User Profile

el dang Locked account

eldang@outside.ofa.dog

Joined 2 years, 5 months ago

Also @eldang@weirder.earth

I am an enthusiastic member of #SFFBookClub so a lot of what I'm reading is suggestions from there.

Profile pic by @anthracite@dragon.style

This link opens in a pop-up window

el dang's books

Currently Reading

replied to Tak!'s status

Content warning Feed Them Silence chapter 1

David Camfield: Red Flags (2025, Fernwood Publishing Co., Ltd.) No rating

Increasingly, people are responding to the contemporary crises underwritten by capitalism by exploring the politics …

As it happens, this book was written by a good friend's brother. But it's also about a couple of questions close to my heart: what of the ideals of communism can be salvaged from the horrors of 20th century "Actually Existing Socialism" as practiced, and how can we be appropriately critical of those horrors without throwing out the baby with the bathwater?

It's perilous ground, and I've already found things to argue with in the first chapter. But he's a good writer who clearly knows the field deeply, and I am interested to see where he takes it.

Becky Chambers: Record of a Spaceborn Few (Paperback, 2017, Hodder & Stoughton)

Centuries after the last humans left Earth, the Exodus Fleet is a living relic, a …

Broadens the world of this series nicely

I appreciated how much this book fills out the world and culture of its setting through individual characters' stories, without having to do a lot of Worldbuilding per se. I found each main character in some way relatable, and particularly enjoyed the way their initially disparate stories gradually get connected to each other. In the end I didn't find it quite as satisfying as the more tightly focussed stories of the first two books, but it's very nicely done and has a lot of very timely stuff to say about ways people care for each other or fail to, and about both emigration and immigration.

Waubgeshig Rice: Moon of the Turning Leaves (Paperback, Random House Canada)

Ten years have passed since a widespread blackout triggered the rapid collapse of society, when …

Great sequel that I think could also stand alone

I found this a very satisfying continuation and conclusion of the story started in Moon of the Crusted Snow. It has a very different mood and focus, so much so that in this review I'm trying to avoid spoilers for the previous book more than for this one. Where Crusted Snow gets a lot of its tension from us as readers learning things as the protagonists do, this one is mostly not a suspenseful story. The broad outline of how things have to go is apparent from early on, and most of what makes it interesting is atmosphere and character development. Even the cover art of the two books does a pretty good job of communicating their relative moods.

I'm pretty sure this book would stand alone far better than most sequels do, because it largely follows a character too young to remember the events of or background …

@futzle Yay! A little way in I am getting that feeling, like it's the zoom out after two very tightly focussed stories about a small group of people. I think I like that she did that in this order, rather than the classic SF/F frontloaded worldbuilding.

Sean Sherman, Kate Nelson, Kristin Donnelly: Turtle Island: Foods and Traditions of the Indigenous Peoples of North America No rating

Uncover the stories behind the foods that have linked the natural environments, traditions, and histories …

Ursula K. Le Guin: The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas (1993, Creative Education)

Some inhabitants of a peaceful kingdom cannot tolerate the act of cruelty that underlies its …

In the strange hybrid acknowledgements / epilogue to Cahokia Jazz, Spufford mentions this story as evidence that Ursula Le Guin (to whom the book is dedicated) wouldn't have liked the world he built. I've somehow got to now without having read Omelas so I'd better fix that now.