thefourthvine: Two people fucking, rearview: sex is the universal fandom. (Default)
Keep Hoping Machine Running ([personal profile] thefourthvine) wrote2010-03-13 05:52 pm

Books: Gender Blender and The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms

Book I Have Issues With: Gender Blender, by Blake Nelson

Let's just present this as a conversation between me and the book.

Gender Blender: I am YA bodyswap!
Me: Sold.
Gender Blender: So. Let's start off with a spurious Native American legend! Ha ha, those wacky Indians and their crazy gender-swapping gods!
Me: Um.
Gender Blender: And then I think we should explore gender by reinforcing stereotypes! Emma is a sweet little gymnast A-student perfectionist, always eager to please, but also part of an evil bitch cabal! Also, she likes to talk about feelings. Tom is a slacker slobbo thrill-seeking baseball player dude! He likes to spit and punch things.
Me: Oh. Um. Look, since we're talking and all, can I ask you a question?
Gender Blender: Sure!
Me: If you're going to have a scene where Tom-in-Emma's-body looks in a mirror to have his First Real Experience of Boobs, and he's all excited about that, then why does Emma's only exploration of Tom's body consist of thinking Tom's dick is a chipmunk when she wakes up with an erection?
Gender Blender: Because, see, boys like boobs.
Me: But girls don't like cocks?
Gender Blender: Well, not good girls. Also, we prefer to use the term "boy part."
Me: This is my review, and I will call it a tiddlewinkle before I call it a boy part.
Gender Blender: Fine. Clearly you aren't a good girl.
Me: Nope. Also, why is there a whole chapter of Tom checking out the girls in the locker room (where most of them turn out to be ugly and fat!) and the shower, and getting to see the boobs of his crush and so on, but Emma never gets a chance to check out guys in the shower or the bathroom or anywhere?
Gender Blender: It might make boys uncomfortable. Plus, you know, she's a good girl, so obviously she wouldn't want to.
Me: I see.
Gender Blender: But I have many other things to offer! Did I mention that there is embarrassment squick aplenty?
Me: Oh, joy. Remind me why I finished you?
Gender Blender: My chapters are short. And you were desperate.
Me: Right.
Gender Blender: I did avoid the smoochy ending you were fearing. Don't I get credit for that?
Me: Sure, yes, absolutely. In the "other than that, Mrs. Lincoln" sense, anyway.
Gender Blender: You know, if you're going to be like this about it, I think maybe you should stick to bodyswap and genderswap in fan fiction.
Me: I will, thanks.

But you'll all be relieved to know that Tom and Emma got good grades on their gender report and learned not to argue so much. There. Now you don't have to read this. (If anyone feels like writing me bodyswap, especially Spock/Kirk or Sam-Teal'c, as a "thank you for saving me from this terrible book" gift, I will not say no. For the record.)

Book I Love: The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, by N. K. Jemisin

You know, when I used to play AD&D (when I used to have time to play AD&D), I was always welcome in any group I cared to join. Because I was willing to play the cleric. No arguments! No roll-percentiles-loser-has-to-be-the-cleric! No letting one person have two player characters if he'd make one of them the healer! I actually wanted to be on the god squad, giving hit points and taking them away (usually not to the same person). I liked using a mace. I preferred clerical spells to magic-user spells. But most of all, I loved gods. (I could, no lie, spend a whole hour just selecting my character's god. This is an important choice, people!)

So, you know, you give me a really well-thought-out pantheon, I am pretty much your girl. I will cling to you through two thousand pages of dense prose and let you kill off nearly all the awesome characters. I will even forgive you shoddy worldbuilding and cookie-cutter fantasy and women whose entire purpose is to have sex and make babies and then die so the hero can experience manpain. (To a point. Don't test me on this one.)

Which makes me all the more grateful that in this book, I didn't have to forgive anything. There's, yes, a massively awesome pantheon. (Some of the gods are slaves, and some are dead, and one is crazy, which is just so incredibly wonderful I can't even tell you. Um, not for the gods, though. Just the reader.) But it doesn't stop there, because this book is incredible: well-written, set in a world the author clearly actually put thought into, and not a Tolkien knock-off in sight. (I think this book might actually have killed Tolkien, in all honesty, if it somehow managed to travel through time to land in his extremely cultured hands. For one thing, the squat dark-skinned girl isn't actually evil, and the tall skinny white people sort of go beyond evil. We all know how hard he would have taken that.) Plus, it provides a functional education in all the things that can go terribly, terribly wrong with ruling by divine right. (Particularly if the divine right is, shall we say, explicit.) You have to admit that's a handy bonus.

I am supposed to pace myself with new books - otherwise I end up reading things like Gender Blender, which never ends well for anyone - but I couldn't with this one. I didn't so much read it as fall on it like a starving wolf. In the end, my only complaints with this book were 1) it ended and 2) there was not nearly enough of it.

If all fantasy was like this, you would not be able to pry me out of the genre with the jaws of life.
torachan: (Default)

[personal profile] torachan 2010-03-14 02:30 am (UTC)(link)
Wow, Gender Blender sounds SO BAD. DDDDDDDD:

princessofgeeks: (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2010-03-14 02:33 am (UTC)(link)
wow, you are like the tenth person to rave about jemison's book on my f list. i'm convinced.
killing_rose: Raven on an eagle (Default)

[personal profile] killing_rose 2010-03-14 02:34 am (UTC)(link)
...Oh dear. Gender Blender sounds like someone needs to inform the author that that is not actually how you write this topic. Please and thank you.

Plus side, you had a good book? (Must investigate this for plane ride of doom.)
dorinda: A black-and-white portrait of a little girl that gradually shifts to look demonic. (demongirl_animated)

[personal profile] dorinda 2010-03-14 02:38 am (UTC)(link)
This is my review, and I will call it a tiddlewinkle before I call it a boy part.

STAND STRONG, SISTER. *fist of solidarity*

Also, the Jemison sounds like just the thing! Many thanks for the tip, from my own starving-wolf-brain.
eisen: Guts & Casca (you might get lucky). [<lj user="vice">.] (keep watching the skies.)

[personal profile] eisen 2010-03-14 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
This was my face for the first review: >:(

This was my face for the second: >:D

I AGREE SO HARD WITH EVERYTHING IN THIS POST.
language_escapes: The main cast of St. Trinian's (2007 film) (Default)

[personal profile] language_escapes 2010-03-14 03:06 am (UTC)(link)
See, I always loved playing the cleric. And, like you, choosing the divinity always took me hours. It was important! It could make or break the entire character! The entire game! The entire WORLD! My group never really got my obsession.

All right, you have to be the eightieth person I've seen recommend The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms. I'm too busy writing my senior thesis right now, but when I graduate in June, I'm all over it.
dragonfly: (BT strangle)

[personal profile] dragonfly 2010-03-14 03:45 am (UTC)(link)
I can't write you a bodyswapping fic, but I can rec my favorite. It's not a well-known fandom, alas, but it's my fannish duty to toss what good stuff I know about around to the universe at large. This one is excellent and funny. It's a vampire fandom.

Bodyswapping Only Looks Fun on TV
by Emma Demarais
fandom: Blood Ties

You can put me down as another recruit to read The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms.
were_duck: Ellen Ripley from Alien looking pensively to the right in her space helmet (One Third)

[personal profile] were_duck 2010-03-14 03:57 am (UTC)(link)
Hundred Thousand Kingdoms: so good! Lives up to the hype!

Gender Blender: not touching that one in a million years. Thanks for the very entertaining warning.
msilverstar: (LOTR: Aragorn)

[personal profile] msilverstar 2010-03-14 04:03 am (UTC)(link)
*orders The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms*
aderam: (300)

[personal profile] aderam 2010-03-14 04:11 am (UTC)(link)
I am sorry your eyes had to experience that first book. It sounds horrible.

I think I might have to read the second book though. I'll put it on my massive list of to read (but I'll put it near the top).

In the books-with-cool-gods category I'd like to recommend Norse Code by Greg van Eekhout. Which is not an original pantheon (it is in fact the Norse Gods - surprise!), but he just does it so well! And brings them into the modern world without sacrificing all their cool Norse-ness and values and things. I asked for it at Yuletide, but no one wrote for it. Le sigh.

When I played D&D (we went through a few different editions based on which rulebooks we could get a hold of) I was always whatever class my brother and his friends weren't playing that we needed to round out the group. For some reason I was usually a rogue or a druid. And I sucked at playing both of them. Because no matter how much I loved the idea of making a character, in practice I would run into the middle of any melee and try to hit the enemy with my sword. This was not usually very good for my health, especially when I was a gnome or halfling. I've since learned that Dwarven fighters are the way to go. :)
dragonfly: (BT strangle)

[personal profile] dragonfly 2010-03-14 04:12 am (UTC)(link)
Uh, right. The "Plot" paragraph on Wikipedia is a pretty good summary.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Ties_%28TV_series%29

Henry -- the only vampire relevant to the story. 500 years old, son of Henry VIII, painter and graphic novel artist, drinks blood (in small, non-lethal amounts) from lovers regularly in order to live and desires Vicki, so he helps her with supernatural cases.
Vicki -- irascible, tough private eye, resentful of her attraction to Henry, used to be a cop and Mike Celluci's partner/lover, but left the force because she's going blind.

Mike -- Vicki's former detective partner, unfortunately knows that her new partner is a vampire and is very antagonistic about their relationship.
Coreen -- Goth secretary for Vicki, fan of the occult, has the hots for Henry who is not interested in her.
xenacryst: Spock, from Errand of Mercy (Ridiculously Attractive Spock)

[personal profile] xenacryst 2010-03-14 04:25 am (UTC)(link)
For the record, I have never confused my tiddlewinkle with a chipmunk. Not when it did that for the first time, nor even when it did that for the first time. I think it would have had to be particularly rambunctious and agile for me to mistake for a small member of the rodentia order.

However, I will definitely be keeping an eye out for Jemisin's book. Sounds quite good, that one.
livrelibre: DW barcode (Default)

[personal profile] livrelibre 2010-03-14 04:36 am (UTC)(link)
The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms was awesome!
blueswan: (Default)

[personal profile] blueswan 2010-03-14 04:44 am (UTC)(link)
Blearg on the first book.

I've got The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms in my shopping cart,while I've been trying to decide what else I want. *orders*
cofax7: climbing on an abbey wall  (Default)

[personal profile] cofax7 2010-03-14 04:59 am (UTC)(link)
someone needs to send [personal profile] nojojojo a link to this review, stat. She'll be so pleased. *g*
cofax7: climbing on an abbey wall  (Default)

[personal profile] cofax7 2010-03-14 05:01 am (UTC)(link)
Having met N.K. Jemisin (at last year's Wiscon), I can also state with authority that she is, in fact, entirely awesome in her person, as well.

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