For the December ramble meme, Day 27,
egelantier asked me to ramble about Volha, but I first needed to get my book thoughts down in more usual manner, and as I try to go in chronological order with the books, I should also post my last Reading Roundup of the year. I made it to 50, just barely... but hey, for a while it looked like even that might not happen
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And I need to get on with my on ramble-meme. In fact I should get back to posting at all. :D
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It's been rather hard to keep up with the posting-every-day thing under the ramble meme, so it's kind of devolved into posting-in-about-the-right order-somewhere-in-the-vicinity-of-the-date for me, but it's still a great meme -- I've enjoyed both writing my own rambles (and caught some insights in the process that probably wouldn't have come about otherwise) and learned a lot from everybody else's rambles. So, looking forward to yours!
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I have long noticed that I am rarely super enthusiastic about books written by men compared to books written by women
Interesting... I think I'm about even in this regard. Lately I've been reading a lot more books by women, it seems like, but the odds of something sparking into full-on obsession seem to be about the same regardless of author's gender. (Like, this year, there were two new-to-me series I started that I would say I was obsessed with, and one had a male author and the other a female one.)
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Yeah, it really does beg that question... :(
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In addition to the Curseworkers (trilogy that starts with White Cat), I also really like her Modern Faerie Tale books (loose trilogy starting with Tithe, although Valiant (the middle book) can be read as a standalone, too). And I think she writes really good short stories, which you can find collected in The Poison-Eaters.
I hope you enjoy if you do give her books a shot!
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The Holly Black was good! Not as good as Curseworkers, I think, but well worth a read. (There is *tiny spoiler* a little bit of flashback-Russia in there, btw, but nothing there to interfere with my enjoyment.)
Volha really seemed likable for her devotion to her professionalism
That is my favorite thing about Volha-the-character (assigning her wry narrative voice to Volha-the-narrator as distinct from Volha-the-character, if that distinction makes any sense; I mean, there are people I really like as narrators whom I like a lot less as characters -- Harry Dresden, for instance, or even Corwin).
Ksandr and Len's past (throw a couple more characters to the mix:) are a thing I really wanted to hear more about at the time, as well.
We don't get much more in the next two books either, then?
single-handedly ( ... )
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I'm curious about YOUR thoughts on this, but did not have very many of my own. Like, it did not impress me with surprising astuteness / aptness the way a character in RoL #4 did, and it didn't enrage me the way Blood of Tyrants did, and it didn't baffle me like Russia in Kushiel's Legacy did. I feel like maybe she did a decent amount of research to avoid anything glaring, and then didn't go so deep as to show any problems with subtler stuff? Which is already way better than most Western authors writing Russian characters...
I admired her pragmatism, perseverance, quite rational approach to most things, and general kindness to people that wasn't of goodie-two-shoes variety
Agreed on all of this -- she felt complex and likeable without at all being generic or too perfect.
Yes, they are represented, and no, it didn't feel to me like SRB's agenda at allI saw Alenka's post on that as I petyred through, and your comments, I think -- does it ( ... )
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