Jan. 20th, 2023

psocoptera: ink drawing of celtic knot (Default)
A bunch of recs, which might be a bit inflated by the "grocery shopping while hungry" effect, where the first few stories are more different than anything else I've been reading lately, and by the time I'm a couple of magazines in it's going to take more for anything to stand out. But, enh, I enjoyed all of these, so hey.

Gentle Dragon Fires, T.K. Rex and Leslie Kinyon, Strange Horizons. Forestry, intentional burning, and waiting too long.

More interactive fiction sex stories! More after last year, I mean. The Thirteenth Knot, Yeonsoo Julian Kim, and First Times, Nibedita Sen. I actually played First Times last year while reading 2021 stuff - it's a really clever use of the interactive fiction format, someone trying to have sex for the first time and using a time turner to "get it right", and I actually thought I had recced it last year, but apparently not. It is definitely porny - like E for explicit-rated - so, uh, heads up for that. NaughtyBits, Erin Roberts, is another fun use of the IF format, in which you get to play a chatbot taking a Turing test.

Intimacies, Filip Hajdar Drnovšek Zorko, Strange Horizons. An alien-encounter/culture clash story where a seahorse person meets a human person.

The Elysian Job, Margaret Ronald, Strange Horizons. Cute and fun retell.

Coming Through in Waves, Samantha Murray, Strange Horizons. Aliens and dementia.

Objects of Value, AnaMaria Curtis, Strange Horizons. Memory and a doomed city.

You, Me, Her, You, Her, I, Isabel J. Kim, Strange Horizons. Art and memory and temping.
psocoptera: ink drawing of celtic knot (Default)
Astrid Parker Doesn't Fail, Ashley Herring Blake. I wanted to read this because I liked the previous one (here), but then on page three the eponymous Astrid starts thinking about how she can't wait to remodel a local historic building by replacing the cherry wood wainscoting with white shiplap, and I completely ceased to experience this book as a romance novel because I was too concerned about whether the love interest would also manage to save the building. I mean, usually romance is very relaxing to read, because you know the couple is going to end up together, and it's just a matter of how the story unfolds to get there, so I was entirely unprepared for this level of tension from this reading choice. I tried to cheat and see if I could get back to reading the story the author had intended - I have it as an ebook and my entire search history is, like, "shiplap", "cherry", "wainscoting", "wood", "woodwork", "painted" - which did not really find me an answer, and then I skimmed and jumped around a bunch, and it sounds like there is a whole battle between the romantic leads over competing visions for the remodel, but the compromise still involves painting the existing built-in bookshelves, and grey walls, and an inexplicable fixation on sage green, and there's a whole scene about smashing the old kitchen cabinets with sledgehammers, and dumping old clawfoot tubs in a dumpster, and, you know, fuck this shit, this is supposed to be pleasure reading, I don't need to read about the gutting of a historic home/inn from a perspective that does not use the word "restoration" even once. I guess there's also a couple of ladies and they have hot sex and fall in love? And good for them? But definitely do not read this book if you have ever loved your original unpainted wood trim or hate the hideous greyification of contemporary interiors.

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