skygiants: Mosca Mye, from the cover of Fly Trap (the fly in the butter)
Frances Hardinge's latest, Deeplight, is not yet out in the states, but [personal profile] izilen sent me a copy from the UK so I could get my fix!

This is the rare Frances Hardinge book that does not feature a more or less monstrous teen girl as the protagonist, but a lying Dickensian urchin lad is a reasonable substitute. ([personal profile] shati and I have been having a whole conversation about Hardinge protagonist patterns over in her post about the book, so I will not rehash it here, but I do think it's very clear that Hardinge has different things to say about her heroines and her heroes.) Anyway! Hark the urchin lad lives on a set of islands that used to worship great and terrible monsters of the deep, which have all died in an unspecified calamity within living memory; the islands are now grappling with the holes left by the absence of the gods, and, relatedly, the potentially ominous arrival of foreign trade from the mainland. On the bright side, the islands have developed a thriving deaf culture as a result of the boom in commercial diving!

Among all this cultural upheaval, Hark is perfectly content with his life of small-time crime; unfortunately, his best friend, Jelt, is a.) determined to do bigger time crime and b.) equally determined that Hark will be doing the bigger time crime with him. As is often the case in Hardinge books, things spiral very rapidly out of control! Eldritch ocean horror ensues!

Aside from Hark, other major characters include:

Jelt: a meaner Dickensian lad rapidly exiting urchinhood; Not A Good Friend
Rigg: A Pirate
Selphin: Rigg's daughter; a feral girl, because this is a Hardinge book; afraid of the sea as a result of a diving accident, which is, unfortunately, a major drawback for a pirate's daughter
Dr. Vyne: morally ambiguous mentor #1, a brilliant research scientist performing experiments using leftover bits of god-carcass
Quest: morally ambiguous mentor #2, a dying priest with Secrets
The Hidden Lady: a dead god with a human torso and crab-legs; Hark has a bit of a crush on her, because Frances Hardinge has apparently been on tumblr and understands what the youth are into (it's great and terrible monsters of the deep)

It was a good time for me to read this book; I don't know if I would have liked it as much as I did if I hadn't already been primed by Heaven's Official Blessings to have a lot of thoughts and opinions about power and divinity and the way humans relate to those things. Major book spoilers! ) On a character level it's probably not my favorite favorite Hardinge, but the way it handles its worldbuilding and themes overall puts it pretty well up there for me.
skygiants: Hazel, from the cover of Breadcrumbs, about to venture into the Snow Queen's forest (into the woods)
I took shameless advantage of my friendship with Iona Datt Sharma and Katherine Fabian to demand an early copy of Sing for the Coming of the Longest Night, their upcoming novella, which is coming out this Friday just in time for it to be the most enjoyable holiday-adjacent thing you'll read this season.

Layla is a respectably-gay-married pathologist with a full-time career, a house and two kids; Nat is an aggressively queer jobbing composer. Their only commonalities: they're both poly, neither of them do very much magic, and they're both dating deeply weird fairyland-adjacent professional magician Meraud. Other than that they have very little to talk about, and generally attempt to avoid doing so -- until Meraud disappears, with his rescue contingent on a complex magical treasure hunt that, Tam Lin-esque, can only be performed by his beloved.

In this case beloved is a plural, which means it's time for some OBLIGATE TEAMWORK.

"I'm only hanging out with you because this ONE PERSON needs us to work together but I GUESS if they like you there's something to you" is a great and tragically underused story structure and it is utilized here SO WELL. There's collective magical riddle-solving! There's a fake engagement! There's the collision of different kinds of queer lifestyles! There's nonprofit bureaucracy and city planning! But most of all there are the complex family and community networks that weave through everybody's lives, and the magic that these connections create, which is really what the story is about, and feel-good in the best possible way.

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skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (Default)
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