Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts

Monday, 29 August 2011

I Love My Kindle: A Review

Kindle, Wi-Fi, 6" E Ink Pearl Display
This is my Kindle. Isn't she pretty?
I'm reading Vorkosigan books.
I've been wanting to talk about my awesome Kindle for a while, but I wanted to actually explain what it was like to use, not just regurgitate all the same old 'AMAZING TECHNOLOGY' blurbs. And come up with an angle worth reading.

So, I looked at what I used it for the most. And that was basically, lunch breaks and travel time. So I present to you... The 10 Reasons Kindles Are Best For Commuters

It's still a little messy. But it has lots of pictures of my cat. BECAUSE SHE STOLE MY KINDLE AND WOULDN'T GIVE IT BACK.

Friday, 5 November 2010

French Maids and Graphic Novels



aurora french maid beauty belle beast disney femslash lesbian fan art Another X-Arielle comic. I am seriously starting to want to draw these myself (but then, I am easily influenced and far too easily inspired :D )

Huh. I have free time. I keep forgetting that. I'm having trouble adjusting... but then, I've only been free for a couple of days.

*shakes fist at impending Semester 3 of long distance class of DOOM*

Re-read the mangas Doll and Lady Snowblood last night. I've been writing up my favourite graphic novels of all time, and wanted to reread them to make sure I'd summarised them aright (and hadn't overdone the maturity warnings I'd put into the descriptions :D )

I'd forgotten how much blood and sex was in those books. it was all very traumatising. I better reread them again and count the number of times Yuki isn't wearing clothes *innocent* - for the sake of the review! *strikes noble pose*

I've created a Recommended Graphic Novels quick-list page, and I've started up a blog to review each title properly: Good Graphic Novel Reviews


These are some of the books I'm reviewing

• Watchmen by Alan Moore
• Sandman by Neil Gaiman
• Elfquest by Wendy and Robert Pini
• V For Vendetta by Alan Moore
• Fables by Bill Willingham and Lan Medina
• A Distant Soil by Colleen Doran
• Lady Snowblood by Kazuo Koike
• Gunnerkrigg Court by Tom Siddell
• Girl Genius by Phil and Kaja Foglio
• Rapunzel's Revenge by Shannon, Dean and
Nathan Hale
• Strangers In Paradise by Terry Moore
• Doll by Mitsukazu Mihara

...and I just found this awfully fun dissertation on DeviantART looking at The Kindly Ones in the Sandman books. EDIT: YUS. It got a Daily Deviation. I am confirmed in having awesome taste.

Friday, 1 October 2010

Reviewing Tiffany's Witch Debut: I Shall Wear Midnight

Writing up a review on the latest Discworld book from Terry Pratchett - I Shall Wear Midnight. Obviously there are going to be spoilers in this.

I was lucky enough to be able to borrow it off an awesome friend, Sera, who by sheer astonishingly good fortune picked up a review copy of the hardback in a second-hand books store (my favourite one, Jason's Books in Auckland) about two days after it was released in New Zealand. And my family has already queued up for it - my dad's reading it through for the second time (I gave it to him at the weekend and he read it all that afternoon, and now my siblings are complaining because they wanted it first! Traditionally, one of them gets it for their birthdays, which are in the next couple of months, but the books seem to be getting released earlier and earlier, so none of us could wait that long!).

I Shall Wear Midnight is the fourth book in the young adult series about Tiffany Aching, who grows up on the chalk in a small shepherding community, and decides that the area needs a witch. This is partly inspired by her renowned and formidable grandmother Granny Aching, who died just before the first book (Wee Free Men). Granny Aching wasn't a Witch - but only because she said she wasn't and the Chalk had no tradition of witches, so they never thought to call her one. Witches to them where toothless old hags... much like the second reason for Tiffany's choice of vocation, the old lady whose cottage was burnt and cat was killed, and who died in the snow, when she was younger.

This last book (for now) ties up various story threads from the series, as well as picking up a few bonus oddments from other stories. Like most of his YA books, it had a much more linear approach - none of the random cameo point-of-view sections and multiple converging/diverging story threads. It's pretty much just Tiffany. It's also got some surprisingly adult elements that threw me on the first read, but on the second worked quite well (I was expecting a children's book, after all - it's definitely into the teen area, depending on your child of course). It was good and a fitting end to the series (if it is the end) and I'd definitely recommend it. The mysterious and deadly enemy is one stirred up in Wintersmith and causes a lot of panic - an old Inquisitor, now an incorporeal and terrible danger, who stirs up the old fears and hatreds against witches and comes hunting Tiffany. It's solved fairly straightforwardly, but there's enough tension to keep it interesting, and it keeps the plot moving in order to let the characters be themselves enough to make a story out of it all.

From the beginning, Tiffany - and therefore the reader - is very conscious of her duties as a witch. Feeding, cleaning and dress the invalids, keeping an eye on things, midwifing, making sure flowers mysteriously grow on an old woman's grave, staying in touch with the Kelda... and of course, never, ever forgetting anyone's name, and having no time for her 'passionate parts'. The book gets adult very quickly here! Although most younger readers wouldn't know what 'passionate parts' are referring to (despite the fact that the question is asked by two little girls). The drama starts when a drunken husband beats his daughter so hard she miscarries - and Tiffany has to try and deal with it all, help the girl, and make sure he isn't hung by the villagers, when he stirs up the 'rough music' (facing the music becomes literal). Nanny Ogg also appears to educate Letitia on her wifely duties, and anyone who knows Gytha Ogg knows what THAT means.

It is very much about growing up and adjusting to responsibility - Tiffany's only fifteen but for most of the book, it feels like she's at least in her twenties. She's very conscious of her new responsibilites and having to learn how to balance them. While of course, never asking for help from other witches, because they would certainly help out. Oh yes, they'd gladly come rescue her. But then it would show that she couldn't do it herself... and that's important to witches. She doesn't wear black (midnight) though - she has a pretty green dress. "When I am old", she says a couple of times, "I shall wear midnight".

She spends most of the book adjusting to the fact that just because it was 'obvious' that her and Roland (the Baron's son, who she rescued in Wee Free Men) should pair up, doesn't mean they actually will. She has a bit of trouble adjusting to his engagement to the washy, 'watercolour' Letitia - a soggy, pretty, princess-girl, much abused by her domineering, excessively class-conscious mother, who has a few surprises in store in the second half of the book. The sort of girl who gives teddy bears to headless skeletons... and has it work.

Tiffany visits Ankh-Morpork, to learn a bit about scary witchy props, discovering the source of the infamous Boffo catalogue (as played a part in her apprenticeship in Wintersmith) and she's meets Vimes, gets arrested, and has to get the Feegles out of the city in a hurry, after they creatively destroy, then creatively rebuild a tavern.

Esk from Wyrd Sisters makes a not-that-unexpected-surprise 'save the day' appearance to rescue Tiffany in Ankh-Morpork and explain the Plot Enemy to her. Eskarina Smith was a girl who ended up as a wizard, back in the early days of the Discworld. Granny Weatherwax was pivotal in getting her into the Unseen University, a blow was struck for feminism, and then she disappeared from every book hereafter. She's got a very practical, witchy outlook - whether because that's how Pratchett portrays his magical women, or because Granny Weatherwax had a hand in teaching her as a child, I'm not sure. She's more scientific and Wizardly in her approach to magic though - and has mastery of time travel, which is a splendid hook for later stories. This comforts me, and helps stave of the slightly dissatisfied feeling her brief appearance leaves, as it feels like she appeared because she had to appear, not because the story needed her.
She built a witch shambles, and also took the 'knob of the end' of her staff to improve the balance (*cough cough*). It looks like there may be a fifth book - it's not necessary, but (SPOILER) Tiffany makes a time-travelling appearance to herself (hence one of the cover illustrations) so it seems Esk taught her a few tricks.

Corparal Buggy Swires of the Watch makes a most lawful appearance to thrash every last one of the Nac Mac Feegles into submission - turns out he's only an adopted gnome... (to be fair, it was fairly well established that a) gnomes are only really some kind of civilised Feegle and b) he wasn't exactly a gnome and was pretty fairly a Feegle already, but he was so minor that most people seem to have forgotten this and were getting upset at the apparent needless plot-pandering/name dropping).

Tiffany wins, of course (it is one of his YA books), and asks for a whole bunch of eat happy endings from the new baron - ironically lampshaded as 'just deciding people's lives for them', and she finds someone else to be her beau (although this is never set in stone with Pratchett, who believes in letting his characters make their own mistakes), who also appreciates the sound of words and shares a love for the sound of susurrus ...


Oh - if you're planning to buy the series for someone, there was a book on Amazon that compiled the first two - I can't find it, so it may have been pulled, but it was poor quality and looks like it's a different book, or a prequel - it isn't. You still have to buy them all separately. The illustrated Wee Free Men is worth buying instead of the novel - it's a nice big picture book, with the complete story and the illustrations are great.

Edit: Pratchett says this will be the last in the series 'because after that she'll be grown up, and so will all her fans and they'll be ready for an adult book' (and therefore not part of the YA Tiffany Aching series!) (ref: video interview in 2007)

Terry Pratchett has Alzheimer's Disease and had to dictate this entirely, as he can no longer type - Wear the Lilac Day is the day for fundraising and commemorating. And wearing lilac. If you're looking for a Discworld book to start with, then the Tiffany Aching series is a very good place, but the first book - the Colour of Magic - definitely isn't. You can also have a browse through a complete list of all Pratchett's books and short stories - most of the short stories are free online now, so you could try jumping in there!

Sunday, 22 August 2010

Rapunzel's Revenge and other Rapunzel Links


You all know the story of Rapunzel, I hope? Well, did you ever think about making a lasso out of all that hair? Or reins for a wild warthog? Then you might want to check out the graphic novel, Rapunzel's Revenge.

Rapunzel's Revenge is a whip-cracking lively and colourful graphic novel that takes the old passive princess in a tower and throws her away in favour of a fiery, moral and stubborn redhead who gets out of her tower and goes to save the world from evil Mother Gothel. It's one of my favourites out of the various books retelling Rapunzel.

If you like the Rapunzel fairytale, you may be interested in browsing the Rapunzel-related posters on this lens. They're mostly from Zazzle - Rapunzel herself, Mother Gothel, and her tower - but there's some on Amazon for the new Tangled movie already.

I also discovered a new song by Emilie Autumn when researching for that lens and this rather funny little short film






tangled disney rapunzel pink cosplay dress costumeLastly, if you're actually interested in Tangled, and/or cosplay, Bria Silivren has written up an analysis of Rapunzel's costume complete with giant pictures from the upcoming Disney film. Bria's a semi-professional (...she doesn't make any money at it!) cosplayer who's already made one of the previewed (and, I think, rejected) costumes from the film (photo on left) and I strongly suspect is gathering pink silks and researching blonde wigs already for a second run.





Image link: Rapunzel 1 on DeviantART


featured lens
And finally, now the film's out, I've written a page about Mother Gothel herself.

Friday, 7 November 2008

Beggars in Spain, Higher Education and In Fury Born: Three science fiction book reviews

The Random Quote: There is a theory which states that if anybody ever discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened. DOUGLAS ADAMS - THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY

Three random reviews of Science fiction books
.

Nancy Kress*'s Beggars in Spain: futuristic, US, some people are modified not to need sleep, and therefore become brighter and smarter and excel. this leads to the usual xenophobia, hate and fear, and most of the sleepless separate from society. It has a longish timeframe and deals with cultural values and conflicting philosophies.

Also Higher Education (J. Pournelle and SM Stirling*) which resembles a semi-predictable Ender's Game or one of the new ones by James Patterson (Wings, with the corporate-mutated induced winged children - it read like that in style and substance) and had a scarily similar US based-future-complacent-hardly anyone is able, or needs, to, read setting to Beggars in Spain. The protagonist (teenage boy) is expelled and recruited into a secret mining organization. Tough love, intriguing space maths and real education ensues. Opinions of the company - as revealed by the narrative - swing dramatically through: They are good, they are bad, they are okay... (*Note, both books/authors looked up through the Bending the Landscape: Science Fiction anthology ).

Had a lot of difficulty trying to get through David Weber's In Fury Born. I made the fatal mistake of leaving it for a few days. It is huge, and he is very fond of the self-evident exposition, irrelevant back history and detailed technology. Some of it is interesting, or even required but the rest... repeatedly and obviously explaining someone's motives, usually through a character thinking for two pages about the physical stance, or fleeting impression, or back history:
the adjective way they verb simply to point out something that was obvious. For example "they knew their job, he disliked her, they had no choice but ..."
So it is very hard to jump back into. Which is annoying, as there is good story in there, it just takes several pages to find it again.

Thursday, 6 November 2008

Author Reviews: Terry Pratchett

The Random Quote: The Fremen were supreme in that quality the ancients called "spannungsbogen" — which is the self-imposed delay between desire for a thing and the act of reaching out to grasp that thing.from The Wisdom of Muad'Dib by the Princess Irulan
FRANK HERBERT - DUNE

I recently tried to set up a Squidoo lens reviewing some of my favourite authors - well, I first knew I was in trouble when I tried to quickly sum up Terry Pratchett. I knew I was doomed when I started on George RR Martin.

That... degenerated into an over ambitious morasse, so I am relocating the writeups over here.
However, it does still contain a lot of links to relevant sites for each of the authors, so it is still worth looking over.


The Random Quote: All witches are very conscious of stories. They can feel stories, in the same way that a bather in a little pool can feel the unexpected trout. Knowing how stories work is almost all the battle. For example, when an obvious innocent sits down with three experienced card sharpers and says 'How do you play this game, then?', someone is about to be shaken down until their teeth fall out. TERRY PRATCHETT - WITCHES ABROAD

Terry Pratchett, writer extraordinaire, creator of the Discworld.


*icon author unknown.

One of the most well known and prolific authors around, this British writer is best known for his (30 books plus) Discworld series (well... sort of series. There's a kind of 'do it yourself' order).

He writes in a pun-filled, flow of thought style* - no chapters being a main trademark, until recently - as well as continual little themes that popped up throughout certain books (frogs... nougat... Death... YES? I wasn't talking to you. OH. FINE THEN, I'LL JUST GO OVER HERE AND WAIT SHALL I? Wait for...wha- nevermind. SUIT YOURSELF)

He lampshades, satirizes and lampoons almost every established cliche and accepted fantasy or social aspect under the sun - and rephrases the most serious and philosophical matters into obvious, and even highly amusing, phrases.

For new readers, I would definitely recommend trying his Bromeliad series (the little Nomes, who live under the floorboards in a Store - sorry, THE Store - that was clearly created for them by Arnold Bros.), the Maurice and His Amazing Educated Rodents or his Tiffany Aching series. These are... written for childrens to young adults, which means he's tried to stay on track and taken the sex jokes out (Yes, Mrs Rosy Palm, we ARE looking at you). They are Good Books - and introduce you to his writing style. Most people who end up picking up the Colour of Magic (his first - and arguably worst written - Discworld novel) don't really enjoy it...

His darker works - such as Thud, Nightwatch - are definitely among my favourites (revolution, murder and politics galore). For Neil Gaiman fans... there is of course: Good Omens. This books was cowritten by Pratchett and Gaiman and is probably one of the most quoted and widest read. It's good.

And the point of this IS of course to indoctrinate more mindless addicts into his army.

Go forth. And beware the pattering of little feet.


*Also is probably singlehandedly responsible for the common usage of little footnotes to add humourous and completely irrelevant text**
**This... being relevant text, of course***
**this isn't, though****
****I CAN'T STOP*****
*****THE ASTERISKS ARE GETTING LONGER THAN THE FOOTNOTE!!!!!^
^There. Knew I'd get the exclamation marks in somewhere. No Terry Pratchett reference is complete with out an abuse of exclamation marks - because it is self evident that all Teryy Pratchett referencers are touched, stirred and baked with insanity (...little insanity raisins in the toasted figgins of our brains)