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Waubgeshig Rice: Moon of the Crusted Snow (2018)

"A daring post-apocalyptic novel from a powerful rising literary voice. With winter looming, a small …

Moon of the Crusted Snow

Moon of the Crusted Snow is a story about a small, remote Anishinaabe community surviving through the beginning of an apocalypse. Power goes out, communication is down, and they turn inward to try to take care of their community, through leadership struggles, limited food, and the chaos of taking in strangers. I read this as a part of July's #SFFBookClub book.

I quite enjoyed the smaller focused story of survival here, where the outside world is at the margins. It centers a small Anishinaabe community, and about its dread and uncertainty and adaptation as everything starts to slowly unravel when winter sets in.

For me, the part that set the tone of the entire story was the conversation that Evan Whitesky has with the elder Aileen Jones, about halfway through the book. She says that there's no word for apocalypse in Ojibwe. But more than that, she says that their …

Content warning now with spoilers!

Suyi Davies Okungbowa: David Mogo (Paperback, 2019, Abaddon)

Nigerian God-Punk - a powerful and atmospheric urban fantasy set in Lagos.

Since the Orisha …

David Mogo: Godhunter

In a lot of ways, this reminds me of the Akata series, but for adults - Nigerian setting, making friends and enemies with supernatural entities, Nsibidi script as magic writing, etc. (This is not a criticism of the Akata series, I love them.)

The setting was the best part of this for me - I enjoyed postapocalyptic, god-ravaged Lagos.

I appreciate that David is imperfect and fallible - he makes mistakes, fails, etc., and it has real consequences for him.

The first section (book? sub-book?) was my favorite, followed by the second - as the story progressed, I felt like it kept getting progressively more frantic and less coherent.

Overall, I enjoyed it, though, and I'm looking forward to more.

#SFFBookClub

reviewed Siren Queen by Nghi Vo

Nghi Vo: Siren Queen (Hardcover, 2022, Tordotcom)

It was magic. In every world, it was a kind of magic. "No maids, no …

Siren Queen

I suggested this for #SFFBookClub, and so I gave this a reread so I could enjoy it again. I love the way this novel takes Hollywood and its obsession with stars and all of its racism and homophobia, and mixes it with fey magical realism. Overall, it's definitely a book whose strengths are in its setting and its writing, rather than in a tight plot, but I still love the characters.

In particular, probably my favorite part of this book are the constant turns of phrase that bring in fey elements at unexpected times. You're just reading along and then you get hit with a line like "The cameras were better now, I told myself. They had tamed them down, fed them better." Silent movies steal people's voices. Film stars are (ambiguously but also maybe literally) stars in the sky and wield their star power. Names are sacrificed, or …

reviewed Crossing the Line by Karen Traviss (The Wess'har Wars, #2)

Karen Traviss: Crossing the Line (2004, EOS)

Shan Frankland forever abandoned the world she knew to come to the rescue of a …

Crossing the Line

It kept very much to the themes of the original: genocide, greed, betrayal, and the sheer amount of damage a few bad-faith actors can do in a system not designed to account for them

Finished just in time for #SFFBookClub sequels month 😅

R. F. Kuang: Babel (2022, Harper Voyager)

Traduttore, traditore: An act of translation is always an act of betrayal. 1828. Robin Swift, …

Babel

Content warning I don't think I can review this without some vague spoilers

Babel (EBook, 2022, Harper Voyager)

From award-winning author R. F. Kuang comes Babel, a thematic response to The Secret History …

Content warning First Interlude of Book 5

R. F. Kuang: Babel (2022, Harper Voyager)

Traduttore, traditore: An act of translation is always an act of betrayal. 1828. Robin Swift, …