All posts by SF Bluestocking

Weekend Links: January 7, 2017

The first week of a new year is generally a slow one for all of us, mostly taken up with previous year wrap-ups and anticipatory posts about the new one. That’s pretty much the case this year, too, except for the slight frisson of fear of authoritarianism that seems to be constantly, anxiously simmering in the background of all my social feeds. So 2017 is off to–generously speaking–an uneasy beginning. For many of us, myself included, the world is an uglier, more frightening and less hopeful place than it was this time last year, and the news is less encouraging each day.

Like (I imagine) many people, I’ve been dealing with things by throwing myself into my work. Also, by putting my congressman’s number on speed dial for when I feel like complaining.

In any case, I’ve written more–or at least more productively and happily–in the last week than I have in the last couple of months, and I’m already in the middle of my fourth read of the year. I’ve been cleaning house and cooking, and taking control of my life where I can. Also, calling my Republican congressman’s office about every other day to complain about stuff and ask him (or asking his poor, beleaguered interns to ask him) to to clarify his garbage opinions.

It helps. Both the productivity and the complaining.

This week, I published six posts here at SF Bluestocking:

I read quite a bit of short fiction between two magazines and what I read online. Here are some of my favorites currently free to read:

Cabbages and Kings posted a retrospective podcast with the editors of FIYAH.

The Barnes & Noble Sci-Fi and Fantasy Blog had an interview with Ken Liu about his Dandelion Dynasty series.

At Tor.com, a great post on Mary Shelley’s post-Frankenstein career.

The B&N blog also rounded up 96 book recommendations from editors for 2017, just in case your to-read list isn’t full enough yet. Also, the 17 most anticipated sci-fi debuts coming out this year.

I loved Rogue One when I finally got to see it on New Year’s Eve, but it wasn’t exactly a flawless movie. Max Gladstone’s suggested fixes make a good deal of sense.

I am honestly baffled by the existence of HBO’s upcoming show, The Young Pope. I mean, what audience are they going for with that? Apparently I’m not the only one, judging by the amount of mockery for the show going around on Twitter.

Futurefire Publishing has one of the first exciting crowdfunding projects I’ve seen this year. $5 gets you an ebook of their Problem Daughters anthology. You can find more news and press about Problem Daughters over at the Futurefire blog.

The other interesting crowdfunding campaign I saw this week is Lawless Lands: Tales from the Weird Frontier. It’s a little steep at $15 for a digital copy of the finished book, but it’s got a pretty good Table of Contents and a neat concept.

This Polish musical about man-eating mermaids is relevant to ALL of my interests:

Last of all, there’s finally a trailer for Hulu’s adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale, and it looks excellent so far:

Magazine Review – FIYAH Literary Magazine Issue One: REBIRTH

fiyah1In an age of constant reboots and reimaginings of old media, the new FIYAH Literary Magazine stands out as one of the most promising such projects in recent years. Inspired by the work of Jazz Age black writers and motivated by current events and the ongoing dearth of recognition and opportunities for black writers in SFF, executive editors Justina Ireland and Troy L. Wiggins have created a unique and special space that is as much needed now as ever before. From its stunningly beautiful cover art to the very last page of perfectly curated fiction, Issue One: REBIRTH is a gorgeous celebration of black excellence that every serious fan of speculative fiction should be reading this winter.

My personal favorite story of the issue is the final one, “Chesirah” by L.D. Lewis, which combines fantastical and science fictional elements to great effect. My second favorite, V.H. Galloway’s compelling “Sisi Je Kuisha (We Have Ended)”, introduced me to a bit of central African folklore that I knew nothing about before reading it, which then sent me down a marvelously fascinating and informative rabbit hole of internet research about Bantu languages and Congolese history. Meanwhile, “The Shade Caller” by DaVaun Sanders is a thoughtful exploration of otherness and the power of community. An excerpt from Sanders’ novel, The Seed-Bearing Prince is also included, though I skipped it in favor of just buying a copy (just $0.99 for Kindle) and adding it to my to-read list.

The first three stories of the issue didn’t blow me away the same way the final three did, but I suspect it’s a mix of personal preference and the fact that I’m white. All of the stories in FIYAH are by, about and for black people, or at least not for white people. Reading these stories while white, one gets the distinct impression that you are the outsider here, and I found myself throughout feeling grateful for the gift of these deeper glimpses into an experience that I can only ever understand imperfectly. It’s a feeling that I often have while reading the works of people unlike myself, just seldom ever through half a dozen stories in a row.

And this might be the most refreshing thing about FIYAH and the thing that makes this project so important for the SFF community. Here, black stories by black authors are in a unique context, in conversation with each other and not singled out as token stories in other publications where they’re almost forced to be in conversation with whiteness. There’s a unity and cohesiveness to this collection that is too often reserved for more privileged perspectives that are allowed to drown out the voices of minorities. FIYAH gathers the voices of black writers together in a way that both amplifies their collective impact and highlights the diversity within the group.

The only quibble I have about this first issue is actually a technical one. Sadly, the EPUB format (my preferred file type as a Nook user) is not well-formatted, and I was unable to adjust the font size to read it more easily. It also didn’t have the best document navigation, and if I wanted to jump to a story I had to do it from the table of contents page rather than the little menu thingy in the bottom left corner of the device. It’s not a deal breaker, obviously, but it was inconvenient, and I (vainly) hated the reminder that I might need to get my eyes checked as I approach middle age. Fortunately, when you buy the issue, you have access to EPUB, MOBI, and PDF downloads, so it’s easy enough to find one that will work for you, but I’m hoping that this problem is fixed in future issues.

Magazine Review: Uncanny Magazine Issue 14 Jan/Feb 2017

I’ve read Uncanny Magazine sporadically since they started publishing, but I finally decided to back their Kickstarter and subscribe for Year Three. I’d definitely rate that among my best decisions of 2016, not least of all because it means that I’ve gotten to start off 2017 with a brand new issue that is jam-packed full of the usual sorts of excellent stories, poetry and essays that have been characteristic of the publication since the beginning.

Sam J. Miller’s “Bodies Stacked Up Like Firewood” centers around a trans man’s suicide, and is the first story to make me cry in 2017. Miller deftly and sensitively explores the grief of his characters, utilizing a slight speculative element for a haunting effect that left me perfectly primed for reading the second story that has made me cry this year, A. Merc Rustad’s “Monster Girls Don’t Cry.” I just recently read Rustad’s lovely “This is Not a Wardrobe Door” in Fireside, so I was excited to find a second of their stories so soon and thrilled to find that this one is even better than the first. I’m a huge fan of stories where outsiders come to own their identities, and I love a literal metaphor, so “Monster Girls Don’t Cry” is right up my alley. I fully expect it to be one of my favorites of the year.

Kassandra Khaw’s “Goddess, Worm” is nice but not terribly memorable. “The Thule Stowaway” by Maria Dahvana Headley is rather long and challenging, especially if you don’t know the works and biography of Edgar Allan Poe very well. I could see it being a great favorite for the right reader, however. From Theodora Goss comes “To Budapest, with Love,” which is a thoughtful meditation on ideas of alienness that I didn’t find that compelling. “Some Cupids Kill With Arrows” by Tansy Rayner Roberts is a charming and funny romance that I will definitely be linking to all my classics-loving friends when it’s free to read on February 7 (and hounding them to just buy the issue in the meantime). The Ann Leckie reprint, “The Unknown God,” is fine, but not as exciting as some of her other work that I’ve read.

I’m no poetry expert, but I loved Nin Harris’s “Jean-Luc, Future Ghost” and even think I understood it. Longer poems by Carlos Hernandez and Nicasio Andres Reed round out the section but are beyond my ability to critique other than to say I liked them.

Mark Oshiro offers an important perspective on and critique of Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them in his essay “Inferior Beasts.” Natalie Luhrs makes an excellent case for romance in “Why You Should Read Romance” and Angel Cruz’s essay, “Blood of the Revolution: On Filipina Writers and Aswang,” is fascinating. The standout essay of the issue, however, is Delilah S. Dawson’s powerful “I Have Never Not Been an Object.” Finally, Julia Rios, in her second issue as print interviewer, talks with A. Merc Rustad and Maria Dahvana Headley, who each offer some great insight into the stories they had in this issue, their respective processes, and what they’ll be up to next.

Like any collection of fiction and essays, Uncanny Magazine #14 has its highs and lows subject to the reader’s tastes, but it’s overall a solid issue of an above average publication. Even the pieces that didn’t especially speak to me personally were obviously chosen with care for their high quality, and I continue to be extremely happy that I finally decided to become a subscriber.

The SF Bluestocking 2017 Winter Reading List

I know it’s a little bit past the actual beginning of winter, but I think from now on I’m just going to break these seasonal reading lists up into more or less three month time periods and name them for the closest corresponding season. It’s just not practical to try and do a full year’s worth of books that I’m excited about, even in January, especially when there are plenty of still-to-be-announced releases for later in the year that I don’t even know about yet. So, this list will get you (and me) through March.

Magazines
I’m starting this year off with magazine subscriptions for the first time in many years. (Like, now that I think about it, I think the last time I regularly read any magazine was Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Fantasy Magazine back in the early ’90s. Yikes.) Here’s what I’m definitely reading (and recommending, natch) in the first few months of 2017:

Tor.com Novellas and Short(-ish) Novels
I plan to continue reading all of these as they are published (or as ARCs if I am lucky and they show up on NetGalley). I know I’ve been full of praise for the last couple of years for Tor.com’s novellas, but I still basically love them. The novella length (and price!) is great for quick reading, and Tor.com publishes a great variety of new and established authors in a good mix of subgenres that offers plenty that I like and enough stuff outside my usual comfort zone to keep things interesting and challenging. After 2016, there are a couple of authors that I will be avoiding in the future because I just don’t care for their books at all, but other than that I expect to keep on reading these faithfully. The first quarter of 2017 has quite a lot to be excited for.

  • Dusk or Dawn or Dark or Day by Seanan McGuire – January 10
  • Sin du Jour: The First Course by Matt Wallace – January 10 (Contains books 1-3 of the series. I probably won’t be rereading it, but if you haven’t read it at least once, you should.)
  • The Fortress at the End of Time by Joe M. McDermott – January 17
  • Passing Strange by Ellen Klages – January 24
  • Binti: Home by Nnedi Okorafor – January 31
  • Idle Ingredients by Matt Wallace – February 7
  • An Impossible War by Andy Remic – February 14 (This is one I’ll be skipping, but it’s surely a better fit for someone.)
  • Cold Counsel by Chris Sharp – February 21
  • Agents of Dreamland by Caitlin R. Kiernan – February 28
  • Standard Hollywood Depravity by Adam Christopher – March 7
  • Brother’s Ruin by Emma Newman – March 14
  • Chalk by Paul Cornell – March 21

2017-winter-tor

Everything Else
Everything else obviously is the majority of what I’ve got on my TBR list. There are a handful of things here that I’m not 100% sure about, but in order to hit my Goodreads challenge numbers I’ll have to get through most of these. I hope I can, because there’s a ton of great stuff coming out over the next couple of months.

  • Difficult Women by Roxane Gay – January 3
  • Windwitch by Susan Dennard – January 10
  • The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden – January 10
  • Kindred: A Graphic Novel Adaptation by Octavia E. Butler, John Jennings (Illustrator), Damian Duffy (Adapted by) – January 10
  • Dreadnought by April Daniels – January 24
  • Six Wakes by Mur Lafferty – January 31
  • Crossroads of Canopy by Thoraiya Dyer – January 31
  • Amberlough by Lara Elena Donnelly – February 7
  • The Stars are Legion by Kameron Hurley – February 7
  • Miranda and Caliban by Jacqueline Carey – February 14
  • Angel Catbird Volume 2: To Castle Catula by Margaret Atwood and Johnny Christmas – February 14
  • Seven Surrenders by Ada Palmer – February 21
  • Hunger Makes the Wolf by Alex Wells – March 7
  • The Djinn Falls in Love and Other Stories edited by Mahvesh Murad and Jared Shurin – March 14

2017-winter-novels

What I’m Looking Forward to in 2017: Film

I feel like every year is a lackluster year in film anymore, to be honest, but there are still a few things I’m looking forward to in 2017, just like there were still a few things I enjoyed in 2016. Here’s what’s on my radar right now for the coming year.

Kong: Skull Island – March 3

Kong: Skull Island confuses me because everything about this movie seems way better than I would ever think yet another regressive creature feature deserves. It’s got a good cast (although predictably short on women), amazing looking CGI, and a clever sense of self-awareness that I find appealing. As a longtime lover of creature features, I am intrigued.

Beauty and the Beast – March 17

Beauty and the Beast has never been one of my favorite Disney movies, and this live-action remake is downright aggressively ugly. However, I will probably see it anyway because everyone else will be doing it.

Power Rangers – March 24

I’m a little old for Power Rangers to have been a big part of my childhood, but this looks moderately entertaining. It’s not at the top of my must-see-in-theaters list, but I’ll see it if I have the time and money come late March.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 – May 5

I don’t care that much about super heroes, but the first Guardians of the Galaxy movie was a ton of fun. I predict that by May I will definitely be in need of some fun.

Wonder Woman – June 2

I don’t have high hopes for Wonder Woman, to be honest. The trailers and reviews of the other recent DC comics adaptations have been so terrible that I haven’t even bothered with them. Regardless, I do think it’s important to support female-led super hero movies when they come out, few and far between as they are. Hey, maybe I’ll be pleasantly surprised.

Spider-Man: Homecoming – July 7

For all that I say I’m not very much into super heroes, I’ve always had a bit of a soft spot for Spider-Man. Plus, this actually looks genuinely decent, which would be a nice change after multiple troubled adaptation attempts.

Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets – July 21

This might turn out to be the Jupiter Ascending of 2017, and I’m more than okay with that. I loved Jupiter Ascending. I also loved Luc Besson’s The Fifth Element twenty years ago, and Valerian looks equally stunning. I’m hoping that Rihanna as a shapeshifting alien will make up for the two pouty, pasty-faced leads. Aside from the new Star Wars, this might be my most-anticipated movie of the year.

Blade Runner 2049 – October 6

I hate an unnecessary and redundant sequel/reboot of an iconic film as much as the next person, but Blade Runner 2049 comes out just in time for me to see it on my birthday.

Star Wars Episode VIII – December 15

Obviously.

Annihilation – TBA 2017

There is no trailer or release date yet for Annihilation, based upon Jeff VanderMeer’s novel of the same title, but I expect it to be good and creepy.

What I’m Looking Forward to in 2017: Television

2016 was a weird year for television. While there were a few things I was interested in, some of the shows I liked best from 2015 didn’t have new seasons and the things I was excited about in 2016 didn’t particularly deliver. It’s a new year, though, and I think it’s going to be at least a marginally better one for television. Several of my favorite shows are returning, and there are a handful of new things coming out that I’m really looking forward to.  Here are the things I’m most excited about.

Emerald City – January 6 on NBC

I don’t necessarily think Emerald City is going to be good, but it looks gorgeous (all ten episodes are directed by Tarsem Singh) and I’m shamefully susceptible to dark, gritty reimaginings of well-loved stories.

The Expanse – February 1 on Syfy

The Expanse  is the best sci-fi show since Battlestar Galactica, and it’s coming back in less than a month. I finally got around to reading the second book of the series, Caliban’s War, last month, and it’s only made me much more excited to see how the show adapts it. Also, I finally get why everyone is so excited about Bobbie Draper, and I cannot wait.

Powerless – February 2 on NBC

Listen, I don’t know what the deal is with this show. The concept seems fun, and it’s got a few actors in it that I like, but we’re less than a month from its premiere date and there’s no proper trailer for it. I haven’t seen any teasers or ads or any evidence that NBC is interested in promoting this show at all, and that has me worried. Still, I’m going to tune in on February 2 and give it a chance, even if all this lack of promotion doesn’t seem to bode well for it.

iZombie Season 3 – April 4 on The CW

iZombie is one of my favorite shows of recent years, just in general, and season two ended with a pretty significant game changing event so I can’t wait to see what happens next.

The Handmaid’s Tale – April 26 on Hulu

I’d love it (I’m sure we we all would) if this new adaptation hadn’t turned out to be much more timely than expected, but it’s hard to dampen my enthusiasm for anything Margaret Atwood-related.

Doctor Who Series 10 – April on the BBC

I’m probably less excited about the actual show than I am about this being the final year of Steven Moffat as show runner, but new companion Bill seems cool.

Star Trek: Discovery – May on CBS

Information is still only slowly coming out about this show, but there is no universe in which I’m not over the moon thrilled about a new Star Trek show. This is probably the show I’m most looking forward to in 2017.

Into the Badlands Season 2 – Spring/TBA on AMC

Into the Badlands is the best show of 2015 that didn’t get nearly the amount of attention and praise that it deserved. After taking until halfway through 2016 to even confirm season two, AMC still hasn’t given an exact air date for it. I will literally drop everything to watch this show whenever it appears, though.

American Gods – TBA on Starz

I’m not a huge Neil Gaiman fangirl, but I loved American Gods when I first read it almost fifteen years ago. I’m down for a TV adaptation of it.

The Shannara Chronicles – TBA on MTV

It’s definitely a somewhat unpopular opinion, but I kind of loved The Shannara Chronicles last year. There’s no announced date for it, but I can’t imagine MTV dragging it out til 2018.

Resolutions for 2017

So, last year, I had a huge list of ambitious New Year’s resolutions and ended up accomplishing almost none of them because 2016 was such a garbage year in general and for my partner and me in particular. The last couple of days, I’ve been doing my best to mentally and emotionally unburden myself from all that bullshit, though, and it’s going alright. I’m not going into 2017 with no cares or worries, and I’ve got one last bit of 2016 business (wrapping things up with insurance after a car accident I was in the day before Thanksgiving) that I’m only going to be finished with in another week or two. But compared to how tightly wound and overburdened I was feeling even a week ago, I’m doing pretty well.  However, I’m also determined to not go into 2017 with any very high expectations. My failure to achieve goals and milestones last year was a major part of my latter-half-of-2016 malaise, and I’d hate to go through that a second year in a row.

So this year I’m keeping things simple, thinking smaller, and focusing on reasonably achievable goals that I can revisit and expand upon as the year goes on. Secondarily, I’m concentrating on building new routines and recommitting to routines that have worked well for me in the past. No need to reinvent the wheel, right? I was doing pretty well a couple of years ago. Just gotta get things rolling again.

Reading

  • Last year, I read 108 things that counted as books on Goodreads, when I had a goal of just 72. This year, I expect to read about the same, so I’ve set my Goodreads Challenge goal to 104. Two books a week should be eminently doable.
  • Last year I started with a goal of reading one nonfiction book per month. I totally failed at that, but I still think it’s a reasonable goal if I just plan better, so I’m sticking with it this year with the intention of actually do it.
  • I’ve been happy with the diversity of my reading, for the most part, but I’ve been trying to read more short fiction the last few months. To continue that trend, my third reading goal for 2017 is to read at least one collection of short fiction–a magazine, anthology, or single-author collection–each month. With a couple of Kickstarted projects on their way over the next few months and a subscription to Uncanny‘s Year 3, I don’t think this will be a problem.

Writing

  • In the past, I have struggled to stay caught up on writing about the books that I read. This year, I will be writing about everything immediately and before I start my next book. This should ensure a more steady stream of book content on the blog and prevent any mid-year meltdowns over how behind I’ve fallen.
  • I started last year with the goal of writing at least some fiction every month, and I didn’t. I do have some ideas, though. Instead of a word count or other goal, this year I intend to have just one story written and ready to submit for publication by the end of the year.

Health and Fitness

  • Counting calories. It’s not for everyone, but it was working well for me before I broke my foot, and I appreciate the combination of mindfulness and accountability involved with it. I updated MyFitnessPal today and will be back on track with it starting tomorrow.
  • Drink only water. It’s unbelievable the calories you can unthinkingly consume with sugary drinks. And I’m certain that giving up caffeine will have a positive impact on my sleep patterns and energy level.
  • Yoga. Three days a week.
  • Cardio. At least 30 minutes, five days a week.
  • Walking. 2 miles, five days a week.

Cooking and Food

  • Learn to make my own pasta.
  • Cook with a totally new to me ingredient once per month.
  • Make at least one vegetarian meal each week.

Political

  • Call or write to my legislators weekly. A thankless task for a leftist in suburban Ohio, but it ought to be done.
  • Get involved in local government. Currently looking at opportunities in my town.
  • Hit a Nazi with my purse if I get the chance.

Personal and Miscellany

  • Get a tattoo. I’m about 95% certain of what I’m going to get. Just have to find an artist and get it done.
  • Learn a new skill. I’m thinking knitting, but I haven’t decided yet.

The Best of 2016: The Best Books I Didn’t Get Around To Actually Reading

It’s been no secret around here that this was a rough year for me, pretty much from start to finish. I won’t rehash it all here, but it has definitely sucked, big time, and as a result I didn’t accomplish nearly as much in 2016 as I’d originally planned. While I did meet my reading goal, at least in terms of number of books, much of what I read was novellas and comic books and magazines. Many of the books I was excited about this year I just never managed to get to. Some of these I hope to squeeze into 2017. Some of these I’ll probably only read if they make awards shortlists. Some of these there’s no telling if I’ll ever make it back to, what with all the amazing new stuff coming out year after year.  In any case, this is the stuff I missed out on in 2016:

The Star-Touched Queen by Roshani Chokshi
This book got a lot of buzz earlier this year, but, frankly, I just haven’t been in the mood for YA or even most YA-adjacent stuff, and I’ve been trying to minimize the number of series I start and never finish.

Three Dark Crowns by Kendare Blake
I read and enjoyed Anti-Goddess a couple of years ago, but never did come back around to finish that series and Blake’s earlier stuff never interested me. Three Dark Crowns sounds like it has a lot of potential, though. Unfortunately, it’s another first book in a series and I read some early reviews that, while positive, suggested a very abrupt ending that made me think I should wait til the whole series is out before getting into it.

Heroine Complex by Sarah Kuhn AND Not Your Sidekick by C.B. Lee
If I’m honest, I think I want to want to read these more than I actually want to read them. The thing is, I’m just not that into superheroes in general, and I always have a hard time getting excited about them, even when promised diversity and trope-busting and fun. These are still on my radar, and I might get around to them someday, but there’s no telling if or when the right mood will strike me.

Arabella of Mars by David D. Levine
I think the main reason this book made it onto my list for the year was that it sounds so exactly like the sort of thing I would have loved to read when I was my daughter’s age. It also has an enticing cover. Unfortunately, some vague feelings of nostalgia and a pretty package weren’t enough for me to make this title a priority.

The Devourers by Indra Das
The Devourers is going on the same to-read-someday list as The Buried Giant and Station Eleven. I swear I will read it eventually.

Borderline by Mishell Baker
I don’t read a lot of urban fantasy, but I’ve heard such good things about this series that I’m still hoping to read this before the second book comes out in the spring.

Ghost Talkers by Mary Robinette Kowal
I read Mary Robinette Kowal’s “The Lady Astronaut of Mars” ages ago and have been determined to read her novels ever since. I never picked up the Glamourist Histories because I didn’t think I would want to spend the time reading all of them this year, but I really thought I would be able to read this standalone when it came out. Unfortunately, that was right when I was in the middle of a bunch of traveling and by the time I got resettled, it was part of a huge backlog of stuff I’ve spent most of the rest of the year trying to finish.

Cloudbound by Fran Wilde
I really liked Fran Wilde’s first Bone Universe book, Updraft, but I haven’t been as excited about Cloudbound, probably because it seems to focus more on a secondary character from the first book that I didn’t care for very much. I expect this is one I’ll come back to when the third book comes out in 2017.

After Atlas by Emma Newman
Planetfall was excellent, and I’ve heard great things about this companion novel, but I’ve honestly just run out of time and chose to work on knocking out some longer books over the last couple of weeks instead.

Infomocracy by Malka Older
Listen. I know that everyone loves this book, and I’ve read an enormous number of good reviews of it by people whose opinions I value, but I just have not had the energy to read it. I was all ready to start it after Hillary Clinton won the election in November, and then she didn’t, and I’ve been reading somewhat lighter, more escapist stuff instead. This is the only book on this list that I am pretty much 100% going to read before I send in my next Hugo ballot.

 

The Best of 2016: Novels

2016 has been a tremendous year for novels, and even without reading everything I had hoped to finish this year it was hard to pare this list down to a manageable number of titles.

All the Birds in the Sky by Charlie Jane Anders
I said in my original review of All the Birds in the Sky, way back in January, that I didn’t think anything else I was going to read in 2016 was going to top it. In hindsight, it was really early to say that. I don’t think I would now say that this book is the best thing I read in 2016, but it is my favorite standalone novel of the year for sure. That said, I love this book with the passion of a thousand burning suns. The older book that it most reminds me of is Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, another book that I have a furious adoration for, but it’s not really very much like that book at all, at least not in any specific or quantifiable way. Rather, it’s sweet and funny and whimsically magical in a way that I find comforting, and that’s something that I enjoyed at the beginning of 2016 and that I need at the end of it. I feel very certain that, like Good OmensAll the Birds in the Sky will be a book that I will return to time and time again in the future whenever I want to read for peace and quiet.

The Obelisk Gate by N.K. Jemisin
The Fifth Season was one of the most brilliant and ambitious novels of 2015, and I honestly didn’t think there was any way The Obelisk Gate would be as good as its predecessor. And maybe it isn’t, because The Fifth Season really is that incredible, but it’s damn close. In The Obelisk Gate, Essun’s story picks up where it left off at the end of the first book, and we’re taken back in time to pick up the point of views of Essun’s daughter, Nassun, and the Guardian, Schaffa. It’s much more obvious in this book how all the point of views are interconnected, though Essun feels somewhat cut off from the others for most of the novel, so there’s none of the build up and mystery and satisfying revelation that The Fifth Season offered. Probably you can really only do that once. And so, The Obelisk Gate is in many ways far more straightforward and traditionally structured than The Fifth Season, but what The Obelisk Gate lacks in structural ingenuity and novelty it more than makes up for with worldbuilding and thematic ambition. The world of the Stillness gets far more detailed this time around, and we learn a lot more about the orogenes, their powers, and the Guardians’ purpose. By the end of the book, the outlines of an epic confrontation in the third book (The Stone Sky, out in August 2017) have begun to crystallize, and I cannot wait to read it.

The Wall of Storms by Ken Liu
Ken Liu has been on fire the last couple of years, and he’s quite deservedly been getting a lot of attention for his work as a translator and editor. His collection of his own short fiction, The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories, was released earlier this year to widespread acclaim, and he is working hard to help bring Chinese sci-fi to Anglophone readers, with a collection of it, Invisible Planets, out a couple months ago. Liu is such a busy guy doing so much important and attention-worthy work that it would be easy to overlook his epic fantasy series, The Dandelion Dynasty, of which The Wall of Storms is the second installment. It would be a huge mistake to overlook this book. Last year’s The Grace of Kings was a gorgeously ambitious book, but my feelings were somewhat ambivalent about it, mostly because of its lack of female characters and the marginalization of what few there were in favor of focusing on the friendships and relationships between men. The Wall of Storms more than makes up for that, and largely redeems its predecessor in hindsight, so if you were put off by that aspect of the first book in the trilogy be sure to give this one a chance. The Wall of Storms expands upon the world Liu created in The Grace of Kings and takes a good, hard look at the aftermath of a revolution, the qualities and values of leaders, the philosophy of governance, and the legacies of conquest and colonization. This is an even more ambitious, erudite and complex novel than the first book in the series, and it deserves to be a serious contender for next years genre awards.

Everfair by Nisi Shawl
Everfair is the book I fell in love with in 2016 that is most outside my normal reading comfort zone. I rarely read steampunk at all–it’s just not really my thing, as a general rule–and never any steampunk as literary as this, so Everfair was a definitely challenge for me. At its heart, though, I think Everfair may be best understood as a sprawlingly epic historical romance, a multi-generational family drama that largely revolves around the difficult relationship between mixed-race but light-skinned Frenchwoman Lisette and her white lover, Daisy. Writing from multiple points of view in vignettes that span some thirty years, Nisi Shawl imagines an alternate history of the Congo in which genocide never happened and instead a utopian society sprang up where people of many races work together to try and build a place where all are welcome. It’s against this backdrop that Shawl examines race issues as they affect the fledgling country of Everfair as well as Lisette and Daisy’s relationship. It’s a book about identity, politics, power dynamics, and the complexities of the human heart. In a year that has been so marked by racism, cynicism, and lack of empathy for others, a beautifully thoughtful and humanist novel like Everfair should be considered required reading.

Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee
Yoon Ha Lee’s short fiction collection, Conservation of Shadows, was one of my favorite reads in 2015, so I was thrilled when I learned that he would be publishing his first novel this year and set in the same universe as one of my favorite stories from Conservation of ShadowsNinefox Gambit did not disappoint. In a universe ruled by a hexarchate that maintains control over numerous planets and space stations by way of strict calendrical mathematics laws that dictate the limits and workings of reality itself, it’s vastly important that everyone stick to the same calendar. When heretics threaten the system by developing their own calendar–and their own technology based upon it–Captain Kel Charis is forced to join forces with the remains of one of the hexarchate’s most brilliant military tacticians in order to quash the rebelling faction. The problem is that Shuos Jedao, while gifted, is also considered to be insane after a legendary incident in which he was responsible for the massacre of two armies. Charis has to figure out how to utilize Jedao’s expertise to accomplish her assignment without being manipulated by him or falling prey to his madness. In some ways this book feels like setup for the rest of the series to follow, but it stands well on its own merits as a strange and marvelously beautiful piece of military sf/space opera.

Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer
I don’t think there’s every been a book quite like Ada Palmer’s debut novel. Too Like the Lightning is a complex, challenging, wildly original book that contains several slowly and methodically unfolding mysteries in its pages. Where Palmer shines brightest, however, is in the worldbuilding department. The utopian future imagined here is in turns alluring and alien and at times faintly sinister, especially as the story goes on and more of the dystopia within the utopia is revealed. I loved the crash course in 18th and 19th century philosophy I got while reading this book, between Palmer’s excellent exposition and my own googling and wikipedia reading (I highly recommend brushing up on at least the bare bones of the Enlightenment before reading this one), and I loved the book’s exploration of the tension between the personal and the political, individualism and collectivism, freedom and justice. Too Like the Lightning won’t be a book for everyone–I expect some readers to be turned off by how cerebral it is, while others will find some of the book’s darker elements disturbing–but I found it singularly riveting and can’t wait to read the sequel, Seven Surrenders, in 2017.

A Closed and Common Orbit by Becky Chambers
Becky Chambers’ The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet was my favorite book of 2015, so I was thrilled when I learned that there would be a companion novel coming out this year. A Closed and Common Orbit picks up right at the end of The Long Way and follows the development of Lovelace (who quickly renames herself Sidra) after she leaves the Wayfarer in the android body kit that was originally meant for her previous installation, Lovey. The other half of Orbit deals with the backstory of Pepper, who was a minor character in The Long Way but plays a major role in Sidra’s story here before the two stories fully intersect at the novel’s climax. Orbit has significant thematic overlap with The Long Way, with both books dealing with ideas about families and homes of choice, but Orbit is a more focused book with a much smaller cast of characters who are mostly tied to a particular location rather than roaming the galaxy. The journeys here aren’t necessarily more personal, but they are more internal and specific to Sidra and Pepper, who are Orbit‘s only POV characters, which is a smart way for Chambers to continue covering similar emotional ground while still setting this second book neatly apart from the first. It’s a wonderful bit of optimistic, joyful comfort reading of a sort that I know that I, personally, always enjoy.

Certain Dark Things by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Silvia Moreno-Garcia is a new-to-me-in-2016 author, though I suppose she was on the edge of my radar for a couple of years before I finally picked up her first novel, Signal to Noise. If you’ve read her earlier novel, Certain Dark Things is not very like it at all. Whereas Signal to Noise was on the far magical end of magical realism, Certain Dark Things is very explicitly supernatural and full of some of the coolest vampires I’ve read about in ages. There’s very little new ground to be covered in the vampire genre, and it’s easy to identify the ways in which Moreno-Garcia’s vampires are derivative of previous fictional bloodsuckers, but it’s also clear that Moreno-Garcia knows the genre well. The novel is peppered with references to enough pop-cultural vampires and vampire tropes that genre conventions Moreno-Garcia utilizes have been chosen with care. Certain Dark Things has a wonderful sense of place (like Signal to Noise, it’s set in Mexico City) and a distinctive dark sensibility (eschewing true romance, unlike many similar vampire stories) that sets it apart from the crowd. Moreno-Garcia has also built enough mythology and done enough worldbuilding here that it would be easy for her to revisit the setting and expand upon the ideas of this book. I’m not certain if that would be a necessary or desirable thing, as it’s easy for vampire stories to become overwrought and cliche, but if there’s never a sequel or companion novel to this one, Silvia Moreno-Garcia has already done a great job of injecting some fresh blood into an old genre.

Central Station by Lavie Tidhar
Lavie Tidhar has been around for a while as an author and editor, but Central Station is the first of his books I’ve read and I still haven’t gotten around to reading any more. I hate to say that what attracted me to this title first was its gorgeous cover, but it’s true. It’s got such a wonderfully retro feel to it with its monochromatic color scheme and phallic rockets and towers, I just knew it would be a book I would want to have on my shelf. It was a pleasant surprise to find out that the innards of Central Station were every bit as enchanting as its outside. In the future, Tel Aviv is now at the base of a giant space station, and millions of people now come and go through the city while millions more live their lives in the space station’s shadow. Tidhar collects and connects vignettes of life around Central Station to create a wonderful tapestry of thoughtful futurist mythmaking. A strange child grows up looking for others like himself. A man returns from space and reconnects with an old lover. A cyborg soldier leftover from a great war falls in love. A robot priest guides his flock. While the book isn’t as entirely cohesive as it might have been if it was written on purpose rather than cobbled together from earlier short fiction, Tidhar has nonetheless successfully arranged numerous slices of life into an overall pleasing composition that paints a compelling picture of a possible future.

The Girl Who Raced Fairyland All the Way Home by Catherynne M. Valente
This isn’t Catherynne M. Valente’s best book. It’s not even the best book of her Fairyland series, for all that it is a wonderful ending to September’s story. But “not Cat Valente’s best” is still incredible. As with all the previous Fairyland books, this one is beautifully written. Valente has a true gift for language, and I never get tired of reading as much of her work as is available each year. The Girl Who Raced Fairyland All the Way Home smartly subverted my expectations–which in hindsight I ought to have expected–and gave September exactly the happy ending that she most deserved. I wept many bittersweet tears at the end, not least because I was sad that my daughter, now thirteen, has been too old to want me to read the last couple of books aloud to her like I did when she was smaller. I say it every time I review this series, but I cannot recommend enough that you find a small child–your own or any one that you can borrow from a friend or relative–and read these books aloud with them. If you can’t do that, maybe get the audio books and let someone read them to you. Valente’s sumptuous descriptions and excellent alliterations deserve to be spoken as often as possible.

The Best of 2016: Movies and Television

This has been a weird year for me when it came to television and movies. Writing it all down in preparation for this post, I found that I definitely watched more than I thought I did, but I feel like I haven’t watched pretty much anything. Partly, this is because I spent a ton of time traveling this spring and summer. Partly, I’ve been too depressed to write about what I did watch. And partly, I actually haven’t watched as much this year as I normally would because several shows that I have enjoyed and am looking forward to aren’t getting their next seasons til 2017. When it came to movies, there just wasn’t that much that I was really looking forward to this year, particularly since I’m not very interested in any of the Marvel and DC superhero flicks. All in all, it’s just been a light year of TV and movie watching for me, and I’m mostly okay with that. On the bright side, most of what I did watch was good stuff that I don’t feel like I wasted my time on, and there’s some comfort in feeling like I nailed “quality not quantity” for once.

Favorite Television

The Expanse – SyFy
Hands down, The Expanse is the best sci-fi show on television these days. Season one did suffer from some of the same problems as Leviathan Wakes, the first in the book series, but the early addition of the incomparable Shohreh Aghdashloo as Chrisjen Avasarala prevented the show from being quite so much of a complete sausage fest. Thomas Jane managed to make Miller tolerably complex, and Steven Strait was perfectly infuriating as colossal dipshit Holden. I do think the show could have cut some stuff to squeeze more of Leviathan Wakes‘ content into the first season, and there are times when the show’s pacing is just atrocious, but it’s beautifully shot, largely well-written, and pretty much perfectly cast. I mean, have I mentioned that they got Shohreh Aghdashloo? Season two will start airing with a double episode on February 1, 2017. In the meantime, you can stream the whole first season on Amazon Prime.
You can read my full coverage of season one here.

The Shannara Chronicles – MTV
My love for this show is likely an unpopular opinion, but I really did think that it was–overall–surprisingly decent. For one thing, it’s lovely to look at, with scene after scene of incredible scenery porn in the far-future ruins of the Pacific Northwest, and while some parts of it (particularly the look of the elf city) do owe a bit too much to Lord of the Rings, it’s not really quite like anything else out there. As someone who grew up watching Xena and Hercules and Buffy: The Vampire Slayer, I have a longstanding appreciation for somewhat campy fantasy, and as someone who loved Terry Brooks’ books as a teenager, I was happy to see the show geared more for teens than adults. And sure, The Shannara Chronicles rehashes a lot of plot points from The Fellowship of the Ring. And sure, the teen drama can be tiresome at times because I’m an adult woman. And sure, the show has some problematic tendencies, such as casually adding in some attempted rape or senselessly killing minor characters for drama. But it’s a fun show to watch, and it was even more fun to write about.
You can read my season one posts here.

Game of Thrones – HBO
Speaking of shows that are problematic as all get out and fun to write about, Game of Thrones is still a thing that is happening. Every season is worse than the one before, and there’s no reason at all to think that this is going to change anytime soon, but I just can’t quit this show, you guys.
I’ve written thousands and thousands of words about this show, and you can read them all here.
Or just read my season six stuff.

Lucifer – FOX
I’ve never read the comic book this show is (apparently very loosely) based upon, so I came to Lucifer with basically no expectations. It didn’t even look that great in the early trailers for it, and Fox pushed back its original airdate once or twice, which is never encouraging. Imagine my surprise when it turned out to be a pretty decent show after all. Season one certainly stumbled a few times, but star Tom Ellis is handsome and charming enough in the titular role to make up for quite a few missteps in other areas. Season two started off a little rocky with some clunky changing of gears and the total abandonment of a season one plot that just never quite worked, but in the last few episodes it’s developed into a truly excellent show. The supporting cast has grown, everyone is getting a bit more to do, and all the characters feel a lot more lived-in this time around, and the easy chemistry between the members of the ensemble makes Lucifer a real joy to watch.
I’ve fallen behind on writing about Lucifer, but you can read my reviews of season one and part of season two here.

iZombie – The CW
Season 2 of iZombie wrapped up back in April, and so much has happened in my life since then that it feels like a lifetime ago. It’s also been very disappointing to not have any new episodes this fall; the Season 3 premiere isn’t until April 2017, which even now feels terribly far away. Season 2 was great, though, with some real progress made on understanding the show’s growing zombie epidemic, some really memorable cases of the week, and a finale that sets up a game change for the upcoming third season that I can’t wait to see.
Check out my iZombie coverage here.

Favorite Movies

The Lobster
This weird and wonderful little movie only got a limited release in the US back in the spring, and I didn’t actually get to see it in the theater. In it, Colin Farrell plays a man in a dystopian near-future society where all adults must be paired off and married or else they will be turned into an animal of their choice. It’s a beautiful, absurd, vaguely Vonnegut-esque and darkly hilarious story that lampoons our societal obsession with marriages and families that conform to specific bourgeois ideals. The deadpan humor and somewhat nihilistic ending may not be for everyone, but it’s exactly the kind of bold and clever risk-taking I like to see and that can really only be found in this kind of independent film.

Tale of Tales
I’ve always said that my favorite fairy tales are the weird ones, and I’ve lamented the fact that the really strange stuff tends to be passed over in favor of endless retellings and adaptations of princess stories. With Tale of Tales, based on a 17th century Italian fairy tale collection, a bunch of weird stuff has finally been brought to the big screen, and it’s glorious. I love every sumptuous detail of this movie from start to finish. Every frame of the film is stunning, with a gorgeous naturalistic quality that makes the fairy tale world seem real and lived in. The interconnected stories mirror and echo each other in strange and unexpected ways that provide plenty of material for dissection and analysis, but the film can also just be enjoyed simply as a viscerally affecting experience. This is the only film of 2016 that I can see myself watching over and over again for many years, as it’s the kind of production that I expect to see something new in on every viewing.

Equals
I wasn’t at all excited about this movie when saw the trailer for it, even though I love Kristen Stewart and like Nicholas Hoult just fine. When it got poor reviews, I just sort of wrote it off altogether, and I only came back to it late in the year when I stumbled across it on Amazon Prime. It turns out that Equals is actually a solidly decent movie. Stewart and Hoult turn in fine performances, and they have a good chemistry that sells their romance well. Everything in the movie is sleek and clean in a way that is rather charmingly retro, putting me in mind of classic sci-fi stories of this type. The movie isn’t breaking any new ground thematically, and much of the plot is regurgitated classic tropes, but everything is so lovingly crafted and generally well put together that I can forgive it for being derivative. Equals isn’t a great film, but it’s a perfectly nice and enjoyable example of its type of story, which made it a great comfort-watch in late December of this year from hell.

Warcraft
I feel like almost everyone hated this movie except me, and I’ll admit that it wasn’t completely accessible for folks who weren’t already fans of Warcraft going in. But, dammit, this movie was enjoyable, and it seemed so obviously made with love that I couldn’t help kind of adoring it.
You can read my full review here.

Ghostbusters
There was never any universe in which I wouldn’t have loved this movie, and my enjoyment of it was only enhanced by the knowledge that thousands of whiny entitled manbabies hated it. I hope they make a dozen sequels.
I wrote a full review of this one when I saw it.

Arrival
Arrival is the movie that I expect to win all the genre awards this coming year, and it deserves them all. It’s a serious original story with some good ideas, a good cast (Amy Adams is superb.), and good production values. There’s not a whole lot to say about the plot that won’t spoil it, but I was extremely pleased at how the adaptation of Ted Chiang’s marvelous “Story of Your Life” turned out. It’s a challenging story to adapt, and it worked with only a handful of relatively minor changes to smooth the translation from page to screen. That said, if you haven’t read the story, be sure to whether you see the movie or not.

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
I actually won’t be seeing this one until this Friday or Saturday, but let’s be real. It’s definitely going to be one of my favorite movies of the year, so I’m going to go ahead and slip it on at the end here.