ursula: bear eating salmon (Default)
Ursula ([personal profile] ursula) wrote2018-12-26 04:34 pm
Entry tags:

Wednesday reading spent some time on a plane

comments on endings

Kelly Robson, Gods, Monsters, and the Lucky Peach. This ends with a sudden reconfiguration of the stakes; it feels like a short story structure, or the end of the first act of a novel. It's not ineffective, but I would have liked to keep going.

K.J. Charles, A Fashionable Indulgence. Apparently suddenly killing people at the climax is just a thing Charles does? This was the sort of fluffy fun I expected, but I was frustrated by the resolution of the inheritance problems. Sudden deaths of rich relatives are rather a feature of the genre, though an actual nineteenth-century novel would probably have gone for disease or accident, rather than the method employed here. But I'm not convinced that giving half one's inheritance to one's cousin so he can wear nice clothes and avoid finding a profession is a particularly feminist act, no matter how arbitrary one's deceased relative's dictates are, nor how nice one's cousin. The next book in this sequence seems promising, however.

fiction in progress

Ben Aaronovitch, Lies Sleeping. I'm enjoying seeing more of Guleed.
cassyblue: a green caterpillar in a space suit with a rainbow pride badge (Default)

[personal profile] cassyblue 2018-12-28 02:58 am (UTC)(link)
there is going to be a sequal to gods, monsters, and lucky peach. I hope that tor eventually publishes them as an omnibus like they did with american hippo since that would make things work much better.