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Spring Reading

For March, April, and May. This is a long one…

You know how you get in the mood for a book with a particular atmosphere or setting, so when you find one, you grab it even though it doesn’t look like something you’ll like? That’s how I ended up reading The Warrior by Kinley MacGregor. It’s set in Scotland near the time of one of the Crusades and is about a distressed damsel who doesn’t want to be rescued, but finds herself being rescued anyway. I do enjoy historical romance, but this particular brand of them has never appealed to me, and The Warrior was no exception. It did satisfy my Scotland craving, though.

The last time I read The Eye of Tthe World by Robert Jordan, I was in high school. I lost interest around book 5 or 6, but with Brandon Sanderson finishing the series, I wanted to give them another try. An ordinary farm boy who finds himself on the run from dark, mythical forces and surrounded by magic–a classic fantasy plot. Robert Jordan does a lot with this plot, but honestly, I found bits of it rather boring, which is why I stopped reading it in the first place. Before I started this second reading, I explained to an old high school friend that I thought maybe I’d changed enough since high school to get more out of these books. To the idea that I’ve matured since high school, he snorted and said no. I guess he was right.

Then there were the Twilight books, which I talked about a couple posts back.

More magic and mayhem ensure in Con and Conjure, Lisa Shearin’s fifth Raine Benares book. This time, racist elves and goblins intend to start a war with each other, and each wants to use the evil rock of power which has attached itself to an unwilling Raine. A good book like all the others, but not quite as gripping. I think it’s because a major source of tension is missing: in the previous book, Raine made her Mychael vs. Tam decision, and that question no longer hangs in the balance. Having Raine’s ex-fiancee show up at the start of her new romance helps up the tension on that front, but it doesn’t quite reach the previous level of nail-biting suspense.

And then I found a YA historical fantasy series. (Between this and the Twilight books, I was all about the YA this spring, apparently.) A Great and Terrible Beauty and Rebel Angels by Libba Bray are the first two books in a Victorian fantasy trilogy. I really wanted to like these books, but unfortunately, I thought the main character was a selfish brat and did not find the magic system to be well defined or to make much sense. The only up sides to the books were the well-drawn Victorian setting and Kartik, the Indian young man who helps the snotty protagonist and seems to like her for some reason.

I also read the YA fantasy Graceling by Kristin Cashore. In Cashore’s world, people born with special talents called Graces are feared and ostricized, and none moreso than the girl Graced with killing. This book contained some interesting magical elements and an ending that took me by surprise, but I couldn’t really get into it. Did you ever feel like all the protagonists in a genre of books all start to sound the same after a while? I’m feeling that way with YA. Though to be fair, that might just be because I read so many YA books in a row.

Earlier this year, I read The Orchid Affair by Lauren Wilig. I love all the Pink Carnation books, and while The Orchid Affiar wasn’t my favorite in the series, one of the things I loved about it was the way tension just smolders between the hero and heroine without either of them having to touch the other or say anything that could be construed as seductive. There are just sparks all over the place. It’s a dynamic I want to create between two characters in my time travel novel, so I reread The Orchid Affair to get a feel for how it’s done. I have concluded taht it’s all about creating a sense of awareness. In Willig’s book, Laura and Andre don’t need to touch, not at first. They are just in a constant state of sensitivity to what the other one is doing. It’s a very, very difficult thing to pull off, and she does this so well.

Brandon Sanderson is without a doubt my favorite writer working in the epic fantasy tradition today. I finally got around to reading his standalone novel Warbreaker, which features a host of intricate, fascinating characters and a magic system based on color, of all things. Like all of Sanderson’s books, the magic in Warbreaker takes a few chapters to get used to, but that’s one of the things I love about his work. He challenges your mind and entertains all at the same time, and creates noble and flawed people you can’t help but admire. In addition, Warbreaker features one of the most tender romantic subplots I’ve ever seen. A must-read!

And finally, The Bookman, a debut novel by Lavie Tidhar. I tell you, these author people are crafty. They know that if they put the word “book” in a title, all these bibliophiles are going to say, “Oooh! Me have!” But this is irrelevant, as are most of my ramblings. Allow me to focus. The Bookman is a fine addition to the growing stampunk genre, mixing classic literature, pirates, turn-of-the-century England, marine biology, and a lizard Queen Victoria. In less capable hands, it would read like the script for a bad B movie, but this is a gripping and lovely book. The writing is lush and poetic (which is as it should be, for the main character is a poet). Listen to this:

“Orphan had first met Lucy one day at the bookshop…He fell in love the way trees do, which is to say, forever. It was a love with roots that burrowed deep, entangled, grew together…Orphan loved her the way people do in romantic novels, from the first page, beyond even The End.”

I will be buying the sequel, Camera Obscura, when it comes out for sure.

Yikes, that’s a long post. I’ll try to post month-by-month this summer, rather than lumping them all together. See you soon!

Katie Lovett, Time Traveler

“Nothing in the world is easier than traveling in time. Just wait five minutes, and you will have moved that far into the future.”

–Sean Carroll’s review of J. Richard Gott III’s Time Travel in Einstein’s Universe: The Physical Possibilities of Travel Through Time, published in 2002 in Physics Today, link

But what about time travel the way you and I usually think of it–what about accelerating forward or backward in time? This is the sort of question you ask yourself if you’re either a nerd or a writer working on a time travel novel. I happen to be both.

I’ve found out some pretty cool things about time travel in the past couple weeks, the most exciting being that I am a time traveler in the super-cool sense–I have accelerated through time! So have you if you’ve ever flown from London to New York or an equivalent distance. You see, according to Einstein’s theory of relativity, time is elastic, not constant, and depends upon the speed at which we move. But it’s more than theoretical. Atomic clocks have been used to confirm that if you fly from London to New York, you will have accelerated a few billionths of a second in time. (Paul Davies, “Time Loops: A Talk With Paul Davies” on 3rd Culture, link.)

Accelerating forward in time is possible. Accelerating forward enough to be exciting, well, it’s technically possible, but we can’t move that fast yet. We’d at least need to reach the speed of light to be able to really do anything cool.

Although I still think it’s cool that I can call myself a time traveler. I’m going to call myself a time traveler, anyway!

So what about backwards time travel? As a historical fantasy writer, this is the stuff I’m most interested in, and it’s anybody’s guess as to whether or not it’s possible. There are lots of theories as to why it’s not possible, and there are lots of theories about how it might in fact be done. (See Wikipedia for a basic overview.) I, of course, am going to pretend that it’s totally possible!

Oddly (or at least, I thought so), the concept of backwards time travel is a pretty modern idea. (Again, see the Wikipedia article.) It first appeared in the 1700s. But forward time travel in myth has been around since ancient days. I wonder what this says about the nature of man. Have we in the past been looking ever forward to the wonders of the future, and now that the wonders of the future have begun to appear, we look for the wonder in our past?

Of course, it’s also possible that Wikipedia has missed some examples of backwards time travel myths. I’ll have to look at other sources…

There is far more I could say about time travel, but I’ll leave that to the physicists. Check out this site if you’re interested. It lists oodles of articles on all things time travel.

I have time traveled ten minutes into the future since I began writing this post.

I Finally Read the Twilight Books

I started reading Twilight by Stephenie Meyer to see what the fuss was all about. It’s been an interesting experience; my opinion of the series has changed drastically as I’ve worked my way through all four books. I’m betting that most people have a general idea of what these books are about, so I’ll be brief in that regard and just offer a short analysis of each book.

Girl moves to small town and falls in love with hot vampire. Twilight never did sound like my kind of book. Vampires have never really done much for me, and Twilight didn’t, either. I didn’t hate it, but neither did I love it, and that was due to more than just the subject matter. (After all, there are a small number of vampire books I have enjoyed.) There was just a lot of teen angst in this book and not much else that I could see. The plot was basically not much deeper than girl falls for hot vampire. And while the characters were sympathetic, they weren’t deep.

But I felt that there was enough potential that I moved on to New Moon. And I liked it better. Yes, Bella spends much of the time moping, but there were enough new developments that it kept things interesting despite all the teen angst. And the biggest new development is Jacob. In New Moon, Bella is trying to adjust to life without her dear hot vampire Edward, and in the process, she makes friends with, in my opinion, the first well-developed character of the series. I found Jacob to be much more appealing than Edward. (I know I’m entering into serious debate territory here.) I loved Jacob so much that I decided to read the next book.

And I will admit, my opinion of the series climbed a bit with Eclipse. I still thought Bella and Edward were underdeveloped, but the secondary characters started filling in nicely. And Jacob….oh, I love Jacob. He’s just so funny and sweet and easy to sympathize with, poor guy. I started to feel a little miffed by this point, though, at how passive Bella is in these first three books. I mean, if I were in the middle of a feud between vampires and werewolves, I’m sure I’d be quite content to let everyone else just take care of me, but as a reader, I want more. I want to live vicariously through a character who gets to jump into the fray.

But I did like Eclipse. So then I moved on to Breaking Dawn. And yes! I get it now. I see why these books are so popular now…or at least, I would if Twilight had been as impressive as Breaking Dawn. Bella and Edward finally spring to life, facing the kind of adversity that forces them to make choices which truly let us see the raw material that makes them who they are. As they fight to save everything that will matter to them for the rest of eternity, they are stretched to the limit and become real at last. Then we get into Jacob’s pov, and I think that was a good move, one which would have benefited earlier books. I understand that part of the series arc is Bella growing from vulnerable and passive to formidable and active, and some scenes in another pov might have helped to break up her lack of action in earlier books. But Bella’s passivity is over in Breaking Dawn, and Edward is developed enough that I finally see what she sees in him. A very nice conclusion to the series.

So now I’m in the loop! I’ve finally read the Twilight books. And speaking of which, I’m finally going to get caught up on my monthly reading posts and otherwise whip this blog into shape. I finally, finally, finally have internet at home again. It’s dial-up (until I can convince my husband to switch!), but it’s still internet access, so now I don’t have to beg and borrow from family and friends, which means my posts will be far less sporadic.

So I’ve got a bunch of other books to cover from March and April. Those will be coming soon.

One of These Days…

…I will get around to posting Spring Reading and other things. Not having the internet at home (are you getting tired of hearing me complain about that yet?) makes it hard to update this blog. Especially when you’re forgetful like me and you leave the blog posts you’ve already written at home on your desk.

But the phone company is (I hope) almost finished hooking up my phone lines, and then I don’t have to beg and borrow internet access from family and friends every time I want to update my site or check my email.

Just to let you know what’s coming (since I have nothing of substance to offer right now), I finally read the Twilight books and also read Lisa Shearin’s latest book, so I’ll be discussing those soon. Also, I’m thinking of doing a post on “neurotic writer syndrome.” It’s amazing how many times you can read your novel and think it’s as perfect and polished as it can be, yet the minute you hit the send button, you suddenly realize that one of your characters should come on much sooner than Chapter 4 and that chickens need to die by page 5. (Oh, and just so you know, no actual chickens were harmed in the writing of my novel.)

In other news, I saw a super ginormous turtle today.

That is all. Have a nice day!

New!

I have posted a brief summary of Fiddlesticks to the “My Writing” page. It’s a historical fantasy set in colonial Maryland and is intended to be the first in a series of three books. I recently finished the first draft.

This post is too short. Enjoy this picture of a cupcake that looks like Mr. Bill.

Jan and Feb Reading…Slightly Delayed

I wrote this post weeks ago and kept forgetting to post it. Not a very auspicious return to Monthly Reading, is it? So before it’s time for March Reading, here’s January and February.

My husband got me The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson for Christmas–my first read of 2011. I am happy to report that it may well be the best book I read in 2011 (meaning no disrespect to the books listed below, of course). This is a big, thick book in the epic fantasy tradition, easily heavy enough to maim a person if you have the mind to do so. (It’s a weapon and a book for the price of one!) The thing I adore about this book is that it shows the full range of humanity–how low a person can sink and how high a person can rise. Over the magnificent backdrop of a magical world where plants seem almost sentient and armies war against each other with little understanding of why, Sanderson weaves the story of a man who has lost everything and has every reason in the world to just lay down and die, but who rises above it all to become a hero in the humblest of ways. For those wondering the future of Sanderson’s career, he will not merely be remembered for his role in finishing Robert Jordan’s work. I’ve been a fan of his since his debut novel Elantris, but he has reached new heights with The Way of Kings. It is every bit as worthy as a Robert Jordan, a George R.R. Martin, and every other high-profile, so-heavy-you-can-maim-a-person-with-it epic fantasy novel ever made.

I did not intend to go on about that book in such length. Oops.

For something completely different, I followed The Way of Kings up by reading Lauren Willig’s latest historical spy romance, The Orchid Affair. I’ve talked much about this series of Napoleonic-era espionage books in the past. This one is the first of Willig’s books which features a protagonist in her thirties and a romantic lead who is widowed or has children, which was kind of cool. Like all of her books, it was enjoyable, but it wasn’t one of my favorites.

The Mischief of the Mistletoe, however, is my absolute favorite Lauren Willig book. I have now read it three times since getting the ARC in September. Since I’ve mentioned this one before, I’ll skip the commentary.

While waiting for the long-anticipated Green Rider #4 to come out, I reread Green Rider #3, The High King’s Tomb by Kristen Britain. Again, a reread; skipping the commentary.

And then…ugh. I mentioned Blackveil by Kristen Britain here shortly after I read it. A super well-written book, but it made me so angry that I still get gloomy just thinking about it. I spent most of the book yelling for King Zachary to cut off people’s heads, or wishing the Weapons would open up a big can of whoop-ass on a whole bunch of people. Yes, I am a big fat drama queen about it, but I just can’t help it! I’m dying to find out what happens next, and if there’s as much unhappiness in Green Rider #5 as in this one, I’m liable to have a conniption.

Which is why I read The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare next. I needed a happy ending. This has been my favorite book since I was twelve years old, a historical Newberry winner about a sixteen-year-old girl who moves to the American colonies and is accused of being a witch. (It doubles as research, too, since I just finished the first draft of a historical fantasy about a broom-riding man who must evade witch-hunting Puritans in the American colonies.)

March Reading is coming soon to a blog near you!

(I am such a dork.)

I Found It

Does the Joker know about this?

Powerful Stories

I was forced to add the tag “makes me want to kill fictional people most painfully” to my list of book tags on LibraryThing recently. Some books just reach out and grab our heartstrings, touch us someplace deep inside with characters we love and care about, and then rip us apart by having other characters break our beloved characters’ hearts, souls, and spirits. What power, what wonder, these authors have wrought!

Equally powerful (though not so seductive to my homicidal tendencies) are books with characters who have overcome amazing odds, who have every right to throw themselves to the ground and not get up again, yet who somehow find the strength to rise above. These books inspire us to be better, to try harder, to face our troubles and not flinch away. We read books by such authors and wonder, “How did he do that?”

Such books can be found in every genre, are so varied as to be nearly incomparable. Yet something binds them together. Something about these books breathes life into fictional people and reaches out to real people not because the plot is fresh or the setting interesting, but because it reflects some part of the human experience. The emotions it draws out, the memories it brings to mind, are things every human understands. But it’s not coincidence when a writer achieves such excellence. It’s also not coincidence that many of our favorite books took their authors years to write. (Which is why people need to stop pestering George R. R. Martin and Kristen Britain to write faster. “If you rush a miracle man, you get rotten miracles.” But I digress.)

I confess that I’m not sure what my point is. I guess it’s just to marvel at the power the written word can hold, and to marvel at the ones who give it such power.

Happy Belated New Year

Very belated, I should say. I will sum up. Life sometimes takes a turn for the tragic, and the past few months have been so for my family, which is why I’m so behind on keeping up with this site. But life also goes on. So here I am.

A couple bits of news. First of all, the fabulous book blog Debuts and Reviews, which I’ve had the honor of contributing to, is now gone. Tia, Supreme Overlord of Debuts and Reviews, is a published author now (yay!), and her busy schedule makes it nigh impossible to run a book blog and still keep up with her writing. So I am no longer doing book reviews. But the URL is still alive and well, as Tia is using it as her author blog, so do visit.

On the writing front, things are going quite well, other than that I’m on a bit of a delay. Back when I wrote my first draft of Hex in 2007, I never imagined that at the time of my revision, I would be going through the same tragedy as one of my characters in the book. It kind of hampered my progress. At first, it was too difficult to write. After that, it was actually kind of theraputic, but I had to watch myself and make sure that everything I was putting into those scenes was essential to the scene and the book, rather than letting myself drone on and on, and letting my own feelings about the situation get in the way. But! I am at last finished, and submission will soon commence. So keep your fingers crossed.

I’d like to start monthly reading posts again soon, but I’ll have to wait until things slow down a bit first. I will tell you that I read Brandon Sanderson’s The Way of Kings and looooved it, and that I read Kristen Britain’s Blackveil (Green Rider 4) and am so, so mad at a bunch of Sacoridians! I spent much of yesterday yelling for King Zachary to cut off people’s heads. (And so I must say that the book is good, well-written, and awesome, but I would feel weird saying that I liked it because I’m furious at a bunch of fictional people for doing terrible things to other fictional people. And I’m going to stop ranting now, but if anybody who’s read it wants to have a nice long chat about this book, we can start a special thread.)

Hope everybody’s new year is going swell, and happy early Valentine’s Day!

Life, the Universe, and Everything

Not having the internet at home has resulted in it being a crazy long time since I posted anything. I really hate that it’s been this long. Still working on getting phone lines run to the new house and all that stuff.

In the meantime, I have been doing a lot of reading lately, but since I don’t have my nifty list of books I’ve read with me right now, I can’t do my October Reading post. (Will get it up ASAP.) I’m not expecting much reading for November; I’ve joined the crazy NaNo train. My Hex revision is nearly done, and I thought it would be a good thing to take a little break and come back to it fresh next month.

I’m about 3000 words behind on my NaNo word count, so I’ve got some catching up to do today. Better get to work! Let me know if any of you are doing NaNo. It’s nice to know I’m not alone!

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