Ten years have passed, and Daikichi has a whole new set of problems in Bunny Drop Volume 5.
Note: Bunny Drop Volume 5 is, of course, the sequel to Bunny Drop Volume 4. The review of Bunny Drop Volume 1 is here, and the review of Bunny Drop Volume 4 is here. Otherwise, read on!
Monday, April 30, 2012
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Chasing airships across the Wild West
Airships, espionage and atrophied Civil War politics all come to a head in Cherie Priest's second Clockwork Century book Clementine.
Note: While the Clockwork Century books are of the same universe, with some of the characters recurring, reading them in order isn't necessary. There are probably a few spoilers ahead though, so be warned. Otherwise, read on!
Note: While the Clockwork Century books are of the same universe, with some of the characters recurring, reading them in order isn't necessary. There are probably a few spoilers ahead though, so be warned. Otherwise, read on!
Monday, April 23, 2012
Manga Monday: Can a naive girl help a young man reclaim his title?
As the world forgets about the magical, those that bridge the two are left behind in The Earl and the Fairy Volume 1.
Miss Lydia Carlton is a fairy doctor. Able to see fey folk when most humans cannot, she learnded to help the two live together peacefully from her late mother. She treasures the time they spent together, and as soon as she was old enough, she put up her shingle and opened shop.
Unfortunately, Victorian Britain has no place for fairies anymore. Ad science gains traction, fewer and fewer people believe in creatures they can't see, and business isn't what it was a generation ago. More and more people are starting to wonder about the girl with the red hair and green eyes that talks to the air.
On a trip to London to visit her father, all this changes. After some very frightening situations, she ends up in the employ of one Edgar J. C. Ashenbert. He is the rightful heir to the legendary Blue Knight, but as a child he lost his title and the Merrow Sword that would prove his lineage. He's willing to do whatever it takes to reclaim his rightful place, but he needs someone like Lydia to facilitate his dealings with the fey.
Lydia has one being in her corner. There's a fairy called Neco who plays the role of protector to our too-trusting Lydia. While normal humans see him simply as a cat, he can speak perfect English to Lydia and can write, too. While he plays the cat in public, he demands to be treated as a proper gentleman by those who know his true nature.
There's quite a lot going on here, and it's easy to get lost. Raven and Ermine, with the names of common animal familiars, are almost certainly more than they appear. The ability that Lydia and her mother have to see fey isn't explained. But some shojo readers wouldn't be tolerant of the slow build that other audiences expect, so we're tossed into the thick of things. Still, the premise is promising, and with light novels, a visual novel and an anime as part of the franchise, there's certainly promise here.
Highs: The reaction of the mailman when Lydia starts scolding the fairies on his mailbag is priceless.
Lows: It's hard to tell where the plot is going at first, but things get cleared up a bit eventually.
Verdict: A guarded recommendation, at least to see where we go in Volume 2.
Further Reading: The Story of Saiunkoku, Soulless
Miss Lydia Carlton is a fairy doctor. Able to see fey folk when most humans cannot, she learnded to help the two live together peacefully from her late mother. She treasures the time they spent together, and as soon as she was old enough, she put up her shingle and opened shop.
Unfortunately, Victorian Britain has no place for fairies anymore. Ad science gains traction, fewer and fewer people believe in creatures they can't see, and business isn't what it was a generation ago. More and more people are starting to wonder about the girl with the red hair and green eyes that talks to the air.
On a trip to London to visit her father, all this changes. After some very frightening situations, she ends up in the employ of one Edgar J. C. Ashenbert. He is the rightful heir to the legendary Blue Knight, but as a child he lost his title and the Merrow Sword that would prove his lineage. He's willing to do whatever it takes to reclaim his rightful place, but he needs someone like Lydia to facilitate his dealings with the fey.
Lydia has one being in her corner. There's a fairy called Neco who plays the role of protector to our too-trusting Lydia. While normal humans see him simply as a cat, he can speak perfect English to Lydia and can write, too. While he plays the cat in public, he demands to be treated as a proper gentleman by those who know his true nature.
There's quite a lot going on here, and it's easy to get lost. Raven and Ermine, with the names of common animal familiars, are almost certainly more than they appear. The ability that Lydia and her mother have to see fey isn't explained. But some shojo readers wouldn't be tolerant of the slow build that other audiences expect, so we're tossed into the thick of things. Still, the premise is promising, and with light novels, a visual novel and an anime as part of the franchise, there's certainly promise here.
Highs: The reaction of the mailman when Lydia starts scolding the fairies on his mailbag is priceless.
Lows: It's hard to tell where the plot is going at first, but things get cleared up a bit eventually.
Verdict: A guarded recommendation, at least to see where we go in Volume 2.
Further Reading: The Story of Saiunkoku, Soulless
Thursday, April 19, 2012
A broken port turns into so much more
A hardware failure shows a deeper web of deception in Mary Robinette Kowal's 'For Want of a Nail.'
Of course Rava would be excited. Appointed the wrangler for her generational ship's AI, and at such a young age, she's in charge of the ship's most valuable passenger. Cordelia does more than just run communications and inventory and the like. Contained in her memory banks is the entire history of the family. Every birth, death, marriage and other event in the history of each passenger has been documented by Cordelia, through the VR glasses that every family wears.
So when Rava brings Cordelia's case to a party being held on the ship, and the case that Cordelia inhabits is dropped, a rather important port ends up being broken. This port is what allows Cordelia to access her long-term storage, both for retrieval and storage of data. She has about two weeks worth of storage onboard, before she would have to start deleting bits of herself. So Rava, and her brother Ludoviko set off to find a new i/o port, or at least a new cable to hardwire her into ship's systems with.
In the process, though, Rava goes to her uncle Georgo for guidance. Uncle Georgo was Cordelia's wrangler before Rava took over the job. He's mostly been keeping in touch by commlink recently, and he seems very out-of-sorts now. He demands to know where Cordelia is, and doesn't seem to remember that Rava took over his job months ago.
Members of the family who are no longer productive members to the whole are recycled. How as prominent a member of the community as Georgo could hide this for so long calls all sorts of people - and AIs - into question.
While the main storyline revolves around Cordelia, Rava and Georgo, plenty of other ideas are hinted at as well. Rava's brother Ludoviko is on the waiting list to be allowed to have a child, because in an enclosed environment such as this ship, resources for things such as child rearing would be limited. This privilege would be reserved for the most worthy. The idea that family members would be 'recycled' as soon as they are no longer productive is a plan that certainly wouldn't work in today's society either. But both of these concessions would be necessary on a ship with limited resources and space such as this.
This, like many of Kowal's short stories is available from her website here. It's quite a nice story, with more depth than might be expected from an AI housed in a Victorian writing desk.
Highs: Every character acts as one would expect, from the jealous older sibling to the old man losing his faculties.
Lows: Some of the lack of redundancies within Cordelia, as well as in the ship as a whole, are frustrating.
Verdict: A masterfully crafted work in a small package.
Further Reading: Shades of Milk and Honey, The Risen Empire
Monday, April 16, 2012
Manga Monday: Natsume finally starts to warm to some humans
Natsume frees more spirits - and deals with more humans too - in Natsume's Book of Friends Volume 2.
Note: Natsume's Book of Friends Volume 2 is, of course, the sequel to Natsume's Book of Friends Volume 1. The review of Natsume's Book of Friends Volume 1 is here. Otherwise, read on!
Note: Natsume's Book of Friends Volume 2 is, of course, the sequel to Natsume's Book of Friends Volume 1. The review of Natsume's Book of Friends Volume 1 is here. Otherwise, read on!
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Even Lord Alderscroft was a young man once.
Any good series starts somewhere in the middle. It's impossible to go into everyone's backstory right from the beginning. So while enough information is given to understand what's going on, there will always be a few questions as to how the characters got started. Mercedes Lackey goes back to before the beginning and shows us how Lord Alderscroft became the leader of the Magician's Circle in The Wizard of London.
While this is the 5th book in the Elemental Masters series, it is certainly accessible to first time readers of the series. While there are no real spoilers that I could tell, or anything beyond basic 'fantasy world magic' to know, there may be some that I missed, so be warned. Otherwise, read on
While this is the 5th book in the Elemental Masters series, it is certainly accessible to first time readers of the series. While there are no real spoilers that I could tell, or anything beyond basic 'fantasy world magic' to know, there may be some that I missed, so be warned. Otherwise, read on
Monday, April 9, 2012
Manga Monday: The beauty of Mongolia reaches beyond Asia
Mr. Smith embarks on his own - and gets himself into all sorts of trouble - in A Bride's Story Volume 3.
Note: A Bride's Story Volume 3 is, of course, the sequel to A Bride's Story Volume 1. The review of A Bride's Story Volume 1 is here, and the review of A Bride's Story Volume 2 is here. Otherwise, read on!
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