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Recent reading
Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie
I am not sure what to say about this book. I admire a lot of what it's doing, but it doesn't quite reach my heart--I feel a bit distant from it. Of course, this could well be because of the nature of the AI narrator. I liked what it's doing with artificial intelligence and the impact this had on the plot, and also the slowly growing relationship in the book (though again, I didn't feel that relationship on a gut level).
Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake
At 500 pages, this was a long book, and it wasn't exactly a page-turner. But I'm glad I stuck with it. Nnnngh, the language alone is worth it: rather convoluted but with startling and vivid images and turns of phrase. It does have a plot, but the main attraction is atmosphere and setting: a castle steeped in ritual and with weird people entrenched in their age-old feudal purposes.
I am not sure what to say about this book. I admire a lot of what it's doing, but it doesn't quite reach my heart--I feel a bit distant from it. Of course, this could well be because of the nature of the AI narrator. I liked what it's doing with artificial intelligence and the impact this had on the plot, and also the slowly growing relationship in the book (though again, I didn't feel that relationship on a gut level).
Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake
At 500 pages, this was a long book, and it wasn't exactly a page-turner. But I'm glad I stuck with it. Nnnngh, the language alone is worth it: rather convoluted but with startling and vivid images and turns of phrase. It does have a plot, but the main attraction is atmosphere and setting: a castle steeped in ritual and with weird people entrenched in their age-old feudal purposes.
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PS I added you on DW - I'm crossing over from LJ more often these days.
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*adds in return*
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I meant I have such a *kink* for the world. Not kind. Ah, typing!
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