davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
 Recent Reading:

Just Stab Me Now, Jill Bearup

"I had such a beautiful evening planned: candlelight, dancing, flirtatious threats, and what do I get? Grand Theft Equine."

Lady Rosamund Hawkhurst is having a bad day. Not only has her plea to the queen for help with her skeevy liege lord had an equivocal answer, but she's come out of it charged with a diplomatic mission to the other side in the ongoing war, which has already killed her husband (opening her up to the advances of said skeevy liege lord). Rosy is actually a logical choice for the mission, not only was she born on the other side of the border, but her sister is married to the new king. But given that, why has she only been given one man as an escort? Is she being set up?

Meanwhile Caroline Lindley is having problems with her new romance novel, because her heroine refuses to tamely follow the lovely enemies to lovers plot she had laid out for her.

Jill Bearup has a youtube channel with half a million subscribers where her main thing is really good fight analysis, along with related stuff such as dissecting female fantasy armour in all its ludicruousness. One of her spin-off ideas was a series of short segments where she played both sides of a romance author finding her heroine has really awkward opinions about the practicality of her enemies to lovers plot. And which many of her fans urged her to turn into a book. A year or so later, here we are.

I liked the original shorts, but I was a bit worried as to whether she could carry off the writing. The first half dozen pages are a little ropy but after that it settles down. One thing she did have to do was to expand on the Caroline side of the plot, well, actually, to give the Caroline side of things an actual plot, but she managed that. The Rosamund side is still clearly the focus of the book, but there is an actual B-plot now. Obviously there's a whole meta level to things and if you just want a straightforward fantasy romance then you might have come to the wrong place, but if you don't mind literary meta games it's perfectly readable.

The Untold Story (Invisible Library Book 8), Genevieve Cogman

Book 8 of the series, and things are coming to a head. Librarian Irene Winters, her not-boyfriend Kai the dragon prince, great detective Vale, and her new apprentice and teenage Fae bookworm Catherine are facing up to the likelihood that series big-bad Alberich is probably going to try and take out Irene in the near future, never mind that he's her father, and they should probably get their retribution in first. Complicating things, the Library is increasingly playing politics to keep the Dragons and Fae in balance, rather than keeping the Dragons and Fae in balance by stealing unique books from all the worlds of the multiverse, while the rumour-mill is whispering that entire worlds are disappearing. Something must be done, and it's probably going to have to be Irene doing the doing.

As an end to the series I rather liked this, the plot-logic makes sense and the story goes where the storytelling needs it. But honestly, I think I always preferred the simple book heists we and Irene started out with.
 

Currently Playing:

I'm waiting for the 1.0 release of Seven Days To Die, due later this month, after which I'll start a new playthrough of that, but in the meantime:

Marvel, Midnight Suns

The XCOM II engine meets the Marvel Multiverse, meets a deckbuilding combat mechanic. I picked this up because it's this week's free game on Epic (until 4pm tomorrow). It's spawned out of the Midnight Sons, a Marvel team I'd never even heard of, even if some of the members are more familiar (Blade!). The plot is Hydra has awakened Lilith, some sort of demon queen, who wants to bring about general lamentation. It's happened before, and that time she was stopped by her sister Sara/The Caretaker, and Lilith's child, the Hunter, a new hero, recently resurrected, who you get to customise as you go. Along for the ride are the usual bunch of Marvel misfits:

On the team so far: Doctor Strange, Iron Man, Captain Marvel, Scarlet Witch, Blade, Ghost Rider (Robbie Reyes), Magik, and Nico Minoru.

Just passing through: Spiderman, Ghost Rider (Johnnie Blaze)

Batting for the wrong team: Fallen Venom, Doctor Faustus

I've only played the tutorial and the first mission, so I haven't progressed very far or met everyone yet. I'm not a total fan of the deckbuilder mechanic, you end up with fewer options than the XCOM engine normally gave you, but it's interesting and AIUI you get better control of the decks as you progress. It is slightly annoying that even major powers like Doctor Strange and Captain Marvel start off almost evenly matched against Hydra grunts, but I guess that's the normal problem of trying to serve up fan favourites in a scenario that also needs to include less overpowered characters.

Overall: worth it at the price.

Subnautica

Survival on an alien ocean world that starts to develop definite horror overtones as you explore further, "We shouldn't have gone so deep!"

I've played this before without actually getting very far, this time I'll see if I can be a bit more systematic about making progress into the underlying plot. Rather gorgeous graphics matched with the normal survival game build this to discover that to go on and build the next thing mechanics.

 

davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

 I've been meaning to recommend NK Jemisin's novella Emergency Skin, which has been sitting on my Kindle for a year or so but which I finally read over the holidays. Subtle it isn't. A soldier from a society founded by all the billionaires abandoning Earth before it's inevitable collapse into an over-populated, mixed-race, climate hellhole full of useless eaters* finds it isn't at all what he was led to expect.

Imagine Elon Musk and Peter Thiel having a baby society together....

This really changed the way I've been looking at Musk's whole Mars thing.

* Perceptions may vary for those among us who aren't white male billionaires.

And just today SL Huang's newsletter pointed me at her new novelette Murder By Pixel in Clarkesworld, which predates the news frenzy about ChatGPT (by a whole day she says!), but reads like it she has spent ages considering its implications. She says she's actually spent ages considering the whole field's implications, coming out at the same time as ChatGPT was just serendipity. It's presented as a journalist investigating a story of social media harassment, but keeps diving deeper.

Other Recent Reading:

Hammered, Lindsay Buroker

Competent urban fantasy. Elves and dwarves etc are sort of known about, but have mostly abandoned Earth (being policed by the military and their hired assassins might have something to do with it). Seattle house-flipper Matti Puletasi is a half-dwarf who tries to stay out of the military's eye, but the military killed her mother and jailed her father when she was a child, so when her latest project turns into a battleground between the local werewolves and an extremely arrogant elven assassin and draws in the military things get complicated.

Rachel Peng series (Digital Divide, Maker Space, State Machine, Brute Force), K B Spangler.

Re-read, technothriller spin-off from Spangler's A Girl and her Fed webcomics. Rachel's an OACET agent, meaning she has a quantum chip in her head that allows her to access any computer system, and the legal right to take over any law-enforcement investigation she wants. Meanwhile her job as liaison to the Washington DC Metro PD is to forge bonds with normal law enforcement. These two things do not sit naturally together. (Neither would the fact she's blind, if anyone realises she's dependent on the chip to see).

Possibly my favourite series, and the re-read isn't changing that. And timely, as Spangler has just announced the three other planned books in the series will be appearing this year.

Greek Key, K B Spangler

Re-read. A spin-off from State Machine, with Spangler's Girl as its protagonist. This is where she partitions the AGAHF weirdness from the Rachel Peng books. Hope Blackwell's rich, brilliant, lethal, and Ben Franklin's her best buddy, because she sees ghosts. She's also married to the head of OACET (aka the Fed, aka Sparky) and Sparky sends her to Greece, where he's legally forbidden from operating, to track down the foreign leads from State Machine. Also featuring Helen of Sparta (yes, that Helen, and no, not Troy), Mike, the world's worst pacifist, and Speedy, the koala.

Sidequested : K B Spangler, Ale Presser

New fantasy web-comic from Spangler and her AGAHF artist Ale Presser (apparently the original concept was Presser's). The main plot direction's not apparent yet, but Robin, daughter of the 'evil witchqueen' has just been 'rescued' from her tower by not the handsome prince, but the handsome prince's (female) cousin Charlie (our protagonist), with running commentary by comedy-vulture Peony. Charlie's engaging but a little bit of a cypher, while Robin is definitely perky-goth - Peach and Charcoal Grey, who knew that would work as a colour combination?!?

(Or is that coral and charcoal grey? I'm hopeless at colour nuances).

Halting State, Rule 34, Charles Stross

Re-read. Linked darkly humourous technothrillers set in a post-Independence Scotland. Halting State has the police and forensic auditors investigating a bank raid in a MMORPG that turns out to have rapidly escalating consequences in the non-virtual world (and that title is brilliantly appropriate). Rule 34 - that if you can think of it, the internet has porn about it, has its protagonists caught up in a rapidly widening set of murders by domestic appliance. (And pairs thematically with SL Huang's Murder by Pixel). I really wish Stross had written the originally planned third book.

Born Magic, the Diary of Scarlett Bernard, Melissa F Olson

This one's a bit weird. Scarlett's a cleaner for the Los Angeles supernatural underworld, meaning she knows not just how to get blood out of the carpet, but what to do with the bodies afterwards, and has played that role through a series of urban fantasies, but in this one she's on maternity leave. And what we get is "Dear protege, I know you're away at college, so I'm writing this diary just in case I die and you have to pick up looking after my baby, the promised one". It's a weird structure, but it sort of works, though with a few too many chapter breaks for "sorry the baby needed changing" and "sorry, the baby scared herself and levelled the house". Ultimately, it's flawed by being 'bringing up the promised one' with a side order of plot, rather than vice-versa.

Fastening the Grave, L A McBride

This is one of those books that you find really annoying, but end-up quite liking in spite of itself. Kali James sees ghosts, who inevitably want something from her, starting with her murdered twin sister who wanted her to find the man who killed her. So she's fled from Chicago and its memories to Kansas City, where to avoid the ghosts she's opened up a costume shop, in an entire suburb given over to haunted house attractions *facepalm*. A girl's night out in one of them climaxes with them walking in on a real dead body, and its ghost.

So that's okay as a setup, the problems for me were that the ghost is a really annoying dick, while Kali is irritatingly oblivious to the wider supernatural world around her and alternates hourly between "Nope, absolutely not doing the ghost thing again" and rapidly escalating law-breaking to dig deeper into the investigation. 

 



 

 

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davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
David Gillon

March 2026

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