Jan. 10th, 2009

meganbmoore: (fantasy heroine)
Gaultry is a young sorceress who lives in the country with her great-aunt. Her twin sister, Mervion, is living with their half-brother on their father’s estate, keeping his new wife company. Due to a prophecy regarding the twins, which says that they will either save the country or destroy it, the prince’s advisor, who wants the country to be reassimilated into the larger nation it broke away from three hundred years ago, has Mervion arrested. Gaultry is rescued from this fate by Martin, a nobleman who had a geas laid on him by their father to protect the twins. However, since Martin didn’t realize they were twins, the geas that was meant to be divided between two subjects is instead focused on the one. Not knowing whether or not to trust Martin, Gaultry nevertheless sets off with him to rescue Mervion.

I grabbed the book at the used bookstore because stories and prophecies focused on family-especially siblings-interest me. Unfortunately for my storytelling kinks, that aspect actually plays a relatively minor part. The actual story is interesting, though, as is the worldbuilding, and the characters are interesting. Unfortunately, it’s also very much a first book. The prose alternates between straightforward and a bit purply and convoluted. We start with the action well underway, resulting in multiple flashbacks and clunky infodumps. Important plot points and characters appear and disappear without warning. Martin is given an estranged wife to complicate the romance, and then the matter is completely forgotten. The twins’ brother is brainwashed, but his fate never revealed. His wife is in the prologue and mentioned as being with Mervion, but is never heard from again. A minor character introduced in an interlude becomes a major player at the end, but with no warning. Etc.

Then there’s the romance. Early in the book, it’s established that the geas causes Martin to be sensitive to anything he perceives as an alteration in Gaultry’s emotional state, and the geas also seems to be the main source of his attraction to Gaultry. (I’d actually guess that it changed a natural but controllable attraction into an overwhelming one.) There’s never any real indication that his love for Gaultry would be there-or at least as strong-without the geas. For her part, Gaultry seems to alternate between “ok, no geas influenced lovers now, thank you, call me when you’re over this” and not seeming to have any problem with the situation. When Gaultry is in “oh *bleep* no even if you are hot” mode, it can be interesting, but when Reimann forgets that part, it got a bit creepy for me. But then, my favorite scene was when a very geased influenced Martin got taken out by magic and left to rot when “no” didn’t get through his skull.

But, like I said, it’s a first book. I’ve read much worse first books, and books from more established authors with less promise, and this does have interesting worldbuilding and potential, and I do like that Gaultry is always trying to be proactive, even when she’s messing up, and never really relies on Martin to save her. It’s apparently the start of a trilogy, though the main story wraps up in this book. Has anyone read the rest of the trilogy? Does the writing get more even?
meganbmoore: (no justice)

Hmm…I thought Vol 20 was supposed to wrap up this arc. Or is that just the Japanese editions?

This has been an interesting arc for Rin. The thing about Rin is that she’s never going to be conventionally “badass.” Blade of the Immortal isn’t the kind of series where you go off in a cave/on a mountaintop/under a waterfall with a master for two weeks and come out five levels stronger, and it isn’t the kind of series where you’re born an amazingly awesome fighter. Unless you’re Makie. In which case, being naturally, amazingly gifted makes your life hell. Not to mention a bit on the whiny emo side. But unless you’re Makie, you have to fight and train and sweat and bleed for years to get good. And if you start out years behind everyone else, then you have to do something to compensate and catch up. If you’re Hyakurin, you do this with poisons, a distance weapon, and a lot of confidence. If you’re Rin, you do this by being smarter (and often crazier) than the person you’re fighting.

Rin without Manji (or, for that matter, Anotsu) is a very different creature than Rin with Manji. She is, very simply, better. In complete honesty, I think she’s just a sixteen-year-old girl (or is she seventeen now?) who knows that vengeance quests and a life on the run aren’t what she’s supposed to be doing, and who was raised with the expectation of having someone to take care of her. But we’ve seen Rin on her own before, and we’ve seen Rin having to take care of someone while being hunted (if largely against her will) but now we have Rin on her own (or at least, without her relative support system) having to be the leader, having to be the planner, and having to figure out how to save someone. And it’s very intersting to see the length she’ll go to to accomplish her goals, especially when almost anyone would label her crazy for it. Actually, people we’d normally label crazy do call her crazy.

spoilers )
meganbmoore: (magic)

The motor (or whatever) for the front driver's side window of my car broke while I was dropping off Netflix DVDs at the post office.  So now I must take it by a shop next week and get someone to manually roll up the window and tape it closed.  I now have three windows that I must get fixed with my tax return.

In cheerier news, [livejournal.com profile] telophase  is looking for YA girl friendly recs for a feminist bookstore that's working on building up it's juvenile section.  Go rec.
meganbmoore: (misbehaving in seoul)
These are two single volume works by Arina Tanemura, a mangaka whose work I’ve heard both good and bad things about. I’ve been meaning to check her stuff out for a while, but keep getting scared off by the eyes. They make Tohru Honda’s look teeny.

I.O.N. is about a young woman named Ion whose father told her that if she spelled out her name as a chant, then good things would happen to her. She does this while fleeing her class president (who may be the student body president, actually, I’m not sure), who has a crush on her, and meets Mikado, a student who is trying to start up a club for psychic research. She falls in love with him immediately because he’s cute and has a dream. I think. Since Mikado and the class president hate each other, she tricks the class president into approving a club she created for Mikado. Later, she gains psychic powers while fooling around with his research, and accidentally burns down the shed he uses, and now has an excuse (psychic powers) to hang around Mikado. Later, random angst is added as Mikado’s ex shows up and Ion starts fretting over whether he likes her as a girl or a psychic.

Mostly, this one bored me. I tend to prefer shoujo fluff to the shoujo romantic angstfests (I prefer comedy, scifi, historical of fantasy, though), but I like a little substance to it, or at least interesting characterization. If nothing else, I like my heroines to have at least something on their minds than whether or not the guy likes her.

Short-Tempered Melancholic is a collection of four short stories. The title story is a two part story about a modern ninja girl (For the purposes of this post, I prefer “ninja girl” to “kunoichi,” ok?) who is in charge of protecting her family’s treasure. Reading this one went something like this:

ME: Ninja girl! Cool!
NINJA GIRL: *kicks butt while non-fighter male BFF looks on*
BLANDLY CUTE BOY NINJA GIRL LIKES EVEN THOUGH NON-FIGHTER BFF IS CLEARLY THE ONE FOR NINJA GIRL: “Ninja girl, you should try to be more ladylike.”
NINJA GIRL: “OK! I will give up being a ninja girl and become a proper lady.”
ME: OMG WTF NO NO NO GET IT OFF!!!
NINJA GIRL: *tries and fails every stereotypical ladylike thing known to man*
ME: It’s infecting me it’s touching me I might get cooties HELP HELP HELP!!!
BLANDLY CUTE BOY NINJA GIRL LIKES EVEN THOUGH NON-FIGHTER BFF IS CLEARLY THE ONE FOR NINJA GIRL: “Ha ha! I am secretly an enemy out to steal your family treasure!”
NINJA GIRL: “OMG! You suck! I’m over you!” *kicks his butt*
ME and NON-FIGHTER MALE BFF: “Whew!!”
ME: “Oh! Another chapter!”
NINJA GIRL: “Oh no! Non-Fighter Male BFF is walking with another girl! I shall fall to pieces!”
NON-FIGHTER MALE BFF and BLANDLY CUTE BOY NINJA GIRL LIKES EVEN THOUGH NON-FIGHTER BFF IS CLEARLY THE ONE FOR NINJA GIRL: “I love Ninja Girl! You love her too? We must duel like  true men and she is the reward to be given out at the end of the fight!”
ME: Touching me infecting me get it off off off it’s touching mmmmmmmeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!
NON-FIGHTER MALE BFF to NINJA GIRL’S GRANDFATHER: “You must teach me to fight so I can claim true love!”
NINJA GIRL: “He loves someone else! I remain oblivious as to why I should care but am destroyed!”
BOYS: *fight*
NINJA GIRL’S GRANDFATHER: *pretends to kidnap Ninja Girl at fight*
NINJA GIRL: *saves self*
ME: MILD REDEMPTION!
NON-FIGHTER MALE BFF: *was trying to save*
NINJA GIRL’S GRANDFATHER: “You win! I was going to give her to whoever stopped fight to try to rescue Ninja Girl! Let’s go toughen you up.”
NINJA GIRL: “I have as many problems with this as I did with being told to change who I was by the boy I liked.”
OTHER GIRL: “I was utterly irrelevant, wasn’t I?”
ME: TOUCHING MMMMEEEEE!!!!

And yet, there was not as much need to scrub my brain as there was when I read Special A a while back. Then again, Special A deceived me and initially made me think it had potential for longer than 5 pages.

Like I.O.N., I think the reason I stuck with the story was that was that with more substance and development and more ultimately going on than fretting about liking a guy, I suspect I could have really liked Short-Tempered Melancholic. The other three stories in this volume were enjoyable but normal shoujo fluff. This Love is Nonfiction started in a way that threatened to incite my shoujo rage (plain girl’s pretty friend apparently stealing plain girl’s cute penpal) but did a reversal (or rather, double gimmick) that ended up making it cute and my favorite of the collection. All the stories, though, still suffered from heroines with nothing on their minds but getting the guy, and all the guys in both books were fairly bland to me.

I have the first two volumes of Time Stranger Kyoko at home. (I got all four booksreally cheap a month or so ago.) It’s a series, instead of a one-off or short story, so can I expect more substance? Character development? (I’ve read single volume works and manga short stories with plot and development before, so I know it can be done!) Does the heroine have anything but boys on her mind?

Profile

meganbmoore: (Default)
meganbmoore

July 2020

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26 2728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 19th, 2025 02:36 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios