It's okay.


. On the plus side, possibly because the mental filing cabinet is currently optimised for serial fiction, this is the first year in ages when I've felt up to doing Lonesome October again. I always think about it, but most years lately I've felt like I was too busy or didn't have the spare mental or emotional capacity or whatever.

It works like this: Roger Zelazny's novel A Night in the Lonesome October has been described as an advent calendar for Halloween: apart from the prologue, it has 31 chapters, each set on the corresponding day in October, and readers are encouraged to space it out and read each chapter on the appropriate day. The story itself is a cheerfully macabre tale involving vampires, werewolves, indescribable Things, and other such seasonal delights. (As well as a guest appearance by an unnamed famous detective who might well be Basil Rathbone's Sherlock Holmes, because if you're already including every other famous character from the black-and-white Universal Studios movies of the 1930s and 1940s, why not?)
pedanther: (Default)
Fiction books
(anthology). Batman Black and White, volume 2 (re-read)
Martha Wells. Artificial Condition (e)

In progress
(anthology). Batman Black and White, volume 3 (re-read)
Roger Zelazny. A Night in the Lonesome October (re-read)

Non-fiction books
Karen Armstrong. A Short History of Myth (e)

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

Top of the to-read pile
P Djeli Clark. A Dead Djinn in Cairo
pedanther: (Default)
Fiction books
Ben Aaronovitch. Tales from the Folly (e)
Ben Aaronovitch, Andrew Cartmel, Lee Sullivan, et al. Body Work
Ben Aaronovitch, Andrew Cartmel, Lee Sullivan, et al. Detective Stories
Ben Aaronovitch, Andrew Cartmel, Lee Sullivan, et al. Night Witch
JRR Tolkien. The Fellowship of the Ring (e) (re-read)
JRR Tolkien. The Return of the King (e) (re-read)
JRR Tolkien. The Two Towers (e) (re-read)
Martha Wells. All Systems Red (e)

In progress
(anthology). Batman Black and White, volume 2 (re-read)

Non-fiction books in progress
Karen Armstrong. A Short History of Myth (e)

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

Top of the to-read pile
P Djeli Clark. A Dead Djinn in Cairo
pedanther: (Default)
. Apart from the regular gaming group meet-ups, I've also been drawn into a smaller group who meet sometimes on weekends to play the kind of board games that take hours to get through and so don't usually get brought out at the more casual meet-ups. Among other things, that's meant I recently got a chance to play Fury of Dracula again for the first time in years. I played Dracula, and I started well but the hunters found my trail just as I was about to slip through their cordon and get away into the area they'd already searched, and after that I never quite managed to shake them off until they eventually cornered me in Madrid. Everybody had a good time, so perhaps it won't be years again before I next play.


. 'Tis the season to look wistfully at fic exchange sign-ups and then decide not to get involved. Lately I've been particularly wistful about Remix Revival (which I enjoyed a lot the first time I did it, but I'd feel weird doing it again when I haven't written anything else substantial in the interim) and FEAR Buddies, where instead of matching on people to write fics for it matches on people who need cheerleading/motivation to finish a fic they were already planning to do. That one seemed like something that would be useful, and where I could be useful, but signing up would have involved, like, figuring out what kind of motivation I need and writing it down and stuff. I'd sign up for a lot more exchanges if the sign-up forms could read my mind and make these sorts of decisions for me.


. I've just finished re-reading The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. It's the first time I've re-read them all the way through since before the Hobbit movies came out, so I spent quite a bit of time noticing differences between the books and the adaptations. One thing that struck me particularly this time through is about travel times; in the adaptations, journeys tend to be "travel montage of indeterminate length" or "cut to them arriving", but in the books Tolkien always gives a definite idea of how long a journey took, so there's more of an impression of how big the land is and how far apart things are. There are places in the movies where it seems like the characters are getting somewhere the same day but in the books it's several days travel, or in the movies it seems like a few days but in the book it's weeks.


. Another thing I've read recently is "All Systems Red", the first novella in the Murderbot Diaries series by Martha Wells, which has been on my to-read pile for ages but I never got around to before. Now I have a decision to make, because the second book in the series is significantly more expensive (maybe it's a full novel? I'm not sure), but the current wait time on the library system's copy is two months.


. I've occasionally noted the progress of the local paper's rerun of the Modesty Blaise comic strip, so for completeness there is one more development to note. (This actually happened a couple of months ago, but I didn't hear about it at the time because I stopped reading paper newspapers during the coronavirus restrictions and haven't restarted.) It's not carrying the strip any more, having decided that some of what passed as acceptable when the strip originally ran is no longer suitable for a family newspaper. Looking back, it's not exactly that I was unaware of the strip's shortcomings, but I never really thought about it because it was such a familiar presence; I might have gone "well, it was written fifty years ago" but I never got from there to ask the question "so why is it being given space here and now?". Apparently whoever was responsible for the content of the comics page was in a similar headspace, at least until the rerun got up to the story set in the Australian outback, at which point the problem started hitting close to home and the question was forcefully received from multiple directions and received the only possible answer.

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