Sunday, April 15, 2018

Books 7 and 8 of 2018



Volume 2 is just as satisfying as Volume 1--of course this fantasy/sci-fi series fits the mold of all the fantasy sci-fi series I've read. Essun has powers she half-understands (think Thomas Covenant or Frodo or Paul Atreides) and must take what she can from teachers who either want to control her her kill her or mislead or manipulate her. She is a member of a mutant class of humans who are despised despite having skills necessary to humanity's survival.

The Earth suffers continuous geological upheavals because its moon has been cast into a long elliptical orbit. Earth is pissed about this loss, and tries repeatedly to destroy humans as a result--apparently in the distant past the moon was cast away by the reckless use of magic/science, and Essun and her allies are trying to figure it out.

But her daughter Nassun might be the kwisatz hederach of Earth...will she become the God Empress of Dune (I mean Earth) and restore the moon, or will the Earth succeed in wiping out all humans except for the monstrous stone eaters?

I look forward to finding out in volume 3.




Clever, funny, and charming short stories in intermediate French. They follow a classic Twilight Zone model, with surprise twists sometimes involving supernatural elements. Would be useful for a French 3 class or above if you are a teacher, or a good way to rebuild long lost French literacy skills. About 13 years ago I was reading de Beauvoir and Sartre and Leiris in the original French...now I'm back to rebuilding again, and this was an engaging place to start!

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

hmm, some glitch (maybe on my side), but I don’t see what books you are discussing (there’s just a blank spot, and no text)

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Geoff said...

Bizarre! Shows up on my phone

Geoff said...

Shows up on my Kindle and laptop too. Weird...The Obelisk Gate and Histoires a Lire a Soir are the two titles.

Anonymous said...

maybe it is some 3rd party URL I have blocked.