Posted 02 November 2016 - 03:35 AM
Recently finished
Bone Swans by C.S.E. Cooney. She's a family friend and kinda-protégé of Gene Wolfe, who gives the book a gushing introduction. The work itself is a collection of five fantasy novellas. They're all very good, and a few of them take cues from fairy tales: "How the Milkmaid Struck a Bargain with the Crooked One" riffs on Rumpelstiltskin, while "The Bone Swans of Amandale" features a take on the Pied Piper (as well as the Grimms' Juniper Tree, which I'd never heard of before.) "Life on the Sun" is a more straightforward fantasy, but with a few neat twists. I found "Martyr's Gem" to be the most moving of the bunch, and "The Big Bah-Ha" (Wolfe's favorite, and it feels like something he might have written) mashes up the post-apocalypse, clowns, and Lovecraftian monsters to interesting effect. Highly recommended.
Currently reading John Hornor Jacobs'
Southern Gods, which, after an attention-grabbing prologue, is turning into a nice Lovecraftian mystery.
This post has been edited by Salt-Man Z: 02 November 2016 - 03:36 AM
"Here is light. You will say that it is not a living entity, but you miss the point that it is more, not less. Without occupying space, it fills the universe. It nourishes everything, yet itself feeds upon destruction. We claim to control it, but does it not perhaps cultivate us as a source of food? May it not be that all wood grows so that it can be set ablaze, and that men and women are born to kindle fires?"
―Gene Wolfe, The Citadel of the Autarch