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Ancillary Mercy

I just finished Ann Leckie’s Ancillary Mercy. It came out on Tuesday, but I saved it until today to read because I knew I would have a long tattoo appointment to endure, and then I read the entire thing in one galloping stretch, train ride through tattoo through second train ride. Now I just want to lie dreamily on the floor.

I laughed a lot. I cried, too. I made startled and/or gleeful noises out loud at inopportune moments and drew Looks on the train. Really, so highly recommended. So much fun, and right now I am so rapturous from the reading that I can’t even be sad the trilogy is done.

That will be tomorrow, I expect.

Reading Notes

I’ve just finished Zen Cho’s Sorcerer to the Crown, which honestly surprised me by wrapping me up so thoroughly in its second half that I stayed up well past my bedtime the other night to gallop through to its end. It’s a perfectly charming fantasy dressed up in witty and impeccable Regency style, and I want to be best friends with both of the main characters. The author’s command of her milieu is a delight.

I did have one fair problem with the structure of the story, but as it doesn’t seem to have diminished my overall enjoyment in the slightest, that’s probably just my inner crank waving her cane. I liked the book; I expect you will too.

A book I was very much expecting to enjoy, and had been looking forward to for months, was Paul Cornell’s Witches of Lychford, and I suppose it’s mostly to its credit that I was disappointed chiefly by its brevity. It is a novella, and so entitled to be short, but I wanted more from it: more development, more stakes, more … I don’t know. I will set it aside wistfully and hope it is the introduction to something splendid and substantial, and/or that these women (is it too much to hope?) make further appearances in Cornell’s Shadow Police series.

(Of course, I already have a list of wishes/demands for the Shadow Police series that’s half as long as my arm, but in that case, what’s one more? I love that series, by the way, and those characters, and if you haven’t read the books yet I direct you to them at once. Cornell’s treatment of his brilliant cast is such that I want to scoop them all up protectively and make soothing noises and tea. I am casting really stern looks in your direction, sir.)

I’ve just this morning begun reading Kai Ashante Wilson’s Sorcerer of the Wildeeps, and am already so absorbed in its language and the texture of its world that it’s hard not to play hooky from my own work.

But I won’t. I’m going to work, I will, as soon as I finish posting this.

Maybe.

On the Bookstack

Currently digesting:

The Godless, by Ben Peek

Ancillary Sword, by Ann Leckie

Karen Memory, by Elizabeth Bear

Small Island, by Andrea Levy

Caribbean Volunteers at War, by Mark Johnson

The Secret History of the Mongol Queens, by Jack Weatherford

A fairly even mix of entertainment and research. My haphazard attention span makes no guarantees as to timetables.

Other diversions at present include:

  • The MMO The Secret World, which I’ve recently rediscovered; I’d initially abandoned it shortly after its painful, buggy release, but it’s been polished since then and is amazing fun for anyone who enjoys myths and urban legends, conspiracy theories and secret societies, and a little R-rated creepiness
  • AMC’s Turn, which I’ve just begun but am enjoying
  • and Netflix’s Sense8

Sometimes I am also writing things.

Genre

I was paging through a writing guide over the weekend, and the guide’s author at one point referred in jest to the (invented, he thought) genre of “romantic zombie fantasy,” as a throwaway example in a longer passage about genre fiction in general.

Well, the joke’s on you, friend. I am writing a romantic zombie fantasy.

(That could mean the joke’s on me, actually.)

NaNoWriMo 2013

A winner is me: my extremely lumpy, extremely jumbled draftbeast, which lurches along under the title Salvaging Angels, weighed in this afternoon at a robust 55,692 words. A majority of them are the wrong words, or go haring off in strange directions, but that’s all right, that’s what NaNoWriMo is for, and I’m sure they can be coaxed into shape if I decide to make something serious of them. Which I might; I don’t usually write science fiction, and it’s been fun. Though I confess in this very rough draft a liberal arts major’s sad tendency to invent future technologies by tacking the word space as a prefix onto current technologies. (E.g., spacetoaster.)

As Mishell and I have been known to tell one another: “Forget it, Jake; it’s alpha draft.”

I’ve excerpted part of the beginning below, for your enjoyment or chagrin or incredulous mockery.

Continue reading NaNoWriMo 2013

Works in Progress

For the curious.

My story that ran in Beneath Ceaseless Skies, “The Red Cord,” is set in a place called the Marethi Ordinary. Or just the Ordinary, to its inhabitants. The Ordinary is also the setting for my novel-in-progress, whose working title has changed only approximately seventeen times in the last two years. Right now we’re calling it Ash. Or Malice. No, probably Ash. It doesn’t matter, it will be something else eventually. Mostly it’s The Goddamned Novel.

I’m also currently working on two short stories set in that same world, plus short stories about:

  • Malevolent angels
  • Monstrous mermaids
  • Carnivorous unicorns
  • Imaginary wolves

(Those are each the subject of a separate story. I have not figured out how to get all of those things into one story, though I bet it would be a hell of a story.)

I’ve also been working on a novel collaboration with Mishell Baker, called The Widow’s Wolf. We completed an alpha draft over the summer that comes in a little above 110,000 words. We began the process of beta revision and then tabled it for a research and rumination break.

And then I decided to try something completely new for NaNoWriMo this year and started writing a space horror thing that has turned into a space … I’m-not-quite-sure-anymore. A Space Oddity.

I am very, very bad at doing one thing at a time.

The Welcome Mat

This site has lain fallow for a little while, since in a housekeeping frenzy earlier this year I took everything down, intending to revamp the place, and then did what I always do halfway through anything housekeeping-related: I wandered off distracted.

My story “The First Stone” was emailed today to Daily Science Fiction subscribers, though, and I notice that company is beginning to turn up here and peer in the windows, so I should probably put on some coffee and look hospitable, if not immaculate.

Hello, hi. Thanks for stopping by.