Review: The Habitation of the Blessed

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The Habitation of the Blessed (A Dirge for Prester John, #1)The Habitation of the Blessed by Catherynne M. Valente

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Yet another wonderful read from Catherynne Valente, this time the first volume of a trilogy dedicated to the mythical Prester John, fabled king of the three Indies. Once more Valente recounts the story through the words of many characters: John, the befuddled but not so innocent priest; Hagia, the blemmye and his future wife; Imtithal, the panoti, who told tales to three children in a … (Read more)

Review: Fair Play

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Fair PlayFair Play by Tove Jansson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A different way of looking at love, through the small and normal things, the little idiosyncrasies, difficulties and compromises of a relationship between two older, temperamental persons. Though at the beginning of the book the relationship between Mari and Jonna might appear strangely detached, it doesn’t take much to understand the complexity and the unseen between the words and to warm up to their rapport.

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Life Flashes By

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Weeks later from when I actually promised I would, here I am writing a review of Life Flashes By, Deirdra Kiai’s latest and possibly most ambitious game to date.

I played it through as soon as it was released and I admit that, even though I liked it, I didn’t feel completely blown out. Since it is a very particular kind of game, I waited until I could play it a second time and see whether the problem was … (Read more)

Review: The Summer Book

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The Summer BookThe Summer Book by Tove Jansson

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The wonderful story of a small child and her grandmother, living together a long summer on an isolated island, learning to know and adjust to each other. Tove Jansson’s style is, at least in this translation, short and to the point, quite matter of fact, and that oddly contributes to make this collection of short vignettes even more poetic in its simplicity.

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Review: In the Cities of Coin and Spice

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In the Cities of Coin and Spice (The Orphan's Tales, #2)In the Cities of Coin and Spice by Catherynne M. Valente

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It always takes me forever to read through Cat Valente’s books. Maybe because I don’t really ever want them to end.

The second and last volume of the Orphan’s tales is identical in structure to its predecessor but different in its tales: the stories seem to lose their ‘high adventure’ quality to become more personal, intimate, dirtier, and the sense of loss permeates … (Read more)

Review: Fragile Things

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Fragile Things: Short Fictions and WondersFragile Things: Short Fictions and Wonders by Neil Gaiman

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Collections are difficult beasts to handle, especially when they bring together material that ranges from the very short to the novella, touching different genres and subgenres, often out of the original context they were written for.
It is easy, when rating such a book on the whole, to base yourself on the parts you didn’t like rather than the bits you liked – and there … (Read more)

Review: In the Night Garden

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In the Night Garden (The Orphan's Tales, #1)In the Night Garden by Catherynne M. Valente

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Stories within stories like matryoshka dolls, intertwined within a complex tapestry. The tales of the titular orphan will bring you into a world of fantasy and wonders, perils and mysteries, witches and wizards, monsters and princes, heroes and sailors, saints and stars. Cat Valente at her best.

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Book review – Thomas Riley

Oh Ahnonay, how much I loathe thee? Let me count the ways.
Well, not many actually, but it’s extremely annoying when you find you missed one cloth and have to go through the whole thing again. Aargh.

On other news, I was in Negilahn waiting for the portal to appear and decided to pass the time by writing a short review of a steampunk YA book I read recently. So here you go:

“Thomas Riley”, by Nick Valentino

Plot recap: … (Read more)

Rapportino musicale

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Recensioni rapide tra gli ultimi acquisti:

Dan Mangan, “Nice, nice, very nice” – Perché anche i robot hanno bisogno d’amore, e chi riesce a mettere insieme Kurt Vonnegut e gli animaletti disegnati sulla slipcase del suo Cd merita rispetto.

Christopher Tin, “Calling all dawns” – Unico difetto: troppo corto (a parte Rassemblons Nous, che poteva durare mezz’ora di meno; ma mi sa che son solo io che non sopporto il francese).

The Dresden Dolls, “A is for accident”(Read more)

Loreena McKennitt a Firenze

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E venerdì si andò in quel di Firenze a sentire la rossa canadese tornare in concerto dopo 9 anni di assenza dalle scene…

Poco da dire che non sia stato già detto altrove. Si vede che Loreena ama suonare, soprattutto suonare in compagnia di amici e compagni musicisti, e si vede anche che quelli in tour con lei sono suonatori di tutto rispetto (Hugh Marsh e Brian Hughes in primis: la roba che facevano durante gli assoli…).

Devo dire che, … (Read more)