cimorene: closeup of a large book held in a woman's hands as she flips through it (reading)
After I read Ivanhoe, I decided to read more of the works of Walter Scott because I read that he was a childhood favorite of William Morris and likely influence on his writing.

First of all, he definitely was. A lot of the archaic-seeming terms that Morris sprinkles throughout his quest novels were still in use in the 18th century in Scotland and are found abundantly in Scott's novels chronicling the recent past: the time of his life, his parents', and his grandparents'.

Ivanhoe was really hard to get into because of Scott's efforts at historical accuracy and the slow commencement of plot (a bit like Tolkien in that respect, except the language is much denser), but also because its primary themes are about racism Read more... ) Be that as it may, however, I found that the novel picked up a lot in the middle after its slow beginning; there were lots of fun and unputdownable parts. I like Scott's use of language and his sense of humor very much, and I found the parts about Robin Hood and his men extremely delightful.

So next I read Waverley, his first novel, which is about the Bonny Prince Charlie revolt, the one with Culloden. From the start I found it much more readable. It's explicitly set sixty years before its publication date, and the language and subject matter is more familiar to me (Scott was a contemporary of Austen, possibly the most comfortable narrative voice for me). In terms of the plot, Waverley, too, begins a little slowly, and it took me some months to read because of this, but it, too, picks up as it nears the halfway point, and develops a lively adventure plot and a strong thread of humor. Read more... )

The third book I read was The Antiquary, which was Scott's third published novel in 1816, and I ABSOLUTELY LOVE IT. It is by far my favorite that I've read so far. By way of blurb, here's the beginning of the article on Wikipedia (emphasis mine):

The Antiquary (1816), the third of the Waverley novels by Walter Scott, centres on the character of an antiquary: an amateur historian, archaeologist and collector of items of dubious antiquity. He is the eponymous character and for all practical purposes the hero, though the characters of Lovel and Isabella Wardour provide the conventional love interest. The Antiquary was Scott's own favourite of his novels, and is one of his most critically well-regarded works; H. J. C. Grierson, for example, wrote that "Not many, apart from Shakespeare, could write scenes in which truth and poetry, realism and romance, are more wonderfully presented."

Scott wrote in an advertisement to the novel that his purpose in writing it, similar to that of his novels Waverley and Guy Mannering, was to document Scottish life of a certain period, in this case the last decade of the 18th century. The action can be located in July and August 1794. It is, in short, a novel of manners, and its theme is the influence of the past on the present. In tone it is predominantly comic, though the humour is offset with episodes of melodrama and pathos. (Wikipedia)


In terms of the plot and humor and vibes, The Antiquary reminds me strongly of some of Georgette Heyer's humorous adventure novels, like The Talisman. It is full of rural Scottish scene-setting, however, vivid portraits and examples of Scottish English dialect from all classes - deliberate, but carefully edited to be readable to an English audience, I am informed by the introductions. Someone might dislike these, but I enjoy them. The romance does not have such a central part in Scott's novels, though, compared with Heyer, although it does seem that he felt he couldn't write a novel without including one.

The vivid, fully-rounded, rather satirical character portraits are beyond Heyer, though, and a bit more similar to Austen perhaps (although Scott's writing isn't really like Austen's). The comedy of manners is delightful. The Antiquary himself, according to the introduction, was apparently based on a friend of Scott's father, and enabled someone who knew his family as a child to guess who had written the book (which was published anonymously, a practice Scott eventually stopped). But I recognized in him one of the more delightfully humorous characters from Waverley as well (Baron Bradwardine), although I gather it isn't the style of dialogue which these two characters have in common that gave Scott's identity away, but the details of the Antiquary's household and interests and so on. (These are also great.)

It's sad to think, after finishing something I enjoyed this much, that it is perhaps the one of his works I was most likely to enjoy, going by these descriptions. But I will continue to read more of them, at least for a while. I skipped Guy Mannering because it reportedly has a plot device quite similar to one in The Antiquary, and am about to read The Monastery.
cimorene: painting of two women in Regency gowns drinking tea (tea)
I saved the best for last, because this one could actually have been written for me. I didn't sign up, but early in the year when I watched "The Name of the Rose" for the first time, and repeatedly throughout the year, I talked about how much I enjoyed the production and feel and wanted to simply spend more time in that world. Lo and behold, a second murder mystery set in a different medieval cathedral! And it's about polyphony! When I say I saved it for last, I mean I only read it after I had been through the rest of the archive and read everything else I thought I might like, so this is fresh in my mind, having been finished last night.

Ciel D'Oro (18766 words) by CenozoicSynapsid
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Il nome della rosa | The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Adso da Melk, Guglielmo da Baskerville | William of Baskerville
Additional Tags: Case Fic, Murder Mystery, Monks, Scholastic Philosophy, Polyphonic Music
Summary:

The second book of Adso of Melk, in which is described his journey to the city of Pavia, together with a description of the cathedral which is named San Piero Ciel D'Oro, and of the tombs of Augustine and Boethius and other famous men who are buried there. Containing also a narrative of a most infamous murder, and the investigations of this matter which were made by the learned friar William of Baskerville, employing methods of deduction. And in addition some discourses on music sung in one voice or in many voices, namely which of these is most fitting and proper for the celebration of the Holy Offices and the most solemn feast of the birthday of our Saviour.



It does make me think I should look for some more murder mysteries in medieval monasteries, or nunneries maybe. I haven't quite gotten around to that, except for that Chaucer series, which I didn't love.

For the rest of the recs there's Jurassic Park universe, gen, social media and conpiracy theories )

Greek Mythology, Hades/Persephone and others, gen, various warnings )

Russian folktale/Baba Yaga/Vasilisa the Brave, gen )

Diana Wynne Jones's Eight Days of Luke, gen )

Georgette Heyer's Friday's Child, Gil Ringwood/Ferdy Fakenham )

Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe, Archie/Nero, sharing a bed angstfluff, slight kink )

Shetland, Duncan/Jimmy )

Little Women Amy/Laurie modern au )

The Snake Fight Portion of Your Thesis Defense McSweeney's post - gen - 2 stories! All the others were isolated. )
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (Default)
Hello, new people and fellow rediscoverers of DW!

In light of Tumblr Exodus I thought I would point to the bio in my profile and the blanket permission statement there (though in short: comments from new people are welcome; feel free to follow me; feel free to introduce yourself if we don't know one another; almost nothing is access-locked). For anyone newly subscribing to this blog, you may be interested in the introduction post 10 Things I Assume You Know About Me If You Read My Journal (this was a meme that went around LJ in 2006. I've just had it pinned to my profile & periodically updated)(though in short: I'm 36 and have been in fandom since 2001; [personal profile] waxjism is my wife).

I have been using Tumblr more than DW over the past few years, and am now making an active effort to increase my engagement here. (I need to look for more communities, I suppose.) I used to do 'what am I reading and what am I watching' sort of roundups here, and I haven't done one in ages; therefore, here's a hopefully comprehensive Survey of My Fannish and Non-Fandom Interests and Hobbies )
cimorene: Photo of a woman in a white dress walking away next to a massive window with ornate gothic carved wooden embellishment (distance)
I was thinking I had quite a few more Heyers to collect, but when I ordered this last one and went through the list of reprints on the inside front cover, I discovered that the several rare ones I was thinking of haven't been reprinted, and most of the others are (a) ~historical novelizations~ (like The Royal Escape and Simon the Coldheart) instead of historical romances, (b) largely concerned with the Napoleonic wars, like False Colours An Infamous Army (and there's no way I'm reading that), or (c) about Spanish brides (a subgenre to which I have an incredibly strong aversion so I won't be buying those either). So in fact, the only books remaining to buy are:

  • Powder and Patch (one of the Georgian ones, which I generally like less, but I will be buying it);

  • These Old Shades (I remember it well and don't like it, so I'll be delaying that a bit);

  • Pistols for Two (short stories, so I can take it or leave it); and

  • The Grand Sophy (I have a very amusing-looking and semi-battered 1984 US edition, but as my wife agrees that its non-matchiness is an eyesore I'll be getting the new one anyway.)



I did notice that I failed to post reviews of some of the novels as I read them, though, which caused a lot of trouble for me before Yuletide when I was trying to untangle in my brain which one was which - the result of all this being that it took me about 10 skimming rereads and nearly a week to pick Felix Hethersett from April Lady as the other half of my pairing. My poor memory. :(

Anyway, back to The Toll Gate. The male protagonist, an ex-Army younger son full of heroism, thrill-seeking and whimsy, is the almost-exclusive POV character in a mystery plot that in fact falls short of the rollicking adventure to be found in many of her road trip novels (like Charity Girl or The Foundling). The romance subplot doesn't present much of a conflict, if any, although the emotional reality of the scenes between the hero and heroine is probably the firmest point of the book, and in itself well worth reading. But back to the mystery - and the ending... )
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (windswept)
Well, for Yuletide I wrote Clean Linen for RosieR. This is 22,000 words of sequel to Georgette Heyer's The Unknown Ajax with a crossover cameo from April Lady's Felix Hethersett (Claud/Felix).

The Unknown Ajax is one of my favorite Heyer novels and I passionately ship Richmond/Vincent, but since I love everything about it I signed up for "any". My recipient had requested Claud slash without specifying whom she wanted him slashed with. I kind of thought she was just trying to be nice, and asked (through proper Yuletide channels) for a clarification of her preference, but it turned out that she really honestly didn't have one, except not slashing him with Richmond (I'm not sure why she felt that way, but it accorded with my shipper's soul, since I only want Richmond to be paired with Vincent); and she gave the okay to OMCs, which was how I decided to borrow a sidekick from another Heyer book. (Well, actually, I combed through about 20 different Heyers from my shelf before I settled on Felix, but the story there is lengthy.)

Besides the scandal, shenanigans, and madcap coincidence plot which I thought was necessary to make a good Heyer story (fervent thanks go to [personal profile] fairestcat for helping me to hammer that out!), the main thing I wanted to do was put homosexuality into Claud's life. Claud is one of Heyer's many secondary characters who read as coded-homosexual to me, and I wanted to add the homosexual lifestyle - subculture, that is - to the story. In the clueless stage I asked my spouse, and she provided the Period Equivalent of a Gay Club prompt. Also invaluable to me in writing this was this book I got for my birthday:

Strangers: Homosexual Love in the Nineteenth Century by Graham Robb. The author is an award-winning biographer who carried out a great deal of research around Europe using primary sources, and the book has lots of fascinating information on how people lived, hooked up, found each other, and talked about what they were doing throughout the 19th century. There's also a section devoted to homosexual representation that addresses Evil or Dead Queers (not by that name), including EM Forster's comment that Maurice wouldn't be big because his protagonists survived it without punishment. (Ouch.) Also, did you know that Tchaikovsky and Hans Christian Andersen were gay? That Walt Whitman lived with a little laborer dude happily, but once denied the homosexual implications in Leaves of Grass in writing? That throughout the history of Christianity many have read the Bible as Jesus/John the Baptist (est rel), and that one of the books removed from the Bible in the middle ages by the Church intimated as much very much more directly? That Arthur Conan Doyle's life was changed when he met Oscar Wilde at a dinner party, that he still talked about it years later, and that he declared his intention of making a study of homosexuality, which he considered not a hanging offence but a medical matter? (Robb theorizes that Holmes is based on Wilde. That whole section is awesome and, ahem, pretty wild.) In short: BUY THIS BOOK.


To return to "Clean Linen" for the moment, nobody commented that I was too obvious with the Richmond/Vincent in the background, so perhaps my decision to remove the part where Richmond tells Vincent that he's not in the petticoat-line was effective after all. I still worried that I was being a bit too obvious with my actual shipping preferences, so feel free to tell me if you thought so. I'm currently weighing whether to write a Richmond/Vincent sequel to it, actually, for my own satisfaction if nothing else. I originally envisioned all of that being entirely off-screen, but nonetheless resolved in the course of the story; but when I reached the end I realized that I don't think they are ready to hook up yet, after all.
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (umbrella)
  1. An Original Work (Authenticity and Provenance Debateable). St Trinian's, Annabelle/Kelly. Hustle crossover. A con job requires Annabelle to pretend to be Kelly's girlfriend.


  2. The Beginning of Wisdom. Poirot, Poirot & Hastings, friendship. Hastings comes home to England; Poirot has a Christmas plan all ready for him. Casefic... kind of.


  3. Just Rewards. Poirot, Poirot & Hastings friendship and/or smarm. Hastings gets ticked off on Poirot's behalf; Poirot counsels patience.


  4. The Mechanical Heart. Sherlock Holmes, Holmes/Watson UST. This is clearly a pairing story in addition to casefic, but as nothing is explicit aside from Holmes's passionate concern for Watson's safety, and occasional whimsical concern for his happiness, it could actually fit quite well in canon - probably without shocking a Victorian readership.


  5. Of Events Past and Future. The Masqueraders - Georgette Heyer. Canon pairings, gen. Prudence and Robin, their father and their spouses beguile an afternoon around the fire with a tale of their past escapades (by which we mean 'cons') told by Pru. Which is bloody fantastic - hilarious, wonderful, exactly in the style of the original. Made me wish for a whole novel or four of sequels (well, prequels?), like a Georgian version of Hustle.
cimorene: Photo of a woman in a white dress walking away next to a massive window with ornate gothic carved wooden embellishment (distance)
I've started making a list of subgenre/tropes in the Heyer books which are thus far in my collection, and you know, I think you could make a whole typology of these comparable to that Anatomy of Folklore book.

As I was remarking to [personal profile] isilya the other day, reading a lot of Heyers is a bit like reading a large collection of SGA AUs, for example. One can have little doubt that it is the same cast of characters being recycled again and again, usually rotated through different roles in the story. So a good step there would be making a cast list of Heyer Types. An example will be a handful of recs for the Heyer neophyte who has read none of the well-known ones aside from The Grand Sophy and Cotillion (which are first recs of course).

  • The Masqueraders (sub-genre: London, Georgian, B-romance: brother) - this is the CROSSDRESSING one! In which the whole book contains two intertwined romances. A brother and sister, children of a con man on the lam and raised to be experts in his arts, decide to go into hiding in plain sight in London... by going in drag. The heroine assumes the guise of a gentleman, and she and the hero fall in love like that; and her brother assumes the guise of a lady, and he and the reigning belle of society fall in love like that. OMGSOAWESOME, though its originality of concept and plot means that it has little in common with the other Heyers in the typography.

  • The Talisman Ring (sub-genre: country house, humor, mystery, B-romance: younger) (notable types: Sense of Humor Woman as the heroine; Spoiled/Stupid Young Beauty as the B-heroine; Fervently Earnest Foreigner as the B-hero) - a charming adventure story saturated with meta

  • Friday's Child (sub-genre: London, post-marriage, sinister seducer) (notable types: Naïve Chit as the heroine; Charming & Airheaded Daredevil as the hero; Knowing One and Amiable Fool as the Comic Relief Sidekick Pair) - one of the most requested Yuletide fandoms due to a pair of extremely gay secondary characters, Gil Ringwood and Ferdy Fakenham. Actually starts somewhat before the marriage, but gets it over with inside a chapter or two.

  • April Lady (sub-genre: London, post-marriage, gambling brother, B-romance: younger) (notable types: Earnest Girl as the heroine; My Child Man as the hero; Impetuous Spoiled Brat as the B-heroine; Worthy But Boring Man as the B-hero; Knowing One as the BFF; Charming & Airheaded Daredevil and Amiable Fool as the Comic Relief Sidekick Pair) - my favorite of Heyer's not-uncommon romances which start after the principals are already married, with some favorite secondary characters including the heroine's brother Dysart and his friend Cornelius "Corny" Fancot, who are less gay but sometimes funnier than Friday's Child's Gil and Ferdy. Corny and Ferdy are the same Heyer Type, but Gil and Dysart are different.

  • The Reluctant Widow (sub-genre: country house, humor, mystery) (notable types: Sense of Humor Woman as the heroine; Man With A Plan as the hero; Worthy But Boring Man and Young Scamp as the hero's brothers) - one of the most hilarious Heyers by my lights and a favorite due to a cosy nesting atmosphere and a favorite secondary character in the hero's young brother Nicky, who is a prankster; although, fair warning, [personal profile] isilya dislikes this one because there's a bit of insanity/crack in the premise.

  • Venetia (sub-genre: adult, country house) (notable types: Sense of Humor Woman as the heroine; Rake as the hero; Young Genius as the heroine's brother; Worthy But Boring Man and Infatuated Puppy as the heroine's previous suitors) - one of the nicest of Heyer's romances which deal with two mature adult characters, with an amusing cast of characters including the heroine's memorably disabled brother

  • The Unknown Ajax (sub-genre: country house, mystery) (notable types: Sense of Humor Woman as the heroine; Young Scamp, Dandy, and Sarcasm Man as the hero's cousins; Magical Noblewoman as the heroine's aunt) - one of Heyer's most successful adventure and mystery plots, plus a very unique hero who puts on a hilarious fake Yorkshire dialect when he realizes that his snobby family think he is a hick; also notable for gay secondary characters (Scamp/Rake! I ship it!).

  • Bath Tangle (sub-genre: Bath, adult, B-romance: older) (Spunky Woman as the heroine; Sarcasm Man as the hero; Worrying Woman as the B-heroine; Not!Col-Brandon as the B-hero) - my favorite of Heyer's books set in Bath because the secondary characters and plot are funniest in this one

  • Sprig Muslin (sub-genre: cross-country quest, taking care of others' teenagers, spoiled/stupid beauty, invisible heroine, humor, B-romance: younger) (notable types: Man With A Plan as the hero; Earnest Girl as the invisible heroine; Spoiled/Stupid Young Beauty as the B-heroine) - a rollicking madcap adventure, one of my mom's all-time favorite Heyers, and probably my favorite of the ones where a beleaguered hero ends up, simply due to his gentlemanliness, saddled with some exasperating young teenager/runaway and spends the whole book trying to dispose of them again. I actually like all the books in this sub-genre fairly well, but they also all have in common the Invisible Heroine, which means she barely appears on page and certainly barely interacts with the hero. There's some kind of Iron Law of Heroines Staying at Home While the Hero Deals With These Annoying Kids in Heyer's Secret Playbook, I'm pretty sure. Anyway, while I like the books on their own merits, I do hate that about them. I actually like the romance in the quite similar Charity Girl better, but I find Sprig Muslin a lot more fun.
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (WHAT?)
Besides the fact that the romance itself is underdeveloped and the overall speed of development I found a tad tedious, the main problem with Cousin Kate is a seriously problematic treatment of mental illness, in my view. Considering the publication date that's not entirely a surprise, of course (the state of mental healthcare in the late 60s was quite bad - we were still at Lithium, Valium, It's All In Your Head, electroshock therapy, and Girl, Interrupted in the US - this just from my own vague non-specialist's knowledge, so the input of someone with more facts is always welcome). It's a bit hard to get my thoughts completely in order to dissect it, so I'd be very interested in the opinions of other people familiar with it. What I can definitely say is that )
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (Default)
The Foundling would make a great movie, actually. Whether that's in spite or because of the fact that it's not plotwise actually a romance but an adventure is... unclear. See, the premise has a romance worked in - and a screenwriter could easily bring it a bit more into the foreground - but in words on the page, it's all background, with very little screentime. Interestingly, the objects are old friends, so spoilers! )
cimorene: A cream and white cat curled up and sleeping contentedly (^_^)
The last two Heyers I bought!

Black Sheep is another book about a mature, independent lady of breeding and fortune living in Bath and acting as a duenna who mistakenly regards herself as a spinster (see Lady of Quality, Bath Tangle, etc). It's also one of the most emotional and romantic - not to say sentimental, which it isn't, though it is full of feeling, dwelt upon, brooded over and presented with crystalline clarity. )

The Quiet Gentleman belongs to the constellation of Heyers that includes The Unknown Ajax and even Venetia (which approaches the formula from the heroine's side, mostly): the heir returning to his birthright, surrounded at the country estate by extended family. It's also, like Regency Buck, got a THRILLER PLOT!! pasted on yey. Heyer's skills lie far more in investigations of murder after the fact than in thrillers (see the ponderous mysteries Penhallow and Footsteps in the Dark), but TQG avoids getting tangled in its own traces as Regency Buck does by concentrating more on Heyer's own Regency High Life~ formula. (Warning: mystery plot spoiled within.) Why is Martin trying to kill his half-brother? Or IS he, dun-dun-dun? )
cimorene: painting of a glowering woman pouring a thin stream of glowing green liquid from an enormous bowl (misanthropy)
arrow fredericaarrow lady of qualityarrow regency buck

angela carter - the bloody chamberamber omnibuseight days of luke

penguin holmes    penguin holmes


These are the principal books I demanded for Christmas from Wax, but I also got a Tracy Chevalier (whom I like, but don't follow eagerly) and an Alexander McCall Smith (been meaning to try) from my mother outlaw. And then I ordered an Alice in Wonderland omnibus for myself (I ordered the one with the awesome cover art, but it remains to be seen whether it will have been a mistake not to get the annotated one)(Those two covers are remarkably similar, but the simple grace of flat mary janes will always triumph over the lumpy, clomping, unattractive outline of platforms).

Yesterday Wax forgot that today was a bank holiday, so our decision to put off visiting Customs for my package first for five hours of fruitless puzzling over taxes and then until today... backfired and now we can't go to Customs after all. Also, we've got a lot of Lindex translashuns to do. Oh, Lindex, World-Class Fashion? How can you claim it, when I was in your store just yesterday marvelling at the dowdiness of your mannequins?

Besides the Heyers, at the recommendation of [livejournal.com profile] notjemima I've already read the bloody chamber )
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (WHAT?)
Regency Buck is a departure for Heyer - it's got the plot of a thriller pasted on, more or less. Someone's trying to kill the heroine's brother Peregrine, but who? The problem with this plot is that all the "clues" are tiresomely (and artificially) belaboured, while the mystery is nonexistant, since the real answer is painfully obvious despite such strategems as writing from the point of view of the hero, who actually knows the entire truth, while selecting strangely and unnaturally vague word choices and scene cuts to "hide" it from the reader (although, again, it's still painfully obvious and she's not fooling anyone). In short, she clearly wasn't cut out for writing thrillers, or perhaps she needed a great deal more practise at it. But either way, despite all this I still preferred it to the "Oh Noes, Gambling" plots.

Regency Buck with several quotes, including Mr. Brummell at his best! )
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (fun)
Dude, this is one of my mom's favourites. She quotes it all the time and I hadn't even read it in years!

Indeed, she had once demanded, in a moment of exasperation, if he cared for anything but his clothing. To which he had replied, after subjecting the question to consideration, that although his clothes were naturally of paramount importance, he also cared for his horses.


The Marquis of Alverstoke: a hunk of burning heterosexual manlove with an incredibly fastidious approach to clothes and a languid-snark approach to conversation. Oh, Georgette, you crazy lady!

urggh

19 Dec 2008 04:20 pm
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (sproing)
↵ I've never petted a sheep! Even though we have lots of them in Pargas near Ängisbacka, where by 'we' I mean Finnish people who... live there, but they're not so, er, common (existant) this close to downtown Åbo.

↵ There should be more green velvet in the world. Like this.

↵ I am not my mother, and my kitchen is tiny, and I need to find a Channukah meal that doesn't require preparation in three or four separate dishes because scheduling won't permit it. The only separate one will be the potatoes. And [livejournal.com profile] wax_jism will probably be in charge of it, because I don't feel up to the stress of deciding.

↵ Georgette Heyer slash that there should be more of: The Unknown Ajax, Richmond/Vincent

↵ My mom's and dad's extended families are both starting to question about whether I will be able to visit the US soon. "I don't know - will you be able to visit Finland soon?" seems like an unfair rejoinder, but seriously, as much as I would like to see them, several thousand euros don't just appear. That trip would cost more than the total amount we spend on the holidays every year, for example. More than we spend on books and DVDs in a year too. And it's not like I'd be willing to just stop buying books and DVDs to afford it, either. An aunt who had a hard time getting it together to visit Alabama from Kansas (11 hours by car) more than, what, three times in my entire childhood should have no trouble grasping these concerns. That's the total income, excluding the rent but not anything else, of several months.
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (lady)
Marriage between first cousins is nothing unusual in Heyer's world, or indeed in Heyer's day, so The Unknown Ajax )
cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (i am the others)
Terry Pratchett's Nation is what the Golden Compass trilogy wants to be when it grows up.

DWJ's House of Many Ways was in some ways predictable, but bursting with drollness and unexpected charm. I think I prefer the slightly sunnier reality in the Howl/Castle in the Air universe to the sort of rainy-English-boarding-school flavoured one of the Chrestomanci, er, multiverse (not the writing, though, because there are several incredible standouts among the Chrestomanci chronicles). However, the Magid verse of Deep Secret/Sudden Wild Magic is still my favourite. I think that after years of preferring Archer's Goon and Eight Days of Luke, though, a second reading and plenty of time to digest it confirms The Merlin Conspiracy as my definite #1.

And in Georgette Heyer, the last one I bought was The Nonesuch. )

I always read books in descending order of how much I expect to enjoy them and review them in the opposite order.

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