Shades of Milk and Honey by Mary Robinette Kowal
I love the premise of this one. It’s essentially every good
thing about Jane Austen novels – satire, sisters, social commentary, with the addition of
magic.
Sisters Melody and Jane Ellsworth are very different from
one another – at 28, Jane is heading for spinsterhood while Melody, who is a
good 10 years younger than her sister – is flighty and never thinks past the
end of her own pretty nose.
Jane Ellsworth is particularly skilled at ‘glamour’ – the
use of magic and Melody is… pretty.
I loved the premise so much, and I enjoyed Shades but I
wanted to like it more than I did. I think it would have been more cohesive if
Kowal had focused on one Austen novel, rather than trying to force elements of
all of them into the book. Still, a fun read and an intriguing premise.
The Rook by Daniel O’Malley
A young woman wakes up in the rain. She has no memory of herself at all, and she’s
surrounded by latex-glove wearing corpses. There’s a letter in her hand, and she
opens it to read “The body you are wearing used to be mine.”
So begins The Rook, a very thinky sci-fi novel by Daniel
O’Malley. I have to admit, like the heroine of the story, I spent large parts
of it massively confused. But O’Malley’s worldbuilding, and the idea that
there’s a tradition-steeped, super-secret organisation like The Checquy
watching over us, were fascinating enough to keep me going.
I really liked the main character, Myfanwy, who is literally
a brand-new person, and the way she sets about finding out what happened to her
predecessor.
Confusing and mind-bendy as it is, I would definitely
recommend The Rook.
Beauty Queens by Libba Bray
I joined up at https://www.worldswithoutend.com/
in order to take part in this: https://www.worldswithoutend.com/authors_wogf.asp
and Beauty Queens was the first read for that challenge.
The contestants for Miss Teen Dream have crash-landed on a
desert island on their way to the competition. After some Survivor-style
in-fighting, the remaining girls figure out how to survive in the hostile
environment of the island.
However, not everything is as it seems …
I loved Beauty Queens. Absolutely loved it. The satire –
while a bit obvious at times – was incredibly sharp and it’s good to see a book
with girls being completely, 100% kick-ass. Even when the sexy pirates show up.
Fun, great stuff. :D
I have read a lot of good reviews about Beauty Queens. While I usually don't like reading about that sort of stuff, this sounds like it is much more than about beauty contests!
ReplyDeleteI have heard many people have the same issue with Shades of Milk and Honey, but supposedly the sequel is better. Or I may be confusing it with another Regency-era magic story :-)
ReplyDeleteRhapsody: Beauty Queens was great, I really enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteAarti: There is a sequel, called Glamour in Glass, though I haven't read it yet. :-)
I've heard good things about Beauty Queens. I enjoy Libba Bray books. I have The Diviners on my TBR shelf.
ReplyDeleteI've heard good things about Beauty Queens. I enjoy Libba Bray books. I have The Diviners on my TBR shelf.
ReplyDeleteHolly: Beauty Queens was hilarious. I'll definitely be reading more from Libba Bray. :-)
ReplyDeleteBeauty Queens was an absolute riot. I thought it great fun, too.
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