Tantalizing Tales — July 2024 — Part Two

Hello, readers! It’s the last Friday of July (howwwwwwww?!) so here’s my roundup of amazing books that just published these last two weeks that I haven’t had the time to read yet but really really want to!

First up, we have a literary mystery debut from a librarian with a PhD in funeral studies. Ruby Todd’s Bright Objects is the tale of Sylvia Knight, a young Australian widow who is losing hope that the person who killed her husband will ever face justice. Since the night of the hit-and-run that claimed his life, her world has been shrouded in hazy darkness—until she meets Theo St. John, the discoverer of a rare comet soon to be visible to the naked eye.

As the comet begins to brighten, Sylvia wonders what the event might signify. She is soon drawn into the orbit of local mystic Joseph Evans, who believes that the comet’s arrival is nothing short of a divine message. Finding herself caught between two conflicting perspectives on this celestial phenomenon, she struggles to define for herself where reality lies. As the comet grows in the sky, her town slowly descends further and further into a fervor over its impending apex, as Sylvia’s quest to uncover her husband’s killer pushes her and those around her to the furthest reaches of their very lives.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/26/tantalizing-tales-july-2024-part-two/

The Düngeonmeister Random Monster Generator: A Mix-and-Match RPG Flipbook by Jef Aldrich & Jon Taylor

I love getting all the Dungeonmeister game aids: they’re always a super fun and creative way to throw my Dungeons & Dragons players a curveball to help keep things fresh!

This random monster generator was no different. It’s based on a very cool flipbook concept, where the bulk of the book after the first 25 pages or so is monsters divided into three sections per page: head, torso and legs. As with other identikits, you can mix and match to create the monster of your dreams, tho it’s also helpful that each page on its own has a perfectly cromulent monster that makes sense cohesively both in theme/biology and in artistic depiction. Honestly, mad props to artist Sara Richard for creating fifty monsters that flow so seamlessly together in form, even when some of the mixed-up concepts are weird as heck.

Before testing this book out on my playgroup, I had to give it a good read, ofc. The pre-introduction is laced with Jef Aldrich & Jon Taylor’s trademark humor, with a tongue-in-cheek series of business statements from Chimera Labs. The authors then explain the different ways you can use the book to whip up some real monstrosities (or not: more on this specific topic shortly,) with each segment providing two of the main stats in D&D, as well as all the other details you need to fill out your monster’s stat block. You can either build randomly as the title suggests, or make conscious choices to fit together a killing machine. Whichever path you choose, this book not only provides inspiration but also excellent advice on how to polish your monster for game time and drop it into the goings on.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/25/the-dungeonmeister-random-monster-generator-a-mix-and-match-rpg-flipbook-by-jef-aldrich-jon-taylor/

Afro Unicorn: The Land of Afronia, Vol. 1 by April Showers & Ronaldo Barata

Interestingly, it says “text by Terrance Crawford” in the credits as well, and I’m not sure exactly what that means. Credit where it’s due, tho?

So this is a cute story that champions black representation in children’s fantasy, particularly of the cute anthropomorphic fantastic beast variety. Afronia is a magical land in the stars populated by Afro Unicorns, mermaids, fairies and other assorted friends. Long ago, three crowns appeared that the Superiors, a cadre of wise older unicorns, used to channel their magic in order to make the planet glow with color and joy. In exchange, all the Afro Unicorns have vowed to be kind and to stay true to themselves, in addition to believing in the magic that sustains them.

Unicorn besties Unique and Divine are thrilled that they’re finally old enough to attend the annual Festival Of Crowns, where they’ll finally learn what their own superpowers are. Trouble is, they have to figure out where to find the festival. Superior Majestic is little help, tho she does inform them that one of the three original crowns has gone missing. The best friends decide that they might as well keep an eye open for the crown since they’re already looking for the festival. Little do they know that their search will lead them right to the doorstep of Madame Imperious, a former Superior who wants to turn Afronia into a dictatorship, led by herself ofc. Will they be able to recover the crown and make it to the festival, with the help of their friends?

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/24/afro-unicorn-the-land-of-afronia-vol-1-by-april-showers-ronaldo-barata/

Echoes Of Memory by Sara Driscoll (EXCERPT)

Hi, readers! This week, we have a terrific excerpt from a new standalone thriller, Echoes Of Memory by Sara Driscoll.

After surviving a terrible attack, Quinn Fleming has recovered in every way but one—her ability to retain new memories. Now, months later, it appears to the outside world as if the San Diego florist’s life is back to normal. But Quinn is barely holding on, relying on a notebook she carries with her at all times, a record of her entire existence since the assault. So when she witnesses a murder in the shadowy alley behind the florist shop, Quinn immediately writes down every terrifying detail of the incident before her amnesia wipes it away.

By the time the police arrive, there’s no body, no crime scene and no clues. The killing seems as erased from reality as it is from Quinn’s mind… until the flashbacks begin. Suddenly, fragments of memories are surfacing—mere glimpses of that horrible night, but enough to convince Quinn that somewhere, locked in her subconscious, is the key to solving the case… and she’s not the only one who knows. Somebody else has realized Quinn is a threat that needs to be eliminated. Now, with her life on the line and only her notes to guide her, Quinn sets out to find a killer she doesn’t remember but can’t forget.

Read on for an illuminating excerpt that perfectly depicts Quinn’s struggle!

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/23/echoes-of-memory-by-sara-driscoll-excerpt/

Witch’s Business by Diana Wynne Jones

Also known in some markets as Wilkins’ Tooth.

I’m joining my pal Emily for A Year Of Diana Wynne Jones, a project she recently started where she and other interested readers go through the entire DWJ oeuvre over the course of a year. I decided to dip in and out as books were available to me: I own a handful, but am mostly relying on my public libraries to cover the rest. I am very lucky in being able to access both the DC and Montgomery Public Library systems, as they helped me get started here. That said, this is technically the second book in the project as the first, Changeover, is very much out of print (as well as out of her usual children’s fantasy oeuvre.)

Witch’s Business itself is the tale of Frank and Jess Pirie, whose pocket money has been suspended one summer. In an effort to make some money, the siblings decide to start a business. At first they offer to run errands for neighbors in exchange for cash, but when their father puts a stop to that, they decide to specialize in getting revenge. Awkwardly, their very first customer is Buster, the same bully that Frank owes money to. Buster is sore that Vernon Wilkins managed to knock out his tooth during a fight, so wants the Piries to get a tooth from the Wilkins boy in turn. If they can manage that, he’ll forgive Frank’s debt entirely.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/22/witchs-business-by-diana-wynne-jones/

The Mimicking Of Known Successes by Malka Older

On the plus side, with this I’ve finally read all the nominees for Best Novella for the 2024 Hugos! That said, what a strange set of entries for this year. As Doug has opined elsewhere, this was not a good year for the category Jo Walton considers an excellent barometer of the speculative fiction zeitgeist.

The Mimicking Of Known Successes is fine. The conceit is cute and the worldbuilding rather brilliant. Essentially, humanity has fled to a planet they call Giant (but which I’m pretty sure is supposed to be Jupiter) after having pretty much destroyed Earth. Society has reorganized itself around the literal platforms they’ve built to support humanity, far above Giant’s gaseous surface. Travel from platform to platform involves railway services which are free by necessity since overland travel is otherwise impossible.

It’s to one such platform, tho remote and scarcely trafficked, that Investigator Mossa is summoned. A gregarious if narcissistic visitor named Bolein has gone missing, with the fear being that he either jumped or was pushed off of the edge of the habitable area. When Mossa learns that Bolein was attached to Valdegeld, the platform where her former girlfriend Pleiti now works as a scholar at the renowned university, she doesn’t hesitate to show up on Pleiti’s doorstep to ask for help.

Pleiti does know Bolein, who had a reputation around campus as being something of a blowhard. He was always happy to talk about his own theories, but didn’t have any interest in listening to others, even to Pleiti’s own research into rebuilding Earth as an integrated ecosystem. He doesn’t strike Pleiti as being the kind of person who would suddenly kill himself in such a quiet, tidy manner, so she sets out to help Mossa figure out his last few days in hopes of solving the mystery of his disappearance. What they learn will lead them all over Giant as they uncover a criminal conspiracy that could very well jeopardize both their lives, just as they’re starting to reconnect once more.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/19/the-mimicking-of-known-successes-by-malka-older/

Shubeik Lubeik by Deena Mohamed

And with this I’ve completed the reading for the 2024 Hugos nominees for Best Graphic Story! And what a way to round out the category! It won’t topple Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons from the chokehold that book has on first place, but it sure comes close.

Shubeik Lubeik is the Arabic for, essentially, “your wish is my command”, the typical line said by genies about to grant a wish. This astonishingly thoughtful graphic novel examines what life would be like if wishes — of indeterminate origin, though likely from djinn — were real. Gradually but cleverly, Deena Mohamed unfolds her entirely plausible world over the course of three interconnected stories, with the occasional interstitial to explain more of the history and politics of wishes.

The first story, while good, was also the weakest of the three, IMO, and only because of its ending. Aziza is a Cairene who’s always lived in poverty, first while watching her parents die of terminal illnesses, then while living with the husband she’s secretly very fond of. Abdo was her neighbor growing up, and he’s always done his best to bring a smile to her habitually solemn face. After he dies, she’s devastated. When she discovers that Shokry, a nearby kiosk owner, is trying to get rid of three fully licensed first-class wishes, she saves up money to buy one. Before she can use the wish, however, she’s arrested by a government that clearly wants her to give the wish over to them. She refuses to be bullied, enduring long days that turn to years in prison.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/18/shubeik-lubeik-by-deena-mohamed/

Life Does Not Allow Us To Meet by He Xi

translated into English by Alex Woodward.

I guess I should start by attempting to summarize this story, but it’s just so weirdly — if not outright poorly — written (or perhaps translated? I’m sorry for throwing you under the bus here Mr Woodward but this story was just so bafflingly not good) that I don’t even know if I can do that with any level of professionalism. It starts out oddly, with what sounds like two people breaking into an astronaut-training facility. But then another astronaut who happens to have the same name as the author (eyeroll) shows up to take charge of their little mission, to explore a colony called Caspian Sea after his own return from another successful colony some light years away.

Space travel in the future has been greatly expedited by the discovery of wormhole travel, tho it’s still not entirely without its risks. The last mission to Caspian Sea, a primarily water planet, was thought to have failed due to the final transmissions sent by the astronauts sent there some decades ago. One of those astronauts, Yu Lan, was actually the love of He Xi’s life, the two having met in training and falling in love after her oxygen tank failed and he shared his breathing equipment with her (like that’s some sort of heroism and not, you know, basic shit you do when buddy diving.)

Anyway, He Xi leads Yelena and Fan Zhe through the wormhole to Caspian Sea, where they discover that the colony has not only survived but thrived. The genetically modified people that humans created to colonize the planet are flourishing, despite the lack of adherence to protocol. A suspicious He Xi quickly ferrets out that Yu Lan is still alive, and that she harbors a devastating secret that could destroy any connection between them for good.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/17/life-does-not-allow-us-to-meet-by-he-xi/

The Three-Body Problem, Part One by Cai Jin, Ge Wendi, BO MU & Caojijiuridong

a graphic adaptation of Liu Cixin’s bestselling sci-fi novel of the same name, which I adored. This, tho… I very much did not love this.

A large part of the problem with this adaptation of The Three-Body Problem is the fact that it strips out much of Mr Liu’s writing save the dialog, which was never the strong point of the books to begin with. I’m not sure who did the translations for this into English, but it feels very workmanlike in comparison with Ken Liu’s thoughtful prose translation of the original. Shorn of much of its language, the weaknesses of the source text stand out far more starkly.

I desperately loved the original T3BP when I first read it because it’s very much a novel of ideas. The application of science to extraterrestrial life was mind bending. Perhaps I’m not recollecting how long it took for the original to get to that point, but I can safely say that this graphic adaptation gets to over 300 pages without a word of alien life even being suspected. In fact, this book basically seems to be about a bunch of scientists, cops and military personnel in China, running around having mysterious encounters and eventually playing video games. It’s a lot of pages to convey very little story, and not very well at that.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/16/the-three-body-problem-part-one-by-cai-jin-ge-wendi-bo-mu-caojijiuridong/

Thornhedge by T Kingfisher

God, reading this book was such a relief. After struggling through three of the other Best Novella nominees for the Hugo Awards 2024, it was nice to finally read a book that felt like it was written by a professional who gives a shit about her audience.

Now I’m a sucker for fairytale retellings, so I was going to be inclined to like this book regardless. Thornhedge reworks the idea of Sleeping Beauty by asking the question: do you need a hedge of thorns to keep trespassers out, or to keep a terrible monster in?

The story is told from the perspective of the guardian of the hedge and what lies within, a creature known as Toadling. Centuries ago, Toadling was stolen from her cradle and whisked away to Fairyland, where she was raised by the monstrous greenteeth as one of their own. After nine years of growing, another fairy comes to take her home, to serve as godmother to the terrible little changeling that was left in her stead. But only five days have passed in the mortal realm, and the king and queen fear that Toadling has come bearing a curse and not a gift. Toadling was, in fact, brought back to restore a balance dangerously undermined by the mischievous placement of the changeling. Alas that she messes up the bestowal of the gift — or rather the fairy price is too exacting for a little girl, even one as exposed to magic as she has been. Instead of being allowed to return to Fairy and her beloved adoptive family after completing her mission, she finds herself tied to this estate and to the little girl who usurped her place.

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Permanent link to this article: https://www.thefrumiousconsortium.net/2024/07/15/thornhedge-by-t-kingfisher/