darchildre: rebis in a purple trenchcoat, looking enigmatic (rebis says:)
I have run out of books I want to read, and am trying to find new ones.

The trouble with book recommending websites is that you put in a book you like, hoping to find another one like it, and the recommendations are given, of course, based on the subject material or writing style. Which makes sense! It's just that I often looking for a particular feel to the book, rather than a particular subject, and that is very difficult to search for.

When I say I want a book like The Goblin Emperor, for example, I don't mean that I want a book about a person thrust into a role they're unprepared for and forced to deal with complicated political intrigue. I mean that I want a book that feels like warm underground caverns and coats that are too heavy and tea brewed with unfamiliar but pleasant spices. Or, the last time I tried to find a new horror novel and realized that what I wanted was a book that felt the same as The Rim of Morning, all dark skies over the desert, and mirrors that showed only blackness, and vast cold emptiness. What it was about in order to feel like that was practically immaterial.

This is why I am almost always disappointed when I ask for horror recommendations in particular, because I can never quite put into words what exactly I want from horror and thus very rarely get it.

Anyway. This is even harder when the thing I want is a book that feels like a work of a different kind of media entirely. This week, I've been listening a lot to the Campaign: Skyjacks podcast and now really want books that feel like that, which is best summed up as "the way you feel when you listen to the Decemberists with the wind in your face as you walk along a rocky beach on a bright day in late autumn, only sometimes funny".

It is very difficult to google for books like that.
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
Today, I finished reading Sherlock Holmes and the Instrument of Death, the Holmes vs Caligari crossover novel. Which was sadly not great - too many chapters of Dr Caligari committing random motiveless crimes, not enough Holmes&Watson - though entertaining enough (or possibly I am bored enough) that I finished it.

The ending did make me think about the difference between semi-official published fanfic and what I think of as "proper" fanfic. Because a proper fanfic writer would have dealt so much more satisfyingly with the situation presented at the climax.

Spoilers, in case anyone else is interested in this very silly book. )
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
I am trying to decide what to read next and would like some help.

I have been between books for a bit and am being picky and indecisive. I have narrowed down what I think I want, genre-wise, to "ridiculous horror/mystery/pulp/Gothic nonsense" and have a few books that have been on my to-read list for a while, but I can't decide. Thus, a poll!

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 2


What should Sara read next?

View Answers

Ziska: the Problem of a Wicked Soul by Marie Corelli
0 (0.0%)

The Beetle by Richard Marsh
0 (0.0%)

The Blood of the Vampyre by Florence Marryat
0 (0.0%)

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
1 (50.0%)

Fantomas by Marcel Allain
1 (50.0%)

Something else that is similar which I will mention in comments
0 (0.0%)

darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
I am thinking about starting a book group on Meetup, because there are no spec-fic book groups in my area*, and I would love to talk about nerdy books with other people. I cannot decide if this is a bad idea or not.

    Pros:
  • Get to talk about nerdy books with other people
  • Maybe make friends, I guess? In any case, more social interaction, which is probably a positive
  • Force myself to finish books, rather than get bored and stop halfway through
  • Exposure to books I would otherwise not have read
  • If I run the book group, I can declare from the outset that quiet handcrafts or other similar activities are acceptable during discussion

    Cons:
  • Talking to strangers, oh no
  • I have neither run nor really ever been a part of a book group before
  • Meetup groups cost money
  • If I run the book group, I have to do all the organizational tasks and I hate those and I'm already doing it for my D&D game



I'm going to give myself till Saturday and if I still want to do it, I'll set the group up then.





*The idea has occasionally been brought up as a library program, but the person in charge of book groups for the system has yet to go for it. She does not read spec-fic. I was part of a conversation with her about this once, during which she said that she didn't think the books in question would "provide enough scope for discussion" which, I mean, have you ever met a nerd? I personally could talk for an hour about individual twenty-minute episodes of The Magnus Archives - you don't think a group of nerds could talk about even a bad book for an hour?
darchildre: children reading books in a field. (books are for adventure!)
Friends, I have a book question. I would like to read some retellings of Arthurian legend. There are...a lot of those out there and I am overwhelmed. Tell me which ones are good?

- I am more interested in works that lean further towards the fantasy side, rather than works that are more "this is a retelling in which Arthur could have been a real historical person dealing with real historical problems". Magic swords and enchanters and Grail quests, yes please.

- I am not particularly interested in "King Arthur, but in modern day!" or "King Arthur has returned in the modern day!" or "Modern people interact with King Arthur!" kinds of stories. (I would possibly accept "King Arthur, but in space!" or "King Arthur, but in the Old West!" or things along those lines, but I would prefer more traditional settings.)

- Books I am already familiar with: The Once and Future King, Mists of Avalon, Gillian Bradshaw's Down the Long Wind trilogy, Mary Stewart's books.

Thank you!
darchildre: ninth doctor and rose viewing earth from space (...and i feel fine)
Things:

- My supervisor changed my start time today to two hours before I normally start on Tuesdays (when all of our start times are normally set in stone and also after I have been on vacation for the last week) and did not say anything to me about it or send me an email or anything. The first I heard about it was when I got a text message from my manager after I'd already been - unbeknownst to me - half an hour late. So I got to work an hour after I was scheduled but an hour before I would have normally started and I'm so stressed about everything right now.

Happier things:

- I spent my Christmas money from my grandmother on spinning fiber. Last year taught me that I can spin enough yarn to make a sweater in about half a year (less, if I spin more regularly) and I see no real reason why I should do so again this year. This time, it will be a cardigan.

- Also, I am currently knitting a big cabled fisherman's sweater in a soft grey natural wool and I'm so pleased with how it's coming out. It's slow knitting because of the cables but I'm enjoying it.

- I finished listening to the extant episodes of The Magnus Archives on Sunday, which means that now it's time to do the relisten-but-take-notes-this-time! To be finished before the new seasons starts in April. Good times.

- I'm rereading Always Coming Home by Ursula K LeGuin right now and you guys, this book is still so good.
darchildre: children reading books in a field. (books are for adventure!)
Friends, I haven't read anything in a month or so that I really enjoyed. Would you like to recommend me some books?

What I am interested in reading right now under here )
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
While I have frustrations with the industry* and general reservations about amazon, I sincerely love ebooks (which are linked to amazon for me because most of mine are kindle books). I like how easy they are to use, I like that I can adjust the font to be whatever I need, I like that I can write notes without feeling guilty, I like that I can carry one device and have dozens to hundreds of books at my fingertips, I like that I never have to carry around a book version of the complete Sherlock Holmes every again.

However.

I am constantly frustrated by the fact that amazon seems to think that all readers want to start each kindle book on page one, rather than the cover. Every time I start a book, I have to page backwards to make sure I haven't missed something. Often, it's just the epigraph or dedication but for gods' sake, I am a fantasy reader! There might have been a list of characters or a map! Why would you think I didn't want to see the map?

It's very annoying.






*I work in a library, you guys.
darchildre: children reading books in a field. (books are for adventure!)
I need a new book*, as I have just finished the not-actually-properly-a-horror-novel I was reading** and I have been poking at my want-to-read list on Goodreads and finding nothing that really appeals. After a few minutes of this, I realized that the reason I can't find anything is that I want something that's like Frances Hardinge but also isn't Frances Hardinge because I've already read all the Frances Hardinge and I don't know anyone else, really, who writes books like hers.

It's a problem.








*I am still reading the WWI horror book but it is nonfiction and thus I need something fictional to balance it out.

**The Auctioneer by Joan Samson, which was good but did not turn out to be the kind of horror I thought it was. I had somehow gotten the impression that the devil was in it but alas, all the devils turned out to be metaphorical.
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
So, I'm reading this book: Empire in Black and Gold by Adrian Tchaikovsky, which is the first in a series of epic fantasy novels about bug people that I found out about thanks to [personal profile] rachelmanija. I'm about 3/4 of the way through it and enjoying it immensely, to the point that I've already put the second one on hold.

But! Y'know that thing, where you have a character type that nearly always works for you but that you're ever so slightly ashamed of? Mild spoilers, but only really at the level of describing a couple of the characters. )
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
Today's favorite bit of The Inferno is the part where Dante and Virgil are being menaced by the Furies and Virgil physically turns Dante around and then puts his own hands over Dante's eyes because Dante is such a goober he can't be trusted not to look.

God, this poem is so goofy and weird and enjoyable when I don't have to write papers about it.
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
Yesterday, Because of Reasons*, I was seized with the urge to reread Dante's Commedia. Because it is summer and I have no attention span for actual reading, I have downloaded the audiobook of the Hollander translation of The Inferno.

While I am in no way ungrateful for the college course that introduced me to Dante - I would almost certainly never have gotten through his work, let alone developed an affection for it, without it - it is amazing how different it is to experience the poem on my own, instead of as a focus of academic study. Now, I get to read at my own pace and feel my own feelings about the text, instead of constantly having in the back of my mind the worry that I have to produce reactions that are intelligent and worth discussing and writing papers about. Reading on my own may not be as intellectually rigorous or whatever, but it's a much more pleasant and satisfying experience.

(Not that I would mind discussing the poem with people. It's just that, right now, my reactions are more on the level of "God, Ciacco in Canto VI is so sad!" and "Heh, Dante's petty grudge against Filippo Argenti is hilarious." I'm liveblogging a bit over on tumblr if you want that level of reaction.)

There are, alas, no audiobooks of the Hollander translations of Purgatorio or Paradiso. I understand why this is - I can't imagine there's anywhere near the level of demand - but I still feel a little bitter about it. Hopefully, by the time I get to the end of The Inferno, I will be over this bit of summer malaise and the momentum will carry into actually reading the rest.







*Good Omens = thinking about angels and demons = thinking about the structure of Heaven and Hell = thinking about the Commedia.
darchildre: children reading books in a field. (books are for adventure!)
Friends, can you point me towards some novels (ideally aimed at adults) with unicorns in them? Preferably unicorns who are actual characters and not just super rad horses?

I would very much appreciate it.
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
As previously noted, I am currently reading Ash: A Secret History by Mary Gentle.

You guys, it was hard enough to put this book down after my lunch break and get back to work in the beginning, when it was just a story about a mercenary captain in medieval Europe with some weird not-our-world variations on Catholicism*.

But now! Spoilers! )

How am I supposed to concentrate on library stuff when I could be reading this book instead?





*I am hoping really hard that at some point, the book will give me more information on these variations because I am fascinated. mild spoilers for things mentioned within the first chapter )
darchildre: text only:  "Circumlocution:  It's a way of speaking around something.  A digression.  Verbosity." (our little sillinesses of manner)
So I'm over halfway through The Shining and, much like every other time I've read a single Stephen King novel, I now want to read about 5 more. (And, because it's me, that desire is mostly leaning towards Dark Tower novels.) Help me decide what to read next.


Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 12


Dark Tower or not Dark Tower?

View Answers

Follow the path of the Beam, obvs
8 (66.7%)

Maybe...not, this time?
4 (33.3%)

Okay, which Dark Tower novel?

View Answers

The Gunslinger (because it's first)
3 (37.5%)

The Wastelands (because it's my favorite)
3 (37.5%)

Wolves of the Calla (because that's where I left off in the last reread)
2 (25.0%)

The Wind Through the Keyhole (because I haven't actually read that yet)
0 (0.0%)

If not Dark Tower, then what?

View Answers

Doctor Sleep (because it's the sequel to The Shining and I haven't read it)
5 (55.6%)

The Stand (because I haven't caught a cold yet this winter and it's probably time)
1 (11.1%)

Didn't he just come out with a new book? Maybe I should read that?
2 (22.2%)

Something else that you can put in the comments
1 (11.1%)



Thanks!
darchildre: the master reading war of the worlds (reading)
So, I'm rereading The Shining for the first time in...a while. It's not my favorite Stephen King but it's good and solidly enjoyable. (And not, for me personally, scary enough that I can't read it before bed, which is a plus.)

But.

Y'all, I read enough of a certain type of fantasy literature as a child that I to this day immediately and automatically read any word that looks weird and made up backwards just in case*. And I get that the characters often literally can't do that but I can only engage with the book as written media. And given Stephen King's habit of picking a significant word and having it recur and recur and recur throughout whatever he's writing**, by about halfway through, the fact that we are still acting like the meaning of "redrum" is a big scary mystery is just annoying as all hell.





*Every once in a while, I run into a Harry Potter fan who still has not done this with the Mirror of Erised. It is always a fun time.

**Which usually I'm pretty into.
darchildre: children reading books in a field. (books are for adventure!)
Today, my family has been cleaning out our storage unit, in preparation for no longer having a storage unit. In doing so, we found one of my favorite childhood books, that I thought was long lost or given away - Folktales of the Amur.

Oh my god, you guys - first of all, the stories are great, and I very much look forward to revisiting them. But the illustrations are the best part. The art is by Gennady Pavlishin and it is amazing. I will give you just two examples, but I invite you to google for more, as it's amazing. pictures under the cut )

I am so excited to have this book back, I cannot even tell you.
darchildre: sepia toned, a crow perched on a gravestone (gravestone)
There have, of course, been many times in my life when I have caught a cold and not been reading a Stephen King novel but I swear to god that I have never managed to read any of his books that talk about Captain Trips without developing at least a sniffle and a cough.

(I am reading Wizard and Glass, have just gotten to the point where we encounter a whole bunch of dead people who died of superflu, and I have a cold. And, okay, on one level I kind of enjoy that level of immersion into the story - well done, body - but on the other hand, I would like to not feel sick.)
darchildre: text: "i am a terrifying and imposing figure" (they said i'd be ambassador to france)
Things:

- I have done something to my back, it is most annoying.

- This past weekend, I went over to see my sisters and we had a Hamilton singalong, in the style of the ones Megan and I used to do when we were kids, where we assigned parts and had to sing five things at once in ensemble numbers. Except this time, we included Katie as something other than dead people. It was absurdly fun.

- When I was reading Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell a couple of months ago, I got distracted while Mr Strange was in Venice and wandered off to read other things. Yesterday, I finally finished it and am currently a little bereft. So I went and started the audiobook from the beginning, like a goober.

- The 5th Avenue Theatre is showing Assassins next year and I bought tickets today. My sisters (and possibly my Mom) want to come as well, which will be fun. (And I also bought myself a second ticket for a different day, because I love this show so much and the chances that I will ever see it staged professionally again (or at all) are slim to none.)

- The Bainbridge library is having a Halloween movie double feature on Friday, which I've promised my coworkers that I'll attend. (One of my favorite coworkers at Bainbridge runs the movie nights and I think he's a little worried no one will show.) They're showing The Serpent and the Rainbow and...one of the Invasion of the Body Snatchers films. I don't actually know which one. Not the first one or the most recent one, anyway. I have seen neither of those movies, so that should be cool.

- Other than that, my Halloween plans at this point mostly involve going to see Crimson Peak and then watching every Peter Cushing movie I own. (Except maybe Night Creatures, since that's not a horror movie. Though it is pretty awesomely swashbuckly, so I might watch it anyway.) I feel like that's a good plan.
darchildre: text:  "well, my doctorate is purely honorary, and harry here is only qualified to work on sailors" (only qualified to work on sailors)
Things:

- This weekend, along with tea jelly, I also made an abacus bracelet. I'm always losing track of what row I'm on when I knit and now I have a bracelet that can count up to 99 and will remember for me. I'm very pleased with it. Also, it's a pretty bracelet. I might have to make another one just because. I am a little tempted to make it three strands so it will count to 1000 but I'm pretty sure that's silly.

- The thing about reading Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell is that it has a very strong narrative voice that is very different from the way I usually speak and it gets into my brain and I start saying things like "I haven't any of those" and wanting to spell surprise with a z and I have to remind myself that I'm not an English person from 1811 and I shouldn't talk like one. I think I've kept it under wraps enough that no one around me has noticed but I feel like I'm being very obnoxious. Or possibly I just talk like a weirdo all the time and people around me don't think it's anything different.

( - This happens when I read Riddley Walker too, but that's somewhat more of a problem.)

- I started listening to the BBC radio Raffles series and it is entirely adorable. Fortunately, I am listening to them alone in my car and thus can pause the show for squeaky noises and shouting, "Oh you adorable little rabbit!" whenever it's necessary. (Spoilers: Bunny is a adorable rabbit all the time. I end up pausing a lot.)

- Yesterday was entirely too full of crying babies at the library. I am hoping very hard that is not the case today.


ETA - I knew I had another thing! I am looking for a good and singable version of Tam Lin. I like Anais Mitchell's version to sing, but it doesn't have the fairy queen in it. Fairport Convetion's is hard to sing without accompaniment, and the melody of Tricky Pixie's version gets a little monotonous without instruments. Do any of you have a favorite version?
darchildre: clark kent drinking cocoa with his mom (cocoa with the kents)
Today, no one's home but me and I have no obligations except laundry. It is lovely. I am spending the day knitting and listening to the audiobook of Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell* and having a wonderful lunch.

Two food things that are making me very happy:
- I buy most of my tea from adagio.com - I tend to buy four to five 3 oz bags at a time, as I like to have a variety, and I find that generally lasts me about three months. Of course, that means that I have to choose fairly carefully or I won't have something I want (or worse, be stuck with a tea I don't enjoy) for a quarter of a year. The last time I bought tea, I neglected to get a lapsang souchong** and found that I missed it a lot. Last week was my most recent tea order and I did get one this time and oh, it is so wonderful.

- Today for lunch, I made sauteed radishes. If you have never sauteed radishes and you like radishes, you should get on that, because they are delicious. I just did them with butter and salt, which was great, but next time I might add a little honey at the end. So good!






*Mom and I are watching the show, so I thought it was time to revisit the book. This was an excellent decision. The show is a lot of fun and not at all curbing my affection for Mr Norrell. I spend a lot of time watching it (or listening to the book) and saying things like, "Oh god, you are the worst, you are the most terrible person ever, I love you." He is so awful, I want to hug him all the time.

**I have a general rule of thumb when making my tea purchases which is: one fruity tea, one floral (usually their Summer Rose, which is so good, OMG), one warm (something spicy/nutty/apple-flavored), and one dark. The dark is usually a lapsang souchong but last time I had a pu ehr blend, which was the wrong choice. I mean, it was fine and I drank it, but I like smoky teas better.
darchildre: drs frankenstein and pretorius, doing mad science.  text:  "should have been burned as wizards" (burned as wizards)
Having finished The Goblin Emperor*, I am now reading The Bone Doll's Twin. (For which this post will contain some mild spoilers.) I read this one and the second in the trilogy, but not the third, as it hadn't come out yet, when I was in college and I remembered a) that it was about a girl being magically raised as a boy and b) that I had really enjoyed it.

What I did not remember was the deeply creepy dead baby magic. So that's awesome. (I realize that sounds sarcastic. I am completely sincere - I am totally here for creepy dead baby magic.)

I also seem to recall reading this book and Iain Banks' The Wasp Factory in pretty quick succession, though I can't remember if I did that on purpose. That must have been a fun couple weeks of creepy genderfuckery. Maybe I should reread that as well.




*Which I loved so much, OMG. I did not want that book to end.
darchildre: a crow being held in one hand.  text:  "bird in hand" (bird in the hand)
Things:

- Thanks again to everyone who gave me fantasy recommendations! I have so many things on hold right now - it's very exciting.

- While waiting for things on hold, I have checked out The Goblin Emperor, because it was immediately available in my library. I am about 150 pages in and, you guys, it is entirely delightful. And it feels weirdly novel to read a book about a protagonist who is so genuinely kind. I'm really enjoying it.

- On another note: a couple years ago, my sister gave me a textbook for learning Old Norse, which I have not previously gotten around to investigating in depth, but now I am working my way through it. And if you've ever thought you'd like to learn Old Norse - which I realize is not actually a goal a lot of people have - this book is pretty great. And because it assumes that you're learning Old Norse so that you can read the sagas (since no one speaks it anymore) all the vocab comes from the sagas. Which means that I know how to say "settler" and "king" and "man of accomplishment" by chapter two but not, I don't know, "mother" or "house".

- I totally have a particular saga I'm excited about reading once I have enough Old Norse under my belt, too. It is Þiðrekssaga, which I've wanted to read for a while and which has not, as far as I can tell, been translated into English, though you can find the Old Norse easily online. Look at the description on wikipedia - dragons, Niflungs, Attila, and death-by-horse-that-turns-out-to-be-the-devil. Also, in some sources, Þiðrek can evidently breathe fire (though I don't know if that's true in this saga). It sounds amazing.

- The family and I are going to a baseball game today! I...do not really care about sports, but I enjoy going to games. Today, we are going to see the Tacoma Raniers, which should be fun.
darchildre: children reading books in a field. (books are for adventure!)
Friends, I am in the mood for reading some epic fantasy. Would you like to recommend some epic fantasy?

Here are things I like:
- Glossaries. If your book has a glossary in the back, I am halfway to loving it already.
- Religion. Interacting with the gods = cool. Characters with coherent religions actually shown practicing their faith = cooler.
- Fantasy lands that aren't just England. I mean, England is cool and I love me some fantasy!Vikings, but it's nice to go other places as well.
- Nifty and coherent magical systems, if we're doing that kind of magic.
- Kickass ladies.
- Interesting villains. Interesting villains with interesting motivations who don't lose just because they suddenly caught the Idiot Ball on page 500.
- And if said interesting villain just happens to have an even vaguely interesting minion, well...that would be a definite plus for me.
- Happy endings. I don't mind if there's suffering to get there, but I'm not in the market for bleak right now.


And things I don't like:
- Stories that aren't finished. I am not up for another George R R Martin right now.
- On that note, I'd really prefer to avoid sexual violence, if at all possible. Or graphic violence in general, though that's more negotiable.

Anybody have any recs?

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darchildre: a candle in the dark.  text:  "a light in dark places". (Default)
Renfield

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