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Showing posts from February, 2013

The Tombs of Atuan

The Tombs of Atuan  is the second book in the Earthsea cycle by Ursula LeGuin. This series is the first (and possibly only?) LeGuin tried her hand at YA. While the first book suffered from some pacing issues, the second book was orders of magnitude better. The second book shifts its focus away from Ged, protagonist of the first book. Instead it follows young Arha, nee Tenar, the head priestess of a dying religion. She's mostly in charge of making sure her gods are still being sacrificed to on a regular basis. But since so few people still worship, her life is pretty boring. This all changes when Ged breaks into her temple in an effort to steal an artifact. The two become friends and end up saving each other. The book is mostly interesting for being a feminist tale from the early 70s. Some themes are familiar, but others are strangely foreign. There are things that are basic facts of my life that LeGuin couldn't even imagine several decades ago. She talks ab

Blackout

I ended up liking Blackout , the third and final book in Mira Grant's Newsflesh  trilogy, much better than Deadline . But still not as much as Feed . I think this is going to end up being one of those trilogies where I just ignore the existence of the second and third books. Like His Dark Materials . I am so glad George was back for this book. I actually considered skipping all of Shaun's chapters and just reading George's. But I decided I'd probably miss too much of the story that way. George is ultimately what kept me going through this trilogy. The science is unbelievable to a point that I ended up writing it off as magic so I could accept the story on its own merits. I mean, clones of dead people being nearly exact matches of the people they're cloned from? Memories and everything? Also sexually transmitted immunities? (That is what Grant was getting at with Shaun, right?) Anyway, Grant did a decent job expanding the conspiracy beyond the first

The Magician King

I have to say that I enjoyed Lev Grossman's The Magcian King much more than it's prequel, The Magicians . It becomes clear pretty quickly that, once again, Quentin isn't satisfied with his happy ending. Being a king in Fillory has left him bored and restless. The book opens with him wanting something to change. When things do change, he's not terribly happy about the direction they go. But he's able to recognize that this is what he wished for and to make the best of it. Quentin is growing up, and that makes him far more likable than he was in the first book. Interlaced with Quentin's story, is Julia's, which is mostly far more interesting. I like Julia a lot better than Quentin. She's just as miserable, but she's trying to do something about it. And when she finally achieves contentment, she recognizes it, even if it is too late for her to hold on to. The end of the book seemed to be structured a bit strangely. The order of the c

Wintersmith

Wintersmith  is yet another of Terry Pratchett's Discworld books. It's the third in Tiffany Aching's arc, the subseries aimed at a younger audience. I picked it up because it was snowing and I was in the mood for something wintry. The more I read about Tiffany Aching, the more I fall in love with her. She's incredibly smart and resourceful. She makes mistakes, because she's still growing and learning, and then she owns them. She does everything in her power to set things right, understanding the difference between something being her fault and it being her responsibility. In this book, inspired by the music, she decides to dance at a winter festival, despite the warnings of her elders. Doing so attracts the attention of the God of Winter, who accidentally falls in love with Tiffany instead of Summer. This happens at the same time as Tiffany is navigating the beginning of something more than friendship with a boy she's known for years. The pitfa