Sunday Reading
Jul. 22nd, 2013 12:20 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Back to teacher training tomorrow, after an excellent, relaxing, and productive break. With many books!
Finished:
Our Mutual Friend, Charles Dickens. OH MY GOD there was a freaking MORAL. Man, I'm so annoyed about that. Bella revealed herself to be GRATE and then you continue the charade? Not cool, John! Not cool, Boffins! But the good people ended happily and the wicked unhappily; that is what fiction means.
Also, I was reading an electronic copy, and then I spotted a beautifully bound and truly ENORMOUS paper version in a bookshop and was mightily impressed with myself.
Courtesans, Katie Hickman. Continued as delightfully to the end. Highly recommended if you want to know what English and French demimonde ladies were up to and the societal norms they exploited and flouted during the long 19th century. (ETA: Historical accuracy apparently not a high point, but entertaining nonetheless!)
Reading:
The Coldest Girl in Cold-Town, Holly Black. Holly is SO good at writing girls who are angry and damaged and proud and dangerous. I can't wait to see where Tana's going.
Cold Steel, Kate Elliot. CAT! BEE! RORY! VAI! Also, politics, magic, revolution, gender, power, control, freedom, and sport. Which are awesome! But let's face it, I'm a character reader, and I love the hell out of those four. If any of them die, I'm going to sulk for days.
Acquired:
Code Name Verity, Elizabeth Wein. Y'all, don't tell me a THING.
Finished:
Our Mutual Friend, Charles Dickens. OH MY GOD there was a freaking MORAL. Man, I'm so annoyed about that. Bella revealed herself to be GRATE and then you continue the charade? Not cool, John! Not cool, Boffins! But the good people ended happily and the wicked unhappily; that is what fiction means.
Also, I was reading an electronic copy, and then I spotted a beautifully bound and truly ENORMOUS paper version in a bookshop and was mightily impressed with myself.
Courtesans, Katie Hickman. Continued as delightfully to the end. Highly recommended if you want to know what English and French demimonde ladies were up to and the societal norms they exploited and flouted during the long 19th century. (ETA: Historical accuracy apparently not a high point, but entertaining nonetheless!)
Reading:
The Coldest Girl in Cold-Town, Holly Black. Holly is SO good at writing girls who are angry and damaged and proud and dangerous. I can't wait to see where Tana's going.
Cold Steel, Kate Elliot. CAT! BEE! RORY! VAI! Also, politics, magic, revolution, gender, power, control, freedom, and sport. Which are awesome! But let's face it, I'm a character reader, and I love the hell out of those four. If any of them die, I'm going to sulk for days.
Acquired:
Code Name Verity, Elizabeth Wein. Y'all, don't tell me a THING.
no subject
Date: 2013-07-21 12:36 pm (UTC)NOT historically rigorous. One of her supposed primary sources, Diary of a Young Lady of Fashion in the Year 1764-65? It's fiction, written in the 1920s.
no subject
Date: 2013-07-21 12:43 pm (UTC)Well, I suspected some of her interpretations anyway, but THAT is another step altogether.
no subject
Date: 2013-07-22 02:51 am (UTC)aaaaaahhhhhhhh Code Name Verity! I thought I was the last person in the world to read it (just a few weeks ago.) Looking forward to reading your review, if you write one!