Sunday, September 24, 2023

My Hugo award votes 2023. Part 3 - Novels

 The quality of the novels that were nominated for the Hugo Award was pretty abysmal, the worst year in years (or ever?). Most of the books were very light and not really something to take seriously. I didn’t finish Nona the Ninth, by Tamsyn Muir, because I found the earlier part to be unreadable and did not continue, something that happens extremely rarely for me. Only one book was imaginative, really engaging, and well-written all at once. Others were lacking at least one of those qualities. Nettle & Bone was that exception to the rule, and it was very easy to put in the first place. The other books really aren’t award-worthy, in my opinion; I will put “No Award” in the second place. Well, after that, it was a choice between Poe pastiche, Thin Man pastiche, and Japanese monster movie pastiche. Yawn. I chose their order based on how well I consider them to be written. Legends & Lattes was left in the last place as very light, not too well written, and badly timed. It was apparently written as a National Novel Writing Month book, and it really shows––some tightening and rewriting and editing might have been a good idea.  


1. Nettle & Bone, by T. Kingfisher (Tor Books)

2. No Award

3. The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

4. The Spare Man, by Mary Robinette Kowal (Tor Books)

5. The Kaiju Preservation Society, by John Scalzi (Tor Books)

6. Legends & Lattes, by Travis Baldree (Tor Books)


The Spare Man by Mary Robinette Kowal


A detective mystery that happens on a luxury cruise (space) ship on the way to Mars. It is a kind of homage to the Thin Man movie series from the late '30s-early '40s. A billionaire woman is on her honeymoon with her new husband, Shal, who apparently used to be a detective. The woman, Tesla Crane, is traveling incognito. She has her cute service dog with her, as she tends to have PTSD flashbacks from a serious accident she had in the past. She suffered a severe back injury and needs deep brain stimulation to ease the pain it causes her. One night, as they return to their cabin, they find a man who is dying from a knife wound. Shal starts to chase the suspect but is unable to catch him/her and soon ends up becoming a suspect himself. So Tesla must find the real suspect to exonerate her husband and, eventually, herself too. A very light, but really slow-paced book. Tesla goes from one place to another and uses her immeasurable entitlement (she is a personification of the “I want to talk to the manager” meme). The cruise security personnel is stupid beyond belief (well, it turns out there is a reason of sorts for that) and the ending seems almost invented while writing some very stupid details. The spaceship is such a powerful Faraday cage that it stops electronic signals INSIDE it (?). It is possible to kill someone by throwing acupuncture needles... I really don’t buy it. The cruise ship has good fingerprinting capabilities but no DNA analysis whatsoever (and apparently DNA analysis did not exist in this world, as the “cunning” plot of the murderer would have instantly fallen apart with the simplest genetic testing). A pretty stupid book with an irritating central character whose husband is mostly a sex object. The writing was pretty good though.        

384 pp. 

My Hugo award votes 2023. Part 2 - Novellas

The quality of the novellas was pretty average – in spite of that this was one of the better categories this year when most of the nominees were fairly mediocre. Three stories could be labeled as derivative works, going from Poe to noirish detective stories and fairy tales, another three (partly overlapping) were parts of a series. None of the stories were really bad, but there were just two novellas that were really tempting to read and were hard to put down. From those two I put A Mirror Mended in first place despite it being part of a series – although apparently, the series will be just these two stories, not more, as the ending had a satisfying conclusion. It was an intriguing story. The Ogres was not far behind but it was a bit more of an “ordinary” tale. After them, third place was also pretty clear even though that story belongs to a long series and is “only” the middle part of it. The last three stories were harder to put in order as they were pretty much on the same level. After some consideration, it was easy to put “Into the Riverlands” into last place. And from the last two I preferred the Chandler pastiche more than the Poe pastiche.  


What Moves the Dead, by T. Kingfisher (Tor Nightfire)

A retelling of The Fall of the House of Usher by Poe. A female (or rather someone belonging to the “Military gender”) comes to the mansion of her (or whatever the stupid made-up pronoun was - there was a long chapter of the different pronouns used in the made-up language she spoke - which had NOTHING AT ALL to do with the actual plot) friends - a brother and a sister. The sister had written a letter where she told being very ill, and it turns out she is pale and has episodes, where she is unresponsive for a long time and behaves erratically. The brother is clearly ill but he is in better condition than his sister. The building is a decaying and moldy place - there are hardly any servants anymore and it seems clear they have run out of money. They both absolutely refuse to leave the house (for ill-defined reasons). The lake near the mansion seems to be extremely dark - except at night when there seem to be strange lights beneath its surface. The animals, especially the hares nearby behave strangely, have a strange walk, and have no fear of people. The story’s plot follows very closely - too closely - to the original, except the cause of the ruin isn’t supernatural but a fungal infection (for what there was an allusion on the first pages of the story). The writing was pretty good and the story as such was nice, but it was a bit too close to the original.  


Even Though I Knew the End, by C.L. Polk (Tordotcom)

A supernatural “noir style” story happening in an alternate -30/40s setting where a detective, Helen, works for someone called “Marlow”. This Marlow isn’t the same as her namesake from Raymond Chandler’s works. Marlow wants to find out who is behind the strange murders that have happened. Helen has supernatural powers and is able to contact the souls of dead people after their passing. At the very bloody scene of the crime, she can’t do that - there doesn’t seem to be a soul anywhere. It turns out that the victim had sold her own soul to a demon, and the murderer is chasing people like her. And Helen is also one of them. And her soul’s “collection time”  is coming in just a few days. Why should she even bother with any investigations as she will be in hell in a few days anyway? But Marlow makes an offer too good to refuse: if Helen finds who is behind the murders she will get her soul back. A story that is filled with surprising turns. The writing was very good, but in places, it felt like a Supernatural TV-series fan fiction; the world was very similar with demons, not-so-good angels, deals with demons, and even Enochian language. I wouldn't have been surprised if the Winchester brothers had turned up via a time loop or something.  


Into the Riverlands, by Nghi Vo (Tordotcom)

A story about a cleric and his intelligent bird who travel to an alternate ancient China. It is a bit unclear why and where they are going, but they encounter a few people and journey with them, among them is a pair of women who are able to “ninja fight” and beat practically anyone. During their journey, they tell stories. Some are just short references to stories most of the company knows, and some are left more or less unfinished. They encounter some bandits and survive the encounter - and that is about everything in the story. I was a bit baffled at what was the point of this fairly fragmentary “story”.  There was one strange anachronism: the characters were joking about mammoths in ancient China. Really? The fantasy content was practically non-existent if you didn’t include the sentient bird.  


Ogres, by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Solaris)

A young boy lives in a countryside farming village. He is a bit of a rogue and tends to do some mischief and spends a lot of time in the forest with a mixed bunch of “outlaws”  who live there. One day the “ogres” who are in power arrive at the village for their yearly tribute. They will take their share, and leave the rest - if there is something left  - for villagers. They hunt animals, kill egg-laying hens, and behave like they own the place - which they do. The villagers can not eat meat, as they seem to be severely allergic to it, it causes skin to blister and makes them throw up even from the slightest bite. He returns to the village. During the visit, he hits the son of the ogre who owns the village after some disagreement. He runs away to find later that his father is killed and eaten as a feast. This time he kills the son and runs away. Eventually, he is caught and sent to a female ogre for experimentation to find out why he is able to behave so violently. It turns out that the “ogres” are not the alien invaders they at first seemed to be. Eventually, the boy is now a man who leads a rebellion against the ogres. A well-written very good story where the situation was slightly (not much) different than it first seemed. There were some problems with internal logic, though. At least the village from where the main protagonist was from was “taxed” only once a year, that apparently was the standard. Where did the ogres - and humans who lived in towns or were in the ogre’s armies, get their food? And what did the people in the sweatshop factories in towns produce? For whom? There apparently was no middle class anywhere: only humans who were practically slaves and a small number of “ogres”. How did the economy work?


Where the Drowned Girls Go, by Seanan McGuire (Tordotcom)

Another installment in the “Wayward Children” -series. The series has had many recurring characters. I had to use Google to find out who was who and what was each character’s tragic “backstory”, especially who “Cora”, the main character, was and why she felt so miserable at her school. The school,  Eleanor West's Home for Wayward Children, helps children who have slipped into their Narnia-like fantasy worlds and have returned to Earth, mostly to their chagrin. That school helps them to cope with their memories and accept what happened to them. But there is another school, one which aims to return the children to society and their homes, to make them forget what happened to them, to disbelieve everything they have experienced, and to never, ever go back. Cora wants to change schools, which is possible, at least in one direction. When she actually is at the Whitethorn institution, she finds out that it is more like a prison with a conversion therapy-like approach to weed out any fantastic feelings - like thoughts about being a mermaid - at ANY cost. But there is a friend, who has come to get Cora out of the school - at any cost - but does she even want to escape? A well-written, interesting story like the other parts of the series. The downside is that they feel pretty similar with a wide variety of characters and it is always slightly hard to remember what is the backstory of each of them. The writing was good and the story was enjoyable, but wouldn't it be time to nominate something else?


A Mirror Mended, by Alix E. Harrow (Tordotcom)

The novella continues last year’s nominee A Spindle Splintered, which was a postmodern take on the fairy tale “Sleeping Beauty”. The main protagonist was able to cross boundaries between universes to different tellings of that fairy tale to rescue the princess from her fate. Usually, from getting married to an unknown prince without consent. She has already rescued a fair share of them, but she is suddenly yanked to a new world, by someone who very very much looks like the evil stepmother from Snow White. How has she skipped tales? And how will she survive the threats of the evil queen who has taken her as a prisoner and demands to get away from her tale as her story is approaching the end which isn’t so happy from her point of view. They end up going through several different scenarios of the Snow White fairy tale, which sometimes seem to have intrusions from other fables. The end on an unusual retelling of the story where the “bad guy” isn’t the queen but the Snow White herself. And it seems that there will be no escaping from that version of the tale… A very good story, well written, and it is exciting and surprising while offering some redemption for one of the most famous and evil antagonists in fairy tales. No one is a bad guy in their own mind, there is usually some sensible motivation for actions - which aren’t necessarily as bad as they at first seem to be. And I liked this story even more than the first part. 


My voting orders:


1. A Mirror Mended, by Alix E. Harrow (Tordotcom)

2. Ogres, by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Solaris)

3. Where the Drowned Girls Go, by Seanan McGuire (Tordotcom)

4. Even Though I Knew the End, by C.L. Polk (Tordotcom)

5. What Moves the Dead, by T. Kingfisher (Tor Nightfire)

6. Into the Riverlands, by Nghi Vo (Tordotcom)





Saturday, September 9, 2023

Jarkko Sipilä: Syvälle haudattu (Takamäki #17)


Tällä kertaa komisario Takamäki ryhmineen selvittää koko maata järisyttävää kirjepommien sarjaa. Aika satunnaisille yksityisille henkilöille on lähetetty kirjepommeja, joista osa ehtii räjähtää aiheuttaen uhreja. Kun pommipaketteja tutkitaan, paljastuu niistä yhden henkilön DNA:ta - henkilön, joka on sattumalta ollut tutkimuksen kohteena jo useita viikkoja kadonneena henkilönä ja jonka katoamista oli juuri alettu epäillä henkirikokseksi. Miten hän voi noihin pommeihin liittyä? Kadonneella miehellä on nuorena ollut yhteys ympäristöaktiiveihin ja näyttää siltä, että hän on melko äskettäin ollut yhteydessä ainakin yhteen tuon ajan ystävistään. Voisiko tässä olla terroritekojen tausta. Samalla mies näyttää käyneen tapaamassa myös hämärää äärioikeistolaista aktivistia. Kumpi äärilaita mahtaa olla tekojen takana? Vai onko kyseessä joku ihan muu tuntematon taho?

Vaihteeksi kyseessä hiukan sarjansa keskitason alapuolella oleva kirja. Juonen uskottavuus ei ollut mitenkään erityisen hyvällä tasolla, itse asiassa kyseessä ehkä oli koko sarjan älyttömin tarina. Jotenkin myös kirjan yleinen vetävyys vaikutti huonolta ja se tuntui jotenkin hätäisesti kirjoitetulta. Kaiken kaikkiaan kyseessä oli pieni pettymys. 


This time Takamäki faces a nationwide threat. Small packages with bombs have been sent to several people who apparently have no connection with each other and seem to be normal, well to do, law abiding people. DNA retrieved from packages belongs to a man who has already been under investigation as a missing person and the police had started to believe that he is dead. Why is his DNA on the packages? Under more careful scrutiny, it has been found that the man used to know some radical environmentalists years ago. But he seems to have some connection to some neo-Nazi far right people, also. Which side is the guilty one?

A below average part of the series. The plot wasn’t believable at all and the writing felt somehow hurried and less engaging than usually. It is perhaps the worst part of the series so far.

259 pp. 


Thursday, September 7, 2023

Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree

An orc, Viv, doesn’t want to fight any more. She has abandoned her battling companions and decides to open a coffee shop in the city. She had encountered such shops during her travels and learned to love coffee and making it. The fact that no one in the city has even heard about coffee is not a deterrent for her. Viv finds a good place for her cafe and starts to renovate it... and renovates it... and renovates it. Little seems to happen in the first part of the novel – it seems that every movement of a paintbrush is described. She eventually recruits some help, a succubus called Tandri, and together they open their business. At first, no one comes. Slowly they manage to build popularity, but there are some awesome obstacles, including a local crime syndicate wanting payments for “protection” and Viv’s old companion who suspects that Viv short-changed him in their last campaign. There are some hardships, but the cafe manages to bring people together and to create firm friendships and more. A pretty loosely written book, which certainly would have seriously benefited from some editing and tightening. But it was light (oh, so very light) and fairly fun. This book would never have made it to the final voting without the endorsement of Seanan McGuire, who for some strange reason (which I really can’t understand – her writings are mostly OK, but not THAT good) enjoys very high popularity among fans nominating books for the Hugo Award.

296 pp.