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2025-05-25 06:53 pm

Starting on the 2025 Hugo Shortlist

I've consumed two things from the 2025 Hugo Award shortlist recently. They're Quite Different.

The first was The Tainted Cup, by Robert Jackson Bennett. I loved this; it's a crime thriller set in a fantasy world, where The Empire exists to keep its people safe from Leviathans. It has a lot of what you'd expect from the crime genre; whilst a couple of times that meant that I spotted the plot twist or reveal coming, there was still plenty here to keep me guessing (and turning the pages). It also talks about power and money (and how those with both can often keep clear of the law), and perhaps something about how we treat those who aren't the same as ourselves. There are some quite gruesome bits. I have a suspicion that there may be a sequel or two, which I look forward to reading :)

Flow is an animated film without any dialogue. After some apocalypse that has removed all of humanity, a flood comes, and a little cat (our point-of-view character) is nearly swept away. Over time it meets and befriends some other animals, and they have adventures together. This is not a plot-driven film, and I think works better if thought of as a poem in cinematic form. There are moments of very authentical animal behaviour, and also some rather less plausible ones (like animals being able to operate a tiller). I would have liked to have seen this on a big screen, I think.
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2024-11-13 06:19 pm
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Trans-Galactic Bike Ride

This book is subtitled "Feminist bicycle science fiction stories of transgender and nonbinary adventurers", and that's a pretty good summary of the contents. The stories are delightful, and capture some truths about the experience of riding a bike as well as trans & non-binary representation. They're fun stories, but also thought-provoking, and generally at least somewhat optimistic. I enjoyed them a lot.
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2024-10-26 04:17 pm
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Raven Black / Shetland

I've recently been watching Shetland on iPlayer. It's a pretty good crime series set on Shetland. After a bit of a wait, I got Raven Black, the first of the books on which the series is based, from the library.

It's not the first novel to be adapted (they did Red Bones, the third book, first), so it's possible some of the changes relate to events that will happen later in book-canon, but I was quite surprised at how different the book and TV were. The main plot is quite similar (in terms of who killed whom and why), but there are changes even then (Magnus Bain's involvement in historic events, particularly), but there are number of quite significant changes to characters - Tosh doesn't appear at all, and book-Cassie is a young girl still living with her mother, whilst Perez is significantly less sympathetic (in particular around his opinions on Sandy). And the solution in the book seems quite rabbit-from-a-hat, even when I knew who the killer was in advance.

I am undecided if I want to try and read more of the books by Ann Cleeves, but it was certainly interesting to read Raven Black (and unusual for me to be coming to the book-canon second rather than first).

ETA: There's a short film Alison O'Donnell Remembers: Shetland where the actor who plays Tosh talks about how and why the character was developed for the TV adaptation.
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2024-07-18 01:36 pm
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2024 Hugo Award voting

I've already voted for the Best Novel. This is my voting for the further categories I've had time to engage with - Novella, Novelette, Short Story, and Dramatic Presentation Long Form.Read more... )

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2024-07-15 03:13 pm

Hugo shorts

Again, in reading order:

美食三品 (Tasting the Future Delicacy Three Times), 宝树 / Baoshu. What if you could experience food as another eats it? Quite a nice story, but I found the biology hard to swallow...

The Sound of Children Screaming, Rachael K. Jones. An angry story about gun violence in schools.

The Mausoleum’s Children, Aliette de Bodard. A strange and well-sketched world, with some good twists.

How to Raise a Kraken in Your Bathtub, P. Djèlí Clark. What could possibly go wrong? I'm afraid I found the plot here a bit too obvious.

Better Living Through Algorithms, Naomi Kritzer. I was expecting this to head for one of two obvious cliché endings (and thus to be annoying), but actually it went elsewhere and I thought it was pretty good.

Answerless Journey, Han Song (tr. Alex Woodend). Two people wake up on a spaceship without their memories; an interesting idea, but it needed some answers to actually be engaging.
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2024-07-11 09:38 pm

Poor Things

This is a very strange film (and, I now learn, an adaptation of a 1992 novel, which takes a rather different perspective on some of the key events). There is a surreal steampunk-ish air to the world it is set in, and plenty of echos of Frankenstein, particularly in the idea that one can transplant a brain (and thus a personality) into another body. It's visually and musically striking.

Emma Stone's performance as Bella is the engine around which the film runs, and she is really good. Aside from the cringe moments, there are some laugh-out-loud funny moments; the other thing that stands out is the significant quantity of sex. It feels rather like Bella is discovering about herself and the world by having a lot of sex. And yet we mostly hear men talking about Bella and her behaviour and the sex she's having, and I worry that the liberation Bella finds is in no longer caring that she's being exploited by men. Also, pretty much everyone in the film is more or less terrible.
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2024-06-24 09:08 am

Hugo Novelettes

In order-of-reading:

The Year Without Sunshine, Naomi Kritzer. A story of a neighbourhood coming together to deal with the eponymous calamity; more optimistic than a lot of the things I've read recently, almost too much so.

One Man’s Treasure, Sarah Pinsker. Another story about exploitation; I liked the world-building and the plot.

On the Fox Roads, Nghi Vo. The Fox Roads may appear for you if you really need to run away from something. Here we have people running away from home, and maybe finding new ones.

Ivy, Angelica, Bay, C. L. Polk. Witchcraft, and other ways to protect your neighbourhood. A twisty tale, with plenty of heart. I think my favourite of these.

Introduction to 2181 Overture, Second Edition, Gu Shi (tr. Emily Jin). A slightly confusingly-told story about the societal impact of being able to "cryosleep" for a few decades. I'm not sure the framing story actually helped here, and I found the writing a bit clunky, but there are interesting ideas.

I AM AI, Ai Jiang. Another corporate dystopia; unfortunately, I didn't really find the point of view character particularly compelling, so this fell rather flat for me.
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2024-06-11 01:04 pm

More Hugo Novellas

In reading order:

Seeds of Mercury, Wang Jinkang (tr. Alex Woodend). This is a very human tragedy, and pretty depressing. I was struggling to maintain my suspension of disbelief at some of the tech, as well.

The Mimicking of Known Successes, Malka Older. I liked the steampunk setting of this, with humanity exiled to habitats ringing a gas giant. The characters were relatable and well described (though the early switch of narrator was a bit jarring), and the plot was nicely twisty.

Life Does Not Allow Us to Meet, He Xi (tr. Alex Woodend). This was let down for my by a really clunky translation (and poor layout); some interesting ideas, an at times slightly confusing plot (I lost the ordering of events a couple of times), and another rather bleak reflection on humanity.

Mammoths at the Gates, Nghi Vo. Another book in the Singing Hills Cycle, which is a setting I've come to very much enjoy. This is a story about grief, about stories, and about the very different ways people are remembered. It's very moving at times, and also has some lovely funny moments. I realise I've not read When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain, and should probably fix that :)
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2024-05-26 04:58 pm

Two Hugo Novellas

Thornhedge, T. Kingfisher. A telling of Sleeping Beauty that wonders if there was good reason for the sleeper to be enchanted thus. I enjoyed the narrative voice (and unusual choice of narrator), and the sense of the otherness of fairy; and the shape of the story and its twists.

Rose/House, Arkady Martine. A nice mash-up of locked-room, haunted house, and noir, even if a little too self-referential in calling out its own genre clichés. I loved the setting and the growing sense of menace, but what is going to keep it off the top spot for me is the ending, which felt a little too ill-defined. Rather like this week's Dr Who episode, if you're going to build up a great mystery, then just leaving the viewer/reader guessing at the end can feel very unsatisfactory.
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2024-05-26 03:30 pm

Wandering Earth ; Wandering Earth II

Wandering Earth II is on the Hugo shortlist this year. We'd not seen Wandering Earth, so decided to watch that first. Whilst this was probably necessary to get a chunk of what goes on in Wandering Earth II (which is in fact a prequel), I think it did cause us to start Wandering Earth II expecting the worst.

I didn't think much of Wandering Earth - it was visually very impressive, and tugged at the heart-strings, but key aspects of the plot just didn't make sense and were too implausible even for sci-fi.

Without getting into spoilers, the same can be said of the prequel; too much of the plot was based on engineering/science so bad as to disengage my suspension of disbelief. Again, it's visually stunning, and the emotional set-pieces hit home, but the plot just didn't work for me. I found the device of announcing "[time period] to [next crisis/key plot event]" a bit jarring, too. I'm afraid the final plot twist/reveal felt hollow too, although it is presumably the setup for the third film.
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2024-05-15 01:56 pm
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2024 Hugo Award: Best Novel

I've now read all of these (although I didn't write a review of Some Desperate Glory when I read it some time back), so time to vote.
  1. The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi, Shannon Chakraborty
  2. Witch King, Martha Wells
  3. Some Desperate Glory, Emily Tesh
  4. Translation State, Ann Leckie
  5. The Saint of Bright Doors, Vajra Chandrasekera
  6. Starter Villain, John Scalzi


I'm hoping the voter packet will be out soon, as otherwise tracking down all the short fiction will become tedious...
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2024-05-15 01:35 pm

Starter Villain, John Scalzi

Sometimes, when I have an evening off and nothing more pressing to do, I open a beer, turn off my brain, and watch an action movie. Starter Villain is that experience in book form. It's silly and fun, but I don't think deserves to be on a Hugo Award shortlist (any more than a James Bond film would).

Our narrator, Charlie, inherits his Uncle's business, only to discover that his uncle was a Bond-style villain complete with island lair. Of course, his life is currently in a bit of a state, yet he will turn out to be smart and perceptive at just the necessary moments to do much better in his new role than anyone expected.

The plot rattles along, and the narrator is amusingly snarky, and as long as you're happy to take it on its own terms, this is a fun diversion.
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2024-05-13 05:46 pm

The Saint of Bright Doors, Vajra Chandrasekera

There's a lot of interesting ideas in this book, some plot twists that sneak up on you, and a strange yet believable setting. But somehow it didn't quite work for me. I like that it's not a typical hero's journey sort of book, but the effect of this is that it feels like the point of view character has very little agency; things happen to them for reasons which are often unclear (and for reasons that often don't even become clear later on). And I'm afraid that left me feeling rather disengaged from the narrative, too.

That's a shame, because the start is arresting, there are a number of nicely-drawn characters, and a very twisty plot that doesn't feel contrived. And there is a lot being said about violence, racism, empire, and trying to grow up as yourself rather than what your parents want you to be; I can see why this book has had a lot of rave reviews.
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2024-04-30 03:48 pm

Translation State, Ann Leckie

I really loved the Ancillary trilogy, so was very much looking forward to reading this. I did enjoy it, and there are some interesting ideas, but I felt the plot was a bit uneven particularly near the end.

I think a lot of the ideas in this book are about identity, and how people with power try to impose their ideas of peoples' identities onto them (like the Radchaai habit of imposing she pronouns onto everyone they encounter), and the violence inherent in denying someone their identity. Including, in this case, whether someone counts as human or not. All of this is caught up in events that could have wide-ranging impact on the galaxy. I liked all three of the point of view characters, and they all develop interestingly during the book.

Major plot spoilers )I did like this enough to remember that I should get hold of Provenance, which I've not read :)
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2024-04-22 05:41 pm

Witch King, Martha Wells

I think this is the first non-Murderbot book by Martha Wells that I've read. Kai, the main character, wakes up in a sticky situation, and there are two narratives through the book: one in the present where he tries to work out how and why he ended up in that sticky situation, and one in The Past where we find out about Kai's back-story and the recent history of the world.

I found this really hard to put down; granted some of that was because the book tends to shift between the two narratives at cliff-hangers, but also because I wanted to learn more about the world and to see what would happen next. I've seen criticism online that few of the characters other than Kai are particularly fleshed out, and I think that's fair, but then Kai is a very interesting character. It's not a book that holds your hand in terms of the world-building, but I didn't find that a problem.

There is quite a bit of violence (and the sort of large-scale death attendant on warfare), and I think some of what Wells wants to talk about is the impact of that sort of large-scale trauma on people and societies, but I think there is also hope here, and examples of people trying hard to do better and work together.

It feels like space has been left for a sequel (though one is not currently planned, I gather), which I would very much enjoy reading, but this is a good stand-alone story.
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2024-04-11 08:23 pm

Barbie

Barbie lives a perfect life in Barbie world, which is ever so pink, and where the Kens exist to be decorative. Until she starts to experience interference from the Real World, and must go to investigate. The trailer has more spoilers than that...

This is an odd movie; it has some laugh-out-loud funny moments, too much cringe for me, and a plot that begs you not to look to hard at it. And what happened to the narrator for the middle two-thirds? I think it can't work out if it's a satire of Barbie, a homage to Barbie as a feminist icon, marketing for Barbie, or nostalgia for adults who remember when they played with Barbie; given some of its content and its 12 rating in the UK, it's really not aimed at kids who currently love Barbie.

The streaming platform I watched it on offered me Grave of the Fireflies as "watch next", which would have been quite a tonal shift...
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2024-04-06 07:09 pm

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

This is a sequel to Into the Spider-Verse, which I rather enjoyed. I'm afraid I was less happy with this film. Part of it is the lack of adequate ending; this just sort of stops (with some cliff-hangers) ready for the next film in the series. Partly it's that the multiverse thing is less new than it was in the previous film, and the whole musing-on-canon-thing feels too much like a plot device than something that really makes sense.

The action sequences are really good, though, and there's plenty of nice details that go flying past. And maybe the sequel will make it all worthwhile...
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2024-04-05 04:37 pm

Nimona

Nimona is set in a scifi-faux-medieval walled city (with cell phones, a metro system, flying cars, and armoured knights); we are told that in the distant past Gloreth defeated a giant black monster and enclosed the city with a wall to keep the citizens safe. In the present, the anarchic Nimona turns up in the lair of the fugitive Ballister and declares that she's going to be his sidekick.

I enjoyed this - it's fast-paced and funny (without being cringey!), and keeps teasing you that it's going to lapse into fairy-story tropes only to swerve at the last moment. There's some nice queer representation, and the characters are pretty believable. It has things to say about being different and being the outcast, and how hard it can be to try and be normal enough to fit in. Spoilers )
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2024-03-30 04:54 pm

Recent reading

On my recent travels I got through a fair few ebooks, mostly borrowed from the library:

Starling House, by Alix E Harrow, is set in a dying coal town in Kentucky; Starling House is an old manor house owned by a reclusive family, and avoided by the townsfolk. But Opal (the narrator) is poor and desperate, so ends up taking a job there. And the horrors of the past refuse to go away. This is a gothic fantasy book that worked for me on a number of levels - it's a great page-turner, with plenty to say about poverty and slavery, and has some nice ideas about how stories get told & retold along the way. I'm a bit surprised to not see it on the Hugo shortlist.

The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi, by Shannon Chakraborty is on the Hugo shortlist, and it's great fun (I'd seen it being plugged in paperback in Waterstones, which is why I picked it up in ebook from the library). Amina (who narrates the story to a scribe) is a middle-aged mother and retired pirate captain in mediaeval Oman (but with magic) who is forced out of retirement for one more heist. The setting felt real, and the narrator's struggles with their wavering Islamic faith likewise genuine; and I liked that Amina's age, experience, and family ties were strengths to her character. Perhaps some aspects of the plot were a little far-fetched, but I really enjoyed this. Plus some more "here are different ways to tell the same story".

System Collapse, by Martha Wells got enough nominations to make the Hugo shortlist, but the author declined the nomination (I don't know why, but their Witch King is on the ballot). Being a Murderbot fan, I enjoyed this, although I'm not sure it has much new to offer.

Acolytes of Cthulhu, edited by Robert M. Price, was on the whole a bit of a disappointment. It's a collection of short stories, which I'd borrowed because one of them was by Neil Gaiman (though that turned out to be Shuggoth's Old Peculiar, which I've read before); while a few of them were good and/or had neat twists, on the whole they felt like a collection of pot-boilers or pastiches.

Of the Hugo finalists this year, I've read two of the novels (the other being Some Desperate Glory), one (Bea Wolf) of the comics, and seen one of the long form dramatic presentations (Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves) and two of the short forms (both Dr Who episodes).
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2023-11-10 11:36 am

Recent books

I've reached the point of noticing I have too many books I've not written up, and it's getting to be long enough ago I'll forget about them...

Sleep No More & The Innocent Sleep, Seanan McGuire (and the included novellas). These follow on from the cliffhanger ending of Be The Serpent, with the latter book telling the same story again, but from Tybalt's point of view. I enjoyed both of these, although the first I found myself feeling a bit like I knew roughly where the story had to end up and a bit frustrated about it not getting there yet. I felt like McGuire's grasp of Tybalt's voice wasn't quite solid at times in The Innocent Sleep, which is a shame given the story was always going to suffer somewhat from us knowing most of the plot points already.

There Is No Antimemetics Division, QNTM. Everyone knows what a meme is, but this SF/horror book is about anti-memes - entities and ideas that cause you to forget about their existence. The Antimemetics Division is trying to manage the risk that antimemetics pose to human society (and has developed some capability to resist amnestics), and recruits operatives who are able to rapidly re-make plans that they have forgotten about. This is an interesting and sometimes disturbing read; I don't think the final sections quite work, but the earlier parts are really good.

Bloodmarked, Tracy Deonn. This was on the Lodestar shortlist, but I didn't get to it before the voter deadline. It's the second of the series, and I suffered somewhat from not having read the first. It's a modern Arthurian story set in the US, with a black teenage girl as protagonist, and is substantially about generational trauma from slavery. For me it suffered a bit too much from the protagonist making bad decisions (though they were plausibly in-character), but it was still an engaging read.