Nov. 5th, 2023

juushika: Photograph of the torso and legs of a feminine figure with a teddy bear (Bear)
Title: A Dowry of Blood (A Dowry of Blood Book 1)
Author: S.T. Gibson
Published: Nyx Publishing, 2021
Rating: 3.5 of 5
Page Count: 275
Total Page Count: 454,825
Text Number: 1588
Read Because: mentioned by [personal profile] chthonic_cassandra, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: Dracula's first bride as an abuse survivor, addressing her Maker after centuries of marriage and after his death. This a loose novel with a gliding, freeform organization and a fun second-person address. I love the vampire atmosphere, the real sense of centuries passing; and, of course, the bloody, gothic indulgences. An abusive relationship and a vampire family map naturally to each other, a profound social isolation that creates an insular, toxic dependence.

But this cleaves to a narrow metaphor of vampire-as-abusive-relationship that I find limits the vampire elements specifically. When physical abuse pops up as a singular occurrence and final straw I was, frankly surprised; it feels out of character that it isn't present throughout the relationship, when so much other violence is. I like this, I like its vibes, but it doesn't gel for me.


Title: I Hold My Father's Paws
Author: David D. Levine
Published: 2006
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 20
Total Page Count: 454,845
Text Number: 1589
Read Because: see review, available free via Infinity Plus
Review: This comes up regularly in alterhuman circles and I can see why, since it's ridiculously on point: protagonist's father physically transitions to dog. The story itself is ... fine; troubled family dynamics are one of the least interesting possible frameworks for this subject, but I appreciate how they complicate the father's psychological motivations—the protagonist holds him both close and at a distance; the father is identifying as but also escaping into dog. So: interesting. Not especially convincing—the "dog with a human head scenes" particularly fail to track; they're not even body horror, they're just comedic. But certainly relevant to my interests.


Title: I Await the Devil's Coming
Author: Mary MacLane
Published: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group, 2022
Rating: 4.5 of 5
Page Count: 110
Total Page Count: 466,895
Text Number: 1637
Read Because: mentioned in emily m. danforth's Plain Bad Heroines, available via Project Gutenberg
Review: The diary of Mary MacLane, chronicling a few months of her life as a 19-year-old woman. This is such a vulnerable text. It's a stylized self-portrait: conceited, brilliant, engaging, often miserable. It's flagrantly honest except when it fails to be - most tellingly when MacLane doesn't or can't yet articulate her own queer desire. Works that were genre-defining often show their age when revisited; they feel less revolutionary in view of the texts they spawned. And sure, this is a now-familiar model of teenage angst and confessional writing. But for all its very mortal exaggerations and imperfections, I feel it in my heart: a specific queer rage, an experience defined foremost by lack of self-knowledge, lack of fulfillment, lack of community, lack of recognition. MacLane evokes it beautifully, in her lines and in the spaces between.
juushika: A black and white photo of an ink pen (Writing)
Title: Hellspark
Author: Janet Kagan
Published: Baen Books, 2019 (1988)
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 350
Total Page Count: 475,415
Text Number: 1678
Read Because: grabbed from this list of five-star books, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: In a multicultural interstellar tableau, a translator is tasked with investigating the potential sapience of a newly-discovered alien race. The speculative cultures and the role of translation, language, and taboo are all too cleanly delineated, all very legible and solvable - this is my perennial critique of SF worldbuilding, and it's both better and worse here: it undermines its own fascination with the nuances of language and culture, but the resulting tone is engaging and lighthearted: a nerdy power fantasy; a slew of puzzles neatly solved. Vibrant and fun, but memorable more for the fact that nonverbal communication is a great avenue for speculative exploration than for the text itself.


Title: To Shape a Dragon's Breath (Nampeshiweisit Book 1)
Author: Moniquill Blackgoose
Published: Del Rey, 2023
Rating: 3 of 5
Page Count: 530
Total Page Count: 482,540
Text Number: 1706
Read Because: reviewed by [personal profile] mrissa, ebook borrowed from the Multnomah County Library
Review: Bond animal meets magical school: an Indigenous girl is chosen by a rare hatchling, and attends the colonizer's school in order to learn the art of dragon stewardship which her people have lost. Somehow this manages to need more magic school and more bond animal: these are ridiculously engaging tropes that here are just ... fine. Some of that works as a critique of education as a form of institutional power, deromanticizing the magical school. But a lot of it just feels like a missed opportunity. The wider world is more fun: a fantasy of resisting colonization which frequently challenges its own escapism, enlivened by clever-if-infodumpy parallel-world worldbuilding. I liked this. It's energetic and readable and very well-intended. I'll probably try at least the next book in the series. But I'm not as crazy about it as I want to be; it lacks a certain spark.


Title: Confessions of a Mask
Author: Yukio Mishima
Translator: Meredith Weatherby
Published: New Directions, 1958 (1949)
Rating: 4 of 5
Page Count: 260
Total Page Count: 484,070
Text Number: 1712
Read Because: personal enjoyment, ebook borrowed from Open Library
Review: An autobiographical novel: the story of a queer man coming of age in wartime Japan. I'm head over heels for the first half of this, which is sexual awakening explored as queer desire meets violence fetish - vividly realized, inseparably entwined, and #relatable amirite. The second half is ... fine, a young adult trying to fit into normal society by making failed attempts at hetero attraction. It follows naturally from the first half, but necessarily lacks some of that tension, the dark, compelling logic and almost claustrophobic interiority, which make the first half so remarkable.

Anyway, time to go read more Mishima. This may not be a perfect book, but thematically it's highly relevant to my interests, as I suspect his other work is as well.

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