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Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

Various Thoughts

Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

  • Tag Archives October Daye
  • BE the SERPENT & Ruby Fever

    Posted on September 4, 2022 6:04 am by Offkorn Comment

    After the previous October Daye entry, things were looking up for the protagonist. So I suppose it shouldn’t be much of a surprise that McGuire’s follow-up is particularly brutal. There is definitely more lost than gained here, and ending on a cliffhanger (which I don’t recall any of the previous novels doing) does it absolutely no favors. Even the short story at the end is pretty downbeat, covering as it does exactly how the sea witch ended up bound.

    The sixth Hidden Legacy novel meanwhile continues the trend of the previous in no longer feeling like Kate Daniels fanfiction. It’s legitimately come into its own at this point… albeit as a fairly standard (if perhaps a bit action-heavy) paranormal romance series. This one marks the end of Catalina’s stint as protagonist, and if the hints at the end are any indication the youngest sister will be the focus of the next book.

    Related posts:

    1. Magic Triumphs, The Brightest Fell, & Night and Silence The long-running plotline regarding Kate’s father is brought to something...
    2. The Unkindest Tide & Archangel’s War Seanan McQuire’s 13th October Daye novel is meant to conclude...
    3. The Witch With No Name, The Great Ordeal, & The Unholy Consult The concluding novel in Kim Harrison‘s Hollows series makes it...
    4. Books; Before and After First the before, which was three books read back in...
    5. WHEN SORROWS COME & That Time I Got Reincarnated as a SLIME #12 Seanan McGuire‘s fifteenth October Daye novel is completely centered on...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Hidden Legacy Ilona Andrews October Daye Paranormal Romance Seanan McGuire Urban Fantasy
  • WHEN SORROWS COME & That Time I Got Reincarnated as a SLIME #12

    Posted on November 11, 2021 3:32 am by Offkorn Comment

    Seanan McGuire‘s fifteenth October Daye novel is completely centered on the protagonist’s wedding. Despite not actually being short, it feels short both due to everything taking place in one location and because the story itself is episodic. If it weren’t for the fact that this event is pretty important to the overall plotline I would’ve said it was merely a transitional novel (similar to the Unkindest Tide).

    The twelfth TenSura novel meanwhile is basically a repeat of Book 6 without any of the action. Also with a 1-year timeskip and an abrupt ending. On the positive side of things they don’t dwell too much on the Labyrinth RPG aspects and it appears as though the next book will have quite a bit of movement with the whole start of the East vs. West war. Then again, there are apparently six more books already published in this series so I can’t rule out additional volumes of nothing but preparation (and if that’s the case for the next entry I’ll probably just drop the series).

    Related posts:

    1. Recent Books Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…...
    2. The Witch With No Name, The Great Ordeal, & The Unholy Consult The concluding novel in Kim Harrison‘s Hollows series makes it...
    3. Hollow Regalia & The Strange Adventure of a Broke MERCENARY #7 The Utsuro naru Regalia series is apparently written by the...
    4. The Hero Laughs #7 & That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime #19 The seventh Nidome no Yuusha novel thankfully keeps the incestuous...
    5. Blood Heir & So I’m a Spider, So What? #12 I actually read Ilona Andrews‘ Blood Heir way back at...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Fantasy FUSE October Daye Paranormal Romance Seanan McGuire TenSura Urban Fantasy Young Adult Novel
  • Cast In Wisdom & A Killing Frost

    Posted on September 2, 2020 12:43 am by Offkorn Comment

    Back in Cast In Oblivion you may remember that the protagonist finally decided to learn more about how to use her powers. Well, the 15th book (not including Cast In Moonlight) in Michelle Sagara‘s Chronicles of Elantra series take the necessary step of introducing a new location filled with characters who can advance that goal. It ends up one of the better installments (despite a continued lack of weight to the action scenes) thanks to both not getting bogged down in metaphysics and Kaylin’s continuing maturation as a character; for those saying she never changes you really need to read the first book (Cast In Shadow) again and then realize that less than 2 years have passed since then.

    Seanan McGuire’s A Killing Frost, the 14th October Daye entry, also advances its goal… far more than I thought it would after the meandering prequel. Not only is the titular ‘Search for Simon’ subplot resolved, but one of the series’ major overarching plotlines gets spontaneously resolved as well. Perhaps a bit too spontaneously. Presumably that event will be examined in more detail in the future, put aside here as it was in favor of wrapping up Simon’s arc, and I hope the author can come up with a believable enough justification for it.

    As for the bonus novella included within: It’s a perfectly fine prequel focusing on the Lordens’ relationship with Simon, which adds some useful context to Killing Frost‘s developments.

    Related posts:

    1. Recent Books Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…...
    2. WHEN SORROWS COME & That Time I Got Reincarnated as a SLIME #12 Seanan McGuire‘s fifteenth October Daye novel is completely centered on...
    3. Cast In Oblivion & Guild Hunter #6-11 The fourteenth entry in Michelle Sagara‘s Elantra series resolves the...
    4. Over the Woodward Wall & CAST IN CONFLICT I’m unsure why Over the Woodward Wall, written under the...
    5. Sparrow Hill Road & Laughter at the Academy The first of Seanan McGuire’s Ghost Roads novels is a...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Chronicles of Elantra Fantasy Michelle Sagara October Daye Paranormal Romance Seanan McGuire Urban Fantasy
  • The Unkindest Tide & Archangel’s War

    Posted on September 25, 2019 6:34 am by Offkorn Comment

    Seanan McQuire’s 13th October Daye novel is meant to conclude one of the series’ long-running plotlines. Instead it comes across more like an intermission. A rather arbitrary one. It does in fact eventually resolve what it set out to, yet the path traveled to get there is just so… random. Meanwhile, the Raj-centric story tacked onto the end is just plain bad.

    Archangel’s War is also meant to be a conclusion, this one to Nalini Singh’s Guild Hunter series (or perhaps just the Cascade-related central plot), and in contrast does the job with full marks. After the way the previous book ended on a cliffhanger I didn’t really know what to expect here and ended up pleasantly surprised by a smooth continuation that manages to wrap up just about every loose end to the point I’d be perfectly content with this as the last book in the series.

    Related posts:

    1. The Witch With No Name, The Great Ordeal, & The Unholy Consult The concluding novel in Kim Harrison‘s Hollows series makes it...
    2. WHEN SORROWS COME & That Time I Got Reincarnated as a SLIME #12 Seanan McGuire‘s fifteenth October Daye novel is completely centered on...
    3. Recent Books Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…...
    4. BE the SERPENT & Ruby Fever After the previous October Daye entry, things were looking up...
    5. Books; Before and After First the before, which was three books read back in...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Guild Hunter Nalini Singh October Daye Paranormal Romance Seanan McGuire Urban Fantasy
  • Magic Triumphs, The Brightest Fell, & Night and Silence

    Posted on September 4, 2018 12:58 pm by Offkorn Comment

    The long-running plotline regarding Kate’s father is brought to something of a close in Magic Triumphs, which begins following a pair of large time skips (a nearly 2-year gap which will presumably be somewhat filled in by the remaining two parts of the Iron Covenant trilogy). Unfortunately, rather than Roland, it instead focuses far more on the Iron Covenant antagonists and for the most reads as little more than a string of exasperating deus ex machina.

    Seanan Mcguire’s eleventh October Daye novel comes very close to reinterpreting the ‘it was all a dream’ trope. While not bad, there’s not much in the way of forward momentum and it seems very much like it’s setting the story up to retread old ground. The included bonus novella is quite good though and wraps up the remaining loose thread from A Local Habitation.

    The follow-up twelfth installment, Night and Silence, does in fact retread old ground… though not at all in the manner I was expecting. It appears to be the start of a ‘third act’ of sorts and leads with about two chapters worth of recap. Then, much like Magic Triumphs above, starts linking together a bunch of highly questionable events that (while they certainly do have forward momentum) don’t really feel believable in the slightest. The bonus novella here isn’t as good as the previous one either and bizarrely enough actually goes and recaps something from its host novel. Just baffling.

    Related posts:

    1. Iron and Magic, The Ripper Affair, & The Chemist Iron and Magic is the first of a new trilogy...
    2. BE the SERPENT & Ruby Fever After the previous October Daye entry, things were looking up...
    3. Magic Rises & Theirs Not To Reason Why The seventh book in Ilona Andrews’ Kate Daniels series (assuming...
    4. A Red-Rose Chain, Magic Breaks, & Magic Shifts Seanan McGuire‘s A Red-Rose Chain has an ending problem; it’s...
    5. WHEN SORROWS COME & That Time I Got Reincarnated as a SLIME #12 Seanan McGuire‘s fifteenth October Daye novel is completely centered on...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Ilona Andrews Kate Daniels October Daye Paranormal Romance Seanan McGuire Urban Fantasy
  • Sideswiped, The Drafter, & Once Broken Faith

    Posted on March 7, 2018 12:38 pm by Offkorn Comment

    The Kim Harrison novella Sideswiped, a work meant to introduce you to the world of Peri Reed, is pretty bad. Both in its technical aspects and in the near-total lack of relevance it has to the first main novel in the series.

    Which would be The Drafter. After the terrible showing of the previous story (and preview first chapter) I waffled back and forth quite a bit over whether or not to give this a proper chance… and I should have went with my initial plan of ignoring it. While certainly better than Sideswiped it unfortunately has some major characterization and plot-related problems and isn’t very enjoyable in any respect. One interesting thing about it though is how, rather than an agency thriller, it comes off more like a gender equality allegory.

    Switching authors now, Seanan McGuire‘s Once Broken Faith is the tenth October Daye novel and does something a bit refreshing. Rather than further escalate matters it decides to take a step horizontally and introduce a number of the other North American Fae rulers while wrapping up both the aftermath of having found the antidote and (with the help of a bonus short story) the Queen of Mists’ situation. It’s a solid balance of humor, action, drama, and world-building.

    Related posts:

    1. Relatively Recent Books Been procrastinating with adding these because it’s a pain. May...
    2. Recent Books Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…...
    3. Books; Before and After First the before, which was three books read back in...
    4. Tempt the Stars, Omens, & Parasite The sixth book in Karen Chance‘s Cassandra Palmer series is...
    5. Middlegame, Siren’s Song, & Honors Seanan McGuire‘s Middlegame is a standalone story with no relation...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Kim Harrison Novella October Daye Paranormal Romance Peri Reed Romance Science Fiction Seanan McGuire Urban Fantasy
  • A Red-Rose Chain, Magic Breaks, & Magic Shifts

    Posted on October 27, 2015 4:46 pm by Offkorn Comment

    Seanan McGuire‘s A Red-Rose Chain has an ending problem; it’s both anti-climatic and rather abrupt. The journey up to that point is entertaining for the most part though, with the only hiccup being a bizarre page-and-a-half dialog regarding a character dramatically revealed to be transsexual. Why is there such a hamfisted focus on it? I don’t recall any particular attention being drawn to May’s lesbian relationship before, and this should have been no different.

    As for Ilona Andrews‘ Magic Breaks and Magic Shifts: The first acts as a conclusion of sorts to the background conflict that has been building from the very first entry in the series, while the second continues on in a slightly different yet still quite similar direction. There’s a comforting familiarity about them that was absent from their more recent prequels.

    Related posts:

    1. Magic Triumphs, The Brightest Fell, & Night and Silence The long-running plotline regarding Kate’s father is brought to something...
    2. BE the SERPENT & Ruby Fever After the previous October Daye entry, things were looking up...
    3. Iron and Magic, The Ripper Affair, & The Chemist Iron and Magic is the first of a new trilogy...
    4. WHEN SORROWS COME & That Time I Got Reincarnated as a SLIME #12 Seanan McGuire‘s fifteenth October Daye novel is completely centered on...
    5. Magic Rises & Theirs Not To Reason Why The seventh book in Ilona Andrews’ Kate Daniels series (assuming...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Ilona Andrews Kate Daniels October Daye Seanan McGuire
  • Books; Before and After

    Posted on February 26, 2015 5:25 am by Offkorn Comment

    First the before, which was three books read back in August:

    Jean le Flambeur – This trilogy by Hannu Rajaniemi reminded me of two other authors’ styles. The first book (The Quantum Thief) was reminiscent of Jack Vance, the second (The Fractal Prince) of R. Scott Bakker, and the third (The Causal Angel) a combination of the two. These books do not explain what’s going on. Rather, they show you what’s going on and trust that you’ll be able to understand/decipher the terminology and happenings on your own. It’s… certainly interesting.

    And now the after, three books I just read yesterday. The first since the trilogy above:

    The Winter Long – Seanan McGuire’s eighth October Daye novel apparently kicks off the ‘main’ plotline that’s been simmering in the background since Rosemary and Rue. Which is not to say that things have changed all that much, as it’s still fundamentally the same series it has always been… just with higher overall power levels.

    Unbinding – This eleventh Lupi novel is focused on wrapping up the loose ends from the tenth and is told from the perspective of the mindhealer Kai. There’s not really much to say about it honestly, since if you’ve been reading this far into the series you already know what to expect and this doesn’t do anything in particular to shake things up. One aspect stands out though, and that’s the possible newfound focus on marrying off its characters. I don’t really like the message this appears to be trying to send; that somehow ‘officially’ being bound to your SO should be important for the relationship in any way, shape, or form. Of course I highly doubt anyone impressionable enough to have their views on the subject changed will be reading a series like this in the first place, so I suppose it doesn’t matter much.

    Havoc – The second part of Ann Aquirre’s Dred Chronicles series is sort of so-so. I wasn’t really sure where things could go from the first book, and this one just feels like an excessive escalation. I also don’t remember the central government being so ridiculously corrupt in the Sirantha Jax novels (this takes place in the same universe), which caused some cognitive dissonance. It’s okay I guess, it just lacks solidity and doesn’t come across as particularly believable.

    Related posts:

    1. Recent Books Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…...
    2. BE the SERPENT & Ruby Fever After the previous October Daye entry, things were looking up...
    3. Middlegame, Siren’s Song, & Honors Seanan McGuire‘s Middlegame is a standalone story with no relation...
    4. Sparrow Hill Road & Laughter at the Academy The first of Seanan McGuire’s Ghost Roads novels is a...
    5. Blood Heir & So I’m a Spider, So What? #12 I actually read Ilona Andrews‘ Blood Heir way back at...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Ann Aguirre Dred Chronicles Eileen Wilks Hannu Rajaniemi Jean le Flambeur October Daye Paranormal Romance Science Fiction Seanan McGuire Urban Fantasy World of the Lupi
  • Recent Books

    Posted on October 18, 2013 7:34 am by Offkorn Comment

    Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…

    Cast in Sorrow (Michelle Sagara) – Completes the storyline started in Cast in Peril. I’m indifferent toward it. While on the one hand there’s some tangible progress on the Barrani front, on the other the general style and plot developments are starting to seriously trend into the abstract and hand-wavy. It’s hard to read some of it without feeling a deep sense of skepticism. Aside: For some strange reason I picture the Barrani as being similar to The Last Remnant‘s Sovani.

    Chimes at Midnight (Seanan McGuire) – Not much to say about this really other than it’s just as good as the earlier October Daye novels. Well, one more thing: It seems to mark the beginning of shifting the overarching background conflict into the foreground.

    Ritual Magic (Eileen Wilks) – It’s fairly amazing that this series continues to avoid the various and sundry paranormal romance pitfalls. Picking up right where Mortal Ties left off, it ends with what looks to be a good point to switch over to a different set of protagonists for a bit.

    Steelheart (Brandon Sanderson) – The setting for this novel is very good and having a protagonist that seems to have either asperger’s or autism is an interesting choice. Unfortunately, those are the only things I can praise about it since the general character behavior and plot developments seem ripped right out of a summer blockbuster. It all feels so artificial.

    Perdition (Ann Aguirre) – This beginning of a new series set in the Sirantha Jax universe is, for the most part, very engaging indeed. The only area in which it slips up a bit is the romance aspect. The relationship seems a little forced and does not feel quite natural. That said, it’s certainly not as bad as what you’d find in a generic romance novel.

    Dancing with the Devil (Keri Arthur) – Speaking of generic romance novels…. I ordered the first three books in this series blind due to what I’m going to chalk up to sudden insanity. For some reason I thought this might be more like Arthur’s Myth and Magic series then her Riley Jenson/Dark Angels series. Again, no clue why I thought that, but this book is as generic paranormal romance as you can get.

    Hearts in Darkness (Keri Arthur) – The first entry in this series is merely generic; this one is downright painful. Not only is the most by-the-numbers example of a paranormal romance still present and as vaguely embarrassing as ever, signs of power-level creep start to appear alongside a dash of internal inconsistency.

    Chasing the Shadows (Keri Arthur) – While for the most part just as unpleasant to read as the second book, this does take an unexpected turn toward the end. The ‘good guys’ actually losing is a very rare thing to see in this sort of novel. Of course, considering the new suite of powers Nikki gains here that loss may end up being not much of a loss at all in the long run.

    Related posts:

    1. Books; Before and After First the before, which was three books read back in...
    2. Cast In Wisdom & A Killing Frost Back in Cast In Oblivion you may remember that the...
    3. BE the SERPENT & Ruby Fever After the previous October Daye entry, things were looking up...
    4. Cast In Oblivion & Guild Hunter #6-11 The fourteenth entry in Michelle Sagara‘s Elantra series resolves the...
    5. Sparrow Hill Road & Laughter at the Academy The first of Seanan McGuire’s Ghost Roads novels is a...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Ann Aguirre Brandon Sanderson Chronicles of Elantra Dred Chronicles Eileen Wilks Fantasy Keri Arthur Michelle Sagara Nikki and Michael October Daye Paranormal Romance Reckoners Science Fiction Seanan McGuire Sirantha Jax Urban Fantasy World of the Lupi

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