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Ghost Talkers – Review

261142914 starsAuthor: Mary Robinette Kowal
Genre: Historical Fantasy
Publisher: Tor Books
Date: 16 August 2016
Source: NetGalley
Buy the BookGoodreads

Ginger Stuyvesant is a medium for the British Army’s Spirit Corps during World War I. Each soldier heading for the front is conditioned to report to the mediums of the Spirit Corps when they die so the Corps can pass instant information about troop movements to military intelligence. While Ginger’s intelligence officer fiance, Captain Benjamin Harford, is away at the front, she discovers the presence of a traitor. Even worse, it is clear that the Spirit Corps is now being directly targeted by the German war effort. Ginger has to find out how the Germans are targeting the Spirit Corps and stop them.

From the moment I first heard the premise of this book, I knew two things: the first was that I would probably cry my eyes out reading this (I did), and the second was that there was A Thing that was bound to happen. I won’t elaborate on what The Thing is, but it was always obvious that it just *had to happen*, the setup was too perfect for it not to. I expected The Thing to take place at the end of the book in the final moment of victory, to better punch the reader in the feels. Instead The Thing happened very early in the book, meaning that the aforementioned punching in the feels happens again and again all the way through. This was fantastic storytelling, but also very upsetting and bittersweet. I spend a lot of my time reading this book with my throat constricting and a bit of dust in my eye.

I always love Kowal’s characters and this was no exception. I particularly loved Ginger for her resilience and strength of character, when her working day consists of sharing in the deaths of hundreds of soldiers in order to report on them to the British Army – not just viewing their deaths but actually living through their final moments and their fears in her own mind. She suffers so obviously from this on top of everything else, by the end I just wanted to give her a hug & make her a strong cup of tea.

It took me a little longer to warm up to Ben because of some of the period-typical attitudes he exhibits: when we first meet him, he has just learnt that the Spirit Corps is in danger, and immediately tries to get Ginger out of danger. Of course, he loves her and wants to protect her, only the way he phrases it is that she somehow has less of a duty to the war effort than he does because she is a woman. Predictably I found this very very annoying – I do think it’s good writing, because it sounds like something a gentleman of that period would say, but it doesn’t mean I rolled my eyes at him any less. But Ginger quickly puts an end to that silly notion, and apart from this one little hiccup, Ben and Ginger’s engagement is always portrayed as a relationship between equals, who have real respect and love for each other.

The book also has fantastic secondary characters, my favourite by far being Ginger’s Circle, a group of volunteers sensitive to the arcane, who support her during her shifts as a medium and keep her anchored to the real world. They are an extremely tight-knit group who all chose to come out to Northern France to help with the war effort, and go through so much together. You can’t help but admire their courage and loyalty and resilience. There are also several characters of colour, both in the ranks of the Spirit Corps and in the Army itself, which was great to see because it is historically accurate for World War I. Probably also historically accurate but quite a bit sadder is the way these characters are often mistrusted, summarily dismissed and generally given far too little credit for their work.

All in all, I loved this book but I am giving it a slightly lower rating than I did the Glamourist Histories series. I got choked up and teary-eyes quite a few times reading this, and I found the reading experience a bit draining. I would definitely still recommend this book to people (so they can get punched in the feels like I was), I think it’s beautifully done but intentionally bittersweet. I mean, if you write a book about WWI and your readers end up feeling all light and happy and fluffy, you’re probably doing it wrong.

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#Diverseathon TBR

Next week, I’ll be participating in #Diverseathon, a week-long readathon focusing on reading diversely. There are no set challenges or rules, the point is just to read books by diverse authors or featuring diverse characters. The readathon starts on Monday 12 September and runs until Monday 19 September. If you want more details, check out Christina Marie’s announcement video.

I’ve selected a couple of novels and some non-fiction, as well as a lot of shorter works, with a mix of audiobooks and ebooks. All of these are also books I already owned, except from the one I got from NetGalley, so no extra book spending for this readathon, if I can make a good dent in this list, it should also help me out with my Goodreads challenge (I am so, SO BEHIND!!)


Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterley

The Untold Story of the African-American Women Who Helped Win the Space Race

Set against the backdrop of the Jim Crow South and the civil rights movement, the never-before-told true story of NASA’s African-American female mathematicians who played a crucial role in America’s space program—and whose contributions have been unheralded, until now.
[Goodreads]

I love listening to non-fiction on audiobook, and I can’t wait to start this book specifically. The erasure of women’s contribution to history is nothing new, especially in the sciences, but there’s still so much work to be done highlighting the work of these badass mathematical genuises. If you haven’t seen the trailer for the upcoming feature film based on this book, watch it, WATCH IT NOW, it’s glorious. I am definitely going to go see that movie.


[one_third]Hidden Figures[/one_third][one_third]Everfair[/one_third][one_third_last]Ninefox Gambit[/one_third_last]


Everfair by Nisi Shawl

Fabian Socialists from Great Britain join forces with African-American missionaries to purchase land from the Belgian Congo’s colonial ruler, King Leopold II. This land, named Everfair, is set aside as a safe haven, a Utopia for native populations of the Congo as well as escaped slaves returning from America.
[Goodreads]

I just got approved to read an ARC of this book from NetGalley a few days ago and I could not be more excited! This was on my Most Anticipated Reads of 2016 list and I’m still just as intrigued by the premise as I was then. I love steampunk that isn’t set in Victorian London (who am I kidding, I love all steampunk), if you add in radical politics and the very Victorian idea of building a utopia from the ground up, it just seems like it’s going out of its way to tick all of my boxes!


Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee

To win an impossible war and redeem herself, Captain Kel Cheris’ best hope is to ally with the undead tactician Shuos Jedao. The good news is that Jedao has never lost a battle; the bad news is that he went mad in his first life and massacred two armies, one of them his own.
[Goodreads]

I keep hearing great things about this book! Elizabeth from Books & Pieces said it reminded her of Ancillary Justice which definitely piqued my interest. Evidently the main character ‘allies with’ the undead General by sharing her body with him and I’m very curious to see how that plays out (maybe she wears a turban & has his face poking out of the back of her head? No?).


The Sorcerer of the Wildeeps by Kai Ashante Wilson

The Sorcerer and the Captain are the descendants of the gods who abandoned the Earth for Heaven, and they will need all the gifts those divine ancestors left to them to keep their caravan brothers alive. The one safe road between the northern oasis and southern kingdom is stalked by a necromantic terror.
[Goodreads]

I went on a bit of a Tor.com novella spending spree a while back, and got this one along with a number of others. I haven’t gotten around to reading it yet, but adding a novella to my readathon plans makes sense, so it looks like now’s the time. I’ve also seen a few reviews that mention the writing style & how it plays with language and colloquialisms, and I am always there for that.


[one_third]The Sorcerer of the Wildeeps[/one_third][one_third]Queers Destroy Science Fiction![/one_third][one_third_last]People of Colo(u)r Destroy Science Fiction![/one_third_last]


Queers Destroy Science Fiction!
People of Colo(u)r Destroy Science Fiction!

LIGHTSPEED was founded on the core idea that all science fiction is real science fiction. The whole point of this magazine is that science fiction is vast. It is inclusive. Science fiction is about people and for people—all kinds of people, no matter where they’re from, what they look like, what their identity is or who they love. These two special editions of Lightspeed magazine (fully written & edited by queer people and people of colour respectively) exist to relieve a brokenness in the genre that’s been enabled time and time again by favouring certain voices & erasing others.
[Goodreads: Queers Destroy! PoC Destroy!]

I got the e-books for both of these anthologies as part of the Kickstarter campaigns that Lightpeed ran for them, and then promptly forgot to download them onto my Kindle for ages. I’ve now remedied this grave mistake and I will be reading stories from both of these during the readathon. At a glance, it looks like both anthologies are quite chunky so I probably won’t get to everything in there, but it’ll be good to make a start.


I’m so excited about the great week of reading I’ve got lined up for myself (even though, knowing me and my reading speed, it’ll probably take me most of the month to finish everything) and I can’t wait to get started. If you’re participating in #Diverseathon, let me know what you’re planning on reading and if you have a blog post or video about it, leave a link in the comments so I can check it out!

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August 2016 Reads


2 stars

Imprudence by Gail Carriger

ImprudenceLady Prudence Akeldama Maccon and her crew fly the Spotted Custard to Egypt to convey Lord & Lady Maccon to the only place they can safely retire. After leaving both of her parents under the influence of the Godbreaker Plague, Prudence continues further inland in search of a secretive pride of werelionesses. Her voyage is complicated by the carnal relationship she shares with her chief engineer, and the tensions it is causing amidst the crew.

The latest novel in Gail Carriger’s steampunky, Victorian urban fantasy universe & by far the most disappointing. I loved parts of this book, but most of the story centered on the elements I enjoyed least, namely Rue & Quesnel’s relationship. I didn’t find him likable or charming at all in the first book & I was hoping he would turn out to be the losing side of a love triangle (look, a character has to be pretty bad for me to hope for a love triangle!) but that wasn’t the case. I hated everything about the way the main relationship was developed. It was obvious, predictable, tropey and sexist. The whole thing left a sour taste in my mouth.

Less slut-shamey plots in which I’m supposed to root for cocky stereotypes of my home country *NAMED AFTER FISH SAUSAGE* and more political intrigue & werewolf/vampire drama. Thank goodness there’s a shorter piece coming about Lyall, Biffy & Lord Akeldama.


5 stars

Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho

Sorcerer to the CrownZacharias Wythe is the first black man to be appointed Sorcerer Royal to the Crown of England, and he has more than his fair share of troubles to contend with: from the decline of British magic to opposition from his fellow sorcerers, and a rumour that he murdered his adoptive father. Plus someone is trying to kill him. Meanwhile, Prunella Gentleman, a young mixed-race woman too clever & too magical for her surroundings, resolves to make a new life for herself in London, by way of selling the contents of her late father’s valise of magical treasures.

This story ticked absolutely all of my boxes, with a great balance of action, mystery, magic, romance and politics. I loved the characters, their subtleties & how they interacted with each other, the way that the various mysteries were resolved and the themes explored in the story. Probably my favourite novel I’ve read so far this year.

I did a full review on my Youtube channel, and there’s a giveaway here on the blog.


4 stars

False Hearts by Laura Lam

False HeartsTwin sisters Teama & Tila never had any secrets from each other – how could they, when they spent the first sixteen years of their lives conjoined? Together, they escaped the cult in which they were born, survived a rare medical procedure to separate them & built lives from themselves in San Francisco. One night, Tila comes home to her covered in blood, only to get immediately arrested for the first civilian murder in decades. In order to clear her sister’s name, Taema takes on her identity and her place at the heart of the Ratel, the city’s most dangerous criminal organisation. As Taema delves deeper into an underworld of drugs and violence, she comes to question everything she thought she knew about her twin sister, and the life they’ve led.

The story was tense, with Taema’s uncertainty & anger palpable throughout. The risks Taema took for her sister – going undercover as Tila, entering drug-addled dreams, taking on mob leaders – all felt terrifying, both justified by the necessity of clearing Tila’s name and undermined by the never-ending questions around the possibility of Tila’s guilt. The two strands of the narrative, Taema’s and Tila’s, came together very nicely at the end. I wish there had been more on T & T learning how to live outside of the cult for the first time, but that clearly did not belong in the story. I just like weird cults too much (and there is plenty of that)!

Also, some wonderfully gory violence!


3.5 stars

Nancy Parker’s Diary of Detection by Julia Lee

28504531There’s mystery and mayhem aplenty in this fun middle-grade novel. Our protagonist is Nancy Parker, a maidservant with an overactive imagination and dreams of becoming a detective. When she goes to Seabourne with her new employer, she finds rumours of theft, two other teenage would-be=detectives and heaps of suspicious behaviour.

This was great fun to read and I really enjoyed the three main characters, as well as the writing and formatting style of the passages from Nancy’s Diary. The 1920s setting is great and the subtle explorations of class issues within the narrative gave it some extra depth. The word murder in the tagline is slightly misleading (there is no corpse at all), but the story does include very nefarious deeds being planned and put in motion!

As an adult reader, I found the plot frustrating at times: One mystery is resolved quickly, the other does not emerge until later, but I found the solutions to both fairly predictable. It makes complete sense within the story why the characters don’t jump to the same conclusions as I would though, and I would definitely recommend this book for young readers. My only complaints come from my being outside the target demographic.

I’m planning to give the book to a friend who has two young daughters who I’m sure will love it.


4 stars

Ghost Talkers by Mary Robinette Kowal

26114291
Review coming soon!

 

 

 

 

 


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Sorcerer to the Crown – Review & Giveaway

sorcererI finally got around to reading and reviewing Zen Cho’s debut Sorcerer to the Crown, a delightful fantasy of manners about the first black Sorcerer Royal and the difficulties he faces. I loved it & heartily recommend it!

Here’s my review if you want to know more about the book & a giveaway if you’d like to win a copy for yourself. Big thanks to Zen Cho who sent me this gorgeous UK paperback to give away to you lovely folks.


The review:


The giveaway:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

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ARC August 2016 TBR

ARC August is a reading challenge hosted by Shelly and Octavia of Read.Sleep.Repeat with the only goal to read ARCs in August. I was very excited to find out about this challenge since I have a whole bunch of ARCs sitting around that I want to read, and my NetGalley ratio really, really needs improving (it’s basically non-existent now…)ARCaugust

First, here are the books I want to get to first, things that have just come out or that are coming out soon:

[one_half]

  • False Hearts by Laura Lam
  • Ghost Talkers by Mary Robinette Kowal
  • Dragon’s Blade by Michael R Miller
  • A City Dreaming by Daniel Polanski

[/one_half][one_half_last]

  • Poison City by Paul Crilley
  • After Atlas by Emma Newman
  • The Obelisk Gate by NK Jemisin

[/one_half_last]
[one_fourth]false hearts[/one_fourth][one_fourth]26114291[/one_fourth][one_fourth]dragons-balde-403x620[/one_fourth][one_fourth_last]51E6jXu7dcL[/one_fourth_last]
[one_fourth]20160229_poison11-666x1024[/one_fourth][one_fourth]28361265[/one_fourth][one_fourth]26228034[/one_fourth][one_fourth_last] [/one_fourth_last]

And a few older ARCs I should definitely get to if I can!
[one_half]

  • Deep Sea Diver’s Syndrome by Serge Brussolo
  • Nancy Parker’s Diary of Detection by Julia Lee

[/one_half][one_half_last]

  • Starborn by Lucy Hounsom
  • Sleepless by Lou Morgan

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Finally, I also have a large stack of comics I was sent for review, and while they weren’t advanced copies, I do want to get to at least some of them in August:

comics