Finished Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman. It was fine. The notion of another magical city behind, beneith, beyond the known reality has been done a lot, so have the various twists of the story.
I feel like Gaiman should have expanded more on the Under City and the lore. At least he could have explained why you can become forgotten.
Read a few Children's books.
Read Mio, My Son by Astrid Lindgren. It's funny that even in the 50s, they were writing straight forward chosen one, portal fiction. It has one of my favourite fantasy tropes, where mentioning the dark one's name causes people to cover in fear, make the plants wither and the birds fall from the sky.
Also read the first books in two of Lene Kaaberbøl's most popular fantasy series, the Wildfire series and the Shamer series. Both books have been made into movies here in Denmark.
I knew she was popular from reviews but I was surprised at how solid her fantasy storytelling is. Her books are for Children around the 10-15 year range but hold up well even for an adult fantasy fan. She cleverly avoids resorting to the typical tropes of young kids doing dumb stuff because they're childish or ignorant. I might actually read some more entries in the Wildfire and Shamer series.
Started up Harrow the Ninth, the second Locked Tomb book by Tamsin Muir. I bounced off it when it was released. Still not wild about the opening chapters.
Does the narration shift away from the "You" perspective at some point? It's driving me mad reading the story in this detached storytelling of the events before and after the first book.
This post has been edited by Aptorian: 01 January 2021 - 07:22 PM