kindkit: Man sitting on top of a huge tower of books, reading. (Fandomless--book tower)
[personal profile] kindkit
My schedule has changed and my days off are now Tuesdays and Wednesdays, so I'm going to try and do these Wednesday reading posts.

Just finished: My re-read of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey & Maturin books through Blue at the Mizzen--I've never read the last, unfinished one. I always enjoy them, but I found myself thinking "wow, this is more homophobic than I remembered" more often than was comfortable. For example, in my memory the Ledward & Wray stuff only takes up a couple of books, but in fact that plotline extends over 8 books! And both their villainy and their downfall are clearly textually linked to their queerness; they operate by seducing and blackmailing powerful men, their motive seems to be partially the Code Napoleon's decriminalization of sodomy, and their eventual death is linked to their affair with the Sultan's lover (who himself meets a gruesome, literally punitive fate). It's true that O'Brian includes several positive queer male characters (the series has no non-straight women), but they share one common trait: they're celibate. Queer men who have sex with other men are always portrayed in much more negative ways. And the positive queer characters get fewer, and the negative ones more frequent, as the series goes on. So that was disheartening. There's still a lot about the books that I love, and no doubt I'll re-read them again, but I didn't get as much joy from them as I was hoping for.

Also just finished K.J. Charles's Masters in this Hall, a Christmas m/m romance novella just released a few days ago. It's fine, it's typical of Charles's recent work: well-researched, competently written, all a bit thin (especially on characterization) and formulaic, but enjoyable. I found the side characters more engaging that the main ones, which is often my experience, across media and genres.


Currently reading: Being in the mood for queer or queer-coded sea stories, I'm making about my fourth attempt at Moby Dick. Last time I got a bit past the point where the narrative focus shifts from Ishmael and Queequeg to Ahab; I'm not there yet so I'm still in the part that I like. I enjoy Ishmael's wry humor and queerness much more than Ahab's extremely serious intention to attack and dethrone God the whale, so we'll see if I manage to get past my disappointment this time.

I'm also reading Screams from the Dark, a horror short fiction collection about monsters, edited by Ellen Datlow. It, too, is fine. Some good (Fran Wilde's "The Midway," Priya Sharma's "The Ghost of a Flea, Chikodili Emelumadu's "The Special One," Gemma Files' "Wet Red Grin"), most okay, only one terrible ("Flaming Teeth," by Garry Kilworth, which imo is so clumsy it shouldn't even have been publishable, much less featured in a Datlow anthology). I only skimmed Joyce Carol Oates's story, because Joyce Carol Oates, but it struck me as exploitive. Anyway, I'm only about halfway through and a lot of the bigger name writers are in the second half, so there may be better things to come.


Reading next: Maybe the latest Best Horror of the Year, maybe Waubgeshig Rice's The Moon of the Crusted Snow, which is an apocalyptic novel set in an Ojibwe community in Canada. I grew up in an Ojibwe community in Minnesota (I'm not Indigenous, but my stepfather was) and I'm deeply curious to see what Rice, an own-voices writer, has to say.


As always, I'm taking recs for genre stories about queer men, preferably written by queer men. (Genre fiction, especially sff, by and about queer women seems to be enjoying a boom. It depresses me that the queer male equivalent seems to be stuck in a pattern where queer male writers look down on genre, and male genre writers won't write queer men, although a number of them seem happy to write f/f.)

Date: 2022-12-07 09:05 pm (UTC)
sovay: (Rotwang)
From: [personal profile] sovay
As always, I'm taking recs for genre stories about queer men, preferably written by queer men.

I assume I have already recommended you Chaz Brenchley's Bitter Waters (2014)? It is my favorite of his books. Author definitely queer, characters likewise. In general I would check out Lethe Press, which publishes a lot of queer men writing genre fiction about queer men.

Ditto Yoon Ha Lee's Machineries of Empire: Ninefox Gambit (2016), Raven Stratagem (2017), Revenant Gun (2018), plus the pendant collection Hexarchate Stories (2019). The series protagonist Shuos Jedao is, like his author, a queer man; hardly anyone in the series is straight across a range of genders. The premise is political science fantasy in a dystopian star empire, so there is a high body count, so perhaps hold off if you are not up for queer characters coming to bad ends at all right now, but it is absolutely not a case of burying gays. I love these books; I always wanted the sequel trilogy that Lee mooted writing before he got into YA/MG. He has said often that his heart lies with twisty, dark political fiction and I am hoping that someday he gets to return to it.

I can't remember if I have already recommended you Joel Lane, who died in 2013 and left a concentrated, influential body of weird and horror fiction. I can't speak to his novels or poetry, but Where Furnaces Burn (2012) is an incredible cycle of weird crime fiction and I have recently enjoyed The Anniversary of Never (2015); the other two I've read are The Earth Wire and Other Stories (1994) and The Lost District and Other Stories (2006), both of which I would, if you like his work, recommend. His characters are not universally queer men, but the prevailing sensibility of his stories is queer, and just as often his characters are.

I unironically like Moby Dick, so I hope that eventually it works for you.

Date: 2022-12-13 12:46 pm (UTC)
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
From: [personal profile] rydra_wong
I tried Ninefox Gambit once before and found myself completely unable to follow what was going on, but I'm sure it wouldn't hurt to give it another try.

Yeah, it very deliberately drops you in at the deep end with a tonne of baffling science/maths/magic technobabble. If you let it wash over you nd settle for getting the rough gist of what's happening initially, you may find you can pick up a lot of what it means by osmosis (and also the "maths" is actually "a wizard did it").

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