2013-06-26

meganbmoore: (Default)
2013-06-26 12:30 am

The closest thing to a political post that I've made in years.

 SCARED TO SLEEP.  TEXAS REPUBLICANS MIGHT HOLD AN(other) ILLEGAL VOTE AND CLAIM OWNERSHIP OF MY UTERUS BY THE TIME I WAKE UP.

(Granted, I'm not actually using it for anything and so it's primarily an instrument of torture, but still.)
meganbmoore: (Default)
2013-06-26 08:41 pm

Wednesday reading meme

What are you currently reading

The Lost World
by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Ebook available at work. Enjoyin it considerably more than I'd expect to enjoy a book about a bunch of educated white dudes travelling to a savage and unknown lost land in South America, accompanied by natives who are either evil and vengeful or dim yet good because they are loyal to the privileged educated white dudes. Yet, cringeing every few pages for obvious reasons. It is making me want to rewatch the series from 15~ or so years back, though.

Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng. I'm reading the fantranslation available at spcnet.tv, and am going to be using the names it uses for my peace of mind, even though they aren't the same as I've seen them elsewhere, should it come up. Then fantranslation also has a lot of detailed footnotes.

This is the book the Tsui Hark's Bride With White Hair movies with Brigitte Lin and Leslie Cheung (and the upcoming movie with Fan Bing Bing and Huang Xiao Ming). There was also a TV series a year or two ago, but it doesn't appear to have English subtitles yet. Tragically. I'm assuming that anyone interested in what I have to say about a wuxia novel is familiar with it, but just in case: Very Gifted student of Wu Dang meets lady mountain bandit/heroine, adventures, crime fighting and very long makeouts under a waterfall ensue, followed by misunderstandings, betrayal, and prehensile hair. Among other things. The movies are fantabulous and if you like wuxia and haven't seen them, then shame on you.

I'm reading this on Kindle and since I have library books checked out, anything on Kindle is second priority and only really gets read in breaks at working and when I'm out and waiting for things. As such, I've only read one chapter. But it's a LONG chapter. Reading only it, I now understand why people can watch a 30-50 episode series adapting a wuxia novel, and still complain about plotlines being left out. You could probably get 3-4 episodes just out of this chapter, half of which doesn't even involve the main characters. The writing style is also very different from what I'm used to (thought not in a bad way at all) and I'm pretty sure my reading speed will increase once I've adjusted more.

That said, loving it so far.

brief spoilers )

What did you recently finish reading?

Dangerous Women: The Perils of Muses and Femmes Fatales by Laure Adler & Elisa Lecosse. A coffeetable book that discusses the portrayal of women's sexuality and power in various forms of art. A good, light afternoon read (but definitely a NSFW one), but not one that goes into enough depth to be truly satisfying, and often ignores aspects of historical women's lives that (IMO) should be taken into account with the obvious feminist intention of the book in order to focus on sexuality, even when that focus serves to reinforce their negative portrayals.

The Summer Prince by Ayala Dawn Johnson. While I completely get why this book is getting near-universal gold stars with bloggers I follow, I have to admit to being left somewhat cold by it, despite interesting worldbuilding and good plot and characterization. Set in a matriarchal society in post-apocalyptic Brazil, The Summer Prince is the story of June, a young artist who befriends Enki, The Summer King, who is to be ritualistically executed after serving for a year. It's been rightly getting a lot of hype for being a non-US-ian, non-Sea Of White People post-apocalyptic YA in which queer relationships are normal and accepted without comment, and in which art and expression in multiple forms are explored, and people should read it for that. On the other hand, for the first half of the book, June's relationships with other women are pretty much universally negative (more than once I wondered if she just hated other women) and the 2 on-page queer relationships (June's mother and stepmother, and Enki and June's best friend, Gil) are things that cause June pain. The second half improves on both of these fronts, though June's relationships with men are vastly prioritized over her relationships with women from the first page to the last page, and I still don't get to have speculative fiction in which a matriarchal society is a good thing. (I don't even get to have "Wonder Woman" for that anymore.) I do still recommend it overall, though, and the ending makes me very interested in what happens next (possibly more than in what did happen in the book itself).

What do you think you'll read next?

More Legend of the White-Haired Demoness, library books.