User Profile

el dang Locked account

eldang@outside.ofa.dog

Joined 2 years, 4 months ago

Also @eldang@weirder.earth

I'm currently the coordinator of the #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

View all books
The Empire of Gold (Hardcover, 2020, Harper Voyager) 3 stars

Epic series finale, a few clunky parts

4 stars

Content warning some major spoilers

Under the Eye of the Big Bird (GraphicNovel) 3 stars

From one of Japan's most brilliant and sensitive contemporary novelists, this speculative fiction masterpiece envisions …

Beautiful and strange, almost afraid to be quite strange enough

4 stars

This is one of a few books we've read for #SFFBookClub that consists of a series of ostensibly separate stories which collectively build one world. I loved the quietly unsettling mood of a lot of the stories, and actually enjoyed how much the author keeps the reader guessing until about half way through the book. But the two stories--one about halfway through, one near the end--which do the most explicit explaining ended up doing too much of that for my taste. I think a certain amount of tying things together was needed, but making things too neat was a bit of a loss, and the big picture story doesn't work as well for me as all the facets in the individual chapters.

Yin Mountain (Paperback, 2022, Shambhala) 5 stars

Freshly translated poems reveal the complexity, self-realization, and spiritual freedom of three classical Daoist women …

A lovely collection

5 stars

Interesting selections, beautifully rendered in English, with a lot of helpful contextual material and annotations. Every now and then the annotations get a bit much, but more often they genuinely added to my enjoyment of the poetry.

Saints of Storm and Sorrow (2024, Titan Books Limited) 4 stars

In this an enthralling Filipino-inspired epic fantasy, a nun concealing a goddess-given gift is unwillingly …

A great page turner with a few gut punches

4 stars

I had a lot of fun tearing through this book. At first I felt like it was a bit too directly "colonised Philippines but with magic" to be interesting fantasy, but in the end Buba used the magical elements to really bring out the clash of two religions and cultures in a powerful, interesting way.

#SFFBookClub

Rimonim (2024, Ayin Press) 5 stars

Rimonim is a richly woven tapestry of poetry meant for use. From a time of …

This is the book I've been looking for

5 stars

In a year in which it's been extremely difficult to value or engage with my own culture, this book has been one of the few things I've felt able to connect to. It's one person's approach to drawing out all that is beautiful, nurturing, and life-affirming in Judaism, and explicitly rejecting all the ways our tradition gets used to defend evil. I needed it so very much, and ended up sending copies to a couple of dear friends.

replied to Tak!'s status

Content warning spoilers

A few chapters further in and I'm enjoying this a lot more. I think it front-loaded a lot of zoomed-out worldbuilding, which is not the most interesting part of the book. Now it's much more a story of a few characters in that context, and the magic aspect is being developed in a way that adds more than I thought it would at first. #SFFBookClub

Saints of Storm and Sorrow (2024, Titan Books Limited) 4 stars

In this an enthralling Filipino-inspired epic fantasy, a nun concealing a goddess-given gift is unwillingly …

#SFFBookClub July.

One chapter in I'm a bit frustrated with how transparently it's a skin on the colonised Philippines--if it stays this literal I'll end up wishing I were reading a straight historical novel instead of fantasy--but there are some interesting ideas here that I'm hoping the author will start to play more freely with.