rocky41_7: (Default)
rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote in [community profile] booknook2025-09-26 04:04 pm

Book review: The Other Wind (and more)

Title: The Other Wind (and sundry short stories)
Author: Ursula K. Le Guin
Genre: Fantasy, adventure

That's a wrap, folks! Today I concluded the entirety of the Earthsea Cycle by Ursula Le Guin for the first time. The final book in this series is The Other Wind, but the collected volume I have also includes after that a few short stories by Le Guin set in the Earthsea universe as well as a lecture she gave at Oxford on gender and the Western archtype of a hero. Seemed best to lump these all together for this review.

I was emotional about this book from the start, and I can only imagine it was moreso for those who had been familiar with Ged and Tenar for decades before this book was published. The Earthsea Cycle begins with A Wizard of Earthsea in Ged's childhood, before he's even discovered his propensity for magic, and here at the start of The Other Wind, he is a man in his seventies, puttering about his old master's house and waiting for his wife and daughter to come home. We've gotten to see Ged throughout his life--as a child, apprentice, wizard, archmage, goatherd (take 2), old man--and this continuity and journey really got to me.

At the end of the previous novel, Tehanu, the mantle of hero is passed on narratively from Ged and Tenar to their adopted daughter, Tehanu, but it's here in The Other Wind that Tehanu really comes into herself. Given Tehanu's past trauma, the way she clings to Tenar and Ged makes sense, so it was very rewarding to see her grow into herself here and eventually claim the power she was told by the dragon Kalessin she possesses at the end of Tehanu

As with Tehanu and Tales of Earthsea, women play a much more central role in The Other Wind. Our noble king, Lebannen, who came into his own in the third book of the original trilogy, is really blown hither-and-thither by the women of the book, who are the real plot-movers. Tehanu, the youthful rising power; Tenar, the wizened heroine; Irian, the free woman who's embraced the power Tehanu shares; Seserakh, the foreign princess who brings Kargish knowledge of dragons; these are the real players of the game. The kings and wizards who follow in their wake exist to help them carry out the plot. 

As with all the Earthsea books, Le Guin focuses her fantasy without centering violence. The great plot of The Other Wind essentially boils down to righting an ancient wrong, and it is resolved through shared knowledge and cooperation. On the whole, the book feels quite positive and we leave Earthsea for this final time on a sweet and hopeful note.

The conclusion itself feels perfect: Ged and Tenar on Gont, talking of nothing, in the end. Who else but Le Guin would have concluded her epic fantasy series with her male hero explaining how he'd kept up the house in his wife's absence? The pair go for a walk in the woods, and that's where the overarching plot of Earthsea ends, beautiful in its simplicity. 

After The Other Wind come a few short stories by Le Guin set in the world of Earthsea. These are fun little tales, none longer than fifteen pages, which have nothing to do with any of the characters we know, until the final one. If you like the worldbuilding of Earthsea, these will be a great addition. The final one, for reasons I won't spoil, had me getting choked up even though I suspect from the opening paragraphs what was happening. 

I had such fun exploring Earthsea and while I wish I had gotten into them when I was younger (because I know how much I would have enjoyed them as a teen!) I'm still glad to have found them now (and I can just envision the daydreams I would have spun about my own female mage OC if I had known about these books then...) I know I'll revisit Earthsea and the adventures of its heroes again, although I'll stick to the paper versions--I've heard nothing good about any of the attempted screen adaptations! It truly feels like this has been a journey, and what an enjoyable one its been.
kalloway: (DL Nefaria)
Kalloway ([personal profile] kalloway) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-09-26 11:42 am

30 Minute Missions - She

Title: She
Fandom: 30 Minute Missions
Rating: AA
Notes: Acerby. Vague body horror, one of many possibly interpretations of 'there's no visible cockpit'.
-

she )
rocky41_7: (Default)
rocky41_7 ([personal profile] rocky41_7) wrote in [community profile] booknook2025-09-25 04:19 pm

Book review: Road to Ruin

Title: Road to Ruin (Magebike Courier duology #1)
Author: Hana Lee
Genre: Fiction, fantasy, dystopia, post-apocalyptic 

I have a job again! \^o^/ This means I am back on the audiobook train and today I wrapped up Road to Ruin by Hana Lee, book 1 of the Magebike Courier duology. This is a low fantasy dystopian novel located in a place called the Mana Wastes, where protagonist Jin works as a courier transporting goods between protected cities. Jin runs a lot of odd jobs for various clients, but her most lucrative by far are Prince Kadrin and Princess Yi-Nereen. Jin has been ferrying love letters between them for three years--while hiding the fact that she's fallen in love with both of them. But everything changes when Yi-Nereen decides to run away and asks Jin to help her.

First, don't let the hokey title put you off. I started this one a bit warily, but it turned out to be quite a lot of fun! The worldbuilding is pretty light, but the novel seems aware of that and doesn't overpromise on that front. What is there serves its purpose well. It's not anything particularly novel, but not every book needs to be.

Jin, Yi-Nereen, and Kadrin are all wonderful protagonists; each of them has a distinct personality, perspective, and motivations, and I really enjoyed all of them. I was rooting for them the whole book and it was great to watch their various interpersonal dynamics unfold. If you're a fan of stories about mutual pining, this one is definitely worth checking out. However, if that's not really your speed, I didn't feel like the book spent too much time harping on about feelings we all suspect or know are requited. The romance element is definitely there, and it's a significant motivator for all three of them, but there's plenty else going on in the book too. 

The book avoids falling prey either to the Charybdis of black-and-white morality where everyone who stands in the way of the protagonists is evil, or to the Scylla of "everyone is friends if we just talk things out," which is a relief after some recent reads. There's definitely a sliding scale of antagonism here, with some characters who are obstacles but not necessarily bad people, and others who run much darker. 

I also enjoyed the presence of the "Road Builders." Jin and her peers inhabit the Mana Wastes, a treacherous desert wasteland where little survives and almost none of it without human intervention. They sustain themselves with "talent"--magical abilities common among humans, but becoming less common by the day--and travel along ravaged roads built by some culture who came before, about which Jin and her peers know very little. These are the "Road Builders" and are, I believe, strongly hinted at to be us. Lee keeps them a pleasant mystery humming in the background of everything else going on.

There were a couple contrivances near the end to aid a dramatic conclusion, but nothing so egregious I wasn't willing to continue to play ball with the book. Similarly, I'm on the fence about where this book leaves the relationship between the main trio, because it feels a little too much like Lee felt it was a necessary hook into book 2, but I'll reserve judgement until I've actually read book 2. And perhaps it's better that everything doesn't wrap up too neatly here. 

On the whole, I had a lot of fun with this book and I will definitely read the next one.
tellshannon815: (acosta)
Creature Of Hobbit ([personal profile] tellshannon815) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-09-25 01:33 am

Never Lose Hope (Acosta, From. Futile, prompt 461)

Title: Never Lose Hope
Fandom: From
Rating: PG
Characters: Acosta
Notes: Spoilers for season 3. Acosta refuses to accept the futility of their position.

Read more... )
phantomtomato: (Edmund)
phantomtomato ([personal profile] phantomtomato) wrote in [community profile] booknook2025-09-24 03:19 pm

RIP (Read In Progress) Wednesday

What are you reading this week? Are you planning your October reading yet?
sweettartheart: Ink text on paper (100 words on paper)
empathy is a superpower ([personal profile] sweettartheart) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-09-23 11:21 am

Prompt: #461 - Futile

This week's prompt is futile.

Your response should be exactly 100 words long. You do not have to include the prompt in your response -- it is meant as inspiration only.

Please use the tag "prompt: #461 - futile" with your response.

Please put your drabble under a cut tag if it contains potential triggers, mature or explicit content, or spoilers for media released in the last month.

If you would like a template for the header information you may use this:

Subject: Original - Title (or) Fandom - Title

Post:
Title:
Original
(or) Fandom:
Rating:
Notes:




If you are a member of AO3 there is a 100 Words Collection!
drabblewriter: (Epic - Troy Saga)
Katie ([personal profile] drabblewriter) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-09-22 10:34 am

[Amnesty][Challenge #398: Serve] The Iliad: Turned Around

Title: Turned Arouns
Fandom: The Iliad
Characters/Ship: Hector & Andromache
Rating: G
Note: also for “plead my belly” on my [community profile] allbingo Piracy Bingo card

Read more... )
quillpunk: screenshot of Rue (with a super innocent expression) from the webcomic The Villainess Flips the Script (rue2)
Ren the Ghost ([personal profile] quillpunk) wrote in [community profile] booknook2025-09-22 05:19 pm

Soon! October Review-a-Thon!!

We're getting very close! XD

Sign-ups are still open; they are, in fact, open until Oct 30 :D We have 11 unclaimed days (though of course, you can claim already claimed days, too, if that's what works best for you) and it'd be super cool to fill up some more!

You can review anything from cookbooks to short stories to novels or comics AND MORE: if you think it counts, it counts. There's zero (0) consequences for missing a claimed day <3 Let's have fun together! XD

but_can_i_be_trusted: from the Wayne & Shuster 'Art Gallery' pantomime sketch--and my first .gif icon! (Surprise)
Echo Invictus ([personal profile] but_can_i_be_trusted) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-09-21 08:44 pm
Entry tags:

[AMNESTY: Challenge #391: Map] Original Fiction: 'Goal'

Title: 'Goal'
Fandom: Original Fiction
Rating: G
Notes: Crossposted to [community profile] drabble_zone

Goal )
but_can_i_be_trusted: (Writing)
Echo Invictus ([personal profile] but_can_i_be_trusted) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-09-21 08:34 pm

[AMNESTY: Challenge #8: Poetry] Original Poetry: 'Laureate'

Title: 'Laureate'
Fandom: Original Poetry
Rating: G

Laureate )
veronyxk84: (Vero#s6SpuffyBis)
VeroNyxK84 ([personal profile] veronyxk84) wrote in [community profile] 100words2025-09-21 01:13 pm

[Amnesty XLVI] BtVS / Spuffy — Laid Bare

Title: Laid Bare
Fandom: Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Characters/Pairing: Spuffy
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: some coarse language
Word count: 200 (Google Docs)
Setting/Spoilers: Set in S6, at the end of ep. 6x07 “Once More With Feeling.”
Summary: Buffy’s POV. The moments after “Where Do We Go From Here” that lead up to the Spuffy kiss.
Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction created for fun and no profit has been made. All rights belong to the respective owners.

Prompt: [Amnesty XLVI] #001 Sweet + #144 Ache + #356 Double/Triple Drabbles

Crossposted: [community profile] anythingdrabble, [community profile] drabble_zone, [community profile] sweetandshort, [community profile] emotion100, My journal, Sunnydale After Dark


READ: Double drabble/Laid Bare )