meganbmoore: (bwwh: music)
I doubt my selections surprise anyone.

The Four II and The Four III: The completion of the trilogy based of Woon Swee Oan's The Four Great constables. The plot of the second one took a little while to get going, but once it did, I mostly really liked it, and the parts of it that carried over into the third movie. The main plot of the third movie was weaker, but had a strong emphasis on found family, and that was good. The "mostly" comment above is because the series suddenly decided that it was inconvenient to have a wuxia movie where the female lead and emotional center of a lot of the plot was disabled, and decided to play fixit. Not that they weren't inconsistent with Yayu's paralysis in the first movie, but at least they tried. These two movies, though were a lot more serious and joyless than the first. Which isn't to say that the first wasn't also serious and rather fond of character angst, but it let humor and cheer pop up once in a while. The romance between Yayu and Lingqi had a pretty decent buildup in the first movie, but for most of the second movie and about half of the third, it's almost entirely fueled by angst and trauma. not that they don't both have plenty to angst about and be traumatized over both together and separately, but a little angst can go a long way in wuxia.

The Huntresses: A Korean action/comedy series about 3 female bounty hunters in the Joseon period who get involved with thwarting a plot to overthrow the royal family. It's apparently inspired by Charlie's Angels, but thankfully thought one fanservice scene was enough. Ha Ji Won, unsurpisingly, carries a lot of the movie on her back, but the rest of the cast pulls their weight just fine. It's a bit uneven, but overall very fun. There's an angsty romantic subplot, though, that causes a bit of cognitive dissonance when combined with the rest of the movie. It manages to pull it off almost purely because of Ha Ji Won and Joo Sang Wook's talents, but that's about it. (The subplot actually WOULD have been pretty good if properly developed in a movie or series, though, as opposed to shoehorned into an otherwise lighthearted movie.) Warning for a character in blackface at one point.

White Haired Witch of Lunar Kingdom: the latest adaptation of Liang Yusheng's Legend of the White Haired Demoness. The first half follows the plot and characterizations from the book more closely than the Brigitte Lin movies did, but then it veers off quite a bit, forgetting about a couple of important subplots along the way. It's a Tsui Hark movie, and so is both incredibly beautiful and occasionally has WTF plotting. (I think he is getting better about that in recent years, though...) As a movie, I liked it. As an adaptation of the only wuxia novel I've read in its entirety, I feel a bit judgey. Fan Bingbing was fabulous, and Huang Xiaoming was pretty good, though a bit overshadowed by Bingbing and Vincent Zhao (who I actually didn't recognize for about 2/3s of the movie thanks to facial hair and shaving off some of his eyebrows). A much higher percentage of male characters from the book than female made it into the movie, and Nishang's army of women is reduced to Tie Shanhu alone. Though I will take solace in the fact that Shanhu made it into the movie, but her love interest from the book didn't. (Not that I disliked him, but i have to take what I can get.) I'm very annoyed, though, that they kept the bit from the Brigitte Lin movies where Yihang gives Nishang her name, as opposed to keep it like it is in the book, where she's teasing him about doing so and he guesses her actual name.
meganbmoore: (bwwh: music)
Via [personal profile] yifu , trailer for the upcoming version of Legend of the White-Haired Demoness/Bride with White Hair starting Fan Bingbing and Huang Xiao Ming:

meganbmoore: (shyzm: san niang)
[personal profile] yifu  asked "If you could pick an all-ladies crime-fighting team from wuxia canon, who would the members be?"

Here is my (probably totally predictable) lineup:

Huang Rong- Legend of the Condor Heroes & Return of the Condor Heroes
Lian Ni Shang-Legend of the White Haired Demoness/The Bride With White Hair
Yan San Niang-Strange Hero Yi Zhi Mei
Wang Yan Yu & Xia Ling Shuang-Paladins in Troubled Times

I guess this could be said to be a Leverage-esque wuxia ladies crimefighting team, given that almost all of them have at least some criminal element in their past. Actually, there's a thief, a criminal mastermind, and a mountain bandit mixed in there, plus Huang Rong, whose youthful impulses weren't always on the upstanding side.

Huang Rong would be more in the Return of the Condor Heroes era, where she's pretty much the top dog in the martial arts world, and the rest are her super-elite crimefighting team. Except Ni Shang doesn't always bother showing up for missions (and when she does, she sometimes ends up leaving important people hanging upside down from trees and such) but she sends a dozen or so of her personal army of warrior maids to help out when she isn't in the mood. Yan Yu is the field leader, but Ling Shuang is the one who always deals with local authorities because Yan Yu makes them antsy. (They know her plots are effective, but she has plotted the destructions of martial arts sects and local governments, and made invasions fail before, and that can make people nervous.) Though sometimes the authorities get annoyed when their wives don't realize Ling Shuang is a girl at first at start ogling the hot young man.* San Niang isn't allowed to deal with local authorities because they annoy her so she steals from them, but she's the best infiltrator/scout ever.

*Ling Shuang is pretty much wuxia!Oscar in this regard.

I've only had a few takers, so there are still plenty of slots left if anyone else wants to leave a prompt.
meganbmoore: (ever after: books)


What are you currently reading

I've started reading the manhwa Abosolute Witch, set in a medieval-lite fantasy setting in which a young woman journey's to her husband's hometown after he goes missing, only to learn that no one has ever heard of him. There's also politics, a grumpy alchemist, a talking frog, a shape-changing lizard, retired pirates who run an inn, an eyepatchwearing seeress, an elderly lady who is the shrewdest merchant alive and a supposedly extinct race of witches. so far, I'm enjoying it considerably.

What did you recently finish reading?

Magic Rises by Ilona Andrews.The 6th Kate Daniels book (I don't count Gunmetal Magic in the series. Mostly because I pretend it doesn't exist.) and one that takes most of the protagonists to the Adriatic in hopes of acquiring a drug that will help more shapeshifter children survive adolescence. There was some annoying relationship drama that unnecessary (and the revelation of why it was there didn't make it seem any less unnecessary) but other than that, I liked it more than the last few books I've read by the authors. i will admit to being amused by Curran's temper tantrum, and people's reactions to it.

I finished reading Legend of the White-Haired Demoness, but don't have much substantial to add to what I've said before, aside from being amused when characters from the two sequels, Qijian Xia Tianshan and Saiwai Qixia Zhuan (which Tsui Hark merged into the 2004 Seven Swordsmen TV series) started showing up as children, and one of the adult characters changed his name and became the master of several characters from the sequel. I knew Seven Swordsmen was based on two Liang Yusheng novels, but didn't realize that they were sequels to Legend of the White-Haired Demoness. (And I'd been thinking that Lian Ni Shang and Fei Hongjin from Seven Swordsmen were similar but not put much actual thought into the similarity, and then I realized than Lian Ni Shang was Fei Hongjin's master and it made perfect sense. Amusingly, Ada Choi has played both characters in TV adaptations.)

Now if only I could find a (non-vikii, because it always gives me trouble) subtitled version of the 2012 TV series with Ma Su and Nicky Wu, and English translations of Qijian Xia Tianshan and Saiwai Qixia Zhuan. (Or any other Liang Yusheng novels, but particularly those.)

A bunch of Claymore, which I posted on separately.


What do you think you'll read next?

More Absolute Witch, and the library has the latest "October Daye" book for me, as well as the next-for-me "Kitty Norville" book.
meganbmoore: (bwwh: music)

What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 15-20. SO MUCH LOVE. Aside from the brief Old Dudes Talking About Honor parts, where I get lost mostly because I forget who half of them are, but there aren't a lot of those. There's considerably less focus on the romance than I was expecting, given the movies (not that there isn't still plenty of it) but instead the book (and these chapters especially) focuses more on the way people view female fighters and the prejudices and double standards they face, and often on how these things affect their relationships with each other. (Lian Ni Shang dealt with it by just taking over a mountain and building her own private army of women. That's because Lian Ni Shang is the best.)

spoiler )

What did you recently finish reading?

Curses! Foiled Again by Jane Yolen and Mike Cavallaro. Sequel to the Foiled GN I read a few weeks back, about a teenaged fencer who learns she's the champion of faerie. More swashbuckling, Princess Bride referenced and iconic gender swapping on the cover. I don't have much to say about it, but I really enjoyed it. Hopefully, there are volumes in the series coming.

A Kiss For My Prince vol 1-5 by Kim Hee-Eun. Fluffy and adorable medieval-lite shoujo manhwa. The heroine, Sei-Ann, is an orphan who becomes the servant of a duchess. convinced she's meant for greater things, she falls for the crown prince when he visits, and gets the prince's manservant to agree to get her a chance to confess her feelings, which he does by getting her a job at the palace. There, she learns that the boy she thought was the crown prince is actually the cron prince's younger brother, and the manservant is the actual crown prince. It's billed as a reverse-harem series but really isn't. While Sei-Ann has 3 potential love interests, one can't be taken seriously at all, and of the remaining two, one of them is largely operating via the driving force of severe substitution issues. A political subplot causes things to veer off into the realm of angst towards the end, but not too much. I also think the manhwaga originally meant the series to last longer and ended up rushing the last volume, but things were still resolved satisfactorilly.

Kitty Goes to Washington and Kitty Takes A Holiday by Carrie Vaughn. The second and third Kitty Norville books. I dunno. I like Kitty a lot and Vaugh does interesting things with the books, and there's a relaxing element even when it's doing things I don't like, but the actual plots don't work well for me. Also, there's a romantic development in the third book that has me "WTF?"-ing a lot.

spoiler )

Cutie Boy Vol 1-8 by Hwang Mi Ri. This is about 50 times as cracky as the only other Hwang Mi Ri I've read The Moment When A Fox Becomes A Wolf. This is an accomplishment because that one had the leads swap bodies for the first half of the series. Han Ah is a somewhat-cowardly girl (largely due to a boy who bullied her in first and second grade) who happens to be very good at martial arts, and so gets forced to be her school's "captain" by her classmates, and have fights with the captains of other schools whose students pick on them. She meets Yoo-Min, a boy who appears to be shy and sweet and delicate, but is actually the captain of another school. And the boy who bullied her when she was younger. (He thought he was protecting her from bullies. He is not bright.) it's...strange, about half the series is fueled a huge misunderstanding in which Yoo Min thinks they're dating and Han Ah thinks he's torturing her with the intent to eventually beat her because their respective classmates expect them to have a territorial fight. Then that gets cleared up and...more strange things happen. There are parts I read in wide-eyed amazement/shock and parts I genuinely liked. I feel there's actually a pretty decent, cute (if somewhat stereotypical) shoujo romance buried somewhere in the book, but it gets drowned out by the crack. And the HMR did a better job with somewhat similar leads in The Moment When A Fox Becomes A Wolf.

What do you think you'll read next?

I refuse to speculate beyond "probably more manga," though I'll likely read the first omnibus of Carla Speed McNeil's Finder, which I have through interlibrary loan.
meganbmoore: (too many books)

What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 14. I think it's been about a month since 7 Seeds completely took over my kindle time, so I'm still playing catch up and trying to remember who all these secondary characters running around are.

What did you recently finish reading?

Finished Georgette Heyer's The Black Moth. Slow start but entertaining overall, though it's more a case of you can see the elements that eventually became Heyer's strengths than that it's really good on its own. I doubt I'll be reading These Old Shades, as "redeem the rapist" plots don't appeal to me. (And while it may have been a failed rape attempt in this book, not only was the intent still there, but he was obviously successful more than once in the past.) I'm curious, though, to see if we start getting some adaptations of Heyers books over the next few years, as they start entering the public domain.

Caught up with 7 Seeds, which I posted on separately.

The Last Dragon by Jane Yolen and Rebecca Guay. Graphic novel set in a medieval-lite world in which a dragon is born 200 years after the last of the dragons were supposedly chased away. When a dragon begins attacking a town, several young men are sent out to find a "hero" to fight the dragon, and instead return with a braggart more familar with spinning stories than fighting. Meanwhile, the local healer's youngest daughter comes up with plans of her own to beat the dragon. It's simple and straightforward and relies more on wit and creative thinking than flashy heroics, and is more concerned with how the dragon affects people's daily lives than with the dragon itself. Very nice little book.

Steel's Edge by Ilona Andrews. Fourth book in Andrews's "The Edge" series. I liked it more than the last 2 books in the series, but less than I do most of the Kate Daniels books. The first half is pretty much the protagonists setting out to destroy every human trafficker they can find, and it later branches out to wrap up most of the threads from previous books. I think it's supposed to be the last book in the series, but if so, I suspect it'll get revisited once or twice later down the road to focus on the teen characters as adults. My favorite part was when the heroine would invert healing magic to make her enemies sick, as I've always wondered why people with healing magic in fantasy worlds aren't able to do that more. (Sadly, the book didn't go where I wanted with that. Oh well.)

Black Bird Vol 1-3 by Sakurakoji Kanako. I read a little bit of this when it first came out, and couldn't quite remember if I disliked it or wasn't quite grabbed by it when I saw that the library had the first 10 copies, so I checked out the first 3. I feel like i need to read about 30 columes of good manga to make up for this.

The heroine, Misao, has blood that is superduper extra yummy blood that makes demons stronger. Her One True Love is a tengu named Kyo who was her childhood friend, and is now a teacher at her school. His saliva can cure wounds. Naturally, Misao is constantly bleeding. (I will pause a moment to ponder what Clamp and/or Kaori Yuki would do with this idea. Whatever it was, it'd be better than this.) The healing is frequently over Misao's protests, and often staged to look like sexual assault. This is aside from Kyo's regular sexual assaults (often at school) that are ok because they're in love and she's his destined bride. Kyo is also fond of deliberately terrifying Misao to teach her that she has to rely on his body for protection, and Misao thinking that there's no reason to refuse Kyo's sexual advances if he loves her, and that it's touching when he's cruel to her because he's trying to teach her to rely on him out of lurve. There is, I think, an average of about 1.3 rape attempts (not including anything from Kyo) per volume. All by people Kyo has warned Misao to avoid. In fact, I think every person Kyo has told Misao not to talk to (which is everyone but his servants) has tried to rape and/or murder Misao. She has to learn her lesson about never having an independent thought or decision of her own somehow, amirite?

Brain bleach required. Very glad I only grabbed a few volumes, because I probably would have felt to read the rest if I'd grabbed them.

After the Golden Age by Carrie Vaughn. This is kind of like reading Astro City in prose form. That's not a criticism. Celia West is the non-superpowered daughter of her city's (the world's?) superheroes. At 17 she became emancipated and ran away to college, and is now a forensic accountant who does her very best to avoid her parents' superhero lifestyle. Unfortunately, her parents' secret identities were exposed when she was a teenager, and she's been kidnapped so many times that it's become boring, and the prosecutor trying her father's archnemesis for tax fraud has decided that it'd be good publicity to have her hepling on the case. There are elements of a parody in there and a pretty strong critique of superhero/vigilante culture and romanticism (one that appears to have made some Amazon and Goodreads reviewers cry in agony at the book daring to resist), and the general feel is of Silver Age surperheroes giving way to more modern superhero through the eyes of someone on the outskirts. While I haven't read superhero comics in probably 5-6 years, I read enough in the 15 years before that to see a lot of the twists coming, but that didn't affect my enjoyment.

The Adventures of Sir Balin the Ill-Fated by Gerald Morris. Part of Morris's irreverent "The Knights' Tales" series of children's books (not to be confused with his YA series, "The Squire's Tales," which can also be irreverent depending on Morris's opinion of whatever tale he's adapting at the time, but is another beast entirely). If you're familiar with the tale of Balin and Balan, you're probably going "but how do you make that a children's book?" The answer is "by relentlessly mocking obsession with fate and destiny." Light fluff, but entertaining and funny, and a quick read.

Rasetsu Vol 1-9 (complete) by Shiomi Chika. I read and enjoyed the first couple volumes of this when Viz first started publishing it a few years ago, then wasn't able to continue buying it because of finances, but the library now has the volumes I didn't, so I finally read all of it. Rasetsu is about a 18-year-old psychic named Rasetsu who was cursed by a demon when she was 15, with the demon claiming that he'd claim her for his own if she didn't find her "true love" by her 20th birthday. Thankfully, while the "find your true love" element isn't completely shelved, there isn't much of a focus on it more often than not (it's there and not something she can exactly forget, but there are other things going on) and most of the focus is on Rasetsu and her coworkers fighting malevolent ghosts and demons. There's a romantic plotline and something of a triangle, but it's generally well done (I say "generally" because I wasn't fond of the third party or his behavior, but it fits the overall plotline) and I liked the actual romance more than expected. My only real beef with it is that, as usual, Shiomi tends to surround her heroine with several men, and no other major female characters. It's connected to Shiomi's other series that was released by Viz, Yurara, in that Rasetsu's love interest, Yako, was in Yurara, and both heroines are psychics, but you don't need to read Yurara to read this.

What do you think you'll read next?

I have Natsuo Kirino's The Goddess Chronicle and the latest Kate Daniels book, and since I've read a bunch of Carrie Vaughn's standalone books, I went ahead and checked out the first couple books in her urban fantasy series. I also have the ATLA tie-in books that my library has, as I recall some listies liking them. I was going to say "I should back off a bit from manga for a while before I OD," but then I was at the Library's main branch this morning after a doctor's appointment and they had just acquired a lot of manga i haven't read yet, so that might not be happening. I also still have Kelley Armstrong's Omens to read.
meganbmoore: (nightwatch)

What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 12-13: After a couple chapters of not much happening, it went back to so much happening in a chapter that it'd probably take 10 episodes of a TV series to cover just that.

brief spoilers )

7 Seeds Vol 2 by Yumi Tamara. Plot is taking off, will give the series its own post once I've read more of it.

brief character design commentary with Basara spoiler ).


What did you recently finish reading?

Susan Elia MacNeal's His Majesty's Hope which I posted on separately.

Saga Vol 1-2 (or issues 1-12) by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples. SciFi epic in which a soldier falls in love with a prisoner whose race has been at war with hers for centuries (a war that has since pretty much taken over the universe) and they runaway together, only to have both their races put out contracts on them when it's learned they have a child. Which sounds like a fairly standard plotline, and I suppose it is, but it doesn't feel like it while reading. The story is told from the POV of their daughter, Hazel, and begins with her birth, and there are some interesting gender-reversals not only with her parents, but with supporting characters as well, and the "forbidden lovers," Alanna and Marco, are charming and adorable and functional even with literally the entire galazy hunting them. The worldbuilding (err, universebuilding, I guess) is also very complex and thought out, and while I could have done without one particular character design (if you've read it, you know exactly which one I'm referring to) most character designs are interesting and inventive. (I'm especially fond of the royals who have television monitors for heads. BECAUSE THESE ARE FORMALLY DRESSED ROYALS WHO HAVE TELEVISION MONITORS FOR HEADS.) Also, a romance novel is a revolutionary, life changing treatise. bless you, BKV. My only complaint so far is a scene in which a female character uses a sexual slur to insult another woman, and that a lot of the language and nudity feels to me like it falls into the category of being there to be "edgy."

What do you think you'll read next?

More 7 Seeds, Autobiography of A Geisha by Sayo Masuda.
meganbmoore: (10k: downtime with obsessions)
What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 9-11

comments )



What did you recently finish reading?

Lost in Translation by Margaret Ball. Hilarious 90s portal fantasy in which a liberal arts student is forced to go to university in France AGAINST HER WILL by her father and accidentally ends up in fantasyland at a university of magic. She decides it's a quaint rustic town where everyone REALLY REALLY likes D&D and is in constant RenFaire mode, and takes about half the book to realize that she isn't in Kansas anymore. she also latches on to the evil mage who brought her to fantasyland so that he could sacrifice her sole, and promptly both projects her daddy issues onto him and decides he's the Best Teacher Ever. Said evil mage then starts having awfully conflicted feelings about the sacrifice thing. Not because of trivial things like morals, but because it's like a kitten staring up at you going "Pet me, pet me! Will it be easier to to pet me if I claw my way up your robes and sit on your shoulder?" Funniest portal fantasy to not be a parody EVER. I first heard about the book through [personal profile] skygiants 's great writeup here.

Adaptation by Malinda Lo. YA SFF with multiple queer and POC (with overlap) characters. Reese and her debate partner, David, are away at a meet when hundred's of birds throw themselves at planes in flocks, causing multiple planes to crash and the airlines to be grounded. Driving home in a rental car, another bird throws itself at their car, causing a wreck that leaves both teens in a coma for almost a month. When Reese returns home, she finds that her body seems to be changing, and thinks someone is following her. She also meets a beautiful and mysterious girl, Amber, and discovers that the birdpocalypse is still an ongoing Thing. Romance, conspiracy theories, genetic experimentation and whatnot ensue. This is possibly the only minstream published fiction i've read in which people sit down and discuss how "queer" is used in modern culture, the negative connotations associated with it and the reclamation of the word. I'm not sure where it's going to go in the sequel, but it was rather grand.

Born Wicked by Jessica Spotswood. YA fantasy set in an AU 19th century England in which the premise seems to be that witches are real and the Inquisition never ended, and the Inquisitors, now called "Brothers" now rule. Witches are no longer burned at the stake, but are instead sent to sanitariums, and when they come of age young women are forced to either marry or join the "Sisters," supposedly allies of the Brothers. If young women do not make their choice in a timely manner ,the Brothers will choose for them. The main character, Cate, is the oldest of three sisters, all witches, who will have to make her own choice soon, and discovers that her mother, also a witch, may have kept secrets about her and her sisters from them that could change their lives. The world building and mythology are pretty complex, but barely touched on in the first book, and the plot, IMO, very interesting, and I very much liked the focus on Cate and her sisters. There's a lesbian subplot that doesn't actually get a lot of attention in the first book, but that I suspect will play a much larger role later on. On the downside, it's first person present tense, which is my mortal narrative enemy, and it took me a while to stop being distract by how much I hate first person present tense.


What do you think you'll read next?

Mr. Churchill's Secretary by Susan Elia MacNeal, the Taken by Vicki Petterson, or a nonfiction book about an ambulance corps in WWII whose title and author I forget just now.
meganbmoore: (ever after: books)
What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 7-8: Mostly a couple of fun side adventures in these chapters, but nothing I feel the need to offer much comment on, aside from appreciation for "no, coming back with an apology and a title 20 years later will not make me swoon in your arms, go away" with a couple supporting characters.



What did you recently finish reading?

Call the Widwife; Farewell to the East End by Jennifer Worth. The last of Worth's 3 memoirs about her time as a midwife (though there's another memoir about when she was a nurse working for the elderly) focuses on women in less conventional situations, and women on the receiving end of sexual abuse and who were victimized by the legal system. The writing style is as straight-forward and easy to read as the other books, but parts are even bleaker than in In the Shadows of the Workhouse, and the sections where she discusses surgical rape (a practice thankfully done away with by Worth's time, but recent enough for her to hear accounts of it) and backalley abortions were particularly harrowing, though it also has its fare share of lighter moments and anecdotes. Overall, I think this may be the tightest of the books and the one where Worth seems most willing to comment of the culture of the times and how things have and haven't changed, but it's certainly not the lightest read of the bunch.

The Treachery of Beautiful Things by Ruth Frances Long. YA fantasy loosely based on Tam Lin and Thomas Rhymer which also incorporates some bits of fae mythology that doesn't usually make it into the YA books (not sure when the last time was that I read a YA in which the heroine was in danger of having her heart literally eaten). When she was a child, Jenny was almost stolen by a creature made of plants, but her older brother, Tom, was taken instead when he intervened, and Jenny was later dimissed as delusional when she tried to tell people what happened to him. Years later, she returns to the spot where Tom disappeared before leaving for university, and hears him in the woods. Being Our Heroine, she naturally dives right in and soon learns that Tom is the queen's slave, and intended tithe, and sets off to rescue him, having a series of adventures and learning why the plant creature wanted her in the first place. Towards the middle, the book almost branches off and becomes about Jenny's Obligatory Mysterious Cute Fae Boy Love Interest, but remembers that it's Jenny's story before too long. I enjoyed it a lot.

Deep Down by Deborah Coates. Sequel to Wide Open, about a veteran who sees ghosts thanks to being dead for 7 minutes who returns home to solve her sister's murder. In this sequel, Hallie chats with Death, gains an undead dog for a sidekick, and hunts for a rogue grim reaper. I didn't enjoy this one as much as the first-but was happy that the book's blurb, which made it sound like the book would be about Hallie's love interest, boys, was misleading-as it shies away from Hallie's PTSD and the mystery plot is less directly related to her, but I still enjoyed it, even though I can't quite figure out if the series would be considered urban fantasy, or a mystery series with supernatural elements.


What do you think you'll read next?

Most likely Adaptation by Malinda Lo or Lost in Translation by Margaret Ball, since the library wants them back.
meganbmoore: (miss fisher: phryne/jack: hats)
I'm having to go in to work at 6 am this week and next week, as opposed to my normal 8 am, which is not really conductive to the brain handling things much more complex than pretty pictures save for brief periods of adrenaline, so I'm not sure how much reading I'll get done in the next week or so. I should take the opportunity to read manga, but I want to start 7 Seeds and start catching up with Skip-Beat and don't want to be reading those when not well rested.

What are you currently reading?

Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 5-6. Still love this book.

spoilers )

What did you recently finish reading?

Unnatural Habits by Kerry Greenwood. The latest (in the US, at least) Phryne Fisher book, in which young girls go missing and a serial...attacker is running around, making sure rapists can no longer procreate, and Phryne acquires another minion. Also evil nuns, but thankfully good nuns too. (The evil nuns were rather jarring, having just read one of Jennifer Worth's memoirs.) In general, grand fun. I've rewatched the entire first season of the TV series, not to mention several extra viewings of the pilot (look, you have to suffer when shoving your fandoms at people, ok?) since reading the first 15 or so books in the series, so while I hadn't forgotten, it was a bit jarring to be reminded of the orientalism in the books. (Not that the show is perfect in that regard, but it does try to improve that aspect.) I remain of the opinion that everyone needs Phryne Fisher in their lives, though.

What do you think you'll read next?
Jennifer worth's 3rd midwife book, as it's an ILL and due back next Tuesday.
meganbmoore: (bwwh: music)
What are you currently reading
Legend of the White-Haired Demoness by Liang Yusheng, ch 2-4.

spoilers )

Mistresses: A History of the Other Woman by Elizabeth Abbott. Nonfiction about famous (and less so) mistresses throughout history and in literature. I'm on page 77 out of 500, and it's a bit of a "cliffnotes: version: in addition to various cultural and historical notes for each of her categories, Abbott looks to have at least 70-80 entries, each with a minibiography of 3-7~ pages, so there isn't room to get into a lot of depth with most of them. Pretty good so far, though.


What did you recently finish reading?

A Train in Winter by Caroline Moorehead. WWII nonfiction about 230 women in the French Resistance who were captured and sent to Auschwitz, only 49 of whom survived. The first half of the book focused on the women's work and how they were captured, and the second half on their experiences while imprisoned. Moorehead interviewed the 7 survivors she was able to locate who were still living when she began work on the book, and so there's considerably more detail about their experiences than in other book about captured spies in WWII that I've read (the others were also about SOE agents, and so also spent quite a bit of time focusing on homefront operations which, if you're familiar with the SOE, can inspire a whole different kind of rage.) It's good and fascinating in the most awful way, and I feel I need to consume about 5000 hours of fluff and love and joy to recover from some of it.


I read a bit of Kelley Armstrong's Men of the Otherworld collection, but then realized that it was all about the werewolf dudes, and decided there were much better ways to spend my time.

What do you think you'll read next?

More Legend of the White-Haired Demoness and Mistresses, library books
meganbmoore: (Default)
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.

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meganbmoore

July 2020

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