Humouress hoping🤞for kitchen adventures in 2023 - thread 4

This is a continuation of the topic Humouress adventures at home in 2023 - thread 3.

Talk75 Books Challenge for 2023

Join LibraryThing to post.

Humouress hoping🤞for kitchen adventures in 2023 - thread 4

1humouress
Edited: Oct 3, 8:39 am

Welcome to my thread. I'm Nina, currently living in Singapore with my husband, two boys and - the star of the show - Jasper their/ our dog. My sons are superboy - but, sadly, he's given up reading though he used to be keen - and firelion; for Christmas 2021 they got Kindles in my desperate hope to use their love of technology to 'rekindle' their love of reading. (Update: it doesn't seem to be working very well although superboy did tell me he created an account for himself and downloaded some GNs. No idea if he actually read any of them, though.) Earlier this year we had an LT meet-up with drneutron aka Jim, Danita and friends in Singapore.

I met the 75 book challenge in 2020, for the first time since joining the Challenge in 2010 and exceeded it, finally reading 89 books in the year. In 2021 I made it again and read 92 books. I started a new hobby during the pandemic; I bought a die machine and started making birthday cards for family and friends as a hobby; it takes a lot longer than it looks like it does but I'm enjoying the creative process. I only managed 53 books in 2022 and it's going to be a close call this year.

My preferred reading genres are fantasy and sci-fi with a touch of golden age humour, mysteries and the occasional school story though I'll venture further afield (very) occasionally. I also have a heap of cookbooks which, really, I ought to crack open and experiment with.

The kitchen renovations progress apace ...



(There's a blue protective film on the windows for now, which is why everything has a blue cast.)
3rd October 2023

>2 humouress: ticker & covers (this thread)

>3 humouress: books (this thread; 4th quarter) December
>4 humouress: November
>5 humouress: October
>6 humouress: July - September
>7 humouress: April - June
>8 humouress: January - March

>9 humouress: constellation
>10 humouress: icons
>11 humouress: reading inspirations

>12 humouress: currently reading
>13 humouress: bookmarks
>14 humouress: reviews outstanding

>17 humouress: welcome in!


75 Book Challenge 2022 thread 4.

75 Book Challenge 2023 thread 1
75 Book Challenge 2023 thread 2
75 Book Challenge 2023 thread 3.

2humouress
Edited: Oct 16, 12:59 pm





October

49. 48.47.

3humouress
Edited: Oct 1, 12:35 pm

(if it's got a tick, I've posted my review to the book's page; stars are self-explanatory; clicking on the number will take you to the post where I've at least put down some ideas; last is the book title and, hopefully, year of publication. I hope you appreciate the alliteration)

review 
posted/ rated/ written/ read

/ / (#) / Title

December

4humouress
Edited: Oct 1, 12:37 pm

review 
posted/ rated/ written/ read

/ / (#) / Title

November

5humouress
Edited: Oct 13, 12:18 am

review 
posted/ rated/ written/ read

/ / (#) / Title

OCTOBER

  49) Legendborn by Tracy Deonn (2020)
48) Rebel of the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton (2016)
    47) The Lady Travellers Guide to Scoundrels and Other Gentlemen by Victoria Alexander (2017)

6humouress
Edited: Oct 13, 2:27 pm

review 
posted/ rated/ written/ read

/ / (#) / Title

September

  46) Gardens of the Moon by Steven Erickson (1999)
  45) The False Princess by Eilis O'Neal (2011)
  44) A Symphony of Echoes by Jodi Taylor (2013)
    43) The Proper Way to Stop a Wedding (in Seven Days or Less) by Victoria Alexander (2017)
    42) Closer to Home by Mercedes Lackey (2014)

August

  41) Well Played by Jen De Luca (2020)
    40) Lost for Words by Stephanie Butland (2017)
  39) Bastion by Mercedes Lackey (2013)
38) Ruler of Naught by Sherwood Smith & Dave Trowbridge
37) The Prisoner of Zenda by Anthony Hope (1894)
  36) Well Met by Jen De Luca (2019)
35) The Dragon Reborn by Robert Jordan
    34) Stuck With You by Ali Hazelwood (2022)
  33) Happy Place by Emily Henry (2023)
  32) The Phoenix in Flight by Sherwood Smith & Dave Trowbridge (1993/ 2011)

July

  31) The Love That Split the World by Emily Henry (2016)
  30) The Benevolent Society of Ill-Mannered Ladies by Alison Goodman (2023)
  29) The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon (2019)
    28) King of Ashes by Raymond E. Feist (2018)

7humouress
Oct 1, 5:34 am

7 April - June

8humouress
Oct 1, 5:34 am

8 January - March

9humouress
Edited: Oct 1, 10:39 am

The constellation:

  You have got to read this one!                           
  Really good; worth reading                                 
     Good, but without that special 'something' for me   
      Very nice, but a few issues                                    
         An enjoyable book                                                   
         Um, okay. Has some redeeming qualities                   
              Writing is hard. I appreciate the work the author did    
             (haven't met one - yet)                                              
                  Dire                                                                            
                  Rated only as a warning. Run away. Don't stop.              

Purple stars, from Robin's thread:

5.0
4.5
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5

Robin has made coloured stars for me (happy dance) and the codes are now enshrined in my profile.

10humouress
Edited: Oct 1, 10:43 am



Reading at home :

‘Waiting for the boys to finish classes’ book :

Bedtime reading :Tashi series (yes, still), Robin Hood, Swallows & Amazons

Kindle :

Downtime : Skulduggery Pleasant

Sometimes I make notes on Litsy (also as humouress) as I'm reading so I tuck them in after my reviews.

school parents' Book club (on holiday)

SF/F Book club Six of Crows (we haven't had a chance to meet & discuss for a while)

online story

audio book

Overdrive start line & bookmarks:
 
The Tiger's Daughter
The Game of Kings



The Storyteller’s Death
Psalm for the Wild-built
Lost Tribe of the Sith

(Things in Jars
Dune)

Holds

 
The Librarian of Crooked Lane

Holds
The Golem and the Djinni

Hills

Holds
Daughter of the Moon Goddess

Libraries:

     

11humouress
Edited: Oct 1, 10:51 am

Reading inspirations

Ongoing series and/ or group reads:

The Dark is Rising - Susan Cooper
Chronicles of the Cheysuli - Jennifer Roberson
Chronicles of the Kencyrath - P. C. Hodgell (group read, started January 2018; thread 2)
Tashi - Anna Fienberg
The Vorkosigan Saga - Lois McMaster Bujold (2014-2017 group read - savouring it before I run out of these glorious books)
**Farseer (group read starting March 2018)
***The Wheel of Time - Robert Jordan (relaxed group read starting January 2019)
{Tor read https://www.tor.com/2018/02/20/reading-the-wheel-of-time-eye-of-the-world-part-1...
Belgariad Mallorean - group read 2022 with Stasia & Paul (amongst others)
Ranger's Apprentice - John Flanagan (group read starting January 2019)

Discworld: Death - Terry Pratchett (group read 2023 starting with Mort in February)

Ooh, what about...

Lunar Chronicles
Vatta/Honor Harrington
*Ready Player One
Earthsea book 1

*sigh* I didn't advance a great deal with these last year. Let's see what happens this year ... (um ... well ...)

ETA: not much, thus far - except for the Belgariad; we only have Polgara left, as of the beginning of October. I've also read book 3, The Dragon Reborn of The Wheel of Time, in preparation for the TV series; I've watched up to episode 7 of series 1 so far.

12humouress
Edited: Oct 1, 12:48 pm

Currently reading

(quotes)

13humouress
Edited: Oct 5, 1:11 am

14humouress
Edited: Oct 13, 2:25 pm

reviews outstanding

January 3,4,5
March 10, 11, 14

April 15, 16
June 21, 26, 27

August 35, 37

15humouress
Oct 1, 5:37 am

15 in case

16humouress
Oct 1, 5:37 am

16 just in case

17humouress
Edited: Oct 1, 5:54 am

Welcome in!

18PaulCranswick
Oct 1, 6:00 am

And as it should be, your neighbour is first.

Happy new thread, Nina.

19humouress
Oct 1, 6:02 am

Hi Paul! Absolutely as it should be. Welcome over.

20figsfromthistle
Oct 1, 7:59 am

Happy new thread!

21richardderus
Oct 1, 8:36 am

Cheers for a lovely Deathtober's reads, Nina!

22humouress
Oct 1, 10:37 am

>20 figsfromthistle: Thank you Anita!

23humouress
Oct 1, 10:38 am

>21 richardderus: Thanks Richard. I thought you'd appreciate the Libra tree up there.

24richardderus
Oct 1, 11:11 am

>23 humouress: Suits me fine!

25atozgrl
Oct 1, 11:59 am

Happy new thread, Nina!

>17 humouress: That's a ... um ... interesting picture.

26humouress
Oct 1, 12:25 pm

>24 richardderus: Ooh, pretty.

27humouress
Oct 1, 12:28 pm

>25 atozgrl: Thanks Irene :0)

I was looking for something with Libra and books - but this came up, and it works too. Though I'm not deeply into horror, to be honest.

28atozgrl
Oct 1, 12:55 pm

>27 humouress: I'm a Libra, but my birthday is in September. That picture is definitely striking, if also a bit strange.

29humouress
Oct 1, 1:15 pm

>28 atozgrl: In that case, belated happy birthday to you!

30foggidawn
Oct 1, 3:00 pm

Happy new thread!

31charl08
Oct 1, 3:13 pm

I'll keep waiting for the kitchen update then (hope it's just the photo that's delayed!)

Happy new one.

32humouress
Oct 1, 3:46 pm

>30 foggidawn: Thank you foggi!

33humouress
Oct 1, 3:49 pm

>31 charl08: Thanks Charlotte.

I forgot to take a photo today; I'll try and do it tomorrow.

Hopefully (touch wood), we'll start getting the cabinets by the end of the month and everything should be done by mid-November. Because then we're expecting a series of overseas visitors. Actually, the first one is due in a couple of weeks but we've recommended that they book into a hotel - especially as the guest room is housing the first few of my book boxes until I unpack them.

34quondame
Oct 1, 5:31 pm

Happy new thread Nina!

35atozgrl
Oct 1, 6:05 pm

>29 humouress: Thank you!

36humouress
Oct 2, 8:41 am

>34 quondame: Thank you Susan!

37humouress
Oct 2, 8:41 am

>35 atozgrl: You're welcome Irene :0)

38humouress
Edited: Oct 2, 11:23 pm

47) The Lady Travellers Guide to Scoundrels and Other Gentlemen by Victoria Alexander

 

{first of 4+3 in Lady Travellers series; fiction, Victorian romance, Paris, steamy}(2017)
It certainly did not look like the type of place where genteel, older ladies were bilked out of their life savings. Nonetheless - India Prendergast narrowed her eyes - it was.
India has come to a meeting of the Lady Travellers Society to find her aunt, whom they seem to have misplaced.

Lady Guinevere Blodgett, Mrs Persephone Fitzhew-Wellmore and Mrs Ophelia Higginbotham founded and run the Society but have not answered India's written queries.

Derek Saunders is Lady Blodgett's great-nephew and, alerted by India's letters to look into the Society, is concerned that the three elderly ladies are running a fraudulent enterprise - especially considering that none of them have ever actually travelled themselves.
’Then you are aware that she and two of her dearest friends have started an organisation ostensibly to assist women with information and travel arrangements but in truth does little more than provide her and the other ladies a steady income? …
And did you know they are offering services they are not competent to provide nor do they feel compelled to provide? Which might be well seen as, oh I don’t know - fraud?’
And far from denying it when he tries to question them, they are evasive and try to deflect his attention. To prevent authorities looking into the Society too closely, he decides to go looking for Lady Heloise himself. India decides to take matters into her own hands and accompany him to Paris.

I'm afraid this was a chore to get through. I was hoping it would pick up and it did lift a little bit at around the three quarter mark but not enough. The banter, far from being witty, was wittering and rather than being sharp was repeated in different ways to ensure the message was hammered home (why India would be an unsuitable wife for Derek was detailed about five different times to various characters, for instance). I found the 'banter' pointless, the characters annoying - especially the three old ladies who seemed not only unhelpful but unrepentant - and the behaviour improprietous for the period (for all that we're constantly told that India is the model of propriety). The steamy scene towards the end looked like it was awkwardly shoehorned in afterwards just because it was obligatory. And I felt that Sir Martin was done a disservice; his character was changed almost completely between when we first see him and the end of the book.

The scattered tidbits about Paris at the height of the 1889 World's Fair are fun. I like the characters of Derek and his brother; the women in this book not so much. I was looking for romance (not steam) with this read but didn't get any. The trope is antagonists to lovers but I'm not sure what Derek sees in India; I suspect he doesn't either.
India Prendergast was the exact opposite of everything he'd ever wanted in a woman. She was soundly practical, terribly sensible and horribly annoying. She knew everything, or at least she thought she did. She was stubborn and determined and overly concerned with propriety. And he had serious concerns over whether she ever indulged in anything he would consider fun. In very nearly every way he could think of, she wasn't at all his type of female, not the type he was usually attracted to.
Though the narrative improved a touch towards the end, the steamy scene didn't help (I was a bit disappointed that Derek didn't stay in character as a gentleman and firmly but politely decline). The prequel I read a couple of months ago (which is included at the end of this edition, too, and is the story of how his parents met and married) had the improvement of being a novella so the shorter format kept the waffling to a minimum. Other than that, this novel is probably almost on par, really, with the majority of other novels (by modern day writers) in this genre. (To be honest, I've given up on authors (who mostly seem to be from outside Great Britain) following the ways of speaking or of behaving that guided people in Regency/ Victorian times, unless it's to poke ridicule at them.)

I didn't enjoy this one - but maybe it's to other people's taste.

(October 2023)
2.5 stars

Litsy notes & quotes

Not the most auspicious beginning; I was desperately trying to finish the first chapter last night before I nodded off but ...
I think we're supposed to empathise with the 3 old ladies who run the Lady Travelers club but we see them from the POV of India, whose cousin has been lost by the club, and Derek (great nephew of Lady Blodgett), who is trying to help them since their club is fraudulent, but they're unrepentant and unhelpful

Starts in 1889, 34 years after the prequel (provided at the end of this edition) which starts in 1855 and the 3 ladies‘ husbands were still alive (though travelling abroad). Derek must be Henry‘s and Celia‘s son. And Celia seems to have worked her way through 3 husbands in the meantime.

So far (chapter 9) pointless banter (wittering), annoying characters, unlikely attraction (ie no basis for it) and improper behaviour (ie not in keeping for the period). Another one that I'm having to slog through.
(ch 11) It's not *bad* but not particularly interesting. Hovering at 2.5/5
{Looking at other posts, the 2nd half is supposed to be better.}

£100 in 1889 would be equivalent to about £16,000 (real value) now or £670,000 in relative value.

A lot of repeating and reiterating things. Hammering an idea home in a waffling sort of way. Why write a sentence when a paragraph will do?

(Ch20, 21) Finally becoming a page turner rather than a chore. I like Derek and his brother; the women in this book not so much. I'm not sure what Derek sees in India; I suspect he doesn't either.
I don't mean to slam this so much; I'm just bored and wandering away from it

'It certainly did not look like the type of place where genteel, older ladies were bilked out of their life savings. Nonetheless - India Prendergast narrowed her eyes - it was.'
(The opening words to this book.)

‘It is not uncommon for a lady traveler, especially one who is inexperienced, to find herself feeling like a different person altogether when in completely new surroundings. One must decide for oneself whether to embrace that or disregard it‘ Each chapter is prefaced by trite (and obvious) quotes purportedly from the club‘s pamphlets.

39foggidawn
Oct 2, 9:39 am

>38 humouress: Sounds like maybe I'll skip that one. Too bad; the title was intriguing!

40humouress
Oct 2, 9:50 am

>39 foggidawn: Well, other reviewers seem to like it. And I may be suffering the after effects from reading Gardens of the Moon (which was a slog for other reasons).

41drneutron
Oct 2, 11:00 am

Happy new thread, Nina!

42humouress
Oct 2, 11:20 am

>41 drneutron: Thanks Jim!

43curioussquared
Oct 2, 2:32 pm

Happy new thread Nina!

44humouress
Oct 2, 2:48 pm

>43 curioussquared: Thanks Natalie!

45humouress
Oct 3, 5:57 am

>1 humouress: I finally took a photo of the kitchen as it is now. We're waiting for the cabinets ... which will only be ready towards the end of this month ... *drums fingers impatiently*

46richardderus
Oct 3, 8:07 am

>45 humouress: I kinda like the blue cast! Very Jacques Cousteau from the 1960s. Lovely that you've only got a whole month to wait...hate the inevitable annoyances of delivery times in renovations.

47humouress
Oct 3, 8:43 am

>46 richardderus: Um, yes. Absolutely the look I was going for. Okay, it is kind of cool if a bit dim.

I made the kitchen as white as possible to get light all the way through especially as the cabinets will be dark wood. I'm hoping I haven't made a mistake with that - I'll have to wait another 15 years to change it.

48atozgrl
Oct 3, 4:09 pm

>45 humouress: Good luck! I hope everything is finally finished soon, with no more delays. I know you've been waiting a long time.

49richardderus
Oct 3, 7:54 pm

>47 humouress: I'd hate to cook in that light because I'd end up fingerless and severely burned. It does look cool, though. Which way does the window face?

50humouress
Oct 4, 3:17 am

>48 atozgrl: Thanks Irene.

51humouress
Edited: Oct 4, 3:26 am

>49 richardderus: The back window faces north(ish) but I don't think it'll get direct sunlight in through it. The sun heads to that side in the afternoon but there are houses and trees behind us. The neighbours used to have a big fiddler fig just on their side of the fence which blocked a lot of light (I used to feel bad for it when they pruned it at our request) but they've chopped it down recently.

They're doing their own renovations; they don't currently inhabit the house but somehow the bats got in and the house was a mess. Once, when the tree surgeons were over, I caught a look and it was really bad; I think that may have contributed to the bats coming into our house. So they're gutting it (from the looks of things) and I think they'll rent it out.

We also have a side window at the back (currently has a board across it since it's not going to be glazed) which looks into the back porch. That area is the boys' project. I'm not chuffed about it because they've converted my porch into a man ... er ... boy cave. They plan to have their friends over and watch football there so we've added doors and air-conditioning and there'll be a giant TV.

52humouress
Oct 4, 8:55 am

Wordle 837 3/6

⬛🟨⬛⬛⬛
🟨⬛🟨⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

53richardderus
Oct 4, 9:10 am

>51 humouress: The lads' room will, over all, keep you saner because you'll know where they are when they're with their buds. Drinking, in other words, won't be the worry it would otherwise be.

North light in the kitchen sounds perfect to me, since it's bright without adding the heat that south or west light does. Poor neighbors' fig! But since y'all got fruit bats in abundance, its presence was just fuel to the inextinguishable fire of hunger and satiation.

54humouress
Edited: Oct 4, 11:06 am

>53 richardderus: That's the only thing that resigns me to having the cave. And we're putting in a fence between it and the pool, though even I have my head above water when standing in the 'deep' end (a design feature my husband insisted on, since superboy was still a toddler when we put it in).

I felt bad about the fig - but also thankful it's gone now. We occasionally glimpse sunsets on that side of the house (depending on time of year, cloud conditions etc etc), although Singapore doesn't usually have spectacular sunsets. Sydney, on the other hand - consistently stunning!

55richardderus
Oct 4, 1:54 pm

>54 humouress: Ever-practical mum FTW.

Equatorial sunsets really aren't...the sun just PLONK disappears. Very disconcerting to my 30° North-plus livin' self. Up here in the middle forties, we can have hour-long sunsets, and I just loooooove it.

56humouress
Oct 5, 12:39 am

>55 richardderus: Very true. Disappointing when you're on a beach holiday looking for the legendary tropical sunsets.

57humouress
Oct 5, 12:39 am

Wordle 838 6/6

⬛🟩⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟩⬛⬛⬛
🟨🟩⬛⬛⬛
⬛🟩🟩🟩🟩
⬛⬛🟨⬛🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Close, today.

58klobrien2
Oct 5, 12:02 pm

>57 humouress: Wordle was tough today. I got it in 5 but I would not have been surprised to have bombed out. Congratulations to you for hanging in there ang getting it!

Karen O

59humouress
Oct 5, 1:02 pm

>58 klobrien2: Thank you :0) I got to the fourth guess with one letter to go but at least three options, so fortunately I could use my fifth guess to work out which one it could be.

60humouress
Edited: Oct 6, 12:43 am

Connections
Puzzle #117
🟦🟦🟦🟦
🟨🟨🟨🟪
🟪🟪🟪🟪
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟨🟨🟨🟨

Trust me to get the easy ones last.

61atozgrl
Oct 6, 10:12 am

>60 humouress: I'm with you on this one. I also got the "easy" group last. I could figure out 3 of the 4 but had no idea what the 4th one was, so had to get all the other groups first. I figured I was showing my age because I had no idea that dead had anything to do with laughter. I see that both of us also got the blue group first. I guess readers think alike!

62humouress
Oct 6, 10:24 am

>61 atozgrl: I think that was my hiccough too :0)

63humouress
Edited: Oct 12, 10:54 am

48) Rebel of the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton

{first of Rebel of the Sands trilogy; fantasy, adventure, magic, desert, djinnis, young adult, re-read}(2016)

 

This was good. I'm thinking of bumping up my rating to 5 stars and buying the trilogy for myself.

Sixteen year old Amani, later dubbed 'the blue-eyed bandit', is desperate to leave the desert town of Dustwalk - a dead-end place, famous only for its guns - before she's forced to become one of several wives of one of the men who work in the munitions factory. As a girl in the patriarchal country of Miraji she has no personal rights. And her traitor eyes show that the man her mother married can't be her father, which pushed her mother and herself even lower on the town's ladder, so her mother had always planned on the two of them leaving Dustwalk. But her mother died and she has only herself to rely on so Amani disguises herself as a boy to use her skills as a sharpshooter in the gun pit in the next town to earn enough money to leave - until a foreign-looking boy spoils her plans. Then she runs into him again in Dustwalk and in helping him evade capture by the Sultan's soldiers Amani finally manages to escape her past. As they cross the desert together she discovers that Jin has stories of his own, some of them involving the rebel son of the Sultan who promises 'a new dawn, a new desert' and a better future for Miraji. As much as she wants to follow her mother's plans to go to Izman, the capital city, sticking with Jin might lead to a better future for Amani
The same night the monster child and Ahmed disappeared.
Fourteen years later, the time for the trials came. It was the way the Sultim, the successor to the throne, had been chosen since Miraji began. As per tradition, the twelve eldest princes were to compete for the crown.
...
On the day of the contest, the twelve sons lined up and the whole city gathered to watch. Then a thirteenth man joined the princes. When he pulled back his hood, he was the picture of Sultan Oman as a younger man and no one could deny his claim that he was Prince Ahmed, returned. No matter what suspicions surrounded the sudden return of the prince, the law of tradition was upheld. Prince Ahmed would compete, and the youngest of the twelve princes was expelled from the contest.
...
Ahmed beat the other eleven princes in the test of intelligence, a huge maze full of traps built in the palace grounds, and the test of wisdom, a riddle posed by the wisest of the Sultan's advisors. When he came to the test of strength, trial by single combat, Ahmed won every fight until only he and Prince Kadir, the firstborn of the Sultan's sons, were left standing. They fought all day, until Kadir surrendered. Instead of executing his eldest brother Ahmed spared his life.
The story was told in the first person from Amani's point of view which emphasised her frustration at her limited future in Dustwalk and her desperation to leave. I liked the world-building; we discover things as Amani does as she travels beyond her hitherto limited world.

One thing that she does know is that in the desert, ghouls exist; Skinwalkers, Nightmares, Djinnis. And Buraqis - First Beings, desert horses created of wind and sand and sun. I initially discounted the legends as just myths - until a Buraqi was chased into Dustwalk and the whole town turned out for the hunt (and we discover that metal is inimical to First Beings). The book is full of myths, legends and stories with a touch of magic to them, such as the one about the Rebel Prince, but we come face to face with the magic and realise that, in this world, those stories are true - although human activity and cold iron are reducing the magic in the world.
They'd built a cannery there. Legend says they were open about a month before the First Beings who lived in the earth had enough and tore apart the ground under the town and flooded the ruins. The same thing happened everywhere. So after a while folks stopped building factories. Except in Miraji. Your First Beings are the only ones who seem to put up with it."
I like the way Hamilton interweaves the myths and legends of her world with the narrative; it added another layer of magic to the story.
So I listened close as he told of a golden age when only First Beings roamed the earth. How, after time beyond counting had passed, the Destroyer of Worlds came from deep within the earth. She brought with her a huge black snake who swallowed the sun and turned the sky to endless night, and a thousand new creatures the monsters she called children, but that First Beings named ghouls. And when the Destroyer of Worlds killed the first First Being, he exploded into the first star in the newly black sky. God had made the First Beings with endless life, so when they learned of death they were afraid. That was the dawn of the first war, and as First Beings fell, the night sky filled. The Djinn, the brightest of God's First Beings, feared death so much, they came together and gathered earth and water and used the wind to mold a being and set it alive with a spark of fire. They made the First Mortal. To do what they feared most, but what needed to be done in any war: die.
So the First Mortal took up steel, and with it he beheaded the huge snake who had swallowed God in his sun form. The sun was released from the monster's throat and the endless night ended.
And, as well, there was Amani's voyage of discovery, the mystery and attraction of Jin and a noble cause to fight for, to free Miraji from the occupying Gallan forces allied with the Sultan. Easy to read, hard to put down with lots of action sequences and characters you want to root for.

(January 2023/ re-read: October 2023)
4.5-5 stars

Litsy notes & quotes

Amani is desperate to leave the desert town of Dustwalk before she's forced to become one of several wives of one of the men who work in the munitions factory. So she disguises herself as a boy to win money in the gun pit in the next town but comes up against a foreign boy. Then she meets him again in Dustwalk

Ch 1: 16 yo Amani, dressed as a boy, is trying to run away before she's forced to marry her uncle. She's trying to win money in a shooting competition but her unusual blue eyes might give her away to people from her town who know her. Up against her is a foreign looking boy, a few years older than her.

In the desert, ghouls exist; Skinwalkers, Nightmares. And Buraqis - First Beings, desert horses created of wind and sand and sun.

This one is more-ish. Finally a good book after 2 slow ones. But it's a re-read, so it was guaranteed. 😊
The same night the monster child and Ahmed disappeared.
Fourteen years later, the time for the trials came. It was the way the Sultim, the successor to the throne, had been chosen since Miraji began. As per tradition, the twelve eldest princes were to compete for the crown.
That was just over a year ago. My mother was still alive. And when news of the trials reached Dustwalk, even men who'd tell you gambling was a sin started placing bets on which of the young princes would win the throne.
On the day of the contest, the twelve sons lined up and the whole city gathered to watch. Then a thirteenth man joined the princes. When he pulled back his hood, he was the picture of Sultan Oman as a younger man and no one could deny his claim that he was Prince Ahmed, returned. No matter what suspicions surrounded the sudden return of the prince, the law of tradition was upheld. Prince Ahmed would compete, and the youngest of the twelve princes was expelled from the contest. That prince was named Naguib. I knew the name because when folks were betting on the Sultim trials, before the news about the Rebel Prince came, odds were that Naguib would get killed first in the trial. His prodigal brother might've saved Naguib's life by getting him expelled.
Ahmed beat the other eleven princes in the test of intelligence, a huge maze full of traps built in the palace grounds, and the test of wisdom, a riddle posed by the wisest of the Sultan's advisors. When he came to the test of strength, trial by single combat, Ahmed won every fight until only he and Prince Kadir, the firstborn of the Sultan's sons, were left standing. They fought all day, until Kadir surrendered. Instead of executing his eldest brother Ahmed spared his life.
The legend of the Rebel Prince.
So I listened close as he told of a golden age when only First Beings roamed the earth. How, after time beyond counting had passed, the Destroyer of Worlds came from deep within the earth. She brought with her a huge black snake who swallowed the sun and turned the sky to endless night, and a thousand new creatures the monsters she called children, but that First Beings named ghouls. And when the Destroyer of Worlds killed the first First Being, he exploded into the first star in the newly black sky. God had made the First Beings with endless life, so when they learned of death they were afraid. That was the dawn of the first war, and as First Beings fell, the night sky filled. The Djinn, the brightest of God's First Beings, feared death so much, they came together and gathered earth and water and used the wind to mold a being and set it alive with a spark of fire. They made the First Mortal. To do what they feared most, but what needed to be done in any war: die.
So the First Mortal took up steel, and with it he beheaded the huge snake who had swallowed God in his sun form. The sun was released from the monster's throat and the endless night ended.
First Beings, the Destroyer of Worlds and the creation of the First Mortal.

I like the way she interweaves the myths and legends of her world with the story.
They'd built a cannery there. Legend says they were open about a month before the First Beings who lived in the earth had enough and tore apart the ground under the town and flooded the ruins. The same thing happened everywhere. So after a while folks stopped building factories. Except in Miraji. Your First Beings are the only ones who seem to put
up with it."
"And what makes us so special?"
Jin shrugged. "Maybe it's because the desert's magic already comes out of fire and smoke instead of growing, living things. Or because the earth here is already dead. But the fact is, your country is at the crossroads between the East, where guns were born, and the West, where they're waging a war of empires. And it's the only one in the world that can build weapons on a massive scale. This desert is valuable. Why do you think the Gallan
are here?"
"So we're just one giant weapons factory to them?" The notion was unsettling.
Metal is inimical to First Beings, immortal creatures of magic.

My first book for this year; my synopsis from January:

Amani and her mother always planned on leaving Dustwalk, a small town in the country of Miraji whose claim to fame was manufacturing guns. Now that her mother has died, Amani disguises herself as a boy, since women and girls have very few rights, and she plans to use her skills as a sharpshooter to earn enough money to leave. But a foreign-looking boy spoils her plans - and then she keeps running into him. The book is full of myths, legends and stories with a touch of magic to them, such as the one about the Rebel Prince; but we come face to face with the magic and realise that in this world, those stories are true.

(January 2023)
4-4.5 stars

64The_Hibernator
Oct 6, 11:52 am



An axolotl is a cute type of salamandar that doesn't grow out of its infant body (no amphibian metamorphosis). They are endangered.

65humouress
Oct 6, 2:49 pm

>64 The_Hibernator: Eep! Well, it's kinda cute. Thanks for clarifying (though it took me by surprise).

66richardderus
Oct 6, 3:17 pm

>65 humouress: Weird-looking thing, ain't it?

67The_Hibernator
Edited: Oct 6, 4:15 pm

>65 humouress: aww. Come on. It has a smile! How can you not love that?

ETA: I can take it down if you want. 🤣😂

68quondame
Oct 6, 5:34 pm

>63 humouress: I did enjoy Rebel of the Sands early this year, though not quite enough to immediately put sequels on my TBR. Then I forgot.

69alcottacre
Oct 6, 5:42 pm

Well, I somehow managed to get 60+ posts behind again, Nina. *sigh*

Happy whatever!

70humouress
Oct 7, 1:01 am

>66 richardderus: Yup.

>67 The_Hibernator: Well, yes. It's ... it ... It has a smile. (No need to take it down. I'm sure I'll survive.😉)

71humouress
Oct 7, 1:02 am

>68 quondame: Well, now I've reminded you :0)

72humouress
Edited: Oct 7, 1:04 am

>69 alcottacre: No worries, Stasia. I confess I lose whole threads of yours because they move so fast. Enjoy your break.

73humouress
Oct 7, 1:04 am

Wordle 840 3/6

🟨⬛⬛🟨🟨
🟩🟨🟨🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Interesting.

I got Connections in 5; the yellow was last again, but it was an odd one.

74atozgrl
Oct 7, 3:12 pm

>64 The_Hibernator: What a weird coincidence! I just saw a program about the axolotl on PBS this morning.

75FAMeulstee
Oct 8, 3:44 am

Happy new thread, Nina!

76humouress
Oct 8, 3:50 am

>74 atozgrl: Are they as ... um ... cute as this one?

77humouress
Oct 8, 3:50 am

>75 FAMeulstee: Thanks Anita! I need to find your thread again, as I slowly come back to LT. Again.

78atozgrl
Oct 8, 4:48 pm

>76 humouress: They looked like the ones in the picture. So you could say they were as cute.

79humouress
Oct 9, 12:23 pm

>78 atozgrl: Lovely!

80humouress
Edited: Oct 13, 12:31 am

49) Legendborn by Tracy Deonn

 

{first in Legendborn Cycle trilogy?; fantasy, urban fantasy, Arthurian fantasy, young adult, magic, southern America, college, teen romance} (2020)

Sixteen year old Briana Matthews (Bree) applied to Early College at the University of North Carolina but her mum wasn't keen and they argued about it; then her mum was killed in a car accident. Unable to face living at home, and with her grief and anger still simmering under the surface, three months later Bree starts at UNC with her best friend, Alice Chen. But on their first night there Bree sees something that she's not supposed to see, that no-one else can. And when another college student 'mesmers' her so she forgets what she's seen, she finds that she can shake it off and remember. Which triggers a memory about the time her mum died.

When she accidentally discovers the Order of the Round Table, a secret society on campus which deals in magic and which then unsuccessfully tries to mesmer her again, she determines to join them to see if they had something to do with her mum's death. And so she enters a world which lies hidden within our own where Legendborn, the descendants of Arthur, Merlin and twelve of the strongest knights of the Round Table, battle demons (Shadowborn) to keep humans (Onceborn) safe.

This was a fast-paced, action packed story; I was literally holding my breath over some of the action sequences. There are some slower paced sections to let you catch your breath but I found it one of those books that you can't put down for too long. It twists and turns in unexpected directions. There's a touch of (young adult) romance and also a bit of an Arthurian triangle happening.

I did find the hierarchy of the Order a bit confusing at first; you may find the following helpful.
"Our Vassal friends and their contemporary fiefdoms are the Order's lower limbs. Without them, we would not have walked through fifteen centuries of this war, would not have advanced from the Middle Ages to modernity. Pages are the left hand: once Oathed, you will be granted Sight in order to hold the shield while we fight in the shadows. Merlins are the right hand, the sword and fists of the Order. Our guardians and weapons against the darkness. The Legendborn Scions and Squires are the heart. The holy text of their Lines has fueled our mission from the beginning. The Regents are the spine, directing our eyes and energies to the urgent matters at hand."
There are thirteen Legendborn Lines descended from the last knights of the Round Table and they can take Onceborn Pages and Squires who then become part of the society. There are also Vassal families (Onceborns) who don't get involved in the fighting but are pledged in service to one of the Lines; they accrue financial and other benefits and their children may be chosen to be Pages. Pages (usually from Vassal families) are invited by Legendborn for initiation and granted Sight after taking the Oath of Fealty; they can then compete for limited spots to become Squires (battle partners) to Scions (who can belong to a different Line from their sponsor). Scions are Legendborn, born with the title; not just descendants but heirs of the knights. Merlins are the Order's sorcerers. There is also a High Council of Regents which rules the society.

I liked this story; however, there were a few minor issues. I found that most of the secondary (male) characters in the Legendborn society were indistinguishable from each other so they were just a welter of names to me and there were a couple of times that Bree extrapolated information that wasn't obvious to me. There were a few plot points towards the end that I could use clarification on - or maybe that will happen in the sequel - such as how the demon got past the wards. And I do wonder why the Order of the Round Table isn't still in Wales, or at least Britain, rather than in the United States - or even scattered around the world.

One thing I wasn't comfortable with - though I appreciated how comfortable Bree was about being black-American - was the way Deonn often highlighted negative attitudes which Bree encountered because of her skin colour. I know it's a real world issue but I did not enjoy it when it cropped up (there's a reason I read fantasy, after all) and I didn't feel it added anything to the story; in some instances it fell forced. I understand why the author put it in but I felt the narrative could have done without those encounters. Docking half a star.

Other than that, I thought it was a really good story and I'll be looking for the next book - once I've recovered my breath!

(October 2023)
4 stars

Litsy notes & quotes

More-ish; enjoying this. I'm not keen on the instances of intolerance Deonn creates for 16 yo black-American Bree (starting at Early College, Uni of North Carolina), though I understand why the author put it in (I feel it detracts from the story). It's not contributing to the story (yet)*

Bree saw something supernatural and has now stumbled on the secret society called the Order of the Round Table which we are now (ch 9) discovering more about

Definitely more-ish. I can't put it down for more than a few minutes.

(ch 13) Wow - all that action had me holding my breath! Good stuff.

Maybe I‘m not concentrating but most of the secondary (male) characters in the Legendborn society are just a welter of names to me. Their distinguishing characteristics aren‘t clear enough. Also, a bit of an Arthurian triangle going on.

* It does bear in later (though it could have been done differently, for my tuppence worth)

Really good story. Recommended 🙂

"Our Vassal friends and their contemporary fiefdoms are the Order's lower limbs. Without them, we would not have walked through fifteen centuries of this war, would not have advanced from the Middle Ages to modernity. Pages are the left hand: once Oathed, you will be granted Sight in order to hold the shield while we fight in the shadows. Merlins are the right hand, the sword and fists of the Order. Our guardians and weapons against the darkness. The Legendborn Scions and Squires are the heart. The holy text of their Lines has fueled our mission from the beginning. The Regents are the spine, directing our eyes and energies to the urgent matters at hand."
This may be spoilery but I'm trying to work out the characters here. Legendborn have a secret society which fights demons (Shadowborn); they are descended from the Round Table. Onceborn are humans.
There are 13 Lines descended from knights and they can take Onceborn Pages and Squires who become part of the society. There are also Vassal families who don't get involved in the fighting but are pledged in service to one of the Lines.

Merlins are the Order's sorcerers. There is a High Council of Regents. Scions are Legendborn, born with the title; not just descendants but heirs of the knights. Pages (usually from Vassal families) are invited by Legendborn for initiation and granted sight after taking the Oath of Fealty; they then compete for limited spots to become Squires (battle partners) which can be to a different Line from their sponsor.

I did wonder how the demon got in; I thought it couldn‘t because of the wards


I do wonder why the Order of the Round Table isn't still in Wales/ Britain?

81curioussquared
Oct 12, 11:40 am

>80 humouress: Glad you enjoyed this one overall! I want to get to book 2 soon.

82alcottacre
Oct 12, 11:44 am

>80 humouress: I went to add that one to the BlackHole and discovered it was already there. I really need to get it read some time.

83humouress
Edited: Oct 13, 12:32 am

>81 curioussquared: I need a break to recover first, but I'll be looking for book 2 as well. Her website says it was planned as a trilogy so I assume there'll be at least one more book to come.

84humouress
Oct 13, 12:33 am

>82 alcottacre: Shucks, no BB ;0)

I think you'll enjoy it when you do get to it.

How do you keep track of books in the BlackHole? I used to keep a list on LT but I seem to have given up on it.

85The_Hibernator
Oct 13, 12:29 pm

>80 humouress: This is interesting.

86humouress
Oct 13, 1:58 pm

>85 The_Hibernator: It is. Give it a go.

87humouress
Edited: Today, 1:06 am

50) Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree

{stand-alone; fantasy, friendship, NaNoWriMo, coffee} (2022)

The sub-title is 'High fantasy. Low stakes. Good coffee'

I like the way Baldree takes every fantasy trope and turns it on its head; our hero is an older female orc warrior, on the point of retiring as we read the prologue (we enter on her last sword-stroke).

Viv wants to start a café in a city that's never heard of coffee so she has to build from scratch. She's saved the bounties she's earned and she has a secret weapon; a Scalvert Stone which, according to her readings, should attract good fortune. So, having done her research, she enters the city of Thune, finds a good location and starts building her business - literally from the ground up, including the building itself. Along the way she finds good people, who become good friends, who help her in her quest.

This story was pitched just right, like a warm cup of coffee on a brisk autumn day; the sub-title is accurate. It's a gentle story which leaves you feeling good after reading it. It's not about high adventure and derring-do but the quest down unknown roads and the friends you make on the journey. Of course, it's not all smooth sailing and Viv comes up against trials like the neighbourhood bully-boys who want their protection money and the jealous business rival but her friends, both new and old, pitch in to help.

There are no humans in this story though most are human-like. I was amused by Baldree reinventing the wheel with Thimble's pastries and things like the gnomish 'auto-circulator' (ceiling fan). The gnomish inventions, such as Viv's flame-powered coffee machine, give this fantasy a slightly steampunk flavour.

A couple of minor points (and just my opinion): to be honest I wasn't entirely comfortable with the arrangement that Viv came to with the Madrigal, though she was obviously happy with it. And, though the villain's comeuppance was very apt, I'd have preferred the other one that was posited for them.

I think this is Baldree's ode to coffee, he describes savouring a cup so lovingly. Try it.

3.75 ***

Litsy notes & quotes

So the hero is an older female orc warrior, retiring. Take every trope and turn it on its head. 🙃

Viv wants to start a café in a city that‘s never heard of coffee so she has to build from scratch. I think this is Baldree‘s ode to coffee, he describes savouring a cup so lovingly.

Baldree is reinventing the wheel a bit though - and the pinwheels, cinnamon rolls, biscotti etc. 😄
There are no humans in this story though most are human-like

Like a warm cup of coffee; pitched exactly right.

TBH I wasn‘t comfortable with the arrangement that Viv came to with the Madrigal though she obviously was