cyphomandra: Painting of a bare tree, by Rita Angus (tree)
I can try climbing again tomorrow night, woo hoo. I've also had 2 doses of Pfizer COVID vaccine; the first gave me a sore arm and a wave of fatigue that evening, the second gave me a very sore arm and a vague sense of tiredness, which I will definitely take as evidence that my immune system is doing something.

Emotional Female, Yumiko Kadota (as audiobook read by the author). Yumiko grew up in Singapore and England before moving to Australia for the last bit of high school and medical school; she always worked hard, made friends, was smart, kind, and responsible, and ticked off one career box after another until she ran headlong into the Australian surgical training scheme, which systematically exploits all would-be surgeons and is not remotely hesitant in discriminating against any one outside the white male Australian norm. Yumiko wrote a blog post about her experiences that went viral, and it’s a useful shorthand for the book; what the book adds is more context, sexual assault by superiors in training (she changes the names but it’s not hard to work out who she’s talking about), and a prolonged and difficult recovery. The writing tends towards restating the obvious, and – oddly – she never seems to have made a mistake in her medical career – but it’s compelling.

Hot Money, Dick Francis. Ian’s estranged father Malcolm is immensely wealthy and has five ex-wives and an assortment of bickering adult children; when the most recent wife is murdered and someone tries to kill Malcolm, he asks Ian (an amateur jockey, natch) to protect him. It’s competent enough, but in order to keep the field of suspects open Francis makes most of the extended family rather unpleasant. The incredibly wealthy tour of international horsey bits is fun.

The Duke of Shadows, Meredith Duran. Emmaline survives the shipwreck that kills her parents on her trip out to India to meet a fiancé, who as so often in these cases turns out to be a rotter, while the British Raj society consider Emma tarnished irretrievably due to her rescue by passing sailors; Julian is an heir to a dukedom and part Indian, an outside and one of the few people who can see – if not stop – the coming uprising (it’s 1857). It’s Duran’s first novel, and it’s good – it doesn’t have the feel for India that MM Kaye’s books have, but she’s strong on character and Emma, in particular, gets to be angry and destructive in a way that romance heroines often don’t show.

The Sins of Lord Lockwood, Meredith Duran. Liam Lockwood disappears on his wedding night to Anna, who holds Scottish lands in her own right and thinks that the deal she made with Liam in order to keep these means that he must havenever had any feelings for her beyond convenience. However, rather than sporting on the Continent Liam was kidnapped by his evil cousin and sent to a hellish prison colony, and his return is part of his plan to trap his cousin – but he wasn’t expecting Anna to find out and interfere. It’s an interesting set-up and Duran gives both characters depth and authority. There are also some great bits with the convicts Lockwood has brought back with him, but Anna isn't as convincing a character as her other female leads.

Auē, Becky Manawatu. Domestic violence, gangs, child abuse, interwoven into the stories of two (and a bit) generations of Māori living in the South Island. It’s won lots of awards and the writing is great. I personally didn’t think keeping the timeline opaque added anything to the story and it does have that “of course they’ll shoot the dog” feel to it. It may be a generational thing but for me the bone people will always be my touchstone for Aotearoa/NZ writing about domestic violence and it's the book where I find the violence most disturbing.

It might sound cliché, Jessie G. All-too-appropriately titled short. Rocco can’t forgive his lover Nino for torching their family restaurant, even as he works himself to the bone to rebuild it; he heads out of town to a snowbound cabin to relax and, naturally, finds Nino there, along with the news of what really happened. Forgettable.

The Covert Captain, Jeannelle M Ferreira. This took me quite a few goes to get into, not because it’s not good but because it’s a very elliptical read, focussed very tightly on period-specific setting and dialogue and leaving a lot of the conventional emotional work to the reader, as well as much of the usual narrative interstitium. I liked Eleanor/Nathaniel a lot, Harriet less so, and would happily have read many more bits with horses; I think I’d prefer more historical to more romance by the author.

Fall Out, Lisa Henry and M Caspian. M/M romance. Former highschool boyfriends reunite at college – then Bastian is in a car smash and ends up struggling with chronic pain and feelings of inadequacy. A camping/research trip (Jack is doing a PhD in environmental science) looks like a possible chance for them to get back together – until there’s an ugly incident with a motorcycle gang and then volcanic ash starts falling from the sky. I was not expecting volcanic eruption and the really rather rapid decay of society, along with lots of rape and murder, and although the (sympathetic) characters are well done, it’s tense, and the volcanic eruption is a fantastic complication, I really prefer Henry’s more conventional romances. Haven’t read anything else of Caspian’s.

Chase in Shadow, Amy Lane. First in a series about the guys who work at Johnnies, a gay-for-pay porn video company. Chase has a terrible father and blames himself for his mother’s suicide; he is also deeply in the closet and engaged (to a woman), but once he takes the job (telling his fiancée it’s in construction) he falls for another guy, and everything begins to unravel. The set-up works really well for Lane and it’s a competently handled cast of characters, with a lot of interesting hints at the next books. The ending lurches into sentiment, as her books tend to do, but I cheerfully downloaded the next one.
cyphomandra: boats in Auckland Harbour. Blue, blocky, cheerful (boats)
All the rest of February. And, hopefully, the last day of lockdown today.

Calendar Girl, Georgia Beers. Workaholic Addison will take over the family business even if it costs her her health; that is, until her family organise a personal assistant, Katie, who is struggling to look after her father as he slips deeper into dementia. Opposites attract, valuable lessons are learnt, etc. Competently handled but the workplace dynamics felt off - opening scene is Addison telling two employees having a consensual relationship that the workplace sexual harassment laws mean one of them will have to be sacked (?!) but then the whole dating your PA is apparently okay when someone else pays her salary.

Unexpected Lessons in Love, Lucy Dillon. Jeannie is on her way to her whirlwind wedding when she realises she can’t go through with it; unfortunately, when she tries to contact the groom, he is distracted by his phone, hit by a bus, and ends up in a coma. While waiting for him to come round and not knowing how to tell anyone else of her doubts, Jeannie gets entangled in the village dog rescue. Lots of good dogs, solid characters with believable emotions; enjoyed this more than I expected.

Roll for Initiative, Alex Silver. Gui is a video game creator on crunch; his new roommate Paz, is a baker, who leaves passive-aggressive notes about people coming home late and not doing the dishes. It’s unclear why Paz doesn’t realise Gui is working or why Gui doesn’t tell him; they bicker, have a bunch of sex (including with food, never my favourite trope and doubly so if Paz is supposed to be baking brownies at home that he’s going to sell in his coffee shop!) and get together. Picked this up as a freebie and it didn’t inspire me to read more.

A Lady’s Code of Conduct, Meredith Duran. Jane Mason (a name that gave me Jane Eyre/Bertha Mason vibes) is a rich heiress held captive by her evil uncle, who is bent on marrying her to her cousin and taking her fortune. Jane seizes the chance to escape when Crispin Burke, an unscrupulous politician on the make, comes to visit and - oddly - appears to show some sympathy for her. This has one of my favourite tropes in it - Crispin is beaten and left for dead, and when he recovers, he can’t remember the last five years, and is horrified when he begins to find out who he became. Meanwhile, Jane is claiming she and Crispin are married, which Crispin is much less unhappy about… I liked this a lot, actually; they’re both great characters, and the political shenanigans (evil Crispin was trying to force through a punitive Penal Reform Bill) were a entertainingly different backdrop.

Shadow of the Moon, MM Kaye. I pulled The Far Pavilions off my parents’ bookcase when I was a teenager and totally fell into it - such a compelling beginning. Eventually I resurfaced after a few re-reads and found Shadow of the Moon, which I read but didn’t like nearly as much. Re-reading it now, and knowing it was written earlier, it works much better - the characters aren’t as strong as the latter book (although Winter’s doomed determination to follow through on her marriage despite the increasing obviousness that her husband is a dissipated and incompetent drunk), but what it’s great at is portraying the inevitable historical tragedy that happened in India in 1857 (a contested title, as per wiki, ranging from Sepoy Mutiny to the 1857 Indian Rebellion to the First War of Independence). Kaye empathises with people on all sides, although perhaps without as much class range as, say, Victor Hugo; but what she also has is a deep love for India, its flora and fauna, that really comes through. I have her memoirs out from the library and am working through these.

The Unteachables, Gordon Korman. Zachary Kermit gave up on caring about teaching when he took the fall for a test cheating scandal; now, only a few months away from retirement, he’s been given the Unteachables, the worse class in the school. At the same time, Kiara, a talented student, ends up in the class by mistake while temporarily visiting the town, and decides to stay. Fun and satisfying middle school romp.

Beware of Dogs, Elizabeth Flann. As mentioned earlier, and unfortunately the ending was a damp squib with a predictable “you thought you were safe - but just as you closed the door…” twist. Deeply annoying as there’d been all these earlier hints (the sharks, the snakes) at a much more confrontational ending. Similarly, the dealing with the lead character’s family memories also petered out. I would read another book by the author because the first 2/3rds were so strong, though.

Jill and the Lost Ponies, Jane Badger. Sequel to the Jill books, in which Jill is battling with secretarial school and then - disaster - finds out that by mistake her two ponies have been sold. I have only read some of the Jill books but this is an excellently done continuation that gets the voice without my feeling that I’m being clubbed over the head with the author’s little quirks, and also isn’t afraid to advance character arcs. I hope she does another one.

The Wives, Tarryn Fisher. Thursday loves her husband Seth so much that she is happy to share him with his two other wives, whom she has never met, see him for only one day a week (I’ll let you guess which), and tell no-one else about their arrangement. But one of the other wives is pregnant, and Thursday can’t stop wanting to know more. Unfortunately what she finds out SPOILER )

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