Tag Archives: N.K. Jemisin

Top Ten Tuesday: Authors I’d Have At My Thanksgiving Dinner

Good morning guys and gals (mostly gals), it’s Tuesday! Yay! I’m excited because my sis and baby nephew are spending the night tonight, but it’s also an exciting day because it’s time for Top Ten Tuesday, hosted by The Broke and The Bookish. This week’s topic is Top Ten Authors I Want at My Thanksgiving Dinner.

 

 

1. Christopher Moore – Because he wrote Lamb, and A Dirty Job, and so many other novels that make me laugh my ass off. And I am thankful for those. And I am sure he would be hysterical in person as well.

 

2. Diana Gabaldon - Because I will forever be grateful that she brought the Outlander series into the world. And so I can hound her for information about future books.

 

 

3. N.K. Jemisin - I loooooove her Inheritance trilogy (AKA The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms  / 100K trilogy). And I think she would be fun and snarky and interesting. And I think she’d be fun to get into political / social discussions with.

 

4. Matthew Norman – I REALLY enjoyed Domestic Violets. However, there were a couple of things I didn’t like about it, so I’d like to invite him so that I can hound him about any other novels he has in progress and make sure he doesn’t make the same mistakes. (I’m so rude.) Also, he seems pro-Obama in the book. Yay!

 

5. Emily Bronte – Because I love Wuthering Heights, and so I can quiz her about the rest of her family. I really wanna know if Charlotte Bronte was the crazy super-bitch I suspect she was.

 

 

6. George R.R. Martin – Because I want to ask him how in the bloody hell he keeps track of the HUGE number of characters and crazy plots in the A Song of Fire and Ice series. Which I love for it’s epicness.

7. Libba Bray – Okay, actually before I meet Libba I need to read more of her books, because I’ve only read Beauty Queens and thought it was AWESOME. And she seems like the kind of weird person I’d get along with. Plus, look at her glasses! I would try to steal her glasses, those are cute. And to ask her if she goes by “Libba” because that way, her name kinda looks like “library”. Yes, these are the thoughts that I think.

 

8. Patrick Rothfuss - Because he’s PATRICK F-IN ROTHFUSS. I need insider info on the rest of the Kingkiller Chronicles! And he has to being baby Oot with him to dinner – normally I wouldn’t allow children, but his blog posts about his son are just so cute.

 

9. Paullina Simons – Ya’ll know how much I love The Bronze Horseman and Tatiana & Alexander. But the last book in the trilogy, The Summer Garden, was AWFUL. And I need to beg her to re-write it. I realize that’s a crappy reason, but it’s that serious.

 

10. Jane Austen – Because the invite list wouldn’t be complete without her! I have so many questions for her – like which of her novels was her favorite, and how does she feel about the Brontes, and what does she think of the skanky-ness and general impropriety of this generation?

 And of course I’d hit up each of these authors for their autographs in my copies of their books, because ya know… I’d HAVE to.

And there are a bunch of other authors I’d want to include – Jesse Petersen, Philippa Gregory, Mercedes Lackey, Anne Bronte, and yeah, it wouldn’t be just a “dinner”, it’d be a damn banquet!

Okay folks, that’s all I got. What are your author picks? OH, and go vote in my December poll on the right-hand side!

~Sarah

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Kingdom of Gods by N.K. Jemisin

So this is the conclusion to an amazing fantasy trilogy by N.K. Jemisin – you can see my reviews for the first two books here:

The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms (1)

The Broken Kingdoms (2)

Seriously, these books are the fantastic. Jemisin has created such a complex, fascinating world in which gods and godlings are ever present in the human world and I can’t say enough good things about it.

So this here third book focuses on Sieh, the child-like godling seen in the previous two books. I love Sieh, and I am SO EXCITED that he got a whole book focused on him. This takes place probably around 100 or more years after the events of the last book. Basically Sieh becomes entwined in human affairs, specifically that of his former captors, the Arameri. He gets acquainted with two Arameri children – Shahar and Dekarta and things kind of spiral from there. While suffering a huge blow to himself, he also attempts to unravel the mystery of who exactly is killing off Arameri and attempting to wage war on the Three gods.

I really can’t give too much more description than that without including some major spoilers. I love Sieh, and definitely felt a lot for him trying to deal with stuff throughout this book. The Three gods appear in the book often, which makes me happy. And we get a whole lotta new background information about them and what led to the last Gods War. And the events of this book are like EPIC.

Also, there’s a cool little extra follow-up story at the end about some older characters, which was neat.

So now, if you are at all interested in good fantasy, pick up this series because it’s outstanding. I’m already looking forward to re-reading them all!

Sarah Says: 5 stars

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To be or not to be… a supernatural creature.

So, recently reading and reviewing Perfect Fudge by Hazel M. Larsen (see previous post) has got me thinking about supernatural creatures, and the choices characters make in these books about whether or not to be one (if they even have the choice). Now, as a human I don’t want to live forever. I’m hoping to keel over when I’m a little over 70. But as a supernatural creature, it’d be so fun to be immortal. I know that’s not everyone’s cup of tea.

So, here are a bunch of supernatural / paranormal / fantastical beings I’ve read books or seen movies about.

Angels: I’m about to get a little spoiler-y here, because I want to clarify why the angels in Perfect Fudge (see previous post for review) are so cool and a fun concept. As you know if you read my review, it introduces a unique concept of guardian angels. These guardian angels don’t really have any biblical connotations, but they help people. They can also fly, teleport, turn invisible, cook food with their mind, heal, clean with the blink of an eye, and whether they start out older or younger, they’ll eventually and then forever appear to be in their 20′s. Of course this is a kind of new version of the idea of angels, but I think it’s awesome.

*I would totally choose to be an angel. There’s almost zero downside.

Vampires: Of course the paranormal lore is different according to legends / authors / movies, but most agree that vampires drink blood (human or animal in most cases), have super speed and strength, and are burned by sunlight. I think the slight majority opinion is that vampires can hold on to their humanity if they choose – at least Christopher Moore, Anne Rice, Charlaine Harris, and Stephanie Meyer think so. (I probably just discredited this theory a bit by mentioning Meyer, but hey whatever). I personally agree with this – I think vampires can choose how humane they want to be. I don’t believe that vampires are “damned”, but that has more to do with the fact that I don’t believe in heaven or hell, so how could I believe in damnation? And even if someone showed me proof that all that existed and your soul could be damned… well I don’t know if that would convince me not to be a vampire.

*If a vampire walked up to me tonight and offered to make me a vamp… I would definitely want to say yes. Honestly, the only thing holding me back here is that the honeyman said that if I was a vampire, he’d have to try to kill me. And you know, that kind of means breaking up, and I don’t want that, I love my honeyman. Honestly, angels can do more cool shit than vampires, but for some reason the idea of being a vampire is more appealing to me… it’s probably just more familiar of an idea.

Werewolves: Again, the lore is really different here. Some say that werewolves only change during a full moon and have no control during that time. Some say that weres that change whenever they want and are conscious the whole time. Most agree that you transform into a big huge scary wolf-like creature (unless you’re the director of the 3rd Harry Potter movie, in which you think weres transform into some weird, sad hairy mandog-looking creature). Generally though, werewolves are bad-ass and powerful and scary-looking.

 *Whether or not I agree to be a were would depend on the lore we’re going with here. I personally choose to think that weres are like the ones on True Blood – that they can change at will and know what they’re doing when they’re in that form. And if that were the case then hell yes I’d be a werewolf.

Witch / wizard: Okay, does this one even need much explaining? The term witch general means one who can do magic – cast spells, has powers, etc. They’re usually not immortal. My personal favorite? The Charmed witches. I love Piper. Oh and Harry Potter of course, can’t forget him.

*I’d agree to be a witch in a heartbeat.

Elves: Elves are cool fantastical creatures. They’re usually nature-nuts, proud, arrogant, secretive, and skinny. But they’re also powerful, graceful, and have magical abilities. In most fantasy, elves are not to be trifled with.

* I suppose that yes, I’d agree to be an elf. Even if meant me getting all weird and slender looking.

Fairies: I think that sometimes the lines between fairies and elves blend and are kind of together called “fae” creatures. I usually think of fairies as little pixies – tiny winged creatures with magical abilities, like Tinkerbell. Gotta love Tink.

* I don’t think I’d agree to be a fairy… depends on the scope of magical abilities. But I think I’d feel too vulnerable being that tiny, and the biggest appeal of being a supernatural creature is being able to feel like the shit and be powerful and stuff.

Mutants: Now here’s a fun one. I’ll let in on a little secret… I believe almost any of these paranormal creatures could exist. Who the hell am I to say that they don’t just because I’ve never had the luck to meet one? I know, I know, I’m like a big kid. Anyways, I like the idea of mutants because to me they are the most likely supernatural creatures to exist. Well, actually they’re still technically humans. They’re not magic, they’re just evolutionally-advanced humans. But still, I’m counting em. Think of the X-Men, the X-Men are awesome! Sure, some of them have pretty lame mutations, but most of them are cool and useful in some way (after all, the point of nature evolving like this would be the progression of human life).

* Sign me up! I know I’m 24, but I’m still hoping some sign of cool mutant abilities will show… or maybe I’ll just go the Alex Mac route and get cool mutant-like powers from radiation and chemicals :-) It’s either mutant powers or cancer… 50/50 odds aren’t too bad, right?

Zombies: Okay, who the hell would want to be a zombie? I’m including them on the list because they are a really popular paranormal creature these days, but they’re basically rotting humans that can’t think anything other than “BRAAAIIIINSS”.

* Hell no, I wouldn’t be a zombie. But I can’t wait for the zombie apocalypse so I can be a zombie-killer! I’ll judge anyone who actually says they’d choose to be a zombie. Weirdo.

Unicorns / Dragons: These are two of the most popular paranormal animals really. Unicorns are supposed to be all sweet and crazy magical, and dragons are supposed to be all nasty and fire-breathing. Honestly, I think both are really cool but I don’t think I’d ever choose to turn into one. I’d feel like a magical pet.

Giants / Goblins / Leprechauns: So these don’t need much explaining. Giants are huge, goblins are tiny and mean, and leprechauns are tiny and lucky. I think I’d reject all of these just on basis of size. 

 Gods: Well, gods are pretty self-explanatory too. I’m thinking of two sets of gods in particular – the Greek mythology gods, and the gods and godlings in the Inheritance Trilogy by N.K. Jemisin. Either way, all are bad-ass. I love that gods are such all-powerful beings, but that they’re also usually petty just like humans. I don’t know why humanity ever gave up on Greek gods as a religion, I probably would have been a believer.

*I would totally be a god. You practically can’t be killed, and you are the baddest mofo out there. Seriously as powerful as all hell. For someone whose severe lack of ambition means I want to be a housewife, I’m surprisingly power-hungry when it comes to paranormal creatures.

I think that covers most of the supernatural creatures I’ve been thinking of…

Oh, and for funsies here are some of my favorite books / movies relating the all of the above:

  • Perfect Fudge by Hazel M. Larsen (angels)
  • Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris (vampires, werewolves)
  • Inheritance trilogy by N.K. Jemisin (gods, godlings)
  • Bloodsucking Fiends /You SuckBite Me by Christopher Moore
  • Interview With A Vampire by Anne Rice
  • X-Men movies
  • Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon (time-travellers, not mentioned)
  • Living With the Dead series by Jesse Petersen (zombies)
  • Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini (dragons, elves, fae)
  • Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling (witches, wizards, unicorn)
  • The Kingkiller Chronicles by Patrick Rothfuss (wizards, fae)
  • True Blood tv show (vampires, werewolves, fairies, fae)
  • Charmed tv show (witches, leprechauns, giants, fairies, vampires)

So, whatcha think?

If one of these creatures walked up to you and offered to make you one of them, would you do it? Which one would you want to be the most? Any that I missed that you’d choose to be? Or would you go the crazy route and refuse them all and choose to remain human?

 ~Sarah

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Filed under Angels, Fairy-tales, Fantasy, Fiction, Harry Potter, Outlander series, Random, Sci-Fi, Vampires, Zombies

Top Ten Tuesday Freebie: My Favorite Series

Good morning everyone! This is a very good Tuesday – my little sister is coming into town to visit and she’s staying with me, so I’m going to get a  LOT of quality time with my new little nephew, L. (Expect a post of pictures sometime this week.) It’s also a good day because it’s time for Top Ten Tuesday, hosted by the fabulous peeps over at The Broke and The Bookish! This week’s topic was a freebie, and I was surprised that a TTT post dedicated to favorite series hasn’t been done yet. (I looked at the list of past TTT’s like three times, but if I’m blind and I missed it, please let me know.) So, my topic this week is Top Ten Favorite Series. Which will include trilogies. Okay, let’s get to it!

 

1. Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon: I’m sure this doesn’t come as a surprise to anyone. This is my favorite series in the whole world, and major depression will set in when it finally ends.

 

2. The Kingkiller Chronicles by Patrick Rothfuss: The next book probably won’t be out for another two or three years at least, but the first two books in this series are OUTSTANDING. Some of the best fantasy I’ve ever read.

 

3. Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling: Well, duh. Do I even need to explain why this would be on my list?

 

4. A Song of Ice and Fire series by George R.R. Martin: I’ve only read the first three books so far, but this is a wonderfully huge and epic story. It’s hard for me to imagine it ever ending. It’s full of really interesting characters and many big storylines.

 

 

5. The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins: I’m SO glad I tried these books – they’re SO GOOD, and I flew through all of them. The honeyman and I have decided to read one book together a month starting in September, and we’re starting with The Hunger Games, which he’s never read before. I’m really looking forward to the re-read.

*Fun fact: This is the only series on my list that doesn’t have some magical / fantasy / sci-fi aspect of it. At least from what I remember – it’s dystopian and set in the future, but I don’t remember any paranormal aspects. Or is my memory failing me?

 

6. The Inheritance Cycle (AKA the Eragon series) by Christopher Paolini: I started these books 6 years ago when I was working at Waldenbooks, and it’s been love since then. The last book, Inheritance, comes out in November and I can’t wait!

 

7. The Living With the Dead series by Jesse Petersen: Married couple Sarah and David battle zombies together when an outbreak occurs in Seattle, and it turns out zombie therapy is good for your marriage. Who knew? This books are awesomely funny, and I hope there’s more to come for Sarah and David!

 

 

 

8. Tales of the Five Hundred Kingdoms series by Mercedes Lackey: If you like fairy tales, try out these awesome fantasy books. They’re fun, magical, and always have a bit of romance in them. The newest one, Beauty & The Werewolf, will be out this fall!

 

9. The Inheritance Trilogy (AKA the Hundred Thousand Kingdom series) by N.K. Jemisin: These awesome books take place in a world where people and gods mix. Can’t wait for the third book to come out in October!

 

 

10. The Lucy Valentine series by Heather Webber: I highly recommend these romance / mystery novels. They’re fun, quirky, and absolutely adorable. There’s no word yet on when the next in the series will be out, but I hope it’s soon!

So those are my ten favorite series! I could have probably added at least 5 more, but I was able to restrain myself. I also have a huge list of series that I want to try out some time… but I think I’ll save that list in case another Top Ten Tuesday freebie comes up :-)

So what are some of your favorite series?

~Sarah

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>The Broken Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin

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Goodness, goodness me – I am loving this trilogy. My only slight disappointment is that the third book doesn’t come out until this fall. I don’t wanna wait that long!

This is the second book in Jemisin’s Inheritance Trilogy (not to be confused with Christopher Paolini’s Inheritance series AKA Eragon), and it’s every bit as wonderful as the first book, The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms. While this is written so that it could be a stand alone novel, I really think you’re better off reading these books in order.

Anyways, this story takes place ten years after the events in the first book. Our heroine is Oree Shoth, a blind street artist living in Shadow. Oree’s life kind of revolves around magic, gods, and godlings. This causes problems for her one day when she discovers a godling murdered in an alley. From there Oree and her mysterious mute house guest are thrown into a brand new conspiracy. And that’s all I really want to say about this plot, because I don’t want to give anything away. Just go start reading this series now.

A couple characters from the first book make an appearance here as well – namely the Three gods. Sieh, a child-god from the first book, also shows up (I <3 him). A whole bunch of new characters are introduced as well, my favorite probably being a godling named Madding. I am totally engrossed in this world in which gods interact so closely with humanity. The whole world that Jemisin has created is just fascinating to me. I actually wish we lived in this kind of crazy world.

The most exciting thing is that I won’t have to wait long for the third book, titled The Kingdom of Gods – according to the author’s site, it’ll be out on October 27th. And I believe the main character of the third book will be Sieh. I am beyong excited about that!

So, go start this trilogy. Now. Please?

Sarah Says: 4.5 stars

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>The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin

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LOVED this!

Yeine is the young ruler of a relatively poor nation called Darre (or Darr? it’s spelled both ways in the book), whose mother has recently passed away. Still greiving, she’s summoned by her grandfather Dakarta Arameri – the Arameri are the elite, and the most elite live in the palace of Sky, which actually is a city in the sky. Her grandfather disowned her mother and therefore she’s never met him before, but she sets off when he calls.

Dakarta names her his third heir, leaving her as a contender to the throne, along with her two cousins. While at the palace, Yeine learns more about the Arameri ways and learns a lot of horrifying things. For instance, that there are so many servants and family members forced to serve there. And that there are enslaved gods there, forced to serve the god Itempas, and controlled by the Arameri. Yeine has very little time to learn enough to try to save her own life.

It took me a little bit to get into, because of all the unfamiliar names and places, but once I settled into the story it flew by. (Plus, I realized later that there’s a glossary in the back in case I forgot what a word meant).

Yeine is an awesome character – She was intelligent, tough, and bad-ass (I’m all about girls carrying knives), but she was also very compassionate. She felt badly for the servants in the world of the Arameri, she feels badly for the enslaved gods, and she does her darndest to protect those she cares about. She has a great sense of right and wrong.

The story wasn’t so much about the power struggle between her and her cousins for the throne. That actually kind of fell into the background as it became apparent that the conspiracies and intrigues surrounding the enslaved gods were more important. And the gods were some of my favorite characters – Nahadoth is creepy and insane and scary, but we see different sides of him. Sieh is most child-like, but he was also intelligent and sneaky and incredibly endearing. Even the other gods were interesting to read about, though not quite as fun. I really enjoyed reading about the Gods’ War. And I loved that the deceit and manipulation of the Itempas priests mirrored that of Catholicism and Christianity – the falsifying or destroying of historical records to suit their own purposes. It made the plight of the gods easier to relate to.

Overall, this book just has it all – great story, amazing characters, fantastic imagery, wonderful writing… I absolutely cannot wait to get my hands on the sequel, The Broken Kingdoms.

Also while this isn’t THAT important – it’s nice to come across a book, especially a sci-fi book, that has a non-white girl as the heroine. I never really notice it, but 90% of the characters I read about are white, so the fact that Yeine is bi-racial made is just a bit more awesome.

Sarah Says: 4 stars

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