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Alison ([personal profile] landofnowhere) wrote2026-02-18 10:30 pm
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wednesday books about young women

Ties that Bind, Ties that Break, Lensey Namioka. Found in a Little Free Library; I'd previously read the autiobiography of Namioka's mother Buwei Yang Chao, recommended by [personal profile] osprey_archer, so I was curious to see how Namioka wrote historical fiction about her mother's generation. Our protagonist Ailin is very much not based on Buwei -- Buwei is the sort of person, where if you wrote her life as fiction, readers would not find it believable. (There is a minor character in the book who appears to be based on Buwei, and Namioka later wrote a sequel about her, but based on descriptions it sounds like it goes in a different direction.) Instead this is the sort of middle-grade historical novel that I ate up as a kid, and it is a well-written example of this, but as an adult I don't want the story to stop when the protagonist turns 19.

Chroniques du Pays des Mères, Élisabeth Vonarburg. Yep, you'll be getting updates on this every week, though I'll try to avoid spoilers (we are now almost halfway through). In this week's installment the protagonist starts college in the Big City, population 15,000, and so we get a bit of a fun school story, and also some comparative linguistics.
mgsx_mod: (MGS - mgsxmod)
mgsx_mod ([personal profile] mgsx_mod) wrote in [community profile] mgsx2026-02-18 09:33 pm
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REVEALS EXTENSION

There are still open assignments, so I will be pushing back reveals for another week.

I'm hoping to have fics reveal on the 23rd!

If you are done with your assignment, this is a great time to do some extra read-overs or touch ups on your art piece! Or, if you're feeling risky, try your hand at a treat?

lebateleur: Ukiyo-e image of Japanese woman reading (TWIB)
Trismegistus ([personal profile] lebateleur) wrote2026-02-18 05:17 pm
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What Am I Reading Wednesday - February 18

A short entry for today since I got home late from work and have to scramble to get to the next thing. Anyway, here's what I read over the last six days:

What I Finished Reading This Week

Lake of Souls - Ann Leckie
This is an excellent book (and I say this as someone who vastly prefers novels to short stories). Lake of Souls has three sections: stand-alone short stories, stories in the Imperial Radch universe, and stories in the Raven Tower universe, and they're all excellent. I enjoyed all but one of the stand-alone stories (and the sole story I didn't like, I didn't enjoy only because it's a bit of a downer. But it's also only 1.5 pages long, so hey). I'd read two of the three Imperial Radch stories prior to this anthology's publication and enjoyed them again here (I won't spoil "She Commands Me And I Obey" but IYKYK...and it's good.) The third, new-to-me story was my least favorite of the bunch, but only because it's so obviously a reskinned version of a standard folktale that didn't add much to the Radch universe or benefit from having Radch elements introduced to it. I was surprised by how much I liked the Raven Tower stories; in fact, I liked many of them more than the novel itself. The Raven Tower worldbuilding constraints just work so well in a short story format. And throughout all three sections, Leckie says a ton of incisive and so-sharp-you-won't-know-you're-cut-and-bleeding things to say about gender. This book was delightful and I will absolutely read it again.


What I Am Currently Reading

A Fate Inked in Blood – Danielle Jensen
I'm only about 50 pages into it but enjoying things so far.

The Laws of Brainjo – Josh Turknett
I'll have this one finished by next week.


What I’m Reading Next

I acquired no new books this week.


これで以上です。
kradeelav: Dr. Kiriko (amused)
krad ([personal profile] kradeelav) wrote2026-02-18 12:33 pm
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(no subject)

lil' funny my very real 2 year plan is 'peace out (of so many things) and literally become a bog hag hermit'

i've been slightly joking about going through a midlife crisis but uh, this is suspiciously resembling the 'buy a boat and peace out to the middle of the gaddamn pacific ocean' stereotype some engineers have.... :D;;;;

that said i do think this is going to -oddly- be a lot better for mental health since it's actually a bigger/more varied space than where i'm holed up currently (and i've been on a trending positive upswing of self-improvement even here over the last five years; think the key really is discipline in tackling areas of life where one's unhappy and trimming out the deadweight).

it's also interesting to reflect how there's always been a major life change about every 5 years for me; high school, college, the pre-covid first five years of work, the current stint.

lord, i'm ready for the next one. it's going to be busy for a while.



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mrissa ([personal profile] mrissa) wrote2026-02-18 10:47 am
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Books read, early February

 

Moniquill Blackgoose, To Ride a Rising Storm. I'm usually a second book person, but this one took a minute to win me over. I think the bar was set so high by the first one that when the second one felt like "more of the same," I was disappointed. It is, however, going somewhere, and it finished up with a bang, and I am very excited for the third one. (But where it finished with a bang was more like a starting pistol. Do not expect closure here. This is very much a middle book.)

Lila Caimari, Cities and News. Kindle. A study of how newspapers evolved and influenced the culture in late 19th century South American cities, which was off the beaten Anglophone path and rather interesting, especially because the way that snowy places were exoticized pretty much exactly paralleled how these cities were exoticized in snowy places.

Colin Cotterill, Curse of the Pogo Stick, The Merry Misogynist, and Love Songs from a Shallow Grave. Rereads. And this, unfortunately, is where the series ends for me. I enjoyed Pogo Stick, and then the other two had mystery plots that were "serial killer because tormented intersex person" (REALLY STOP IT, these books came out in the 21st century, NOT OKAY) and "bitches be crazy, yo" (WELP). The mystery plots are not nearly as central to these mysteries as one might expect of, well, mysteries, but on the other hand they are integral to the book and not ignorable and I am done. When I read this series previously I endured these two in hopes that it would get better again, and now I know it doesn't. Well. Five books I like is more than most people manage.

Jeannine Hall Gailey, Field Guide to the End of the World. I still resonate less with prose poems than with other formats of poem, and this had several, but it was otherwise...unfortunately apropos, a worthy companion in our own ongoing ends of worlds.

Tove Jansson, Moominpappa's Memoirs. Kindle, reread. Charming and quirky as always, with some hilarious moments about memoir that went over my head when I was small.

Laurie Marks, Fire Logic, Earth Logic, Water Logic, and Air Logic. Rereads. I still really enjoy this series, but on the reread it was quite clear to me that water is very, very much the weakest element here, no contest. The water witches are not really portrayed as people, nobody with water affinity gets to be a character, they're very much the "oh yeah I guess we have more than three elements" element in this series. Water is the element I connect with the most strongly. I still like this series, I still think it's doing really good things with peace being an active rather than passive state and one that has to be made by imperfect humans--more unusual things than they should be. As with the Cotterill books above, the fact that it was a reread meant that I couldn't keep saying to myself, "Maybe there'll be more on this later," because there won't, the series is complete. But in contrast to the Cotterill it was complete in a way I still find satisfying.

Alice Evelyn Yang, A Beast Slinks Towards Beijing. This is a family history novel with strong--in fact integral--fantastical elements, but only the realistic plot resolution is satisfying, not the fantasy plot at all. The fantasy elements are required for the plot to happen as portrayed, there's no chance they're only metaphors, but they only work as metaphors. Ah well. If you're up for a Chinese family history novel that goes into detail of the horrors of both the Japanese occupation and the Cultural Revolution, this one has really good sentences and paragraphs. But go in braced.

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silveredeye ([personal profile] silveredeye) wrote2026-02-18 12:27 pm

Candy Hearts 2026: reveals and recs

The Candy Hearts collection opened this weekend and I come bearing recs. First, my gift:

Vienna Blood Waltz (734 words)
Fandom: Invisible Inc. (Video Game)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Brian Decker/Maria "Internationale" Valdés
Characters: Brian Decker, Maria "Internationale" Valdés
Additional Tags: Arranged Marriage, Pre-Canon, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Flirting, Enemies to ???
Summary:

The moves to this dance are more complicated than Decker's used to.



The author went with my arranged marriage prompt, resulting in some absolutely delightful enemies-to-??? fiancés flirting. I love them and I love this.




Then, a smattering of fics I liked, ordered by length:

Dancing & Desire (The Goblin Emperor, Csethiro/Maia, Teen, 700 words)
Maia and Csethiro's first kiss, ft dancing lessons and Csethiro speaking her mind. Just a wonderful Valentine's chocolate of a fic.

I Just Texted to Say (Heated Rivalry, Scott/Kip, Gen, 1.5k)
Texts between Scott and Kip from their breakup to the Big Damn Kiss. Impeccable character voices, a really fun take on their dynamic.

Humans Need Chess Periods (The Murderbot Diaries, Murderbot&Ratthi, Gen, 1.9k)
Things I did not know I needed: Murderbot playing board games with Ratthi (recovering from concussion) and being good at chess.

Adrift (The Murderbot Diaries, Murderbot&Ratthi, Gen, 2k)
Murderbot and Ratthi are stranded in a small shuttle for several days. Beautiful dynamic, sort of really understated emotional h/c.

Missing the Point (FAQ: The "Snake Fight" Portion of Your Thesis Defense - Luke Burns, herpetology students, Gen, 2.2k)
The herpetology students have very different questions about the snake fight portion of their thesis defense. Pitch-perfect academic emails, adorable concept, made me laugh several times.

paradise (Original Work, Female Elf Noble/Her Male Drow Hostage-Secretary, Teen, 2.5k)
The original ship tag is "Male Drow Used To Being A Disappointment/His Female Captor Who Thinks He's Pretty Great". Moderately gnarly cultural conflict, lovely subdued developing relationship, vivid worldbuilding.

disorderly, and marvelous, and ours (Homestuck, Equius♦Nepeta, Teen, 3.1k)
Humanstuck, still moirails (and also childhood friends). Really lovely warm take on the concept.

how do you speak with your tongue pressed so tight to your teeth? (Fullmetal Alchemist, Roy & Riza & Olivier, Teen, 4.2k)
Riza shows up with injured Roy at Briggs, Olivier thinks a lot about this impressively competent adjutant. Fantastic character voices and character dynamics.




I have two fics in the collection, one even more obvious than the other. :D
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ioplokon ([personal profile] ioplokon) wrote2026-02-17 07:41 pm
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At last!

An English-language version of Les Libraries has launched! Head on over to https://www.booksellers.ca/ to check it out! It is basically a collective of independent bookshops with an online store that encourages people to shop for books locally. The French version has been around for 15 years and is basically how I buy all my French books. I'm excited for the English side to take off & give people alternatives to Amazon, Indigo, and the other big-name chains.

Another cool thing is that the English and French sites share a backend. So you can actually buy books in both languages at the same time, if you want (though it looks like in-shop pickup is not fully coordinated, so you would probably have to have them shipped).
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ryulynn ([personal profile] ryulynn) wrote2026-02-17 12:58 pm

2026 gaming post #5

I had yesterday off and went hard on playing Twilight Aqua City which is the latest Holicworks BL game and finished Touka's routes!

With a little trouble since there is no walkthrough available (I thought there might be one since it released 2.5 weeks ago but I guess niche game is niche), I did manage to get two different endings that had credits and three that took me straight to the title screen? This is a hefty game; I feel like I'm just scratching the surface in terms of what is going on in the world and with the other LIs.

(If a walkthrough doesn't exist by the time I finish maybe I'll put one together??)

It's only in Japanese which doesn't make it very accessible. It randomly uses old kanji for common words. But there isn't too much in terms of complicated spells, or Buddhist terms, or politics, so I feel like the game is more accessible than Taishou Mebiusline by far. I also have found it more interesting so far because of the main character having his own deal and connections already to the other characters prior to the start of the game that help shape it and the main character is not ignorant of it.

So I hope they localize the game. Because the art is gorgeous! Holy shit the most beautiful CGs in a BLVN that I've ever seen. And the studio just released a game two years ago? Everyone else big is taking 4-5+ years to put out their next work? Between this game, parade's Lesson, adelta Ooe, there was some feasting in the last year. I'm really hoping the BLVN industry in Japan can keep up with this.
rionaleonhart: goes wrong: unparalleled actor robert grove looks handsomely at the camera. (unappreciated in my own time)
Riona ([personal profile] rionaleonhart) wrote2026-02-17 07:54 pm

Fanfiction: Backup Heating (The Goes Wrong Show, everyone/everyone)

In the stage version of Christmas Carol Goes Wrong, Chris canonically refuses to keep the Cornley Playhouse heated, and everyone complains about how cold it is. It seemed like a great excuse to write self-indulgent fanfiction!

As this is based on the 2025 stage version of Christmas Carol Goes Wrong, be aware that some details may not match up with the original 2017 television version.

The title's not great, but the only other thing I could think of was Baby, It's Cold Inside, which would be considerably worse.


Title: Backup Heating
Fandom: The Goes Wrong Show (well, technically Christmas Carol Goes Wrong)
Rating: G
Pairing: slight everyone/everyone
Wordcount: 1,600
Summary: During rehearsals for A Christmas Carol, Chris won't allow anyone to use the heating. Clearly, the Cornley Drama Society is just going to have to huddle for warmth.

Backup Heating )
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mindstalk ([personal profile] mindstalk) wrote2026-02-17 10:20 pm

Feb 14: Yokohama and Chinatown

Album. Long day. Uphill outh of me to Yamate, train up to Kannai, walking south through a park and then Chinatown. Read more... )

I walked up and down through much of Chinatown, had a meat bun, various siu mai, a fried chicken cutlet or "dekatsu". None of the food blew me away, honestly. Oh right, sat down at a place with outdoor seating, ordered various dumplings; the soup dumplings were good.

kradeelav: Dr. Kiriko (amused)
krad ([personal profile] kradeelav) wrote2026-02-16 08:12 pm
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(no subject)

my dad is really sincerely great but there are moments when i am ngl a little shocked he hasn't darwin awarded himself out of the gene pool XD

> we're discussing the unfortunate quote for fixing an old ass furnace apparently at high risk for carbon monoxide leakage, as we just found that out
> he's been trying to weasel out of not having to pay
him: ok so what happens if you don't uhhh do anything?
[me and mom simultaneously, instantly] you die. :l

(anyway. i'm writing the check for this one. yeezus.)



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proustbot ([personal profile] proustbot) wrote2026-02-16 05:51 pm
Entry tags:

when youre an adult youre like i need more poisons ASAP

Genshin Impact (2020-, PC) -- Went through the 6.3 patch, because I'm going to be traveling for most of this week and wanted to give myself a fighting chance of finishing this year's Lantern Rite before it disappears into smoke in six days. (Although, now that I've dipped a toe in this year's Lantern Rite: hmmm, so far I am underwhelmed!)

Genshin Impact 6.3 A Traveler on a Winter's Night


I largely liked 6.3, though it did the exact same annoying thing that 6.1 did and straps you into Cutscene Masterpiece Theater for multiple hours of playing time. Still don't love that move, Genshin! However, it does this under the ambitious gambit of removing the player's character from the field of play and having most of the plot happen with the supporting cast. I enjoyed that. It is very dreary playing The Single Most Important Person In Teyvat all the time, and it's nice to see other characters get to steer the story for a while.

slightly sweaty attempt to explain a lot of baroque world lore to players who routinely button-mash through cutscenes )
shinon: Shinon and Gatrie from Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance. (Default)
No one, that's who! ([personal profile] shinon) wrote2026-02-16 11:58 pm

3SF, final week

...I'm still Pretty Bored All the Time so I may keep poking through prompts for anything I want to do for a while - but with 3SF prompting formally over, here's my most recent batch.

Tellius, Emily Wilde, EO2U )
kradeelav: Dr. Kiriko (amused)
krad ([personal profile] kradeelav) wrote2026-02-16 05:59 pm
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fft times

marquis elmdore is really such krad bait i literally said 'oh no' out loud at the tv when he first showed up lmao

look at me krad

you are not immune to a gorgeous sexy villain bishie

you have not been immune since 2003

:P 
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cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2026-02-16 11:23 am
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Education meme

Educational meme from [personal profile] thistleingrey (also seen at a couple of other places under lock). I've answered for both my sister and myself (generally similar answers, sometimes not), as well as for my kids. (Will eventually lock.)
Cut for length )
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Trismegistus ([personal profile] lebateleur) wrote2026-02-16 09:23 am
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Monday Media - February 16

A good mix of activities over the last seven days.

Games: Boardgame group has resumed, with the added bonus of two ridiculously cute and rambunctious new kittens. We played Everdell. And I mean played. We spent four hours on this 80 minute game. ) This is funny to remember now but it was even moreso to us at the time, when we were already slap happy from being up in the middle of the night, after a long gaming session, after a long week.

Music: We saw Nine Inch Nails, a phenomenal show and perhaps my favorite of the three times I've seen NIN live (the first with A Perfect Circle opening; the second their "final" show at Summer Sonic in Osaka). The GC, by contrast, had never seen them before and if you only had to see one of those shows, I think this was the one.Read more... ) So yeah, freaking amazing show. I wish I could watch it all over again.

Monday's house session had seven people—the biggest attendance since I've started playing with this group, and a commensurately big sound. The number of players also meant each individual called fewer sets but we played a bigger range of sets, and at different tempos, than the norm, which was both challenging and fun. And I'm going to adopt a few of those sets for my own calls in future sessions.

Podcasts/Articles: No podcasts. I did read a couple of longform articles: Apocalypse No: How almost everything we thought we knew about the Maya is wrong and The Privileged Life and Tragic Death of an 11-Year-Old Tipperary Girl.

Roleplaying: Nothing.

Television: We finished the final episode of Max Headroom season 2, and with it, the entirety of Max Headroom itself. Read more... ) All that said, Max Headroom is still one of the shows that was before its time, and cancelled before its time, and setting aside the few dud episodes it still absolutely holds up.

Video Games: Nothing this week, what with the concert + standing post-work activities + peace monkpocalypse during my commute.

これで以上です。
lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
lightreads ([personal profile] lightreads) wrote2026-02-16 02:21 pm

DNFs

Swordcrossed by Freya Marske

I’ve really liked some of her other books, but this one (secondary world M/M fantasy) just did not click. I got it from the library three times and appreciated Marske’s writing (always a highlight) but the trope set and the relationships just did not get me. Probably better if you like the inveterate liar falls in love thing.

Heavenly Bodies by Imani Erriu

Booktube strikes again. Enemies to lovers romantasy about the princess of the shadow kingdom kidnapped by the sunlight kingdom to train to kill a god. I was told this had good banter. The first 15% did not demonstrate that, just a lot of ham-handed writing and some cartoon sketchy worldbuilding. Meh.

Zone One by Colson Whitehead

I think his Underground Railroad is genius. Which is saying something, since I generally do not like when a book has a speculative twist but gets shelved as literary. This falls in the same camp – it’s a literary take on the post zombie apocalypse thing. Meh. Genre has done it better, with more interesting people (our main character here is deliberately a boring sad sack, but still), and at least the genre book wasn’t like “but what if capitalism was the zombie all along, huh, huh, huh? How about that?” Well, okay, some genre books do that, but we don’t have critics shouting about how brilliant and innovative that is.

Luminous by Silvia Park

Literary scifi about three siblings (two human, one robot) in a future unified Korea. I developed a near instant dislike for this book. I am told it is interesting and goes deep on the relationships between humans and robots. Robots in this future being property and commodities as a formal matter, but as a functional matter serving as everything from members of the family to romantic partners to servants to victims of horrendous abuse, often more than one of those. There was something about the prose style that was like sandpaper to my ear, and I could tell in just the quarter I read that there was going to be a certain emotional grotesquery here that left me nauseous. It’s supposed to, but meh, no thanks, life’s too short.
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candyheartsex ([personal profile] candyheartsex) wrote2026-02-16 02:05 pm
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Post-Reveals Pinch Hit

We have one post-reveals pinch hit! No need to formally claim it in advance, but I'll screen comments, so if you're able to create a gift for this request, please comment here after you've posted it so I'll know for sure that it's in.

PH 98 - Sleep No More - Punchdrunk, Sleep No More - Punchdrunk )

silverflight8: CA:TWS Winter Soldier walking to destroy Widow and Cap (winter soldier murder walk)
silver ([personal profile] silverflight8) wrote2026-02-16 11:54 am
Entry tags:

sf supernatural monsters

Something that I just don't usually do well with in sf/f is unnatural monsters presented in a scientific-ish context.

Admittedly I'm not into horror for horror, so I'm definitely missing a piece of the enjoyment that lets a fan of e.g. monstrous characters/enemies overlook other stuff - "OK the plot isn't great but I really liked the minotaur so it was worth the trade off!" which is definitely something I do for stuff that I care about, like interesting worldbuilding. Everyone's got their preferences and IMO it's not worth interrogating past that, sometimes you just like what you like. But the problem is the suspension of disbelief and the way that it breaks mine when sf tries to talk about horrifying supernatural monsters in a scientific context because then: WE HAVE BROUGHT IN BIOLOGY. (Oh no.)

I find a lot of horror wants to play off that fear that this monster is so much better than humans so we are helpless against it. OK. But unfortunately I cannot stop thinking about biology, and also, what underpins biology: energy. First, the biology part - there are lots of animals and not-animals here, today, in the past, that are better than humans on just about any axis. It's kind of what happens when you compare 1 species against, you know, several hundred millions of other species. There isn't really an apex of all apexes, there was no cosmic race to do that, and also no reason to do so. A species exists in a time and place and its unique constraints. Pretty much nothing is adapted to every conceivable environment - why should it be? And every species and individual makes trade offs because energy is not infinite. There are lots of advantages to being warm blooded like a human (being able to move! running from danger! actively capturing things!) but also lots of disadvantages (the number of calories you have to consume is staggeringly more than cold blooded, not to mention plants! you're limited by the productivity of the prey you eat!) There's not exactly a hard-and-fast rule that says anaerobic life forms are better at life than aerobic, I'm sorry. Each of them generally does extremely poorly in the wrong environment. As you add complexity you add to the number of ways things can go wrong, you add to the cost of maintaining all that infrastructure...It's always bothered me when the aliens are so much better for monstrous reasons just because Doylistically, that makes them scary. OK, but what does make them able to exist better than us in hard vacuum and in a hyperoxygenated environment like Earth? (Have you seen what oxygen does to stuff that has never been exposed to oxygen before? What it did to all the rocks that were present on the planet when it happened? The effects are still visible several billion years later. Have you thought about fire and why it does really well here and not elsewhere?) If they move faster than us, does that mean they need more energy? What about their joints? This is a part of my brain I am apparently unable to shut off if the context invites any kind of biological scrutiny. We are humans writing for other humans, we know our limitations imposed by biology and physics because obviously, we inhabit these bodies and have first-hand knowledge, which is unconsciously integrated into our art. When monsters are written this way, they appear to have no limits, and I find that weirdly frustrating. Not to mention the worldbuilding pretzel I find hard to respect when the monster is actually custom-designed to be extra scary or good at killing/destroying humans, when they did not know about humans - it's just too much Ah How Convenient, Humans Are The Center of the Universe (Negative Edition) to me. I'd respect it more if a monster was like "oh I have discovered Humans are a great snack, didn't know they existed!" rather than some cosmically horrifying this has always been out there to hunt you, a Very Important Organism from the Center of the Universe* statement. I don't think these concerns bother other people who like the genre, or use these concepts, it's just me. They wake up every ounce of my but actuallyyyy instincts and then I stop enjoying it as a book**.

I'm OK with totally magical (often in fantasy) monsters, since it just says OK, ignore all physical realities, this is something else. That's fine. I just can't with the halfsies position here.

(Indeed I did not enjoy Blindsight [I believe this is Peter Watts' exercise in despair], nor Into the Drowning Deep, nor right now, Leviathan Wakes.)




*Pretty sure we're in a backwater actually

** Actually I also don't appreciate, this time from a narrative perspective, the way many of those also do a late-book shift into re-examining the horrifying bits as Actually This is Beautiful, which I find both twee and irritating. THIS IS JUST NOT FOR ME