First of May...

May. 1st, 2026 10:26 pm
luscious_purple: Snagged on LJ (great news)
[personal profile] luscious_purple
So, today is the SCA's 60th birthday. Happy Birthday, SCA (and Crush Guy, who is 11 years younger)! Happy New Year (Anno Societatis LXI)!

So, what have I done?

I've been writing stuff up in my other blog:
https://ladypatriciaoftrakai.blogspot.com/2026/04/how-things-stand-mid-april.html
https://ladypatriciaoftrakai.blogspot.com/2026/04/the-second-half-of-april.html

Also, at my Toastmasters club meeting a couple of nights ago, I gave a talk about being Lady Patricia of Trakai in the SCA. It went over well.

Today has been a pretty quiet day. I did some shopping, went for a nice long walk, and cooked dinner for myself and my temporary housemate (who I *really* wish would start looking for another place to live).

I have thought about where I've been and where I'm going. Here are a couple of large photos... )

Tonight I've been noodling around with the baronial newsletter, which needs to get done. Now I think I'll wrap up the day with a bit of Baltic pick-up weaving.

last contract, radiant star

Apr. 25th, 2026 09:23 am
ursula: bear eating salmon (Default)
[personal profile] ursula
Porting a pair of book reviews over from Bluesky:

Fonda Lee's Last Contract of Isako is terraforming cyberpunk. It's also a samurai movie in book form--directly, rather than in the secondhand way you'd get by riffing on cyberpunk without knowing the sources. Last Contract of Isako is thinking through what it means to have a moral code--an unrelenting and in some ways horrifying code--in service to someone who has no ethics at all. It comes down more or less on the side that some ethics are better than none, which is refreshing when you're used to grimdark, or real-world nihilism. It's also tremendously tightly plotted, in that way where as a reader you know one thing will happen but aren't ready for the sudden unfurling of ramifications!

Last Contract pairs well with Ann Leckie's Radiant Star, in the sense that both are portraits of people who are fucking things up for deeply embedded cultural reasons. Though the book I think you should read Radiant Star against is Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. Leckie loves point of view experiments, and Radiant Star is experimenting with an opinionated nineteenth-century style narrator who can dip in and out of other points of view.

Like Jonathan Strange, Radiant Star is particularly interested in the ways that social stratification of various kinds leads people to ignore the knowledge of those they think are inferior, at great peril. When the narrator of Radiant Star comments that a decision is really very understandable, it is about to become a giant clusterfuck, and this becomes funnier and funnier (and scarier and scarier) as the book goes on. You can read most of Radiant Star with general awareness of Ancillary Justice, but the end will be most satisfying if you remember the events of Ancillary Mercy (it's close in time to that book, though places & characters don't repeat).

I requested both of these books from Netgalley, and I'm very glad I did.

November 2011

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