Finished Judd Winick's "Pedro And Me," which managed to bring me to near tears. Winick did the legacy of his dead friend proud.
Currently reading Ian Mc Donald's "River of Gods," his fantastic doorstop novel set in India 2047. I need to take breaks every so often just to absorb the details of the world he's created, with its hoeks and virtual AI TV stars and suchlike.
For a breather, Richard Cowper's "Out There Where The Big Ships Go" offers several stories I remember being printed in Fantasy & Science Fiction among other places. The stories are nicely written, but I don't expect I'll keep the book once I finish it.
Thoughts on Henry Miller & Kate Millett over here. Also finished reading Over The Knee – a bit of erotic fiction written by a spanking / corporal punishment enthusiast. Not particularly my kind of thing, but interesting to read in conjunction with a seminal work of second wave feminism, focused so much on the political implications of portrayals of sexuality, and which would probably view this kind of submissive fetish with suspicion. The author / protagonist in Over The Knee fully inhabits and owns her sexuality – she's always had her 'kink', and she embraces it with confidence. And yet she gets off on being punished, humiliated and physically beaten. It's not so much about that being sexy in itself – those roleplay sessions are genuinely painful and terrifying. The appeal seems to be the surrender to an absolute will who can liberate you from guilt and imperfection. That feeling can be arousing in itself, something I'm still trying to wrap my head around...
Now on to Black Jack, a foundational work of manga. I was given this as a present, and wasn't particularly keen on it, but actually it's really great! It's about a mysterious master surgeon without a license – a anti-hero put in inventive situations where he wrestles with hubris and duty. Fun cartooning as well. On to the second volume already...
Defend The Realm by Christopher Andrew (and his research team) Gun Machine by Warren Ellis Night Watch by Terry Pratchett With Liberty And Justice For Some by Glenn Greenwald Path of the Assassin vol 3 by Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima Dirty Money by Richard Stark (aka Donald Westlake)
So how is Gun Machine? I have mixed feelings regarding Ellis... his work consistently highlights a lot of issues and psychological inadequacies ingrained in the man.. but at least the unapologetic anger that comes through is refreshing.
I'm reading 'Old man's war' at the moment. It doesn't feel like I'm reading anything new or ground breaking but, because I love everything that's influenced it, it feels comfortable and familiar.
Finished reading TH White's "Sword in the Stone" as I want to read the entire "The Once and Future King". It was, honestly, rather hard to get through... really not what I remembered from when I was younger.
Also just finished reading The Redbreast by Jo Nesbø. Entertaining detective story that used some unfortunate tools (IE: Someone figures out a secret, is worried that she'll get attacked, calls someone else and leaves a message saying that they figured it out but they don't say what it is.... Guess who's never heard from again?) This book had one of the most heartbreaking set of chapters I've ever read. It's 7 chapters in a row, each of them start with
the main characters partner's answering machine recording and the chapter (usually a page or just over) is him leaving a message. After the second or third one he talks about her funeral.
Absolutely beautifully done and I would read the book again just for that part alone.
Currently about to finish Guy Gavriel Kay's newest book, River of Stars. GGK is probably my favorite writer, this book does not disappoint. It's based off of 12th century China, deals with a country that, over the course of the last 400 years or so, has drained all of the power out of its armies. The main explorative theme is about exile, how is affects people, and what happens because of it. Highly suggested for most anyone that can appreciate a well written, beautiful story.
@MartinSheen: I'm not big into crime thrillers, but I enjoyed Gun Machine.
Ellis can write. The book is funny in parts, gripping/scary in others, squick-inducing in others. But it manages to be . . . breezy? It moves right along. It is a crime thriller, nothing deep or profound, but one with the potential to be a great movie or TeeVee show.