26 Apr

Marissa Meyer’s Lunar Chronicles

Cinder

If we could judge authors by the sound of their names, Marissa Meyer would get big points for her similarity to Mercer Mayer, who wrote and illustrated many delightful children’s books, including my favorite ‘What Would You Do With A Kangaroo?’ But I don’t necessarily pick up on author’s names until I’ve read more than one of their books, and when I picked up ‘Cinder’ it was for two reasons: first, it was reportedly a Cinderella retelling involving a cyborg; second, it started as a Nanowrimo project. Read More

17 Apr

Arabian Tales

You may remember that last summer I was pretty excited about G. Willow Wilson’s debut novel, Alif the Unseen. You can read my earlier thoughts on Alif, or just read the book – it’s out in paperback now. Briefly, it is genre-bending urban political fantasy magical realism which presaged the various recent revolutions of the Middle East.

Part of the plot of Alif involves a book called the 1001 Days, which may or may not be a fake written by a European. Last year I got a copy of another such book – a little younger, a little less magic involved in the plot, but an excellent read. The Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan was written by James Morier, who was of Swiss-Dutch extraction. Read More

03 Apr

Death and Rebirth of Gods

I’m in a period of pleasure reading right now — as opposed to research reading — and have been making a little progress in my quest to catch up on contemporary sci-fi and fantasy. Coincidentally, three of the recent books I picked up all dealt with the death and resurrection of gods. It seems appropriate to be reading these in the spring time. I’ve been watching the buds pop out on the trees and reveling in the appearance of crocii and cherry blossoms in my neighborhood. Plus, despite the secular life I’ve chosen as an adult, I still have a childhood nostalgia for Easter. I even found myself considering dyeing eggs, even though I never eat hard boiled eggs.
However, you won’t find much in the way of Christian symbolism (or Christian-flavored paganism) in these books. Read More

22 Dec

Moominland Midwinter

moominland midwinter

I was in a toy store a few weeks ago, looking for presents for small children of my acquaintance  when I fell into the vortex of the book section. I don’t know exactly what happened, but I came home with a copy of Moominland Midwinter by Tove Jansson. I probably own this book already, at my parents’ house, but it was in the clearance section, and a Tove Jansson book always needs a good home. Plus, I’d been thinking about the Moomins lately as an example of northern literature. Read More

06 Dec

Jack London’s Martin Eden and supporting the creative process

Jack London

Jack London at work

I just finished reading Jack London’s Martin Eden, and my brain is a bit on fire. If you are an aspiring writer, then you should definitely read it. If you are a spouse or relative of an aspiring writer, then you should probably read it, too. Read More

12 Nov

From an Alaskan point of view

Roughly equivalent, right? Maybe??

I sent another story through critters.org and got back a lot of helpful commentary. Isobel and the Mammoths is going to be a teaser for the series I am currently working on – Isobel the Bear Eater. This particular project is going to be an interesting one. I am from Alaska, and have a degree in Russian, which gives me an insider view to the pan-Arctic culture that I am both borrowing from and creating, but leaves me really open to making references that are obvious to me but obscure to most everyone else. The critters pointed that out several cases where I had done this.

I’ll be working to make things clear to a general audience, of course, but there’s a part of me that delights in these small confusions. It’s payback, you see, for when I was reading stories as an Alaskan child, and there were plenty of references that were alien to me. (Except for maybe the Moomin Trolls. But obviously the Finns understand.)

What was a firefly? A toll bridge? A badger? A thirty-story apartment building? How could you tell a garter snake from a rattlesnake?

Robin Hood was always hunting deer, an animal I knew only from brief glimpses when visiting relatives in Pennsylvania, part of that vast territory that Alaskans refer to as the “Lower 48” or simply, “Outside.” I enjoyed Beatrix Potter, but it was moose that ate things in our garden, not rabbits, and I understood that hedgehogs were like porcupines, but smaller.

Botanical references were off, too. I never saw a weeping willow until I went to college in Connecticut. Tulips grew the floral department of the grocery store, not in fields. There were no cultivated fields – we never went on road trips and drove past fields or corn or cows or anything. Dogwood is a flower, maybe 8 inches high, not a tree. And while we’re at it, flowers on trees? What is this madness?

Dogwood versus Dwarf Dogwood. Wha?

Dogwood versus Dwarf Dogwood. Wha?

One of the pieces of advice I see over and over is “write what you want to read.” So that’s what I’m doing. I want to read something in a world familiar to me. A world where summers are blinding light and endless adventure and winters are a time for telling stories next to a wood stove. A world with bears and berries in the woods, with salmon and sea stars in the ocean. Grumbling porcupines. Roiling ash clouds. Long crimson sunsets over the ocean; clouds streaked fluorescent orange over the mountains in the morning. Sea otters rolling in the water, scrubbing their hair just like you do in the shower. The way that cold snow squeaks underfoot or the spaceship noises that ice makes.

I could go on, but I think I need to get back to Isobel. There’s this spirit-fox that has been following her and she’s trying to figure out why…