mme_hardy: White rose (Default)
I was overwhelmed by wonderful things this year. I couldn't possibly pick a favorite; they're so distinct, and so amazing in their separate ways. I wish I could be more eloquent than I am, because these are marvels.

For Megan Whalen Turner's Thief series, two stories about a side character, Phresine, one of which also features Heiro. Both have wonderful voices for Phresine, and both catch the way that Turner tells stories, through allusion and revelation. Both of them have surprises (at least to me), so I'm being intentionally vague. Both have great funny moments.

words like water into dry earth. Phresine tells two instructive stories to Attolia, and the consequences roll out slowly. The prose is up there with Turner's and Le Guin's in saying a great deal in spare well-chosen words. As far as I'm concerned, this story is now canon.

“I think the Mede ambassador might appreciate this story better than I,” remarked the queen, unsmiling. “Perhaps you might tell it to him instead.”

“It wasn’t him it was meant for,” said Phresine, knotting the last of her errand threads together, “and besides we’ve not yet reached the end."

Heiro's Other Earrings, whose author does a masterful job of using earrings and clothes as emotional turning-points of the story. And they put in a plot point I'd specifically called out as the sort of thing I like, somebody climbing up to a window. The emotional journey is sweet and funny.

Phresine’s eyes sparkled with approval. “Ileia has a balcony.”
“That’s--that sounds very nice, I do love architecture.”
Phresine laughed. Heiro had to admit, it was a bit of a cackle. “She retires early. She doesn’t seem to have the stamina for a ball like this.”

For Madness, three(!!!) stories about the Geefs brothers' Satan statues. Go have a look before you read the stories.

Satan's sonnets. Holy cow, a Spenserian sonnet sequence. I threw that idea in as an example of "write anything you want", and holy cow, this author delivered. There are some very clever uses of meter, and the point-of-view is wonderfully conveyed. There's also a subtle change of voice between the first statue and the second.

Go, hide with bright parades of sovereignty;
Deny the truth; that I am liberty.

All across the thready sky A Pygmalion story, surprising and eloquently told. The author threw in a third Geefs statue of a sleeping angel, one I'd never heard of. Some spectacular moments of poetic prose.

I made the wings, straining behind your back—the wings, wrapped in flame, that move me and make me tremble. I made the eyes, the mouth, and the closed fists. I made the curve of the spine, the points of light, the feet still black with fire. I made the withered heart. Sharp, sharp, I made the chain, the sadness in your brow, the pain in your hands.

Heat. Not just Satan's point of view, but Satan's point of view as a statue, feeling the sensation of being carved. Excellent characterization, with sensuality.

He was chained in place because he allowed it. First he allowed himself to be chiseled from marble, for he showed himself to all who would see him, settling into the minds of two brothers who would never be the same once the idea of him had seized them. The rest was as he allowed it. He did not chafe against the chain, because he knew of its existence as he made his presence known. He expected every single scrape of the tools against the block of marble he would eventually be set free from. If the second sculptor envisioned chains, he would allow the formality.

He would be seen. He was already seen.
mme_hardy: White rose (Default)
Apart from everybody's favorite (right?) comedy/D&D podcast "The Adventure Zone", I mostly prefer history. 

There are a lot of bad -- and beloved, in some cases -- history podcasts in which the author postures, makes bad jokes, and assumes you don't know much and only want to know a little more.    Two exceptions to this are "The History of the Mongols", which is excellent and clear and takes a fair amount of concentration, and "Revolutions",* which takes an in-depth look to various European revolutions starting with the English Civil War.   I've just gotten to Charles I leaving London for the last time (although he doesn't know it).

If there were ever a more shining counterexample to the Divine Right of Kings than Charles I, it has to be one of the monarchs who was actually insane or intellectually disabled.

* Revolutions' podcaster, Mike Duncan, is known for an earlier history of Rome, which I haven't listened to but hear is excellent.

If you like true crime that is dispassionate rather than overblown, I highly, highly recommend "True Crime Japan".   The podcasters are gaijin living in Japan, and they do an excellent job of explaining Japanese customs and cultural aspects that are relevant to how crimes took place.   These are not crimes that have been rehearsed over and over in English-speaking media -- no Ripper, Bundy, Lizzie Borden -- which makes them all the more engrossing.

All of the above are, of course, available on iTunes and other aggregators; I'm linking to the authors' sites.

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mme_hardy

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