skygiants: Nellie Bly walking a tightrope among the stars (bravely trotted)
As little objectivity as I had about Freya Marske's A Marvellous Light, I have even less about the sequel, A Restless Truth, which is an adventure targeted More or Less towards Me in Particular featuring as it does:

- relatively powerless sidekicks getting their own adventures! Maud Blyth is baby sister of the protagonist of A Marvellous Light and spent a fair bit of that book acting as an accidental but significant source of stress for him; as such her main motivation throughout this book is "well I am NOT technically a magician and these magician problems are NOT technically my problems but my brother asked me a favor and it will be SO depressing if I fuck this up" -- charming! relatable!

- Hijinks On A Boat! this is the sort of book where one is introduced to a lot of potentially chaotic elements in the first few pages -- a menagerie! a medium! a suitcase full of porn! a full Scottish Fife and Drum company! -- and can rest assured in the knowledge that before the end of the story our protagonists will end up colliding into all of them in pleasing and satisfying ways; I wouldn't necessarily say it's all the way screwball but it is bringing a lot of screwball energy and I love that for me

- a heroine with a backstory that's rooted in the turn-of-the-century New York theater scene! this one is just a present to me specifically, and also I just love Violet -- she's charming and pleasant and very good at using a lot of sparkling enthusiasm to distract from the fact that she's revealing as little of herself and her own personal weak points as possible, which makes for some extremely fun contrast and conflict with Maud who really wants this to be the sort of book where everyone trusts each other with their deepest secrets after three days and who is not going to get it

- relatedly, the main romantic pairing spend eight significant days together on a boat with romantic stakes that are not "are we going to spend the rest of our lives together now" but "will we ever decide to see each other again after the liminal space of this boat"! and obviously one is rooting for them to do so, they're a delight, but also such a refreshing change!

I am realizing that I have described many elements now but not in fact the plot. So, the plot: Maud Blyth is escorting elderly magician Mrs. Navenby across the Atlantic for Magical Conspiracy reasons when Mrs. Navenby turns up dead, probably murdered; Maud immediately bulldozes through the boat looking for allies and ends up press-ganging scandalous ex-actress Violet Debenham (as well as extremely rude Lord Hawthorne, and resentful radical newspaper reporter Alan Ross) into assistance with Maud's various projects of a.) solving the murder b.) finding Mrs. Navenby's Important Magical Artifact and c.) learning about lesbians, c.1.) preferably with practical instruction.

An extremely good time with quite a different energy from the (also delightful) country-house pining of the first book; I am also extremely looking forward to the third one for reasons that will be elucidated in time!
skygiants: Nice from Baccano! in post-explosion ecstasy (maybe too excited . . .?)
I have absolutely no objectivity about Freya Marske's A Marvellous Light, which I first read a draft of in 2018 and which comes out in the US tomorrow (! !! !!!!); that said, in my undeniably biased but extremely confident opinion, it's an absolute delight and of all the books I've read in its particular rising genre of 'fantasy novels unabashedly structured around the queer romances at the center of them' it is my very favorite (except, perhaps, for its forthcoming sequel.)

A Marvellous Light is the first in a trilogy set in an Edwardian England where some people -- mostly members of a very limited set of families -- are secretly born with magic, and won my simple sidekick-loving heart straightaway by the fact that one of the protagonists has zero magic and the other one has very little of it. Edwin Courcey is the least powerful member of his prominent magical family, an unhappy intellectual with a great research interest in magic and a frustratingly limited ability to test his own theories and hypotheses; meanwhile, amiable out-of-pocket jock Robin Blyth is a paperwork error who is extremely startled to learn that a.) magic is real and b.) his brand new civil service position is meant to involve liaising with Edwin to collate reports about it.

Unfortunately for Robin, his predecessor was Mixed Up In Mysterious Magical Business, which means that instead of getting shuffled back into a safely unmagical department he shortly finds himself:

1. cursed (painful)
2. reliant on Edwin to help him break the curse (socially awkward)
3. stuck in the middle of a boisterous and also potentially murderous magical house party at Edwin's family's country home (probably worse for Edwin than Robin actually despite Robin's lack of magic and ongoing general peril)

Over the course of the book, Edwin and Robin proceed to uncover a magical conspiracy, support each other through various sibling and family issues, trip and fall into various unusual magical inheritances, and, of course, fall in love! Freya is an incredibly romantic writer who's brilliant at drawing connections between outwardly-dissimilar people and showing the draw that they have for each other, but she also has unfair gifts for setting, language, and set pieces that jump back and forth on a dime between extremely tense and extremely funny. I truly hope people will end up drawing fanart for this book; I desperately want to see one hundred interpretations of the bit with the swans.

Anyway! Tomorrow! I am so excited for people to have the opportunity to read this book, and then come talk to me about it!!!

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