The Language of Liars, by S.L. Huang

Feb. 24th, 2026 08:42 am
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[personal profile] mrissa
 

Review copy provided by the publisher.

This is a novella with a whole range of aliens with different language features, wildly different environments, etc. Several of my friends just stopped reading this review to go pre-order or request that their library do so. You are correct, if that is the sort of thing you like, this sure is that thing.

What it does less successfully, I think, is the twist ending. I feel like this is a book that is for people who like science fiction about aliens, but for me, as soon as I knew the premise, I knew the ending, and I was correct. So if you're reading for the aliens, come on in; if you're reading for a clever twist you did not see coming, this is not that novella, that is not where Huang spent time and energy.

Books read, early February

Feb. 18th, 2026 10:47 am
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[personal profile] mrissa
 

Moniquill Blackgoose, To Ride a Rising Storm. I'm usually a second book person, but this one took a minute to win me over. I think the bar was set so high by the first one that when the second one felt like "more of the same," I was disappointed. It is, however, going somewhere, and it finished up with a bang, and I am very excited for the third one. (But where it finished with a bang was more like a starting pistol. Do not expect closure here. This is very much a middle book.)

Lila Caimari, Cities and News. Kindle. A study of how newspapers evolved and influenced the culture in late 19th century South American cities, which was off the beaten Anglophone path and rather interesting, especially because the way that snowy places were exoticized pretty much exactly paralleled how these cities were exoticized in snowy places.

Colin Cotterill, Curse of the Pogo Stick, The Merry Misogynist, and Love Songs from a Shallow Grave. Rereads. And this, unfortunately, is where the series ends for me. I enjoyed Pogo Stick, and then the other two had mystery plots that were "serial killer because tormented intersex person" (REALLY STOP IT, these books came out in the 21st century, NOT OKAY) and "bitches be crazy, yo" (WELP). The mystery plots are not nearly as central to these mysteries as one might expect of, well, mysteries, but on the other hand they are integral to the book and not ignorable and I am done. When I read this series previously I endured these two in hopes that it would get better again, and now I know it doesn't. Well. Five books I like is more than most people manage.

Jeannine Hall Gailey, Field Guide to the End of the World. I still resonate less with prose poems than with other formats of poem, and this had several, but it was otherwise...unfortunately apropos, a worthy companion in our own ongoing ends of worlds.

Tove Jansson, Moominpappa's Memoirs. Kindle, reread. Charming and quirky as always, with some hilarious moments about memoir that went over my head when I was small.

Laurie Marks, Fire Logic, Earth Logic, Water Logic, and Air Logic. Rereads. I still really enjoy this series, but on the reread it was quite clear to me that water is very, very much the weakest element here, no contest. The water witches are not really portrayed as people, nobody with water affinity gets to be a character, they're very much the "oh yeah I guess we have more than three elements" element in this series. Water is the element I connect with the most strongly. I still like this series, I still think it's doing really good things with peace being an active rather than passive state and one that has to be made by imperfect humans--more unusual things than they should be. As with the Cotterill books above, the fact that it was a reread meant that I couldn't keep saying to myself, "Maybe there'll be more on this later," because there won't, the series is complete. But in contrast to the Cotterill it was complete in a way I still find satisfying.

Alice Evelyn Yang, A Beast Slinks Towards Beijing. This is a family history novel with strong--in fact integral--fantastical elements, but only the realistic plot resolution is satisfying, not the fantasy plot at all. The fantasy elements are required for the plot to happen as portrayed, there's no chance they're only metaphors, but they only work as metaphors. Ah well. If you're up for a Chinese family history novel that goes into detail of the horrors of both the Japanese occupation and the Cultural Revolution, this one has really good sentences and paragraphs. But go in braced.

(no subject)

Feb. 16th, 2026 08:18 am
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[personal profile] spryng
What a busy weekend, and we're not even done.

Saturday I made pink pancakes for the kiddos, then took CG and 5yo to piano lessons. Afterwards, we hit up the library for an hour, since Dr Lady had a 3 hour taekwondo event. I found a few more kids' cook books and am going to try again to get CG involved in the weekly cooking. I swear at this point I'm beating a dead horse, but hey, maybe the horse will suddenly start kicking. I feel like if I can just find the right thing, she'll get interested. She likes making eggs, after all.

After we got home from the library, they helped me clean out the garage. Once Dr Lady came home, I let everyone vege for a few hours, because that evening we were going to pick up some Indian food and go watch the bats. Half of that turned out all right--surprisingly the food pick up. We had a 30min wait for our food, so the kids sprinted back and forth outside, and then I corralled them in the back of the car where they happily worked through 5yo's activity book. He's gotten really into those find-the-object activities, as well as simple mazes, so Dr Lady got him a whole stack of those kinds of books for his birthday.

The food took longer than I'd budgeted for, timewise, so by the time we got to bats, the nearby parking was full up and people were everywhere. We had to walk a ways and then we were on the wrong side of the road to really watch, but it was getting too dark and there were too many cars to cross the road safely. We got to see somebats come out of the bat houses, but not the endless stream I was hoping for.

And then it was very dark and 5yo was tired and wild and running all over the place--near the gator-infested lake and then near the car-infested road. Not great! Then he just laughed at us when we told him to stop and come back, so I had to take away his stuffie for the evening. It was a struggle with him the rest of the night, but at least Sunday we were fine again.

Both kids were up when it was time to go get groceries, so I put 5yo on my bike and CG biked on her own. She's doing such a good job with biking further and further and learning how to share the road with cars. She had no problem at all biking all the way to the grocery store and back again.

We only had a little time at home after, because the university put on a little science fair at Depot Park that only ran for a few hours. So we hustled over there and the kids got to touch a whale's baleen, learn about frog calls, and pet caterpillars. It was fun, if a bit windy, because the cold front was coming in. We closed out the fair and then played on the playground for a bit and I reminisced on how we used to come to this park every weekend. The friends we'd meet up with there have all unfortunately moved on or ghosted us, but I really want to go there more often again. It's such a nice park with a big playground and lots of safe space for the kids to run around in.

We were all exhausted by the time we got home, so we let the kids vege again.

And today, as soon as these kiddos wake up, we're going to see manatees. :)

(no subject)

Feb. 12th, 2026 06:03 am
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I should be at Crossfit, but the fatigue has risen up and consumed me this week. I could feel it approaching on Monday, and Tuesday it hit me like a truck. I'm trying to just ride it out and allow myself to rest, although some anxiety seems to be wound up in it. I just keep reminding myself I've been here before and it was better for so long, and I know what to do to make it better again. That I'd noticed my food choices slipping since November and even remarked to Dr Lady last week that I wasn't eating much meat again.

It feels silly that apparently I need meat to avoid this fatigue, but I haven't been able to get enough iron/B12 on a vegetarian-adjacent diet, even with supplements. Blrgh. But I also need my energy back; I truly felt like my old self for a while there. I was PRing lifts and being a boss all summer, but I feel like I've been barely keeping up since fall.

Definitely 90% of the blame can be placed on the stress in December. I thought I'd got out of that relatively unscathed, but I guess I'm finally paying for it. I did try to take January easy, and I've been alcohol-free for five weeks (hoorah), as well as consistently exercising. I need to prioritize getting outside again and there are a few other things I could dial in.

Unfortunately, it looks like there might be another crunch coming up at work in March. I've already warned them I'm not working outside of hours and this crunch is entirely because other people don't value our work ("we want training on this process, but we haven't finalized this process, and we're launching in May no matter what" r-e-a-l-l-y). It doesn't help that boss-boss keeps telling us to just "use AI." Ma'am, I don't think that's going to help when folks still don't know what they want their users to do.

All the more reason I got to get hold of this fatigue wave while I can. I wish there was a simpler solution; I feel like the older I get, the less forgiving my body is. I also feel like I'm not old enough to feel this way, lol. My body should not hurt like this, I should not be this damn tired.

But it does and I am, so here we go.

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K.A. Doore

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