The corners of Jude’s mouth turned up at his answer as she let him take the books. If she was being honest, she was somewhat proud of being the one to make the introductions between two beloved titles and someone new.
“Glad I could provide you with something novel. Pun intended.” Jude quipped, and shifted her weight to one side as she considered the man’s question. Gesturing towards Tess of the Road, she said, “Hartman’s good at world-building, but the novel would be great even without her fantasy creatures. I don’t know when ‘ strong woman ‘ became code for ‘ uncomplicated and preferably wielding a sword ‘ but that’s not really Tess. She fucks up and embarrasses people and doesn’t live up to anyone’s expectations but the novel is … compassionate. She gets to forgive herself.” Jude trailed off and shrugged, suddenly uncomfortable with her accidental rant. “I don’t know, I guess I like an assertive woman.”
“And that one: take notes, read the footnotes. You’ll probably think it’s pretentious, gimmicky postmodern bullshit and it kind of is, maybe. But I guess the gimmicky, labyrinthine text is supposed to be like … like you’re exploring a house instead of reading a book. You’re scrutinizing every nook and cranny, walking its halls. It’s immersive. And haunting, definitely haunting. And hopeful. And about what it means to you, regardless of narrative or author’s intent.”
Jude stopped before she overwhelmed the guy, and tilted her head towards the other book he’d been holding before he spoke to her. “I guess I should have started by asking what you’ve got there.”
____
“Ha! Good one,” Niko chuckled a little at the pun. As the woman described Tess of the Road, he nodded a bit, liking the description of it more and more. He loved book where characters didn’t fit into perfect boxes of what you expect from them. Characters should be like real people. Complicated. “Well, you’re doing a great job selling me on it. I can’t wait to read this one,” he admitted.
“As for the horror novel... well, I think that’s what I want from it. I want to be a bit scared and not know what to expect from every line of every page. I think I’ll read Tess of the Road first, and then this one. Give my brain a bit of time to really prepare for something ‘pretentious.’” He put both books on top of is small pile and held them against his body so they wouldn’t topple over.
Niko shook his head a little at the question about what else he had. “Oh these? They’re just for a class I teach at the university. They’re nowhere near as interesting as these novels you’ve handed me. There’s no world building. But there is probably a bit of pretentious language. But that’s most textbooks.”












