Autumnal #balisebooks

GoodReads tells me I did achieve my 60 books goal for 2020 – and we still have a quarter in this year, so I may need to get a larger goal for next year 😉 Granted, there’s been quite a few shorter books so far in the year: there’s been more graphic novels/comics, as well as more novellas/novelettes/short stories than in the previous years (because I read most of the selection for the Hugos). Still, it’s been a while since I did a #balisebooks post, so let’s fix that.

The Wicked + The Divine – volumes 1 to 9 – Kieron Gillen, Jamie McKelvie, and Matt Wilson

The Wicked + The Divine is a graphic novel for which the premise is that every 90 years, 12 gods incarnate as humans. These humans are essentially celebrities – with everything that goes with that – and they’re dying within two years.

I absolutely loved the first volume, but I was somewhat let down by the following volumes: I don’t know exactly what I was expecting for a story, but I felt disappointed, somehow. (I also got very confused towards the end). At least the story is complete and the ends are tied and the ending is actually satisfying.

It was still very good, and I fell absolutely in love with the art, which is GORGEOUS from start to end.

Before Mars – Emma Newman

This is the third book of the Planetfall series, which is a loosely connected series of books that happen in the same universe where a group of colonists left for a distant planet a few decades before. In Before Mars, we follow Anna, who’s the new artist in residence on the Mars colony. Anna quickly starts to observe things that make her question what’s really happening… and her own sanity.

This was fantastic, buuuut. I absolutely loved the idea of “psychological thriller on Mars”, and it’s very well executed. Generally speaking I loved the book, but up until the end I was scared it would go to a disappointing ending. It didn’t (actually, far from it), but I was scared of that. Now I’m not sure whether the issue is with my lack of trust or with the fact that what I was seeing as a possibility was not clearly eliminated as a possibility, but that made my reading slightly more uncomfortable because I was “I like this thing A LOT, but I’m afraid it’s going to go to a conclusion I don’t like and that it will make the whole thing significantly worse”.

It didn’t, and I’m happy with that; it’s also not a feeling I’m much used to, which kind of bothers me. All in all, a very solid addition to the series.

LaGuardia – Nnedi Okorafor and Tana Ford

LaGuardia is a graphic novel in which there exists sentient alien plants that are trying to integrate as they can on Earth. The main protagonist, Future, is very pregnant, and just left Nigeria while smuggling such an alien (called Letme Live) and arrives at the eponymous airport (and spaceport) to go live with her grandmother.

I loved everything about LaGuardia – it’s smart, it’s sometimes funny, it’s just the right amount of “in-your-face-political”, the art is great and the colors are superb. It won the Hugo 2020 for Best Graphic Novel, and I actually had voted for it in the first place, so that makes me happy 🙂

Atlas Alone – Emma Newman

In Atlas Alone (fourth book of the Planetfall series, see above) we get to follow previous characters of After Atlas. The book centers on Dee, the friend of Carl’s, the detective from After Atlas.

They are currently flying in a spaceship, where the major source of entertainment is mersives – and a significant part of Atlas Alone happens in such environments. This is the story of Dee learning more and more about her environment and how she reacts to it, within the context of her previous trauma.

I must admit that, for me, this was the weakest book of the series. All in all, this felt very, very dark, and I kept hoping for some glimmer of hope that I didn’t feel I got. Also as a nitpick: the turn of sentence “my face was a mask in front of a mask” made me cringe the first time; and it also made me cringe the second and third time I encountered it in the book 😛

However, I did like the environment and what Newman did with the mersives and in particular the whole idea of “leet” gaming. I also enjoyed seeing Carl again, and the role he had in this book. The plot was also very tight and kept me interested all along (and may or may not have led to a few “okay, one more chapter” at too-late-hours of the night).

Mooncakes – Suzanne Walker and Wendy Xu

Another graphic novel, you say? You bet. Nova is a teenager working part-time in her grandmothers’ bookshop. Said bookshop has a large “occult” section, and, oh, Nova’s grandmothers are witches. And, unexpectedly, Nova’s childhood friend Tam reappears, and they are a werewolf.

This was sweet and cute and, again, I loved the art. That’s actually one thing that reading a larger-than-usual amount of graphic novels in a short time taught me: I DO have opinions about their art, and it’s very important in my enjoyment of the form.

Middlegame – Seanan McGuire

Seanan McGuire’s In an Absent Dream was my favorite for the Hugo award for Best Novella, so that put Middlegame firmly in the top of the pile of the things I wanted to try to read before the Hugo voting deadline, since it was nominated for Best Novel.

In Middlegame, we get to meet Roger and Dodger. Roger has words for everything; Dodger has numbers for everything. They are twins, but they never met. And one day, they make contact – in their minds. Nothing is a coincidence: Roger and Dodger are part of a large alchemical experiment. As they grow up, they learn more about themselves, about their powers, and how the world may end up depending on them.

I did really like Middlegame, and I think it had a lot of things I like – intriguing setting, memorable characters, good writing. I did find it a bit long, but I have no idea if it’s because I’m in a bit of a hurry (I really wanted to read another Hugo nominee before I voted) or whether it would have been my opinion as well in other circumstances.

Gideon the Ninth – Tamsyn Muir

Gideon the Ninth was the book I had heard the most about before the Hugos (for which it was also nominated for Best Novel). The Emperor has called upon the heirs of all the necromancer houses for a trial of valor. The winner of the trial will ascend to a higher, immortal state of being; the losers may not survive. Harrowhark is the heir for the Ninth House; Gideon is her reluctant protector.

This was super good – loved the setting and the use of necromancy; loved the characters. But it took me a looong while to stop being confused about who’s who – the cast is quite large, and a given character will be called at least three different ways, which doesn’t help. There was also possibly more twists and turns in the last 20% than in the first 80%, and that was a bit exhausting. Also, I’m starting to realize I actually do not like long, epic scenes endings… and this definitely went into that category. So, let’s say that I loved 80% of it 😉

Deal with the Devil – Kit Rocha

I got excited about Deal with the Devil the minute I heard the title of the series (it’s a new series by the authors of the Beyond series): MERCENARY LIBRARIANS, HOW AMAZING IS THAT IDEA.

The global context is the same as in Beyond – post-apocalyptic US, where everything is more or less derelict, and people are scraping by the best they can. Nina and her team collect data from remaining data vaults, mostly redistribute it to whoever needs them, sometimes manage to score an interesting cache of sensitive data that they try to sell to interesting parties.

Knox and his team are ex-super-soldiers in dire need of a way to fix their brain implants before they go completely awry. The hacker that could handle that has been kidnapped; the price for Knox to get them back is to manage to deliver Nina to the kidnappers.

Both teams start working seemingly together; this is a Kit Rocha book, so there’s significant romance elements (I honestly don’t know if it’s a post-apo book with strong elements of romance or a romance book with strong elements of post-apo 😀 ) – not much surprise there.

It had less “librarian” content than I hoped but it was so so good! The fighting scenes read as choreographed (and I actually enjoyed them, although it’s not my usual cup of tea), I loved the characters and the setting, and I cannot wait for #2 🙂

A Memory Called Empire – Arkady Martine

A Memory Called Empire is the first book of a new series, Teixcalaan. Mahit, who comes from Lsel, a small mining station, is named ambassador to the Teixcalaan Empire, which is basically… most of the known universe. She gets summoned to her post, and quickly questions the demise of her predecessor, whose death is somewhat suspicious.

Lsel has an interesting technology, called imagos, where the memories of a person get transferred as a chip to another person. Mahit gets the imago of her predecessor, but since they’re bad with backups, or something, she gets an outdated version… which starts malfunctioning quite quickly. Thankfully, her liaison, Three Seagrass, is here to help her navigate court intrigue, poetry as a mean of communication, and what it means to be Teixcalaan (and to possibly be called Six Helicopter or One Lightning.)

A Memory Called Empire won the Hugo award for Best Novel; I hadn’t read it before voting, but this was very well-deserved. The world building is fantastic, the characters are endearing, the plot and intrigue were delightful, and I loved everything about this book. Another one for which I cannot wait for #2!

Other reads

  • Die, Volume 1 – Kieron Gillen and Stephanie Hans – A graphic novel where a group of role players gets catapulted in the world they’re playing into. I think it was good, but it was completely not my thing 🙂
  • Attachments – Rainbow Rowell – I had my reservations for a long while about the premise of the book (a “security” person monitors employee emails, shenanigans ensue) and, while this was better than I feared, it wasn’t very memorable.
  • Kiss my Cupcake – Helena Hunting – a cute romance about a cupcake-and-cocktail shop owner and her craft-beer-ax-throwing bar owner neighbor.
  • The Bride Test – Helen Hoang – Khai is autistic, and his mother tries to find him the perfect bride. She finds Esme, and offers her a deal: a summer in the US, no strings attached, under the condition that she tries to make things work with her son. This was pretty good, but I had a hard time connecting with Esme – Khai is often flabbergasted by her… but I must admit, so was I at times!
  • The Phlebotomist – Chris Panatier – in a world where people are supposed to give blood every couple of months and where the society’s class system depends on the people blood’s group, Willa learns disturbing truths that put her life and the one of her grandson at risk. A decent post-apocalyptic novel and a nice take on a common trope.

#balisebooks from the end of the year

(Ce billet est traduit en français ici : #balisebooks de fin d’année)

I’m so behind on my #balisebooks reporting that it’s not even funny. So, the plan: remove the backlog before new year, and start 2019 on a reasonably clean slate. Let’s go!

Crazy Rich Asians / China Rich Girlfriend / Rich People Problems – Kevin Kwan – the story starts with Rachel, whose boyfriend invites her to meet his family in Singapore, without even hinting that his family (and the people who gravitate around it) is richer than rich – and not necessarily behaving in a “not richer than rich” way. Drama ensues, and continues for two more books. I liked it way (way) more than I thought I would – it does have a Downton Abbey meets Gossip Girl in Singapore kind of feel, it’s generally pretty funny, many characters are likeable (and you love to hate the ones you do), the sprinkling of Malay and Chinese expressions in the dialogs is pretty well done, and that series made me SO HUNGRY, there is SO MUCH FOOD!

Site Reliability Engineering – How Google Runs Production Systems – edited by Betsy Beyer, Chris Jones, Jennifer Petoff and Niall Richard Murphy – a very nice collection of essays around the SRE theme, on topics that range from “how to organize on-call in your team” to “how to handle consensus in a distributed system” via “what’s a cascading failure and how to deal with it”, with an interesting mix of “organisational” topics and “highly technical” topics.

Ivy and Abe – Elizabeth Enfield – a book where Ivy and Abe, as soulmates as people can be, meet for the first time at different points in their lives, which makes their common story vastly different depending on the timeline and circumstances of their meeting. I really liked the idea, and the characters, and the whole view that the moment at which people meet and what they’ve lived through so far is at least as important as who they are. I am however a bit sad that there’s so many timelines in which things don’t work out, and that some of these timelines kind of lack closure.

Altered Carbon / Broken Angels – Richard K. Morgan – the first two books in the Takeshi Kovacs series, happening in a universe where people can store their consciousness into “stacks” and be revived in new bodies, borrowed or grown. In the first book, Takeshi Kovacs is hired from a (very) rich guy to investigate his own murder (the rich guy’s, not Tak’s); in the second one, he’s gathering a team to go explore a seemingly lucrative alien archaeological find. I had read Altered Carbon a while ago, hadn’t been convinced; but I liked the TV series a lot, so I was wondering if I had missed something in the book. I did like it a lot more on the second read; moreover, the few things that had bothered me in the series were actually different in the book, which is quite funny. I did dislike the second book, though – I’m not sure if it was me or the book or the moment, but I got so, so bored :/

Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup – John Carreyou – the story of Theranos, a startup that wanted to revolutionize the biological testing industry, and its CEO, Elizabeth Holmes. Spoiler: it did not end well – the product never quite worked, and the whole thing went from embarrassing failure to something described as a full-blown scam. Fascinating story, great storytelling – a very interesting and entertaining read. A novel with that plot would seem barely believable… and yet 🙂 Highly recommended.

Romancing the Duke – Tessa Dare – I was very pleasantly surprised by this one. I’ll admit that I have a fair amount of prejudice towards the romance genre, but this prejudice is chipping away one book at a time 😉 Izzy Goodnight inherits a castle, which is a good thing for her, because other than that, she has basically nothing (except an ermine). Problem: said castle is currently inhabited by the Duke of Rothbury, who a/ is not aware the castle has been sold b/ as current owner, would actually have something to say about it. Stuff ensues. Including a bunch of cosplayers. (No, really.) And it’s funny, and it’s cute as hell, and it’s entertaining, and I just loved that thing.

When a Scot Ties the Knot – Tessa Dare – technically in the same series as the previous one, but with unrelated stories and characters. Madeline is shy to the point of social anxiety, so when the time comes for her to make her débuts in London, instead, she invents a fake Scottish fiancé who tragically dies after a bunch of letters. Until the day where said fake invented fiancé arrives on her doorstep, with a bunch of letters addressed to him. I did like it less than the previous one, but it was still a damn entertaining read.

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone – J.K. Rowling – yup, I started re-reading Harry Potter. Still great 🙂

The Calculating Stars / The Fated Sky – Mary Robinette Kowal – a series where the premise is that, in 1952, a huge meteorite fell to Earth, and made things very awkward climate-wise. It completely changes the timeline of the space conquest (“we need to go to Mars, and we need to do that sooner than later”), and in that context we follow Elma, mathematician and Lady Astronaut.
On the one hand, there’s two points I do have an issue with:

  • I’m not sure I’m buying the premises (of “moving the hell out of here” vs “finding a way to make things work on Earth” – because in any case the environment on the Moon or on Mars is not going to be much better, is it?)
  • I’m not often bothered by sex scenes, but I was in the first book (the second one is better in that regard). They feel kind of awkward, too numerous, and either too long or too short (but then that would probably be marketed differently 😉 ).

Buuuuuuuuuuut. First, it was VERY, VERY hard to put down, and that’s a major factor. Second, it made me audibly chuckle AND drop a few tears here and there, and I’m a sucker for emotional reaction. Third – the anxiety depiction is so fucking spot on I can’t even, and I couldn’t help rooting for Elma – more than I would for myself 😉 – so it’s kind of therapeutic, in a way. All in all: definitely something for which I’m looking forward to the third book.

I’d Rather Be Reading: The Delights and Dilemmas of the Reading Life – Anne Bogel – That was very neat, in a meta sort of way. What do we read, why do we read, how do we read? Nobody is unique in their reading (or non-reading) habits, which makes this small book very relatable – and funny. And I even snagged a few titles that I’ll have to put on my “to read” list 🙂 Also, it made me discover Anne Bogel’s blog, Modern Mrs Darcy, which I quite like 🙂 (And which eventually made me start journaling, sooo.)

The Great Gatsby – Scott F. Fitzgerald – this one counts as a classic, and there’s been a movie recently (which I haven’t seen) that made me want to read it. And honestly? I don’t know. I did like it, but I have no idea why. Probably mostly because of the mood and the writing (which are not necessarily what catch my attention usually, they’re more “nice to have”s, as far as I’m concerned). I don’t know.

The Technological Singularity – Murray Shanahan – “The singularity” is a term that any science-fiction fan and/or computer scientist will have heard. I will confess that the definition and implications of it weren’t that clear to me before starting this book. Shanahan does a very good job at defining it, considering how artificial general intelligence could possibly be achieved, how it can lead to singularity, and what could be the impact of this, considering both technical and philosophical questions, at a very accessible and pretty engaging level. A thoroughly interesting read – although it definitely adds to the general sense of World Anxiety instead of alleviating it 😉

The Consuming Fire – John Scalzi – a great sequel to The Collapsing Empire. Still very entertaining characters (same ones, so if you didn’t like them in the first book, don’t expect to like them more here), a fair amount of smartassness and kickassery, cloak&dagger&treason, and IS THE THIRD BOOK AVAILABLE ALREADY? 😛

Shades of Milk and Honey – Mary Robinette Kowal – apparently, Pride and Prejudice with magic. I haven’t read Pride and Prejudice (yet, it’s on my list for next year 😉 ), but I still enjoyed this one a lot (I’m, at the time of writing this, reading the second book in the series, and it’s even better). It’s an historical romance where the characters are able to manipulate “glamour”, basically magical visual illusions. That was a very pleasant read.

Happier – Tal Ben-Shahar – an intro book about positive psychology. Nothing mind-blowing, but ties a few things together neatly. Pretty good, all considered.

A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares – Krystal Sutherland – Esther is convinced that her family is cursed, and that every member of her family has One Great Fear that will eventually kill them. Esther has escaped it so far, by keeping a list of “possible fears”, and carefully avoiding getting exposed to all of them – until her friend Jonah challenges her to tackle these fears, one at a time. Funny and heart-breaking and great and generally wow.

Wool – Hugh Howey – stories from the Silo, where a small community of people live, sheltered from a very dangerous Outside, to which occasionally someone gets sent (and dies quite quickly). Really loved the beginning, was less convinced by the “late middle”. Still, a very good read, and I’m looking forward to the other installments of the series.

Wild Hunger – Chloe Neill – first book of Chicagoland, The Next Generation, following Elisa, related to the vampires from the first series, coming back from Paris to Chicago after her training. Scratched the UF itch, but I got slightly bored – and rolled my eyes more than usual, at least in the beginning. The ending was somewhat better.

An Absolutely Remarkable Thing – Hank Green – Gigantic Transformer statues appear all around the world, and April May is the first one to document their appearance on YouTube, and becomes Internet-famous because of it while the whole story about the Carls (after the name April gave “hers” on a whim) and their mysteries unfolds. A very entertaining read with a quite believable protagonist and an interesting depiction of “social network fame”.

The Kiss Quotient – Helen Hoang – Stella, a brilliant 30-something econometrician, is still single, at least partly because of her Asperger. She decides to hire an escort to teach her sex and relationships. Basically a gender-swapped Pretty Woman; nothing much surprising, but very cute.

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society – Ann Mary Shaffer and Annie Barrows – an epistolary novel set in 1946 where Juliet, writer, starts corresponding with a man from Guernsey – who is part of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. Juliet is intrigued and ends up visiting her new-found friend. This was at times fun/lighthearted, poignant and moving. Really (really) liked it 🙂

Altered Traits – Daniel Goleman and Richard Davidson – a short book that aims at distinguishing scientifically validated facts from hypotheses that may not be (not necessarily wrong, but “more research required”) when it comes to meditation and the brain, particularly when it comes to long-term practitioners. It’s a very interesting summary of the research around meditation effects and it’s history, but it sometimes feels a bit messy/meandering.

And if you were to read only one of these… The Calculating Stars.