Read: Shades of Milk and Honey

Polished off Mary Robinette Kowal’s Shades of Milk and Honey this evening. It’s a well-regarded fantasy and Regency romance. I liked it, but I don’t think I liked it as much as I was supposed to like it. The Regency-romance thing is nothing special to me, as I have a wife who is way big into Georgette Heyer and who has recommended many of Heyer’s books to my attention, so all the period stuff Kowal puts in there is already familiar to me. Perfectly serviceable, but not remarkable.

What’s more interesting is the magic, which is a) pretty neat, b) elegantly limited, and c) appropriate to the setting; she did a nice job of working it out. I like how Kowal is brave enough to let the story be small: there’s no danger of the world being destroyed or anything; the stakes are important to the characters and so they’re important to us.

The natural comparison for this book is to Wrede and Stevermer’s Sorcery and Cecelia; they’re both Regency fantasies, and yet very different in how they go about it. I think the comparison actually makes both books look good.

That may not be my strongest recommendation, but it is a recommendation. I liked it.

Read: The Escapement

That didn’t take me long. K.J. Parker’s awesome. I’ve got a couple more of her books on the to-read pile and I’m going to save them, I think.

The ending surprised me. I had been expecting a bloodbath like the end of Othello or something, but what we got instead was both more and less brutal than that. I admire it.

Read: Evil for Evil

Second book in K.J. Parker’s Engineer Trilogy, and it’s excellent. I’m already about a third through the third book, The Escapement, and it’s all I can do not to drop everything until it’s finished. I’m going to be rereading these ones.

At least, I hope I will. Thing about putting all these books on hold at the library the way I’ve been doing, it cuts into my rereading. I’ve got a lot of books on my shelves that I kinda miss and would like to revisit, but there’s just no time with this steady stream of new books always coming in. I grant you that, as problems go, this is probably the best one to have.

Read: Star Island

I’ve been keeping track of my books read on this page but I think I’ll start breaking that up into individual posts as well.

I just finished Carl Hiaasen’s Star Island. I was a big fan of Hiaasen for a while there and I guess I still like him. I’m not sure why his stuff isn’t working as well for me as it used to. Star Island isn’t bad compared to his early stuff (my favourites: Strip Tease and Native Tongue); maybe it’s just that I’m familiar with his tricks. So it was pretty good.

I’ve started into K.J. Parker’s Evil for Evil, book two of her Engineer Trilogy. I’ve been looking forward to this for a long time.