lizbee: (Avatar: Chibi Zuko and Mai)
[personal profile] lizbee
Having recovered somewhat from the overwhelming badness of Among Others, I moved onto attempting Mira Grant's Deadline. I say "attempting", because it's the second book in a trilogy I had otherwise decided not to read, and while I had to give it a go, I promised myself I could stop if I really hated it.

I MADE IT FIVE CHAPTERS, GUYS, YOU SHOULD BE PROUD OF ME.

To sum up: the Newsflesh trilogy is set in a sci-fi zombie apocalypse dominated by pop culture references that are already outdated now. (Strike one.) The protagonist in the second book has his dead twin sister living in his head, but that doesn't save him from being deeply annoying. (Strike two.) And then someone (thankfully) warned me that the trilogy's OTP are siblings. (Strike three.)

It wasn't HOLY SHIT, THIS IS BAD! on the scale of Among Others, but the little bit I read killed any desire to read any of Grant's other work ever.



...also, the "it's not incest if they're only adopted!!!" meme makes me really angry. (It keeps coming up in Korra fandom, too.) It's insulting to adopted families. It's also a line that gets used in cases of real life abuse, ie, my grandfather and the daughter he adopted.



I'm now trying to read Ray of Light by Brad R. Torgersen, one of the nominated novelettes. I say "trying" because, while it's technically good and all, so far it suffers from All The Female Characters Are Symbols And Archetypes Syndrome, and also a bad case of PrecociousInnocentChildItis. I'm beginning to wonder if this year's nominations are actually an elaborate attempt at trolling.

Something I did like! I'm on a couple of YA panels at Continuum -- I also came third in the short story competition! -- so I've been catching up on some YA sci-fi. (I have to say, the contrast with the adult-oriented Hugo nominated novels is striking. And I'm still convinced that the really interesting stuff is being written for teens.) Really enjoyed Feed by M T Anderson, even though it is full of things I usually avoid -- cyberpunk, douchebag male protagonist who learns an important lesson from a borderline manic pixie dream girl, etc. Mostly because it is so well written that it turns the cliches inside out and into interesting origami shapes, and is also short enough that it doesn't overstay its welcome. I'm not saying that I was crying on the train as I finished it, but ... yeah, I was totally crying on the train.

As long as I'm kicking lots of popular genre works, here are four more unpopular opinions:

- The actress who played Sif in Thor was really embarrassingly bad...
- ...and Darcy is kind of not that interesting to me
- Korra/Asami is possibly the most boring f/f pairing on the entire planet, and I'm sure I have good reasons for believing this that aren't just "They get in the way of Korra/Lin"
- it kind of skeeves me out that so much of the Korra/Tahno fan art on my dash puts Korra in a stereotypically feminine nurturing role

OH YEAH, and I'm also on a Continuum panel about vidding! So I should probably maybe go watch some vids? Said panel is at 11pm Friday night, btw, so if you come -- it's gold coin entry on Friday! -- maybe bring me some Red Bull, because I turn into a pumpkin at 9.30.

Date: 2012-05-30 02:33 am (UTC)
amberfox: picture from the Order of Hermes tradition book for Mage: The Awakening, subgroup House Shaea (Default)
From: [personal profile] amberfox
This is pretty much my position on the series. I'll re-read BLACKOUT on ebook when I've had a couple of weeks away from it, just to see if I dislike it less, but it really didn't seem to flow from the previous books. Which is a shame, because I really loved FEED, DEADLINE was interesting, and I was so looking forward to this. I even had it on my calendar. =(

They do at least mention that they were very careful about keeping their relationship quiet because they knew it would creep people out.

Date: 2012-05-31 03:58 am (UTC)
archangelbeth: Bleary-eyed young woman peers up, pillow obscuring the lower half of her face. Text reads: SO not a morning person. (So Not A Morning Person)
From: [personal profile] archangelbeth
IIRC from her LJ spoiler-thread, the author acknowledges that the relationship is not what you'd call healthy in anything but a zombie-infested post-zombipocalypse; something along the lines of pressure-cooker environment, emotionally distant "parents," and no real options for relationships outside their tiny, enclosed home environment until after they'd already established their pairing. (Sort of a Flowers In The Attic vibe, only the author didn't make that comparison.)

If it helps that it's not presented as a "incest, yays" and more "broken world, broken people, making the best of what they're dealt." (Which doesn't mean you should read the book either way, but if it helps in a... *waves hands* thingie. Bah, I cannot brain. Bedtime...)

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