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

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.

commented on Cahokia Jazz by Francis Spufford

Francis Spufford: Cahokia Jazz (Hardcover, 2023, Faber & Faber)

In a city that never was, in an America that never was, on a snowy …

The music is a big deal in the book, and Spufford made a Spotify playlist to go with it. I don't want to use or direct people to Spotify, so I made a qobuz equivalent - mostly the same versions but I couldn't always find them, and added a couple of things in: open.qobuz.com/playlist/42331567

Edited: I learned that without an account one can only hear snippets of each song. There are free accounts available at least, but I hadn't meant to be as much of a qobuz shill as this is turning me into.

Francis Spufford: Cahokia Jazz (Hardcover, 2023, Faber & Faber)

In a city that never was, in an America that never was, on a snowy …

Astonishing masterpiece

This book does so many things, and all outstandingly. It's a portrait of a Cahokia that in our timeline was never allowed to exist. It's a noir detective thriller. It's an intense character study of a deeply relatable protagonist. It's a love poem to 1920s jazz--the music and the cultural space it created.

I'm having difficulty actually talking about it coherently without massive spoilers. So just go on and read this book.

Mark Waddell: Colin Gets Promoted and Dooms the World (2025, Penguin Publishing Group)

The apocalypse will be an HR nightmare.

Colin Harris is your typical twenty-something stuck …

A fun book that knows exactly how ridiculous it's being and manages to cram some serious parts in at the same time

Full disclosure: this book was written by someone I know socially. I'm pretty sure I would have enjoyed it just as much if I'd found it by chance, but the sneaky thing about biases is how invisible they can be.

The description pretty much says as much as I can about the plot without spoilers. But what I can add is that Colin manages to be simultaneously terrible and very, very relatable - all the weaknesses that drive his series of bad decisions are ones everyone shares to a greater or lesser degree. And with that, I feel like the book manages to be a bit more than the knowingly silly light read it presents itself as, because the protagonist is a case study in how some less outlandish real world bad decisions happen. But this never comes at the expense of it being light entertainment.

Minor criticisms: …

Francis Spufford: Cahokia Jazz (Hardcover, 2023, Faber & Faber)

In a city that never was, in an America that never was, on a snowy …

Content warning very minor early setting/character spoiler