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Will Supervillains be on the Final?

Manga-style comic written by Naomi Novik and draw by Yishan Li, about a girl who goes to superhero school, has more natural power than most people, but has difficulty fitting in, and is affected by the ongoing fallout of ex-superhero and ex-supervillain politics.

I love this genre, and it's a pleasant example of it, I really enjoyed it, though it doesn't add a lot I haven't seen before. It's fairly short, and I was sad to see promised follow-up volumes haven't appeared.

First Fifteen Lives of Harry August

This is exactly the sort of book I like, about someone living their life over several times, getting tangled up in the plots of other people in the similar situation, someone screwing up the timeline and causing future cataclysm, and fight between time travellers.

It touches on themes I find interesting in this sort of thing -- how much you meddle with time, and what happens? do you care about the lives of people you know are going to just come alive again? And it uses its premises on what does and doesn't allow an immortal to return well in crafting the overall plot. I would have liked more "now lets try a do over with more information" a la Groundhog Day/All You Need is Kill, rather than descending into standard-ish thriller territory, but it's still good.

Spoilers )
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Over the Christmas holidays I have had *several* new books to enjoy, *many* of which have been classic enough for me to want to recommend them and buy everything else by the author.

Temeraire is Hornblower with dragons. That says it all really. If you're not off reading it now, you never will. But for those of you reading on, I'll mention some of the good, the bad, and the ugly in my opinion.

* The good. Hornblower. With dragons. And it represents it well. Captain whatsit isn't Hornblower -- he's happy, for one thing -- but definitely from the same world. The alternate history -- Dragons have been bread for various uses, mainly military superiority in parallel to navies, the Chinese have overwhelming air superiority if they ever chose to use it, and the most intelligent, charming dragons, though others have bread for size, flame, poison, etc. The tactics used all sound plausible and Napoleonic, in that dragons are useful and dangerous, but not overwhelming.

* The bad. The first book doesn't really seem to go anywhere. It's lovely to read, but there's no substance, no unfolding plot, no tension, no revelation, no anticipation. People who recommended it to me, did you think that? How did you feel about the rest of the series?

* The other. Of course, a dragon is a gigantic honking stonking Mary Sue. That's what dragons are. Some people may complain about that, but it's like complaining that some science fiction explores laws contrary to reality, or that romances have a happy ending. That is the genre, and if you don't like it, reading is not recommended, but it cannot be changed without destroying it :) As I ranted about an ex-depressed post, Dragons are metaphors, expressions of some human emotion or other, as often as not, which is why they're cool. OK, I may be stretching things, but I wanted to say it. The fact that of course he turns out to be one of the most important breeds of dragon, and of course at the end of the book saves everyone, is perhaps over the top, though I'm not surprised. But that he's so wonderful isn't a flaw, it's the reason for the book :)

In fact, the entire review can probably be summed up by the conversation it was first recommended to me in.

Naath: It's Hornblower! With Dragons!
Ian: But it's not very good. Egan--
Me: No! Thank you both. I, of course, very much appreciate any recommendations for good good books. But Naath, please continue to recommend good books that are just like other good books, but with dragons, how can that be bad?

Sorry to both :)

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