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[personal profile] the_rck
I spent a lot of time yesterday making these lists and making notes about what I remember about these books. I'm posting these mainly so that I don't lose track of them, but I'd welcome comments-- positive or negative-- from anybody who's read any of these.

These are listed alphabetically by author, but the title is first because that's how I typed them in to begin with.

I don't need much feedback on the first category, but it's also not very long, only eight books.

Maybe already read:
Silver Curlew by Eleanor Farjeon: I know I read two of Farjeon’s fairy tale adaptations. One was The Glass Slipper, and I’m nearly certain that this was the other one. I need to dust the book off so that I can open it and check, but I think it’s an adaptation of Rumplestiltskin.

Bell Tree by H.M. Hoover: I think I read this in high school, but I’m not absolutely sure I finished it, just that I checked it out from the library then.

Megatokyo 3: I may actually have read this. I have only the vaguest memories of the series at all, so I’m not sure at all.

Armed & Magical by Lisa Shearin: I’ve definitely read one or two of the four books in this series that are on my shelf, but I couldn’t tell, based on the cover blurbs, which one is which or where I stopped. The series is fun and without substance, but the plot advances by millimeters in each book, and I started losing patience and stopped reading. I think I’d like to go back because this is about my current speed, but I don’t actually want to reread anything, so I need to figure out where I stopped. Let’s see… Amazon says this is book 2. I’ve read it, then. I know I read at least two books in the series.

The Trouble with Demons by Lisa Shearin: Amazon says this is book 3. I’ve maybe read it and maybe not. Probably? I’ll have to open this one and see if it’s familiar.

Once a Princess by Sherwood Smith: I think that, for all three of these Sherwood Smith books, I was sick when I read them, and because of that, I’m not sure if I finished them all. I know I read bits of all three which ought, at the very least, to mean that I finished Once a Princess since that’s the first in a duology (with Twice a Prince). Then again, I have been known to skip around a lot, and having both books in hand at once might have meant that I’d skip around in both books instead of in one at a time.

The Trouble with Kings by Sherwood Smith

Twice a Prince by Sherwood Smith

There are some on the next list that I'm on the fence about keeping, but most of them are things I would like to finish. I just don't know if I will.

Partially read:
Sethra Lavode by Steven Brust: I like Brust’s Paarfi books less well than I like the Vlad ones, so I’ve struggled to read them. I will finish this one some day.

Captain Vorpatril’s Alliance by Lois McMaster Bujold: I’m not sure if I’ll go back to this one. I bailed when Ivan’s in-laws showed up because I could smell disaster in a form that I would not find amusing.

The Tale of Murasaki by Liza Darby: This was a gift. I believe it was from [personal profile] retsuko. I enjoyed what I read of it (⅓ to ½ of it) and still hope to go back.

The Eternal Rose by Gail Dayton: I really liked the first two books in this series, but I bounced off of this one. I think that it shifted focus in a way I wasn’t really interested in. I haven’t liked anything else of Dayton’s that I’ve tried.

The Early Medieval Balkans by John Fine: I had Fine for two semesters of Byzantine history as an undergraduate and had a blast. It’s one of my regrets about college that I wasn’t able to take his Medieval Balkans classes because of a scheduling conflict with something I absolutely had to take. I’m almost sure I’ve got a copy of The Late Medieval Balkans somewhere in the house.

Portal by Eric Flint and Ryk E. Spoor: I only got about three chapters into this one, but I liked the first two books in the series a lot, so I plan to persevere.

Time Spike by Eric Flint and Ryk E. Spoor: I started this one and pretty much bounced. The premise is interesting, but even looking ahead didn’t hook me. I wasn’t convinced by where things seemed to be going.

Slow River by Nicola Griffith: This was a present. I think it was from [livejournal.com profile] lunargeography. I just barely started it before getting distracted.

To Ride a Rathorn by P. C. Hodgell: I think I need to start this one over from the beginning because, although the bookmark is about ⅔ through, I remember nothing at all. Heck, I probably need to reread the series from the beginning. God Stalk is the only one I remember at all clearly.

Changeover by Diana Wynne Jones: I still intend to finish this. What I read of it gave me the impression that it’s quite different from her other, later work and not just because it's not middle grade fantasy.

The Islands of Chaldea by Diana Wynne Jones: I think that the barrier to finishing this one, apart from it trying to hide underneath our bed, is that, once I finish it, that’s it, no more Diana Wynne Jones. I’ll still have The Skiver’s Guide and Changeover unread, but they’re not at all the same sort of thing.

The Steerswoman’s Road by Rosemary Kirstein: I believe this is a combination edition with the first two books in the series and that I finished the first book and a bit of the second. I know a lot of people who really and truly adore these, but I wasn’t sufficiently hooked to care. I may or may not go back.

Balance of Trade by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller: I think I read about half of this, but I wasn’t hooked by any means. With these authors, I love maybe one book in five (possibly even in ten), and I haven’t bought any of the more recent ones because I got ticked off at some things Sharon Lee said. It’s not an ethics/morals thing, just irritation that I can’t currently separate from the author’s work.

Wolf Captured by Jane Lindskold: I’ve read the beginning and the end of this one, but there’s a chunk in the middle that I haven’t yet read. I don’t feel very motivated in spite of having the following book sitting on the shelf, too.

The Gambler’s Fortune by Juliet McKenna: It’s been so long since I read any part of this series that I think I’d have to go back to book one and start over. I can’t remember if this is book three or book four. Scott’s read it and liked it, I think, and we’ve got the next two books somewhere around.

Resenting the Hero by Moira J. Moore: I will probably get rid of this one. I read half of it and then put it down and forgot about it. The world building was interesting, but I’m not sure it was entirely worked out.

Broken Blade by Kelly McCullough: I bought this on the strength of McCullough’s WebMage series which I really, really liked, but I couldn’t get into this one at all. I think it was that I didn’t connect with the point of view character. I’ve kept it because I want to try again.

Troubletwisters by Garth Nix and Sean Williams: I may let this one go. I’m generally more likely to finish books like this than other books right now, and the fact that this one has been ⅓ read for about three years now probably means I’m never going to get to it.

Captive Prince by S. U. Pacat: This one’s just not my thing, so I’m going to get rid of it. Anybody want it?

The Firebringer Trilogy by Meredith Ann Pierce: I know I’ve read the first book and the very end of the third book, but I’m not sure I read anything in between. I’m also not convinced that I’m going to.

Battle Magic by Tamora Pierce: I will read this one and probably soon. Mark Reads has gotten up to where I left off, and I think I can use that as impetus to get going again. It’s just hard because there have been so many hints, in other books set later, of how bad things are going to get for the characters.

Cast in Fury by Michelle Sagara: I’m pretty sure this is the one I stopped in the middle of. At any rate, out of the three unread volumes in this series, it’s the one with a bookmark in it which seems like a fair indication. I very much want to get back to this series because I remember enjoying it a lot.

Francesca by Joan Smith: I started this one and didn’t care for it, so I think I’ll get rid of it.

Coronets and Steel by Sherwood Smith: I wasn’t sure how to count this one because I read a draft of it many years ago but haven’t yet opened the copy I bought. I liked the draft enough to buy this one and the two sequels, so I definitely do want to read it. I just keep not picking it up because I’ve already kind of sort of read it.

Senrid by Sherwood Smith: I started this one summer when Cordelia was four or five and going to camp for half day sessions. Those were short enough that I would find a place out of sight (she’d cry inconsolably if she saw me but be fine otherwise) and read. I started this one then but didn’t end up finishing it before the week was over. If I’m recalling correctly, I left it in my backpack and forgot about it for a while. When I found it again, I wasn’t quite sure where I’d left off.

A Stranger to Command by Sherwood Smith: This book is a mismatch with me. I like the main character, but I found myself not very interested in what he was doing. I will certainly keep it, but I’m not sure I’ll go back and finish it.

The Cloud Roads by Martha Wells: I think I actually finished about 75% of this. I need to go back and figure out where I was and finish the rest because I liked it quite a bit, enough to buy the next two books in the series before I finished this one.

I do intend to read all of the following. Probably.

Graphic novels and manga:
The Authority 1-2: A friend suggested that this series might fit for a vaguish superhero plot bunny I had a while back. I may or may not ever do anything with that idea. These have only been on the shelf about a month.

Avatar the Last Airbender: The Rift 1-3: I’ll get to this eventually. I bought it mainly so that Cordelia could read it, so I’d better make sure she has before I hide it in our bedroom.

Drug & drop 1-2: I’m iffy about CLAMP at this point, but I was curious about this, so I picked it up. (I waited a while to see if our library would get it, but they don’t seem to be planning to.) I’m sure this completely josses the Legal Drug fic that I wrote way back when.

Fruits basket 11-16 (two copies of 15): I’ve got an additional complete set of this in a box in the basement that I bought largely to get the last few volumes that I’d missed when they first came out. That means I have duplicates of the first two thirds of the series. I can’t remember why I stopped reading this. I’ve been spoiled for a lot of what happens.

Hikaru no Go 10: I’ve read up through about v.5 or v.6, and we own everything up to at least v.10. I’m just not sure where they are (possibly on the shelf on Scott’s side of the bed). Scott bought everything that was out at that point as an anniversary present for both of us and was then very disappointed that I didn’t read what he’d bought.

Read or Die 4: I need to locate my copies of 1-3 so that I can reread them before I read this one. As I recall, I didn’t enjoy the manga nearly as much as I did the OAV.

Read or Dream 1

Rozen Maiden 3-4: I don’t have v.1-2 at present, so I’m not likely to read these any time soon. I picked them up on BookMooch because I really, really liked the anime.

Samurai Deeper Kyo 1-9: I bought these from the Friends of the Library book shop about five years ago. I think I paid $2 per volume. I haven’t ever opened them, however.

Secret Coders: Another very recent addition to the shelves. If I recall correctly, I wanted to give it to Cordelia but realized that, if I did, she wouldn’t read it.

Utena 1-3: This is another one I’ve had forever. I just can’t get myself to start them. I’m a little afraid of what I’ll find, given what I’ve heard about the manga.

Weiss Side B 1, 5: One of these is in German which I can’t read; the other is in Japanese which I also can’t read. I’ve tried the scanlations more than once, and I can’t follow them. I’m hoping that, with a book in hand, I can use the scanlations for the dialog and follow the art in the book (and maybe, just maybe, learn to tell the damned characters apart).

Young magician 3-7, 11: I have to find and reread v.1-2. I put them away somewhere when Cordelia was a toddler. (I think I’ve got a large plastic tub, maybe even two, filled with manga in the basement somewhere. I should find those because I want the Rurouni Kenshin for fic writing purposes.) I own v.11 because I found it cheap somewhere and thought I’d better grab it while I could. As I recall, I started this series because I loved something else by the author.

Date: 2016-01-30 09:26 pm (UTC)
chomiji: Yuya and Mahiro hugging each other and laughing - from Samurai Deeper Kyo (Yuya & Mahiro - friendship)
From: [personal profile] chomiji

Re Samurai Deeper Kyo: try to persevere at least through vol. 4, when Yukimura becomes an active character. That's when the series took off for me. Up to that point, it's very typical (if somewhat more prettily drawn) shounen manga, with random whacky opponents, attacks with names, and panty shots of and boob grabs at the lone main female character, Yuya (depicted in my icon along with Mahiro, who has a minor but recurring role). This was my first manga and I still love it a lot. It almost got the Saiyuki treatment when Tokyopop died with only a few volumes to go, but Delrey stepped in and published the last volumes as doubles.

Re the Hodgell: one of my favorite series, although she's not getting the editing she deserves now that she's at Baen. But hey, at least her books are being published (she had not one but two publishers die on her during the 1980s).

Hikaru no Go is something I enjoyed but not in a squee! fashion. It's basically a shounen sports manga, but instead of basketball or swimming, it's Go. There are a couple of female secondary characters, including a cute but talented Go player, Asumi (in icon here) who has a lovely little side episode about her conflict between being a fairly typical teenage girl who just happens to be a pretty ferocious Go player. She makes the right choice, IMO.

Edited Date: 2016-01-30 09:28 pm (UTC)

Date: 2016-01-31 02:32 am (UTC)
lemon_badgeress: basket of lemons, with one cut lemon being decorative (Default)
From: [personal profile] lemon_badgeress
For me personally, God Stalk and all the later books aren't...really the same thing. I adore God Stalk, and I really don't care about the others, because the series she's writing isn't what I read in God Stalk.

Date: 2016-01-30 09:35 pm (UTC)
scripsi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] scripsi
I was a bit scared Ivan's in-laws would be a disaster, but it worked better (for me) than anticipated.

And I know exactly what you mean about the last Wynne Jones book. I've read it, but then I had a good cry.

Date: 2016-02-02 08:22 pm (UTC)
scripsi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] scripsi
Wynne Jones wasn't translated to Swedish until I was well into my teens, so it was a lter Discovery for me too. And just a handful books are translated, so most of them I read as an adult. And i have never been able to persuade my son to read them either. :)

Date: 2016-01-31 12:57 am (UTC)
kalloway: A close-up of Rocbouquet from Romacing SaGa 2 (Default)
From: [personal profile] kalloway
I’m sure this completely josses the Legal Drug fic that I wrote way back when.

And the WISH fic I'm probably still going to write anyway somday, dammit!

I didn't expect to like Captive Prince, but I ended up really enjoying it and the sequel. The slavefic aspects I was expecting pretty much dried up in no time and the second book is pretty much all adventure (and even though I'm not a huge fan of slavefic, I was just curious what made it to big publisher territory). I think I'm in the same boat as a lot of people, waiting for the last one with excited apprehension.

Date: 2016-01-31 01:24 pm (UTC)
kalloway: A close-up of Rocbouquet from Romacing SaGa 2 (Default)
From: [personal profile] kalloway
I'm also happy to get more of WISH's story, even if it josses my plans. So even though I didn't like Legal Drug that much, I'll probably keep following Drug & Drop. *sighs* I'm really all over the place with CLAMP's stuff. Loved Angelic Layer, Cardcaptor Sakura, WISH, but not a huge fan of Tokyo Babylon, X, and I hated Chobits with a passion by the end.

I really think I read more out of weird curiousity than anything? I found the writing to be really comfortable, which I wasn't expecting at all.

I nope right out of a lot of sci-fi and fantasy that sounds really good on the back of the book, so I figure that while I like things, I don't always like how they're specifically used and that's okay.

Date: 2016-02-02 02:07 am (UTC)
kalloway: A close-up of Rocbouquet from Romacing SaGa 2 (Default)
From: [personal profile] kalloway
I liked the premise of xxxHolic but I'm pretty picky about long series. I may end up borrowing it and Tsubasa from the library at some point if I'm curious.

I'm not sure I'd have anything to write for either series, though I really like them. But there's a lot of stuff out there that I love - stuff I consider absolute favorites - that I have no interest in fanworks for.

I'm just tired of all the grimdark or people thinking they're doing something so new and exciting and turning stuff upside down and it's been done a thousand times. Or playing with race/sex/gender in a way that's really just as overdone as everything else. Usually it all just combines really badly.

Date: 2016-01-30 10:26 pm (UTC)
hamsterwoman: (Dragaera -- Morrolan's attention)
From: [personal profile] hamsterwoman
With you on the Paarfi books being a much harder read than the Vlad books, but I did enjoy Sethra Lavode a lot (plus, home stretch! :)

Aww, I'm sad to hear Captain Vorpatril's Alliance did not work for you. I found that for me, even after the Arquas descended, it continued to be fun, and then unexpectedly poignant.

Also that the Steerswomen books weren't your thing. I like them a lot, but read them in weird order, so maybe not a good indication of normal reading, but the second book was my favorite. So maybe worth another look, especially if you liked Bel and/or Rowan and Bel's friendship.

Captive Prince by S. U. Pacat: This one’s just not my thing, so I’m going to get rid of it. Anybody want it?

Heh. I find #2 is much, much more my thing than #1 (because slavefic is not my thing either). But you would have to get through #1 to get there, which is probably not worth it.

Oh, I didn't realize you've read Sagara's Elantra books -- I know so few people who are familiar with them! It's a frustrating series for me, and I'm several books behind, but I think Fury was one I actually liked. I don't much care for the next two, but I actually liked #7 (Cast in Ruin), because it scratched a Dragaera-like itch, finally.

I really enjoyed Cloud Roads, but haven't read on in the series yet, though I plan to.

I thought AtLA's The Rift was a lot better than the previous set. Although partly it's probably that I'm a huge Toph fan :)

Date: 2016-01-31 09:00 pm (UTC)
hamsterwoman: (Default)
From: [personal profile] hamsterwoman
I've heard the feedback that the slavefic in Captive Prince is the wrong kind of slavefic from another friend, who's a fan of the genre (done right), but since it's not my thing, I'm not sure I'd be able to tell the right kind of slavefic from the wrong kind of slavefic :P

It feels lived in, if you know what I mean, and the characters still have lives when they're not on screen.

Yes, I like that about the books. Elantra really does have a feel of a fantasy metropolis, which is one of my favorite tropes when it's done right (Ankh-Morpork, Adrilankha, Camorr). The thing that frustrates me is the narration/prose, which feels very under-edited to me -- too many asides and "verbal" tics that don't add up to a compelling sense of character for me and just irritate me as a reader, because I feel like I'm hacking through an overgrown path instead of gliding smoothly through the narration. A friend who has spent some time with the author says Michelle Sagara talks like that, too, so it's not intentional artifice, apparently, but I do find it interferes with my enjoyment of the story, to a greater or lesser degree.

Date: 2016-02-02 08:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ramenkuri.livejournal.com
Balance of Trade by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller

Yeah, it took a while for me to get into this, and you won't miss all that much by skipping it. I preferred it on the second reading when I wasn't worried for the main character.

Fruits Baskets
Obviously I'm alone in this given all the FB fans but after a while I thought everyone was psychotic. Reading the end didn't really improve things for me, but as I said, I'm probably the only person who thinks this.

Date: 2016-05-21 06:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ramenkuri.livejournal.com
Ah, the Theo books are so hard to read! Theo just isn't as endearing...

I do agree, I still enjoy Conflict of Honors and Plan B.

Date: 2016-02-02 11:48 pm (UTC)
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)
From: [personal profile] carbonel
Battle Magic is indeed very, very dark. It was easier to take because of all the foreshadowing, but I haven't felt moved to reread it.

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