sophistry: ([Tea] reading)
Sophie ([personal profile] sophistry) wrote2009-10-12 12:39 pm

(no subject)

At lunchtime, I am making a run to the bookshop - having read The Graveyard Book, which I adored for the same reasons I adore Neverwhere, has me craving... more of the same, basically. So! YA recs of the 'if you liked _______, you'll love ________' sort in the next 20 minutes, GO GO GO.

Or, you know. Later on, as well. But I am coming out of that shop with something to fill the gaping hole in my heart left by Silas and Bod and Miss Lupescu, and without recs, I will (as I inevitably do, without ever learning from my mistakes) probably just buy whatever one has the prettiest cover.

[personal profile] stained_glass 2009-10-12 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I have been reading the Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson, and I am... undecided. The story is no doubt vast and rich, and the writing is exceptional, but the characters, especially the women... Hmmm. I would say it is worth a read, but maybe from a library?

[personal profile] stained_glass 2009-10-12 01:16 pm (UTC)(link)
YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS.

I did not care at ALL about Jack "It's all about me!" Shaftoe and Bob and Abigail or yet MORE bad shit happening or the Mary Sue of all Sues, but I am now on the final book because of the promise of this is where the Newton/Liebniz brain-sexitiems is to be found.

[personal profile] stained_glass 2009-10-12 01:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I want to finish it now, because I am invested in Newton, but I have also just read Unseen Academicals by Terry Pratchett which I really, really enjoyed.

Also, this might sound odd, but The Spanish Bride by Georgette Heyer (I know, I know) is actually really, really good. They use it at Sandhurst to teach the Peninsula War.

[personal profile] stained_glass 2009-10-12 01:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Me too, but this one is actually really brilliant - a good return to form, I think. Some of the new characters are shallow, but Mister Nutt is wonderful, really, and the Wizards and Vetinari are back in fighting form.
skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (elizabeth book)

[personal profile] skygiants 2009-10-12 01:43 pm (UTC)(link)
The third book is INDEED where Newton/Daniel/Liebniz returns with a vengeance! I slogged through the second book, but it was worth it for the third. *tempts*

Also, as to your actual request, here are some recommendations!

Un Lun Dun, China Mieville - I did not actually love this the same way I loved China Mieville's adult stuff, but it is really good and inventive and thoroughly, thoroughly Neverwhere-ish - very much a 'if you liked this, you will like that' book.

The Queen's Thief books, Megan Whalen Turner - unreliable narrators! twisty alterna-greek politics! awesome queens! WHAT IS NOT TO LOVE

Flora Segunda, Ysabeau Wilce - you may love the wild and crazy worldbuilding and awesomely complicated family dynamics and untrustworthy demonic spirits and unique language, or you may bounce hard off the language within three pages, I cannot tell. I would recommend reading the first three pages in the bookstore to see if you like the narrative voice, and, if you do, buy it!

The Book Thief, Marcus Zusak - WILL TWIST YOUR HEART AND NEVER LET IT GO

Tamsin, Peter Beagle - my absolute favorite ghost story. Teenaged girl meets (and develops a tremendous crush on) the Cromwell-era ghost who lives in her new house and is introduced through her to the mythological side of Dorset

DIANA WYNNE JONES - okay, specifically, if you are in a Neverwhere/Gaiman-ish mood, I would go for Eight Days of Luke (Gaiman stole American Gods off it!), A Tale of Time City (thoroughly practical protagonist pulled into an inventive otherworld - in this case, the city at the center of time - with bonus day-saving action!), Deep Secret (you have to see if you can recognize the mockery of Gaiman having breakfast) or the Dalemark Quartet (BECAUSE IT IS AWESOME.)