inulro: (Default)
55. We by Yevgeny Zamyatin

This month's bibliogoths selection.  The mother of all dystopian novels.

Even grimmer than I recalled.  Though, I have to say, New Labour (and to be fair, every government now that we have the surveillance tech)'s wet dream.

Nobody actually liked it, but it did generate a lot of discussion.

56. The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters

I've only read two of Waters' books before - Fingersmith, which I love, and The Night Watch, which was technically very good but not really my thing.

This blows both of them (yes, including Fingersmith) out of the water.

It's a departure for Waters.  There are no lesbians.  There is, in fact, no sex.  The narrator is a straight middle-aged man.

Set in 1947, it's the story of the decline of the family in a local Big House and how the local doctor gets sucked into it.  It works equally well as a ghost story or a story of too much isolation leading to descent into madness (no prizes for guessing which interpretation I favour).

I'm completely unable to do it justice - I was glued to it from the first page.

Go. Read. Now.

57.  The Night Sessions by Ken McLeod

My cup runneth over with good things to read!

Obviously, I can't resist a detective novel set in near-future post-apocalyptic (sort of) Edinburgh by an author I already rate highly.  It's a startlingly good mystery, along with the usual mix of interesting (and usually hilarious) ideas that only McLeod can come up with.   As [livejournal.com profile] hirez pointed out, McLeod's pretty much alone in having goth and transvestite characters that feel real. 

Again, not doing it justice.  Just go read.

Profile

inulro: (Default)
inulro

May 2022

S M T W T F S
1234567
89101112 1314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 23rd, 2025 06:32 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios