Reviews and Comments

Stephen

tinheadned@ramblingreaders.org

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

I read when I can't sleep, so yes there's a lot of books here. Nearly all SF.

he/him

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L.M. Montgomery: Anne of Green Gables (Paperback, 2020, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) 3 stars

Why do people like Anne?

3 stars

I enjoyed the gentle humour as the grown-ups put up with Anne but when she's young, she's bloody irritating. Very glad I read it before doing the mandatory tour of "her house" which is set out with a large number of references to the book (shattered slates and all).

The book suddenly speeds up in the last quarter and a few years pass, before the conclusion of the book slows down again. Honestly can't guess the tone of the next one.

René Goscinny, Albert Uderzo, Jean-Yves Ferri, Didier Conrad, Jean-Yves Ferri, Didier Conrad: Astérix chez les Pictes (Hardcover, French language, 2013, Editions Albert Rene) 4 stars

Asterix and the Picts is the 35th book in the Asterix series, and is the …

Classic Asterix, now with female characters

5 stars

Honestly could barely tell this wasn't by the original authors, the writing and graphic styles are both on point. The main difference I noticed was that there's (a bit) more diversity in the speaking roles. Very welcome.

reviewed Public Domain vol. 1 by Chip Zdarsky (Public Domain, #1)

Chip Zdarsky: Public Domain vol. 1 (Paperback, 2023, Image Comics) 2 stars

Syd Dallas is responsible for pop culture’s greatest hero: THE DOMAIN! But his sons Miles …

Well-written, but a bit dull

2 stars

Fundamentally I think there's not much entertainment I'm getting from a comic about the copyright dues of comics. Some good jokes, but even a whole trade seemed like a lot to devote to this, and it keeps going.

Steven Erikson: Gardens of the Moon (Paperback, 2005) 4 stars

Dark forces gather in the Malazan Empire as Empress Laseen, malevolent ruler, turns her attention …

Okay, feels like a superhero novel

3 stars

Will be interesting to see if I change my mind on this, as generally the reviews appear to be "book two is where it all comes together" but while this was enjoyable, there was the fantasy version of technobabble and unstoppable forces literally colliding in the air over protagonists heads.

It's not bad, but the thought of nine more doorsteps means I'm going to have to pace them out.

Mercedes Lackey: Exile's Honor (Heralds of Valdemar - Prequel #1) (Paperback, 2003, DAW) 4 stars

Alberich had spent most of his youth in the Karsite military schools training to be …

Valdemar without too much angst

4 stars

After reading other fantasy books where characters pick up new languages instantly (and annoyingly) it's quite nice to have a protagonist that struggles with their new language. For about half the book. Then it's annoying.

There's still a bit of standard introspection where Alberich dwells on the same problems a few times, but less egregiously than Tania or a host of others. There's less fighting in this than you might expect from the text. His background is referenced a lot but he's in new situations from the first chapter. And the new situation is the Collegium, so it's back to school. Again.

The last third is back out again though and more enjoyable.

ND Stevenson: Nimona (2015, Quill Tree Books) 5 stars

From the Publisher:

A National Book Award Longlist Title

The graphic novel debut from rising …

Funny and warm

5 stars

Read this after seeing the Netflix film. It's not really like the film but also I can absolutely see where the film is coming from. The dialogue is very funny with modern vernacular in a "Euro medieval" frame.

The "exclusive epilogue" doesn't add anything, mind.

Mercedes Lackey: Storm Rising (Valdemar: Mage Storms #2) (Hardcover, DAW Hardcover) 4 stars

In Storm Rising, mysterious mage-storms are wreaking havoc on Valdemar, Karse, and all the kingdoms …

Slow and angsty

3 stars

Maybe I'd enjoy this more if I was reading less Lackey books in one go (and this is definitely my cue to stop for a bit). But there is less action in this one and an awful lot more "thinking and feeling bad".

The secondary plot is also just competency porn which can be satisfying to read but sometimes the Valdemar universe is a bit too perfect, even the antagonist in this book considers optimal logistics.

reviewed Storm Warning by Mercedes Lackey (Mage Storms, #1)

Mercedes Lackey: Storm Warning (Hardcover, DAW) 4 stars

With her phenomenal Mage Winds trilogy, bestselling author Mercedes Lackey captivated fans across the country. …

New characters mixing up the Valdemar world

4 stars

This is actually the second time I've read this, but it's felt a much longer read the second time. It's enjoyable, I really like priests from Karse (although I'm realising I've missed another sequence between this and the last books chronologically).