Sunshine Book Club Week 5

Feb 08, 2014 13:33

A lot of things happen in this section, although it still feels like the calm before the storm to me. Rae's dark vision is endlessly fascinating to me - I've never been entirely sure of what all she's seeing, but it's cool to think about, especially since she's noticing a lot of secret things (or is she just imagining them?). And then more SOF - ( Read more... )

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Comments 8

biggersandwich February 9 2014, 18:27:17 UTC
Yolande is SO interesting. I really want to know more about wardskeepers because so far Rae mostly sounds like she thinks of them as skilled, but not different in the way that SOF and sorcerers are. But then it becomes clear that Yolande does have this totally different perspective on the Others/human situation, and Con's master was involved with the Blaises and there are so many hints that the society in this book that seemed so recogniseable is actually a lot more fractured than we can see. I really want Yolande's story, because she's so firmly presenting "normal to the point of boring" and yet, she survived a difficult job and knows so many unexpected things....

I love how McKinley describes the dark vision because I can't quite imagine it, and yet I feel like I can when I'm reading. So cleverly done.

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accidentallymel February 9 2014, 20:34:44 UTC
I require 500 pages of backstory on every single character in this book, and some of the ones who are only mentioned (Rae's dad, anyone?). The hints that society in this world is more complicated than it appears at first are frustratingly tantalizing because they're never fully explored. And I'd love to know more about wardskeepers in general and Yolande in particular.

The dark vision is just - it's so weird, and I love it, because it's exactly the right amount of creepy and weird to fit in with the rest of the book.

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biggersandwich February 10 2014, 01:30:59 UTC
So much yes to all of this. I have a lot of respect for McKinley for writing this story instead of the sprawling Voodoo Wars epic (and, admittedly, think she's better at this kind of thing: I didn't like The Blue Sword as much as this or Chalice or Spindle's End at all, not that it's bad, per se), but oh, I would have read the hell out of it.

And one more way to say that vampires are not just humans with additions, because even when Rae is literally a human with this thing added on, it's always evident that it's alien to her, not an augmentation of what she had, the way acquiring something like the kind of night-vision cats have would have been.

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accidentallymel February 10 2014, 05:45:17 UTC
DO YOU WANT TO TALK ABOUT CHALICE FOREVER BECAUSE WE COULD TOTALLY TALK ABOUT CHALICE FOREVER, I'd never met anyone else who'd read it, but we should probably not do that here, I loved Chalice, and I have to agree that McKinley's strength is probably worldbuilding and little personal stories within these amazing worlds that she builds. Dragonhaven's another of hers that I really loved because it was such a personal story, while still being completely fascinating. Her characters are amazing.

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