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[personal profile] luzula
The Color of Distance, by Amy Thomson
I liked this a lot! It's about a scientist who gets stuck on an alien world, and how she learns to communicate and live with the intelligent aliens there. The writing is more telling than showing, but the characters are engaging and I just really enjoyed reading about the alien biology and society. There's a whole fascinating ecosystem, too. Will be seeking out the sequel.

The Beggar Maid, by Alice Munro
Read for my book club at work. I guess it was okay, but I didn't love it? I just wasn't emotionally engaged enough. They should give the Nobel prize in literature to Ursula K. Le Guin instead.

I döda språks sällskap, by Ola Wikander
This is a popular science book (in Swedish) about various dead languages, like Sumerian, Etruscan, Coptic, etc. I picked it up at a book swap a while ago, and liked it fine, but it wasn't really geeky enough for me. Historical context is all well and good, but I'd have liked more detail about the languages themselves.

(no subject)

Date: 2013-12-17 08:39 pm (UTC)
frayadjacent: Connie Maheswaran on a beach reading excitedly (!reading)
From: [personal profile] frayadjacent
I might be checking out The Color of Distance, thanks for the recommendation! I've been looking for new fiction.

Agreed re: Le Guin. Though I still have never read any Alice Munro.

Speaking of: what do you think of Le Guin's more recent work? Changing Planes left a bad taste in my mouth and I haven't read anything she's published since (though I have revisited old favorites). I heard good things about Lavinia but not much either way about anything else.

(no subject)

Date: 2013-12-18 02:13 am (UTC)
frayadjacent: peach to blue gradient with the silouette of a conifer tree (Default)
From: [personal profile] frayadjacent
I remember it having more rape than I want in my fiction. OK, I pretty much never want rape in my fiction, but it stood out to me as being more prevalent than her other short story collections (or novels), and also as being portrayed in a way that naturalizes it? I don't remember examples, though -- it's probably been about 10 years since I read it. (!)

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Date: 2013-12-18 11:20 pm (UTC)
frayadjacent: peach to blue gradient with the silouette of a conifer tree (Default)
From: [personal profile] frayadjacent
Yeah, I guess a lot of her fiction has rape in it. Most memorably, for me anyway, in Four Ways to Forgiveness, which I think is excellent and I'd love to read again, but it's also just so upsetting I can never bring myself to. But I remember with Changing Planes feeling like the rape was presented as a sort of natural biological fact and that was more what bothered me. I mean, I never enjoy rape being in my fiction, but the way that it's presented makes a big difference in my reaction. But, like I said, it was a long time ago and maybe I'd see it differently now.

Anyway, glad to hear it about the other books. I'll be checking out Lavinia for sure at some point, and probably the others as well.

(I did start to read Gifts a long time ago, but I got distracted by mounds of work and never came back to it. It's always much harder for me to read a book if I've already started it once and put it down, even if the reason I put it down has nothing to do with how much I enjoyed it.)
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