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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

“Really, it’s terrible,” says Electra in Sophocles’ eponymous play, “to speak well and be wrong.” (? δειν?ν ε? λ?γουσαν ?ξαμαρτ?νειν, l. 1039.)

February saw a lot of speaking and quite a lot of being wrong over the increasing professionalism of SFWA. It seems a shame to pass over it in silence, but everything I could have added has already been said elsewhere, and better. But the resistance to new voices—to, especially, women’s voices, and in that regard let me recommend both Joanna Russ’s How To Suppress Women’s Writing and this piece by Mary Beard on “The Public Voice of Women”—displayed by elements within the SFF conversation is one of the reasons I’m grateful to Tor.com for the opportunity to continue writing this column.

(And hey, did I mention Sleeps With Monsters has been shortlisted for the BSFA’s Best Non-Fiction Award?)

Rather than dwelling on the sediment in the churning ponds of the internet, though, this month I want to draw your attention (again!) to some new books.

And one videogame that I couldn’t afford and spent money on anyway. Because the description of Assassin’s Creed: Liberation HD — well, it sounds like it could’ve been made for me.

And Becky Chambers at The Mary Sue convinced me of its merits:

Aveline never stopped feeling dominant, even when she changed into brocade and lace. When Aveline puts on a fabulous dress and a coy smile, she’s not doing it for the player. Oh, no. When Aveline flirts, it means someone is about to get played. And/or stabbed. Aveline is always in control, no matter what her appearance or her behavior. Assuming a traditionally masculine role does not compromise her femininity. Assuming a traditionally feminine role does not compromise her power.

God, I love this character.

It’s not the utter brilliance that is Tomb Raider: not even close. But I’m having a lot of fun killing people as Aveline de Grandpré. I encourage you all to give it a chance.

But what about the books? I’m getting slow in my advancing age: at the time of writing, I haven’t yet managed to finish Nnedi Okorafor’s Lagoon, or Ankaret Wells’ Heavy Ice, or Elizabeth Bear’s Steles of the Sky, or Joanne Harris’s The Gospel of Loki, or even Francesca Forrest’s Pen Pal—which comes highly recommended by Sherwood Smith. (But I’ll be able to tell you about some of them next month.)

Of the six to which I hope to draw your attention today, two (Katherine Addison’s The Goblin Emperor and Heather Rose Jones’ Daughter of Mystery) hit my perfect narrative sweet spot of EVERYTHING IS WONDERFUL I WILL READ THESE THINGS FOREVER, three (Carrie Vaughn’s After the Golden Age and Dreams of the Golden Age, and Seanan McGuire’s Half-Off Ragnarok) struck me as various degrees of fun, and the last (Deborah Coates’ Strange Country) wasn’t quite the book I was expecting, but it eventually convinced me it was a good book nonetheless.

Daughter of Mystery is a Ruritanian romance of an alternate Europe. Set in a small Alpine nation bordering Austria, Italy, and France, at some unspecified point between the 17th and 19th century, it earns its place in the fantasy genre proper by the inclusion of religious magic—miracles that can be created and directed by the appropriate rites. It’s also a coming-of-age (rather explicitly: the plot relies on the age of majority of its principal actors) and a love story that explores power and privilege between individuals. It has some flaws—the pacing is at times uneven, although the prose shows a mature competence—but this is the author’s debut novel. I expect she will improve, and I look forward to seeing her do so.

(For those of you in the audience who also read category romance: it rather reminds me of a Courtney Milan novel with more fantasy elements and more queerness. Good stuff.)

As for The Goblin Emperor, due out in April, CAPSLOCK EXCLAMATIONS OF JOY, people. I can’t tell you all the things I found lovely about it in a single paragraph—or in ten. Just trust me that it is magnificent, and go order yourselves a copy right now. (I reviewed it. I neglected to mention several amazing things in that review.)

Half-Off Ragnarok is a novel of murders, misunderstandings, arson, gorgons, family, and relationships that start badly but turn out pretty okay. It feels somehow slighter than its predecessors, Discount Armageddon and Midnight Blue-Light Special, but it’s still a lot of fun—and at points, laugh-out-loud funny, too.

I liked After The Golden Age, Carrie Vaughn’s first nod to the superhero stories of the old-fashioned pulps, much more than I enjoyed its loose sequel, this year’s Dreams of the Golden Age. After’s protagonist is the daughter of superheroes with no powers of her own: an accountant, whose relationship with her parents has been rocky at best—complicated by the fact that villains keep kidnapping her for leverage, and by the revelation to the world of her teenage rebellion as sidekick to a supervillain. It’s an interesting novel about family and responsibility and power, as well as being quite a bit of fun. And it’s not a traditional superhero narrative, which means it appealed to me a lot more. Dreams is in part a much more traditional superhero narrative, and a much less focused one: I liked it less, but it’s still a fun book, and worth reading if you enjoy its predecessor.

Which brings us to Strange Country, due out in May, Deborah Coates’ third novel after Wide Open and Deep Down. Coates writes interesting Midwestern US contemporary fantasy with an eerie, haunting undercurrent, and her main character so far, Hallie Michaels, has an appealing directness. But in Strange Country much more of the narrative is carried by Deputy Boyd Davies, Hallie’s boyfriend, than I’d expected—and that narrative has more PTSD, more uncertainty, and less activity than I’d been hoping for. But it does all come together in the end, and the narrative does earn the cold, distant, disconnectedness that attends much of its characters’ early interactions. It just wasn’t the book I expected—but it’s a good book, and I’m looking forward to what Coates writes next.

There are still too many books and too little time.


Liz Bourke is a cranky person who reads books. Her blog. Her Twitter.

About the Author

About Author Mobile

Liz Bourke

Author

Liz Bourke is a cranky queer person who reads books. She holds a Ph.D in Classics from Trinity College, Dublin. Her first book, Sleeping With Monsters, a collection of reviews and criticism, was published in 2017 by Aqueduct Press. It was a finalist for the 2018 Locus Awards and was nominated for a 2018 Hugo Award in Best Related Work. She was a finalist for the inaugural 2020 Ignyte Critic Award, and has also been a finalist for the BSFA nonfiction award. She lives in Ireland with an insomniac toddler, her wife, and their two very put-upon cats.
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