Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

  • Mood:
  • Music:

Too tired (and too sick) for content; have some links.

I have been home, dead of sick, for two days. We're talking "deep, rasping chest cough, I sound like a Batman villain, spent eleven hours on the couch yesterday, watched all of The Number 23 because changing the channel seemed too much like work" levels of sick. (PS: Maybe the number-obsessed OCD girl shouldn't watch movies about being driven to increasing levels of paranoia by numbers when she's already sick. Luckily for me, the movie made no damn sense, and just triggered nice little daydreams about prime factors and pi. What? I don't judge what helps you feel better.) So here is some stuff from my link file that I have been unable to find context for.

First off, no matter how bad a cover your book gets, it will never win the bad cover lottery. That prize has already been claimed by this not-safe-for-work edition of The Princess Bride. What is that I don't even. Flesh-snakes are attacking her lady bits with the intent to burrow their way into the promised land. Presumably the promised land has a cover that makes sense. Also, I do not remember Buttercup using a falcon as a cunning hat. Maybe somebody was hitting the cold meds a little too hard when they approved this one? I don't know.

The next time I go to the UK, I am totally visiting Hoxton Street Monster Supplies, which promises me "bespoke and everyday items for the living, dead, and undead," and is the only shop I've ever seen that was polite enough to request that angry mobs douse their torches before entering. Hell, forget visiting; I want to live there.

This is Alton Brown's Fanifesto. It makes me happy, even as I am sad that it needed to exist.

Disney Princesses have their issues, and I am the last person to pretend that they don't, but they have their good sides, too. This is a lovely collection of moments to illustrate that. (And while I'm pointing you at Princesses, why not swing by Amy Mebberson's Tumblr? Her weekly "Pocket Princesses" cartoons are a real treat.)

Finally, for now, cuckoos are in a biological arms race to continue their egg parasitism ways. So maybe there's hope for humanity. If the cuckoos don't figure out a better way...

I'm going back to bed.
Tags: brief notes, geekiness, medical fu, state of the blonde, utterly exhausted
  • Post a new comment

    Error

    Anonymous comments are disabled in this journal

    default userpic

    Your reply will be screened

    Your IP address will be recorded 

  • 79 comments
My deepest sympathies on the illness. 3 days after ConSonance I came down with an Upper Respiratory Infection (URI) of my own, and though the worst has passed there is this lingering cough.... From your description, though, it sounds like a different URI. I didn't notice anyone at ConSonance who obviously had these symptoms, though, so I rather suspect the Sunday Dinner Run to Sweet Tomatoes (which was very crowded) may have been where I caught it.

I did read and enjoy DISCOUNT ARMEGEDDON while I was sick. The Aeslin mice were a lot of fun, and I've watched enough competition shows on dancing (both the professional/amateur ones like DANCING WITH THE STARS and the professional/professional competitions shown on PBS) to appreciate Verity's dance background. But while I enjoyed the book, I think I have to give the edge to the October Daye series. Of course, that has developed over 5 books (so far). It may well be that once the world of Verity Price has had more space to be developed, a re-assessment would be in order. And it could simply be that if I was feeling better when reading DA I might have enjoyed it more. But there really seemed to be too much of a rush to introduce the various races - that no sooner had one race been introduced than another was pushing it aside. For my taste (which may not be typical of your other readers), introducing half as many races and giving each one twice as much time would have been a better pace. But of course, you had specific plot reasons to introduce all those races. The plot would have had to be revised to accomodate that choice if things went the other way. As an author you have to make many such choices. The Dominic/Verity stuff likewise progressed much faster than I would have expected (given the relationship of the two families). The trust given and the shifting of his viewpoint seemed unexpectedly quick. So just letting you know that to this reader much of the book felt rushed.
I appreciate the feedback, although I note that this is a first book, which meant "introduce some of these things now or get yelled at later when they aren't properly established." In the future, however, please leave these sort of comments on the book's open thread, so as not to accidentally spoil people who may not have read it yet?