A blog for people who don't want to spend all their free time in the real world. After all, we live and work there. Escape the mundane with books, travel, and writing.
by Melinda Brasher
by Melinda Brasher
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Soon to be Published in 50 Haikus
I just got an acceptance letter for a poem I submitted to 50 Haikus. It's from my oh-so-creatively named series, "Haikus Written on the Train." I wrote it...you'll never guess...while on a train. I'd just returned to my beautiful Czechia for the third time, and the scenery was pulling poetry out of me right and left. This one, "Gold," is probably the most serious of them all.
My issue (#16) isn't published yet, but meanwhile, you can check out 50 Haikus' website: https://50haikus.com/
Monday, June 8, 2020
Long May She Reign by Rhiannon Thomas
Long May She Reign by Rhiannon Thomas is one of the few books I've ever found of this
rare and wonderful genre that I don't even have a name for: a pseudo-medieval setting, an imaginative
culture, royalty…and no magic!!!! No
magical creatures or time travel or vampires.
I love fantasy, but I also a good non-fantasy fantasy. It allows great world-building without
letting the characters depend on magic to save the day (or ruin the day). To me, it's one beautiful permutation of how
the child of fantasy and historical fiction would look.
I love to read this non-fantasy fantasy genre, on the rare occasions when I find it, and I also love to write it. The very first novel I wrote--my so-far-unpublished baby--is this genre. One day maybe it will see the light of day.
Anyway, enough gushing on the genre.
As for this particular novel, I really enjoyed it. The queen was a scientist! Awesome.
Throughout the whole novel I was wondering who our main character could
trust. Awesome. The story wasn't very violent. I mean, there was a mass murder by poisoning
at the beginning, but the main characters tried—and often succeeded—in solving
their problems without violence.
Awesome! At the end, the queen
had to decide what to do with a gray character:
show mercy and weakness or show strength and cause more bloodshed. I find that what often happens in novels is
that the problem character conveniently dies or something, so the main
character doesn't have to be merciless OR weak.
Not so here. Our MC actually made
a decision. Awesome.
I did think some of the science and politics felt a big
simplistic and easily solved. Like, how
did they manage never to fight in this kingdom?
Especially with bad leadership and unhappy people? And what about other kingdoms who might take
advantage of their defenselessness? But
these weren't big issues that affected my enjoyment.
Some readers might think it a tad slow, because there
wasn't a ton of really actiony action.
But for readers like me, the pacing was perfect.
The writing was good, the characters interesting.
I absolutely recommend it and will soon read Rhiannon
Thomas' other books.
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
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