Fri, Oct. 29th, 2010

oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
Tiffany Aching's adventures in Wintersmith have attracted the notice of an old enemy to witches, the Cunning Man, and she has to deal with that along with her relationship with Roland and her relationship to the people of the Chalk now that she's their witch and not just little Tiffany Aching.

I've seen people mentioning here and there that this will be the last Tiffany Aching book that will be published as YA, and this book does indeed start out dark. On the other hand, despite the series being YA to date, I find the Tiffany Aching books to be some of the darker Discworld books, adult or YA, largely because they're about Tiffany growing into her power and acquiring more and more responsibilities as the books go on. As such, they're my favorite out of all the Discworld series.

That said, this isn't a very fair review, because I spent the entire book wondering if the voice was off or if I was just making things up. So I was pretty distracted while reading and focusing more on the nuts and bolts of prose rather than what was going on. I'm still not sure if it was me or the book; it's been a few years since I last read the Tiffany Aching books, so my memory, already terrible, is even worse.

So... the villain was very creepy, I loved the folk tradition woven into the ending, I'm curious to see how Pratchett handles Tiffany + romance, I continue to love how Pratchett always brings in so many different women of different ages in the witches books, I really liked how he handled Tiffany's relationship with Letitia, but I felt really distant from the book while I was reading it. I suspect this will be one of things that changes on a reread.

ETA: Also, let me know if you have a review of this! I know I missed people's while I was waiting for my library hold to come in.
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
As you can probably tell, I am a) trying to catch up on old reviews (not even really old ones! Just from the past few months!), b) reading a lot, and c) trying to keep up with my reading so I don't add to backlog.

Possibly one day I will blog about something that is not books.

No, I lie. I will never stop talking about books! Books! Books books books books!

(This reading thing! With the long plotty books! It is still so awesome!)

Anyway, this is book 2 of one of Carey's typical epic trilogies. I read it about two months ago, so my memory is pretty fuzzy. I was extremely wary about this book despite the first book visiting a China analogue and amazingly NOT making my head explode because of the cover. I mean, at least it's not a red sari, and I really hope it's not supposed to be the heroine on the cover, since the heroine is from the world's equivalent of a Celtic tribe.

Spoilers for book 1 )

In conclusion: This is very much a middle book of a trilogy where some momentum gets lost. I still love the central romance, but although I didn't end up wanting to chuck the book at something, I also think Carey didn't handle her India analogue as well as she did with the China analogue in book 1.

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