skygiants: (swan)
skygiants ([personal profile] skygiants) wrote2019-04-23 08:00 pm
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I finished Ann Leckie's The Raven Tower!

As I said on Twitter: massive respect for Ann Leckie's mineral protagonist progression from 'passive-aggressive AI' to 'literally just a very sulky rock.'

I'll admit it took me some time to come round on the sulky rock, but then the rock insisted on being hauled halfway across the continent in a large unwieldy carriage out of sheer bloody-mindedness despite several protestations from annoyed divine friends, and suddenly I loved that rock. We are all what we are.

I also have a slightly more confused respect for her decision to plant her flag firmly on the Horatio/Ophelia rarepeair while vehemently refusing to support all the more common Hamlet ships. Bold choice! Little out of left field, but bold!

As with Ancillary Justice, I found this a slow build and an increasingly rewarding one as it went on. Things that Ann Leckie clearly likes and is good at, in combination with mineral protagonists:
- unusual and somewhat deliberately distancing narration
- non-human entities moved to action by feelings of affection and responsibility towards specific humans
- very long-game revenge plots
- careful plot-relevant linguistic exploration! MY FAVORITE PART


As much as I liked the book overall, I did not find the ending as satisfying as I wanted to. I think part of that is just that I care more about Hamlet than Ann Leckie does. And, I mean, Hypercompetent Trans Horatio is very much a character who's written for me to love, but by 2/3 of the way through the book it's pretty clear that the whole Hamlet side of the plot is just an unstoppable rolling stone set in motion by the Strength and Patience of the Hill, and the ending is very much just that stone landing where it has to, and I kept waiting for Eolo's presence to ... maybe shift the path of the stone a little in the final pages? For the Strength and Patience of the Hill's interest in Eolo to be relevant to the endgame, other than 'Eolo lives', which we know is going to happen anyway because that's what Horatios do. So when that didn't happen, and the ending just thunked itself right into place, it felt slightly anticlimactic to me.

Also, Mawat feels like a Hamlet written by someone who doesn't much like Hamlet-the-character, and I didn't think I was a person who much liked Hamlet until I found myself becoming vaguely indignant on his behalf as I read through the book. No, that's not the right kind of drama queen-ing! Hamlet is more genre-savvy than this!
sovay: (Morell: quizzical)

[personal profile] sovay 2019-04-24 01:04 am (UTC)(link)
I also have a slightly more confused respect for her decision to plant her flag firmly on the Horatio/Ophelia rarepeair while vehemently refusing to support all the more common Hamlet ships. Bold choice! Little out of left field, but bold!

I didn't realize this book was a retelling of Hamlet.

I approve of the rock.

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kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)

[personal profile] kate_nepveu 2019-04-24 01:33 am (UTC)(link)
it is also a retelling of a couple other stories that are generally less well-known to USian audiences! GIANT SPOILERS: https://annleckie.tumblr.com/post/183303749411/three-links-presented-for-no-particular-reason

my most recent feeling about Hamlet are via Ryan North's choose-your-own-adventure version, which also does not like Hamlet much or think he's very genre-savvy, so I did not feel very indignant on his behalf.

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kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2019-04-24 01:10 am (UTC)(link)
I read the opening pages of this, but got distracted. I totally want to read it now!

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[personal profile] cahn 2019-04-24 05:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I honestly didn't like it much for the opening pages (the first 10-20 pages?) -- try reading the first 50 and see what you think at that point; that was when I bought the book from the bookstore (which I never do; I usually am able to wait and check it out from the library first).
troisoiseaux: (Default)

[personal profile] troisoiseaux 2019-04-24 02:02 am (UTC)(link)
Frankly, I was won over almost immediately by the general concept of a sulky and extremely stubborn rock as a protagonists, but then it turned out to be a Hamlet adaption ft. "non-human entities moved to action by feelings of affection and responsibility towards specific humans" and linguistics and the urgency of my need to get my hands on this book grew about 10000x!!!!
starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)

[personal profile] starlady 2019-04-24 04:41 am (UTC)(link)
Aw, I loved it. I love Hamlet, but I appreciated him being called out for his drama by the narrative in this version. And I appreciated that the sulky rock was actually the book's protagonist the whole time.
conuly: (Default)

[personal profile] conuly 2019-04-24 04:55 am (UTC)(link)
I'm going to have to object to your view of Breq as "passive-aggressive".

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vass: Jon Stewart reading a dictionary (books)

[personal profile] vass 2019-04-24 05:12 am (UTC)(link)
I agree with much of this, although in fairness does Horatio's presence change the plot of Hamlet?

I do like Hamlet-the-character, and was initially prepared to just go with "well, this is just going to be one of the Hamlet adaptations where I don't care much about him, like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead," but I did warm to Mawat a little because of the fucked-up family dynamics and how it was clear that while he's never been great at regulating his emotions, he is also someone whose skill at doing is inversely correlated with proximity to his family (both in time and geographic distance.)

Mainly I was there for the rock.
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)

[personal profile] kate_nepveu 2019-04-24 12:01 pm (UTC)(link)
yes, it was interesting how my rooting interests shifted over the book, the way it used my expectations about narratives, and also the way Mawat so clearly devolved over the course of the book (alas).
st_aurafina: Rainbow DNA (Default)

[personal profile] st_aurafina 2019-04-24 07:00 am (UTC)(link)
Omg, Mineral Protagonists, omg. Hypercompetent Trans Horatio, I'm dying.

I felt the same about the ending - it did thunk into place like one of those balls in a puzzle box. I loved the journey (and also the literal journey, and how mad the Myriad was at big old rock frand) but the ending fell a little flat for me.

But language! And long games! So good.

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[personal profile] rmc28 2019-04-24 10:52 am (UTC)(link)
I am still laughing at myself because I was UTTERLY GRIPPED by this story all the way through and Spouse and I enthused at each other when we'd both finished it, and I completely failed to notice it was a Hamlet story.

(I twigged to the Hamlet about a week ago after reading a couple of other people's reviews.)
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)

[personal profile] kate_nepveu 2019-04-24 12:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Becca. Becca, the real crossover here is not Marielda, it's . . .

STEVEN UNIVERSE.

Imagine the mutual uncomprehension at such different ways of being a rock person!

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asakiyume: (squirrel eye star)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2019-04-24 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm carefully not reading your spoiler cuts, but I love your bullet list of things that Ann loves, and I **agree** My heart skews toward the non-human entities moved to action by feelings of affection, but **they are all good**.

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[personal profile] aria 2019-04-24 01:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Hamlet is more genre-savvy than this!! I absolutely loved that book, but you just put your finger on the thing that bothered me that I couldn't articulate (as well as the thing that bothered me that I already could, which is that Eolo's presence doesn't actually materially change anything). God, what a delight, though. When R&G show up (I cannot for the life of me remember their names in this, heh) and the narration is all "They were sent for" I was just HOWLING; Ann Leckie's Hamlet feelings are not mine but gosh to I respect them.

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[personal profile] ellen_fremedon 2019-04-24 03:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved this book, but I twigged that the rock was the sampo/Grótti during the first conversation with the dog god, and that really colored my experience of the rest of it.

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[personal profile] cahn 2019-04-24 05:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Heh, I didn't mind at all that Mawat/Hamlet wasn't genre-savvy! I mean, I totally agree he's more thoughtful and genre-savvy in the original, I think I'm just not emotionally invested in it. Whereas I think I am emotionally invested in Horatio, so I would have been really upset if Eolo/Horatio had been messed with the way Mawat/Hamlet's character was. I guess maybe what I'm saying here is that my id pretty much exactly lines up with Ann Leckie's!

Speaking of ids matching up, I did also really like the thudding finality with which everything thunked into place at the end -- I guess I have a weakness for that kind of thing. And I think I have a lot of feelings about SAPotH being quite fond of Eolo but that fondness being a god's fondness, and so extending to saving him and matching him up to Ophelia (I never shipped this before reading this book and now I ship it like burning, well played Leckie) but not to totally using him to wreck everything.
dhampyresa: (Default)

[personal profile] dhampyresa 2019-04-24 10:34 pm (UTC)(link)
the rock insisted on being hauled halfway across the continent in a large unwieldy carriage
Like the Emenese baetylus?
alchimie: (Default)

[personal profile] alchimie 2019-04-25 05:02 am (UTC)(link)
I too finished this recently and upon doing so became somewhat indignant on Hamlet/Mawat's behalf -- I would not have said prior to this I had much sympathy for Hamlet, but apparently I do. He's not just being difficult, he has legitimate concerns! He does not assume people are lying to him for absolutely no reason, most of the time they are actually lying to him! And etc.

I agree also about the plot, once I was convinced it was really Hamlet, I wanted it to do something that was not-Hamlet -- for Eolo to shift it, as you said -- not for the plot to just hit all the Hamlet beats with the regularity of a hammer.

The AI/stone had not occured to me before and now I cannot stop laughing.

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[personal profile] aella_irene 2019-04-25 03:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I started this but didn't enjoy it enough to read it sustainedly, because, I must confess, I wanted to know what Eolo was thinking, and didn't care that much about the rock.

(Also I have Hamlet feels which I need to dispose of via another production, because the one I have seen had a crap Hamlet, but a really good everyone else, and I don't think, from the comments, that I would have enjoyed, say, the Rosencrantz and Guildenstern bits in this.)

Aargh, I wish I could get on better with Ann Leckie.
umadoshi: (hands full of books)

[personal profile] umadoshi 2019-04-26 02:15 am (UTC)(link)
My gosh, I love your reviews. *^^*

I remembered while reading it that it was adapting/playing on a Shakespeare play, but I know so few of the plays well and couldn't remember which it was. (And then forgot to actually look it up afterwards.) So this was helpful as well as delightful.
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-02-08 05:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh Skygiants, seeing this now, I'm just laughing and laughing. I need to find that tweet of yours and retweet it to my daughter who also read/loved the book.

massive respect for Ann Leckie's mineral protagonist progression from 'passive-aggressive AI' to 'literally just a very sulky rock LOVE IT

And I share your love for plot relevant linguistic exploration!

What you say about the ending--I'm really colored now by what my daughter said: that S&P basically is willing to make this whole country, and all its sundry humans, fall completely apart for its revenge. Which means that it hasn't really grown very far away from its original self-centeredness. It cares, now, about a select few humans. Who are important--tautologically--because it cares about them. But that's it.

I felt sad when my daughter pointed this out to me, because I really had come to love S&P ... but she's right.

I think one thing Eolo's competence coming to naught really shows, in a chilling way, is human lack of power in the face of the actions of gods. Eolo had will, Eolo had agency, Eolo was intelligent and made intelligent decisions--but all of that was Very Small in the face of what S&P had in mind and was able to accomplish.

(so where is that tweet of yours--how can I find it?)

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