osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I’ve Finished Reading

I finished Welcome to Night Vale: The Novel. The propulsive force in the plot did eventually grab me and drag me along, but ultimately I wasn’t too impressed with the book; I feel like Night Vale’s world-building probably works much better in radio program form than as a novel, where you have to try to get down to brass tacks about how people actually live in this bizarre and terrible town.

So I might still give the podcast a try someday? But I don’t think the novel is worth reading unless you’re a Night Vale completist or just super into the creepypasta aesthetic.

I also read Elizabeth Yates’ charming Mountain Born, a Newbery Honor book from 1944. (I have sometimes thought about trying to read all the Newbery Honor books, but there are so many! And I think it would be hard to get my hands on the older ones…)

Anyway! Mountain Born is about young Peter growing up in a mountain community and learning how to be a good shepherd, with all sorts of interesting details about sheep and shepherding folded beautifully into the narrative - it’s a bit like the parts in the Little House books where Ma is making butter or Pa is putting together a makeshift door hinge, and the fun of reading it is in learning about how people at the time did things? The success mode of infodump, basically.

Of course his pet sheep dies at the end, because pets of all kinds always die at the end of the children’s books. It didn’t bother me as much as it does sometimes because 1) it’s a sheep, not a dog, and I just don’t care about sheep as much, and 2) it’s clear that Peter’s sheep would have been culled from the herd soon anyway, so having her die heroically saving the rest of the flock by leading them back to the barn through a blizzard actually seemed like an improvement on her other possible fates.



What I’m Reading Now

D. E. Stevenson’s The Four Graces, the story of the four sisters of the Grace family, all daughters of a village parson. It’s perfectly charming - all the D. E. Stevenson books I’ve read has been perfectly charming, and I am tempted to go out and get all the rest that the Indianapolis Public Library has, but on the other hand I think I ought to keep them in reserve for those times when I hit a reading drought.

Anyway, this book has the odd distinction of being a cozily charming tale of home and village life while also being set at the tail end of World War II (which is when it was written; it was published in 1946). I love World War II books (and movies. And TV shows. And superheroes), but generally speaking they are not full of coziness.

I also really liked the way that the book dealt with its religious themes - it’s not a main theme in the book by any means, but because Mr. Grace is a parson it does come up, and I was glad that Stevenson let it come up and even more pleased because she had interesting things to say. Religious experience often seems to be relegated off to the side in modern fiction, and I can understand why that’s so, but at the same time it’s such a big part of the human experience that it seems like cutting out all mention of food, say, except in books that are specifically designated Food Books and shelved in their own special part of the bookstore.

What I Plan to Read Next

Grace Lin has a new book out! When the Sea Turned to Silver, a third book in her marvelously illustrated series of chapter books loosely based on Chinese folklore. (They’re not a series in the sense that the stories build on each other; they simply share a similar sensibility, and of course the gorgeous illustrations.) I loved the first one, Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, and I have high hopes that I’ll love this one just as much.

Date: 2016-10-20 08:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wordsofastory.livejournal.com
I liked the Nightvale podcast a lot in the early days, when it was more just odd little disjointed snippets of a strange world, but once it started to have more recurring characters and long-running plots it fell apart for me as well. As you say, it's simply not a world that really makes a lot of sense for how people could live in it, which is okay when you're only asked to take it seriously for the sake of a few paragraphs. But it can't sustain a continuous story when you're asked to treat it like a real place.

Date: 2016-10-20 08:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
Yes. How do they live? I mean this in the most basic sense; Nightvale is so deadly that I don't see how it continues to have a population. Surely they all would have died off, and aside from Carlos and his scientists no one new seems to have come to town for ages.

Date: 2016-10-21 04:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
I got my copy of When the Sea Turned to Silver, signed by the author! I have all three books now. Like you, I really loved the first one. The second one I liked too--but not as much as the first. I'm very much looking forward to this one!

Did you know **she** does the illustrations. Amazing talent.

The success mode of infodump, basically. --that's right! Sometimes infodumps are just what you want.

Date: 2016-10-21 11:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
Aaaah, that's so cool! Did you get it signed personally, or just order it signed? I'd love to hear her give a talk someday; I think it would be so interesting to hear about her story-writing process and her techniques for the illustrations.

Date: 2016-10-21 12:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
Alas, just ordered it signed, but I did hear her speak once! She was great: she was talking about a series she does for younger kids about twins, Ting and Ling.

Date: 2016-10-21 12:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
That must have been a great talk!

Have you ever read her other series of chapter books, which is a loosely fictionalized memoir about her childhood in the US as the daughter of (IIRC) Taiwanese parents? I think you might enjoy them if you read them - not only is the cultural stuff interesting, but the books are also about her growing into her sense of herself as an artist.

Date: 2016-10-21 01:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
I have one of those books--Dumpling Days--but actually haven't read it yet (I know I'll read When the Sea Turned to Silver sooner)

Profile

osprey_archer: (Default)
osprey_archer

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     123
456 78910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 8th, 2026 04:37 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios