cyphomandra: boats in Auckland Harbour. Blue, blocky, cheerful (boats)
I actually spent most of my free time this month playing Stardew Valley, a sweet move-to-a-small-town and run a farm sim that is in no way anything I would want to do in real life, and read very little, which was also helped by the fact that I didn’t really like anything I read. On the other hand, my farm is super productive and many of the townspeople are friendly.

The Juliet Code, Christine Wells. While I can sympathise with reading Between Silk and Cyanide and thinking, I want to write about this, I am less sympathetic to making it a romance between the not-quiet Leon Marks codebreaker and the not-quite Noor Inayat Khan radio operatives he trains, especially when it ends happily, and not at all sympathetic to making the leads neither Jewish nor Muslim.

Fence, volume 2. C.S. Pacat. I find this very pretty while not retaining much. I am still baffled by the logistics of the school - if it’s a specialist fencing academy, why are there so few fencers? - and not entirely convinced by the dynamic between the two leads, but it’s fun while I’m reading.

The Glass Ocean, Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, Karen White. Narrative switches between two women on the Lusitania on its final, fated cruise - a wealthy southern belle with a secretive industrialist husband and a steerage passenger forced to carry out a risky theft/forgery by her con artist sister - and a contemporary author descended from one of the ship’s stewards, who, struggling to come up with a new book concept, breaks a promise she made to her mother and opens a chest containing her ancestor’s rescued possessions - which sends her on a quest to find out what they mean. I really liked the beginning, where the author attends a rich, bored, book group, who have pirated copies of her story, and there’s some nice scene-setting on the ship, with that sense of inevitable doom approaching. None of the romances are particularly convincing, though, and I wanted more from the final resolution.

A Prince on Paper & Can’t Escape Love, Alyssa Cole (Reluctant Royals series). These do have fantastic covers. In A Prince on Paper, Nya, who tried to escape to New York from the shadow of her abusive father but never really fitted in there, accidentally shares a bed (on a private jet) with playboy (or is he?) Johan von Braustein, prince of Liechtienbourg; romance and a rather unconvincing action plot ensue. There are a lot of nice moments - Nya’s fondness for playing dating sims, the bit where Nya suggests that the Liechtienbourgers language is just a mash-up of French and German (true, plus misspellings) and Johan says that this is a terrible insult and a misunderstanding and she must never say this again - but there’s a lot going on and a lot of things feel unfinished.

Can’t Escape Love has nerdy popculture blogger Regina (who uses a wheelchair and is Portia from Duke by Default’s twin - I read this next month) is obsessed with the voice of live-streamer and escape room designer, Gustave Nguyen, which she uses to fall asleep to. When he deletes his archive Regina goes looking for him - conveniently, just after he’s been commissioned to design an escape room themed around an anime he’s never watched, that Regina is obsessed with. This is a sterling demonstration of failing to lean in, as per [personal profile] rachelmanija, as at no point is the escape room described nor does anyone get locked in one, and I was so irritated by this that I don’t remember much else.
cyphomandra: fluffy snowy mountains (painting) (snowcone)
I am attempting to catch up on these by the end of the year...

A whole lot more graphic novels, as I bought some for my niece's birthday but (naturally) had to read them first.

Sharon Hale & Dean Hale (illustrator Nathan Hale), Rapunzel's Revenge. Rapunzel escapes Mother Gothel's tower and finds a steampunky-Western outside world that is failing due to Gothel's actions. She teams up with Jack (the Giant-Killer) in order to fight evil and restore balance. This didn't really grab me but I am a very hard sell on Western settings that are not actually Westerns. I also wasn't wild on the Rapunzel-Jack romance.

Victoria Jamieson, Roller Girl. Astrid and her best friend Nicole do everything together - until Astrid signs up for a roller derby summer camp (with minimal experience) and Nicole goes to ballet camp with Astrid's enemy. Excellent, good on friendship issues and acquiring practical skills, and great people.

Vera Brosgol, Be Prepared. Not the Jeremy Irons song from the Lion King that my daughter is currently fascinated by. Graphic novel memoir in which Vera goes to a summer camp for Russian speakers, which is not quite what she expected. Entertaining and well-observed, and I like the monochrome art.

Molly Ostertag, The Witch Boy. Girls in Aster's family grow up to be witches; men grow up to be shapeshifters. But Aster hasn't shifted yet, and he's fascinated by witch magic. This was fine and the characters are sweet, but it was lacking something as an actual story.

Eleanor Davis, The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook. Super-smart Julian Calendar discovers two secret science nerds, Ben and Greta, at his new school; they team up and fight crime. I liked this and it's fun, but I would have preferred one of the other two as a viewpoint character.

Mary Treadgold, The Weather Boy. Dutch boy goes to stay with his cousins in England; there's an obnoxious neighbourhood busybody accompanying him, his father is out at sea, and the main character (possibly Jan?) makes friends with a personification of the weather.

C.S. Pacat & Johanna the Mad, Fence (v1-4). Nicholas is the illegitimate son of a fencing coach and struggles to train without resources; at his first tournament he is easily beaten by the prodigious Seiji Katayama and vows to beat him. This means he somehow ends up on scholarship to an exclusive fencing school (with a surprisingly tiny fencing team) and, of course, rooming with Seiji. I like the idea of this and I like CS Pacat's writing, but there were one too many lurches in plot logic for me and also, remarkably little actually happening. Still. It's appealing, and I will read the next volume.

Alan Sisman, John Le Carré: the biography. Fascinating counterpoint to Le Carré's own memoir, The Pigeon Tunnel, which I read earlier this year; fills in the gaps, looks at the facts behind the stories, and attempts to grapple with Le Carré's impressively monstrous father, who casts a long shadow over everything. Lengthy but a smooth read, and Le Carré is one of those people whose career does not seem to ossify as they age (I'm thinking of Doris Lessing's memoirs, which were similar in nature).

Mark Siegel & Alexis Siegel, Five Worlds book 1: The Sand Warrior. Easily my favourite of all the graphic novels this month. A sand dance who struggles to control her powers teams up with a professional athlete and a slum kid (who have their own secrets) to save a gorgeously detailed world. Fascinating and rich, and I really like the colouring. Book 2 is out and book 3 is out next May; I'm presuming there are five in total but am not sure.

Stephen King, Misery. This was [personal profile] rachelmanija's fault, as she re-read it and then I picked up my copy just to check something (a process I know is always doomed) and re-read the whole thing. Fabulous. I always forget just how compelling the Misery book within the story is - it's the thing that I think the film glossed over.

Mary Stewart, Airs Above the Ground. Vanessa is having tea with a friend of her mother's who mentions seeing Vanessa's husband Lewis in newsreel footage of a circus fire in Austria; but Lewis told Vanessa he was on business in Stockholm. Vanessa seizes the opportunity to escort the woman's teenage son to Austria (where he was going) and investigate. It's fun, it's fast, the tense bits are genuinely tense (racing a rickety funicular railway train up to where someone is caught on the tracks) and there are amazing and heart-warming horse bits with Lipizzaners.

André Aciman, Call Me by Your Name. Read after I'd seen the film. Wonderful writing and very good, as the film is, on the emotions and distinction between late teenage and early adulthood; however, the book frames it as Elio looking back, and also goes on into the future, and that weakened it for me somewhat. Some of the supporting characters are also more well-developed, but then it doesn't leave me with the Psychedelic Furs soundtrack of the movie.

E.M. Channon, Expelled from St Madern's and Her Second Chance. EM Channon wrote schoolgirl books (The Honour of the House is one of my favourites, dealing with loyalty to family versus loyalty to school, and characters who have hidden depths beneath unappealing exteriors). In the first, a schoolgirl is (eventually) expelled for her understandable but regrettable attempts to ruin the school. The second, the sequel, has the expelled schoolgirl, now an adult, returning as a teacher and solving a mystery. Enjoyable. These are contemporary reprints and I need to track down some of her detective stories.
cyphomandra: boats in Auckland Harbour. Blue, blocky, cheerful (boats)
This is more a couple of weeks' worth.

Just finished:

CS Pacat's Captive Prince series - re-read the first two and then read the new (and final) one, Kings Rising. I am very fond of this series and will try to discuss them properly later. Spoilers for emotional reaction to <i>Kings Rising</i> )

Jane Duncan's My Friend series - I finished My Friends the Miss Boyds (Janet's childhood) and read My Friend Muriel (bits of WWII, Janet meets Twice), My Friend Monica (early days of Janet & Twice's relationship), and My Friend Annie, (back mostly to Janet's school days and then university, and then on to her and Twice going out to the West Indies). More enthusiasm. )

Mercedes Lackey, Blood Red. Elemental Masters series, does the fairy tale in the prologue. Competent, especially compared to the terrible Tin Soldier one.

Reading now:

Helen Macdonald, H is for Hawk. I've been meaning to read this for a while and found it at the library. Still too early to say.

Up next:

I also snaffled Kate Elliott's Court of Fives from the returns section, and am looking forward to Hugner Games/Little Women crossover action. I also really do want to get to the latest Bujold and must find a way to get it on my phone.

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