Recent reading
Mar. 9th, 2015 10:21 pmEmbassytown by China Miéville
For my fannish bookclub. This book was a bit al dente in the beginning--I had to slow down and chew properly, because of the density of the language/worldbuilding. But it paid off. This book is idea-driven science fiction, and its strengths are: great worldbuilding with aliens who feel alien, good writing, good what's-gonna-happen-next plotting. Weaknesses: I didn't connect with the characters much. As discussed in the book club meeting, it's possible to poke holes in the worldbuilding, but we didn't really want to, because it was cool. This is not my favorite Miéville, though--I enjoyed both The City & the City and Railsea more than this one.
We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler
I feel like everyone else has already read this, but yeah, everyone who recced it was right: I really enjoyed it. Yeah. Read it if you haven't already. Great writing, and I felt the emotional impact of it, too.
For my fannish bookclub. This book was a bit al dente in the beginning--I had to slow down and chew properly, because of the density of the language/worldbuilding. But it paid off. This book is idea-driven science fiction, and its strengths are: great worldbuilding with aliens who feel alien, good writing, good what's-gonna-happen-next plotting. Weaknesses: I didn't connect with the characters much. As discussed in the book club meeting, it's possible to poke holes in the worldbuilding, but we didn't really want to, because it was cool. This is not my favorite Miéville, though--I enjoyed both The City & the City and Railsea more than this one.
We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler
I feel like everyone else has already read this, but yeah, everyone who recced it was right: I really enjoyed it. Yeah. Read it if you haven't already. Great writing, and I felt the emotional impact of it, too.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-03-09 10:44 pm (UTC)I have in fact not read any more of Miéville than the ones I've mentioned. Iron Council is vaguely on my to-read list. In fact the protagonist of Embassytown is female, but really she could be changed to male and I wouldn't notice. It's weird. I just didn't get any sense of what gender she was, which is not necessarily a bad thing, except that I suspect that it's because she felt like a thin character overall, with not much of an actual personality. Anyway, I do recommend both The City & the City and Railsea if you're looking to read more Miéville.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-03-10 01:46 am (UTC)