Archive for: September, 2008

Creepy Covers Part 2: Satan’s Stepback

Sep 16 2008 Published by under Cover commentary

Ok, so I bought Patricia Gaffney’s To Have and to Hold on Ebay, because it’s out of print.  I just got it today in the mail. I know it’s controversial. I know it contains one or more scenes of forced seduction or rape, depending on your viewpoint. But heck, the cover seemed so innocent!

And then I opened it and saw THIS:

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8 responses so far

Review: Grimspace, Ann Aguirre

Sep 15 2008 Published by under Reviews

Cover comment: The heroine’s hair is not what is described in the book, where the unruly mess is almost a character in itself, and is an important component of the heroine’s identity, but I ought to be used to those discrepancies by now. Otherwise, I think it’s a terrific fun pulpy SF cover.

Setting: Mostly on a ship in space, with eventful visits to several different planets. Earth, or Old Terra, fares about as well in this world as it did in the movie Wall-E.

Series: Yes, the second book, Wanderlust, is out now. Doubleblind and Killbox to follow. You can read a prequel about March, the hero, here.

Main characters: The heroine, Sirantha Jax, genetically gifted with the coveted ability to travel through grimspace; The hero, March, hard bitten pilot with Psi abilities. And several other shipmates, including Dina, the butch lesbian, Doc, the pacific geneticist, and Loras, the subservient protector.

Plot: When we meet her, Jax is an unjustly disgraced former “nav-star”, being held for interrogation about a crash which killed her pilot/lover, and destroyed their ship, killing all 80 persons aboard. March and the crew of the Folly rescue Jax from the evil Corporation, and together the fugitive gang travels to different planets on a mission which becomes clearer as the book progresses.

Distinctive features: This is hard for me to judge, because the book’s genre is SF, not romance. But viewed as a romance, the world building and the characterization of the heroine stand out.

My take in brief: I don’t have time to formulate it because I have to get to Borders before it closes to buy Wanderlust. How’s that?

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3 responses so far

Your Favorite Author and Her Favorite Songs

Sep 14 2008 Published by under Genre musings

I was just preparing my review of Ann Aguirre‘s Grimspace, and in one of her interviews, I came across a comment she made about the songs she was listening to when she wrote that book:

Ms. Aguirre writes (over at the Bradford Bunch) that she was listening to the following when writing Grimspace:

I wrote Grimspace over a year ago, was finishing up summer of ‘06. Let me look at my playlist and see what I was listening to back then. Looks like Placebo and Blue October. Here are some songs that influenced Jax and March:

Hate Me – Blue October
Sound of Pulling Heaven Down

Because I Want You – Placebo
Song to Say Goodbye
Infrared
Blind

Music has always been important to me, but it had never occurred to me that writers can use music to enhance their muse (I know. Duh.). This past spring, I was having a slightly difficult time. I can’t complain, because I was choosing between two good things, but one of them would have meant cataclysmic change, and let’s just say not everyone was happy for me. Luckily, I had my husband and other folks to help me process it all.  But I couldn’t have gotten through it without music, and I had three songs in particular on a constant loop: Annie Lennox’s A Thousand Beautiful Things, The Flaming Lips’ Love The World You Find, and, when I felt like saying a big “fuck you” to everyone, the White Stripes’ Seven Nation Army.

So, I thought I would look around and see what some authors I like have to say about the music that inspired them. Here’s what I found:

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7 responses so far

Erotica Warning Labels, and Porn v. Erotica.

Sep 13 2008 Published by under Feminist contentions, Genre musings

Summary for the tl;dr crowd:

1. Warning labels may be helpful, but they may mislead readers into thinking books with warning labels are more extreme than books without.

2. Erotica and pornography both intend to arouse the reader, but erotica intends to do so in a way that has other kinds of merit, such as artistic.

3. Feminists who object to porn do so not b/c it is obscene, but because of its negative effects on women. From a feminist point of view, much erotica is consistent with feminist empowerment, although plenty is not.

4. It is odd and too bad that one central intention of erotica — to arouse the reader — is downplayed by many erotica writers, and readers, giving lie, in some sense, to the idea that erotica empowers women to be fully sexual beings.

I’ve been trying to get myself to write a review of Lauren Dane’s Giving Chase, which I liked, but I can’t muster the willpower. I actually purchased it in paper, and as I sat looking at it, willing myself to come up with something interesting to say about it, I noticed something.

It has a warning label:

“Warning, this title contains the following: explicit sex, graphic language, and some violent situations.”

I find it interesting that Samhain uses warning labels, and while I know their executive editor has her own blog, I feel like it would be too forward to write in and ask her about it. I guess my unconsidered opinion about it is that it probably doesn’t hurt and it may help, for example, by alerting parents of minors about the content of what they read, so that they can make knowledgeable decisions that accord with their own family values, the same way the “Explicit” notation on lyrics at iTunes helps me decide whether a song is appropriate for my child.  On the other hand, speaking as a consumer new to Samhain Publishing, the warning led me to gird my loins, as they say, for what turned out to be a pretty tame read.

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12 responses so far

Review, The Lost Duke of Wyndham, Julia Quinn

Sep 11 2008 Published by under Reviews

Cover comment: Holy clavicles, Batman! The female cover model is Norwegian/Egyptian model/soap actress Ewa Da Cruz (there was a cover story on the book in Soap Opera Digest). The male is the ubiquitous Nathan Kamp.

Series?: Yes, it is Book 1 of the Two Dukes of Wyndham. Book 2, Mr. Cavendish, I Presume, is out at the end of this month.

Word on the Web:

KMont, Lurv a la Mode, 5 scoops

Jayne, Dear Author, B

Romance Rookie, Jill D., B

Lynne Spencer, AAR, A-

Smart Bitches, mixed (review of both this and its sequel)

Mary Benn, The Romance Reader, 4 hearts

Ana, Book Smugglers, 9

Marg, TGTBTU, B+

Sandy M, TGTBTU, A-

Devon, TGTBTU, B-

Lawson, TGTBTU, B

What Kate’s Reading, very positive

Animegirl, 4 out of 5

Anne Glover, Regency Reader, negative

A detailed mixed review in a thread on a discussion board here.

Long AAR thread with very mixed reactions here.

Amazon.com, 3 stars after 97 reviews

My Take in Brief: It’s half a book, and not an especially good one, at full price.

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7 responses so far

On the Moral Status of Snarky Reviews

Sep 09 2008 Published by under Ethics, Genre musings

Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark

Note: I apologize in advance for the length and general analocity (analness?) of this post. If it helps, please know that the published version is about 1/87th the length of the draft. (The analness, I’m sorry to say, is pure me and not expungeable.)

I’m working on a blog page, “Jessica’s Personal Rules for Reviewing”, while at the same time listening to the audio version of Karen Marie Moning’s Beyond the Highland Mist (you can read the finished snarky product here.)

Perhaps if you have read this book, you will know why I am suddenly interested in the question of whether “snark” is ok in a review.  And, as usual, I start with the question of “what is snark”?

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18 responses so far

Last chance for a free copy of Tall Tales and Wedding Veils

Sep 07 2008 Published by under Uncategorized

Would you like me to mail you my copy of Jane Graves’ Tall Tales and Wedding Veils, which I just read and reviewed?

It’s simple. All you have to do is either make a comment on this thread stating what your favorite wedding scene in a romance novel is and why (Gah. I’m such a teacher. I always have to ask “and why” ), or put a link to this blog on your own blog (and let me know in the comment section that you have). Do both, and you are entered twice!

You have until midnight EST Sunday September 14 to enter.  I will use Random.org to  pick a winner.

Please feel free to enter regardless of where you live (um, ok, maybe I have to exclude you Martian readers, but anyone on Old Terra, feel free to enter)!

A few additional rules here.

Good luck!

7 responses so far

Review: The Rake, Mary Jo Putney

Sep 06 2008 Published by under Reviews

Cover comment: I think this shows that covers can be sophisticated without being boring.

For fun, below is the cover of the original, The Rake and the Reformer, which is not too shabby, considering it is a pop culture product produced in the 1980s. It actually illustrates a scene from the book in great detail, down to the rosebush and the color of the heroine’s dress, something you don’t see that often these days.

Series: No, according to Putney’s website, although I believe one or more minor characters appear in other Putney novels.

Setting: Mainly the hero’s country estate, Strickland, in Dorset, with a few scenes in London.

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10 responses so far

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