[loved liked ok nope dnf bookclub*]
Ocultos • The Butcher's Masquerade • The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet • Elatsoe • A Wizard of Earthsea • Nightshade and Oak • Magic Flutes • Totem • The Girl from the Other Side: Siúil, a Rún Vols 9-12 • Book of a Thousand Days* • Shadow Scale • The Eye of the Bedlam Bride • Snake Eater
Like everyone else's January, my January sucked ass. Especially in the second half of the month, after the sudden death of my cat, I increasingly turned to books as a distraction/to keep my mind occupied. And it... mostly worked? I definitely read some good books this month. And also, fittingly, the most drab, monochromatic collection of book cover colors yet. Judging by the number of parentheticals and small text asides below, I've got some Opinions on this batch.
Here's hoping February will be a better month irl and an also-good month bookwise 🤞
Ocultos [GR review] ★★★☆☆ - Another Laura Pérez book where I look at the pictures and go "Ah yes, some weird shit. Keep it coming 🫡"
The Butcher's Masquerade ★★★★★ - A faaaascinating chapter of the DCC saga! That ending though. Ouch. Pretty insulted that this book [SPOILER] killed off a character I liked but resurrected the character with my dad's name. Where's the justice
The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet ★★1/2☆☆ - Imma be real with you chat, this one was simply not for me. I was unprepared for just how meandering light on plot and slow-paced it was gonna be (it really was a LONG way to that planet, goddamn), and I wasn't in the mood for all the therapyspeak Aesops the characters went through. Would be good for someone who is in the mood for something episodic and therapeutic, I suppose.
Elatsoe ★★★1/2☆ - Finally crossed this one off the tbr! And what a fun romp. I loved that since the in-universe vampires had to follow the "must be invited in" rules, the Apache characters could disinvite them from large swaths of North America. Also the cute ghost animals! I want that ghost mammoth so bad
A Wizard of Earthsea ★★★1/2☆ - Another book that's been on my TBR for, oh, a decade or something. Having now read Ursula's craft book, it was very cool to see how she deploys her own techniques. Needed 80% more women in it, but I hear the sequels are good for that
also this was yet another book that made me go "oh, so THIS is what Name of the Wind is trying to be"
Nightshade and Oak ★★★1/2☆ - An ARC I snapped up because it looked fun. Had strong first and last acts and a middle that decidedly plodded. Cool "goddess trapped in mortal form" premise though, and I'd love to see more historical fantasy from this setting/era!
Magic Flutes ★★★★☆ - I definitely have to be in the mood for Eva Ibbotson, but when I am in the mood, she HITS. I really appreciate that while her romances all have similar plot structures and archetypes, she fills each of them with incredibly specific details and side characters that stand out. Also this book taught me like 12 new words. Ever heard of a charabanc? A smultronställe? Poob Eva has it for you
Totem ★★★☆☆ - Once again looking at Laura Pérez story-pictures going hell yeah right on sister. Watch your past self have sex with your now-dead gf who mysteriously disappeared into the desert! You go girl
Shadow Scale ★★★1/2☆ - Not as good as Seraphina, alas. Had way too many (admittedly cool) characters and didn't take enough time to explore the full impies (implications) of its own events. And call me a whiny baby but I wanted PROPER polyamory, not Schrodinger's Homewrecker! What do you MEAN she danced with Kiggs but not Selda at the wedding?? When I want grim self-sacrificing love triangles I'll watch Mujhse Dosti Karoge. This is an outrage who do I call
The Eye of the Bedlam Bride ★★★★☆ - Devoured this in 1.5 days because I desperately needed a distraction after my cat's sudden passing, and it was oddly comforting to read about the fictional Donut's adventures, especially since this is the book where everyone's mental health is relatably in shambles. Interestingly, this is the first DCC book that felt a little repetitive at times, but I ended up not minding so much because the final twist* (*not final there were like 3 more in the epilogue alone) being hopeful felt very earned after the previous book's bleaker ending.
Snake-Eater ★★★★☆ - A surprisingly fun vibe-forward time! Having now been to the Sonoran desert (and seen a roadrunner there) I felt like the setting was incredibly well-rendered—I could tell that unlike me Ms. Ursula loves the desert with her whole soul. This might be my second- or third-favorite T. Kingfisher book now? It was surprisingly tightly written for something so slow-paced for the first 80%. I love how I'll bitch about Becky Chambers writing something slow and therapeutic but when T. Kingfisher does the same thing I'm like no let her cook. A craft thing or a personal taste thing? Yes. Also this one has suspense and gradually building dread so that might be part of it
The Girl From the Other Side: Siúil, A Rún Vols 9-12 ★★★☆☆ - Well, that was an ending. I'm not sure I liked where the story ended up, but that wild interlude with the king and the Church was interesting. And as usual, the art never missed.
January superlatives: here
I've got The Swan's Daughter and Nine Goblins checked out from the library. I also hope to get around to Mariana Enriquez's memoir and perhaps the first Bartimaeus, which a friend gifted me!
2024: july august september october november december
2025: january february-june july august september october november december